Parsley, Sage, Rosemary & Thyme

I remember the first time I ever smelled sage in a wine. Not just a little hint, but plunged my nose into the glass and immediately felt as though my entire nasal passage was filled by the smell of fresh sage. (The wine was 1997 Beaune 1er Cru Greves “Vigne de l’Enfant Jesus, Bouchard Pere et fils).While I’ve always been a huge fan of sage, across the board I love all fresh herbs. They are highly under-utilized by the home chef, who can add just a touch to almost any dish and improve its flavor and expression immensely. Since my plants are finally coming up, I thought I’d pass on some quick and easy ideas for what to do with your herb garden. If you DON’T have an herb garden, consider it this year. For the price of a handful of plants ($10), a few flower pots ($15) and some soil ($7) the results are, to steal a phrase, priceless.

Rosemary – cut up new potatoes, douse heavily in olive oil, garlic salt pepper and finish with fresh rosemary. Put it under the broiler. A great side for your next cookout. Or get some baker’s yeast, flour, water and olive oil, mix in some fresh rosemary and put your choice of olives, sund-dried tomatoes, etc on top for easy foccaccia.

Basil – Insalata Cabrese is a favorite. Fresh buffalo mozzarella, slice tomato, and basil leaves drizzled with olive oil. Or ender fat from pancetta, sautee garlic and shallots, add whole tomatoes and basil and cook low, slow and long for a great pasta sauce.

Sage – one of my all-time favorite appetizer/first courses, from David Rosengarten: Sausage-Stuffed Radicchio Cups.

Parsley – Add chopped parsley, capers and a bit of dry mustard to Chopped Tuna for the best tuna tartare.

Send me your ideas if you have more to add, we’d love to add it to our recommendations.

(My mint is still coming alive, but you can be sure that when it does, I will be mixing up a mint julip and doing some sun tanning).

I have some interested wines to taste later in the week, and hope to explore a much discussed question, to age or not age in my next post…

The Golden Rule

As I mentioned in my last post, I became an Uncle recently, so I have been spending much of my free time trying to explain terroir to my niece Riley. I got into an argument with a few people on a wine discussion board regarding this very subject.
Here’s the rundown.
Wine, like anything else, gives people who know (or claim to be in the know) a possibility to make you feel dumb (if you let them). Now I love Rielsing; I actually probably drink Riesling more than any other wine, mainly because they are generally lower in alocohol than other wines and so I can drink a whole bottle and not worry about the side effects. The problem is that Riesling people have a certain air of importance about them – you mean YOU don’t think Rielsing is the greatest wine on earth.
Now admittedly, I am like that about Burgundy, but I freely admit that. I freely admit that I think that Burgundy is the greatest wine on earth (red or white) and I am a pretentious, arrogant slime because of that. But I’m not smug about it. It is what is.
More importantly, if YOU think that MERLOT or some other grape is the greatest grape in the world, I’m fine with that. I ahve often said that as a professional, I don’t taste a wine thinking whether or not I like it, I taste a wine thinking who would like it. That my saound like a very capitalistic approach, but I don’t mean it in that sense. YOU and I like different things. I like Haydn [a dead white guy] and George Strait for music, I like Burgundy for wine, I like the engravings of Albrecht Durer [another dead white guy], I enjoy sage more than basil, and I live and die black and gold with the Pittsburgh Steelers, Penguins and Pirates.
I’m only an expert in one of those cases – wine – but you still don’t have to agree with me. I strongly suggest the wine sthat we have available for sale. If you read my posts, it’s obvious which ones I prefer. But My 90 pointer may be your 80 pointer. Give us a call or send us an email. Although Riley may eventually hate Haydn’s Symphony 101 “the Clock Symphony”, for now, she’s going to sleep every night to it (or well, occassionally she’s at least sleeping). I won’t do that to you!

More Cowbell?

I (you, we) hate the prices of wine. Wine is an imperfect market as I learned very quickly working for an auction house. Although stocks can dip or crescendo on the whims of one investor (Buffet buys a railroad – all of a sudden we think we’re playing Monopoly), given the number of stocks that’s not the norm. Wine’s different. Public opinion and quality are very irregular.
I was recentlt preparing a list of wines to be tasted for a business group and I had a few ideas going into the project. Nothing earth-shattering: I like themes like “A Walk Thorugh Napa Valley”, “An Introduction to the Wines of France”, or something like that. In particular, the latter is very inclusive and is a good theme. The novice interrogates, “Oh, so Sauvignon Blanc is from the Loire. Tell me more…”. The more advanced taster asks, “Do you prefer Chateauneuf-du-Pape from 1998 or 1999 and why?” In short there’s a broad range of exciting possibilities about which we can talk, and I feel out the audience.
Here’s the thing, I’ve been given a budget that’s “too high” for what I feel I can accomplish in a tasting, unless of course I’m reviewing, for example, the evolution of 1998 Grand Crus from Burgundy. I’m putting together my list, and I’m ignoring the budget, because my wines are going to be less. Why? Because once you’re getting into the $60-$80 range (minimum) per bottle, another $40 doesn’t really buy you better wine, unless you’re talking vintage wine (i.e. ‘74 Heitz Martha’s Vineyard) – and then the event becomes more than a gathering and instead a few hours for analysis and contemplation.
I have to be honest, I think wine can/should be less expensive than most people think it is. If two couple commit $30 – $40 once a week, you can taste 104 wines a year (all other dinners excluded) and cook a really nice brunch each weekend + have an appropriate amount of wine for a Saturday afternoon or Sunday afternoon for the young and adventuresome!
So as is typical of my history, I’m currently planning on a “down”-sell, but that’s all right. I much prefer wines that are appropriate to the goals of the event (or consumer in question). In the end, more cowbell doesn’t always do it…

It’s a Girl!

After a false alarm Monday and another 20+hour wait on Thursday, I am finally an Uncle. Riley Elizabeth Puckey needed a bit of time in the oven but I’m happy to that she is doing fine and came home to my sister’s today.

Now, I’d imagine her parents are thinking about things such as college, whether she’ll be a ballerina or a teacher, you know, the important things. Of course these are the last things that a Wine Consultant like myself would want to be bothered with right now; the most obvious question is, how will the 2007 Vintage turn out, since these will be Riley’s birth year wines. I admit that I’m pretty twisted.

It’s an important consideration. Very few years produce excellent wines in every wine region, and not every well-made wine will age for the requisite twenty-one years or more required to head into adulthood in style. As a wine consultant, if I had a dime for every time I was asked, “My daughter was born in xxxx, what wine should I buy to celebrate her 21st Birthday”, I would already be retired. So without further ado, for your consideration and reference, here’s my far-from-complete, super-unofficial birth year wine chart:

2005 Bordeaux, Sauternes, Burgundy, Northern Rhone, Southern Rhone, Spain, Australia
2004 Port, Spain, Italy, selected Bordeaux and California Cabs
2003 Rhone, Burgundy, Bordeaux
2002 Burgundy, California Reds, Australian Reds
2001 California Reds, Burgundy (Cote de Nuits), Sauternes, Rhones north and south
2000 Bordeaux, Port, Rhones especially Southern, Italy
1999 Burgundy, Rhones especially Northern, Italy
1998 Rhones, Bordeaux (Right Bank), selected Burgundy
1997 Italy, California
1996 Champagne, Burgundy, Bordeaux (Left Bank), Spain

That’ll give you a decade to play with for starters. Keep in mind that buying the best producers as well as the producers noted for longevity will go along way in making sure Birthday #21 is special, but without proper, that is, impeccable, storage, you might as well just flush your money (and wine) down the toilet…