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Turkey Day Wines

I was on CBS's The Early Show this past Saturday, with some affordable wine recommendations for Thanksgiving (and every other upcoming holiday), and I keep receiving emails from friends wondering about wines that go with turkey, so evidently not everyone has their holiday grocery shopping done. To that end, here are a few of my favorite wines for Thanksgiving. These are just bottles I happen to like, that I think go well with a wide range of flavors—which is the key to a good Thanksgiving wine.

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Rainy Day Wines

Well, here in NYC it's a rainy fall day, which always brings to mind (my mind, at least) dishes like the venison chili I made the other night, and wines like the 2005 Hendry Block 28 Zinfandel ($30, click to find it) that I opened to go along with it. The Hendry is a big, boisterous red, with lots of rich berry fruit, but a firm framework of tannins to support it. Not a small wine, but not a monster, either.

I don't know how much of the 2006 Chateau Blanc Un Autre Rouge Côtes de Ventoux (price a mystery) makes it to the US, since wine-searcher seems never to have heard of it, but if you like lively Rhône reds and you spot a bottle, go for it. Purple berries, a scent of violets, prickly tannins, rustic spice—couldn't be more Rhônish in nature. I suspect it's affordable, and write this in hopes that a wave of the stuff will soon appear on wine store shelves.

Another good wet weather wine, ideal with something like my ex-colleague Nick Fauchald's Beef and Lamb Burgers with Cheddar and Caper Remoulade—mighty tasty burgers that he concocted this summer for a story on wine vs. beer pairing—would be the 2005 Vallado Tinto ($25, click to find it) from Portugal's Douro river valley. A blend of various local grapes, it's deep garnet in color, dark, rich and dense with lightly baked Douro black cherry fruit—another red very evocative of the place it comes from. 

Intense Italian Reds

Sometimes you need a wine that can take a steak and just plain whomp it into submission. And if that's the sort of wine you're looking for, Aglianico isn't a bad grape to consider. Professore Piero Mastroberardino of Mastroberardino, one of Campania's most lauded wineries, stopped by the F&W tasting room the other day with some of his latest red wines, all of which are made from the Aglianico grape ("red wines" used loosely—these were really more black-red in hue). 

Aglianico's notoriously fierce, musclebound with tannins and broodingly aggressive; but it's a heavyweight boxer with a good heart. "It's a tough variety," Prof. Mastroberardino admitted, "but I'm fond of it for its personality. For sure, it's a variety you have to pair with the right food, too. Baby goat, which we put on the table at Easter, and of course game, which is what we put on the table in the Taurasi DOC." I'd add to that any kind of massive, well marbled steak. Or short ribs. Or...

Anyway, look for the 2006 Mastroberardino Aglianico Campania (about $20, click here to find it) for a relatively—that's relatively—gentle intro to this variety, with smooth dark cherry and smoke notes ending on grippy tannins.

The 2004 Mastroberardino Taurasi Radici (about $50, click here to find it) has a touch more wood, with spicy dark cherry fruit held in place by taut, intense tannins and an almost searing end (it would be much better with food). "In my opinion, 2004 has great potential," Prof. M. said. "It will better the 1999; it has superb concentration."

Finally, the 1999 Mastroberardino Taurasi Radici Riserva (about $65, click here to find it) is just lovely—the added age and mellowness it brings underscores the more generous side of the grape. Smoky tea leaf aromas, luscious, slightly wild—animale as the French would say—savory notes, pure cherry fruit, a finish that descends into resinous tannins. Terrific wine, and just as good the second day when I tasted it again. 

An Ageable Bordeaux at a Fair Price

The other day my colleague Kristin Donnelly blogged about an upcoming auction at Christie's as a likely source for good values. At it—thanks to the rough economic times—I know she scored some very intriguing sounding wines for the comical price of $50 a case. Anyway, it somehow struck a chord in my mind with the result that last night for dinner I opened up a half-bottle of 1989 Château Citran that I'd recently found in an old shoebox in the back of my closet (really). It was tobacco-y and very distinguished, still holding onto a reasonable amount of cool blueberry fruit, and aromatic in a filigreed kind of way—musically, it would be a Chopin etude rather than the Beethoven symphony that first growth Bordeaux tends to suggest. (Or The National rather than My Morning Jacket, if you'd rather get more contemporary.) Anyway, it was pretty darn impressive, especially given that I've been carting the thing around the country with me for about fourteen years now (I bought it in 1994). So if you can find any of the ’89 at an auction—whether for $50 a case or not—snap it up!

And, what that brings to mind is the 2005 Château Citran (about $25, click here to find). It's from an equally good vintage—’89 was pretty off-the-charts, but so is ’05—is polished and firm, and should have an equally long life ahead of it. Whether it will age perfectly in a shoebox, I don't know. But I wouldn't be surprised if it did. 

Back in Tuscany after 600 Years

I had the opportunity to sit down recently with Sandro Boscaini of the Veneto producer Masi to taste the winery's new Tuscan wine, the 2005 Poderi del Bello Ovile ($20, click to find it). This is produced in partnership with Count Pieralvise, owner of the Serego Alighieri estate in Gargagnago (from which Masi produces some of its best Amarones) and a direct descendent of Dante Alighieri—who was, of course, exiled from Florence in the 1300s. "You shall leave everything you love most dearly: this is the arrow that the bow of exile shoots first," Dante wrote in his Divine Comedy. In other words, take away a man's Sangiovese, and he gets testy about it.

Well, hm, time heals all wounds? I guess after nearly 700 years, sure. Bello Ovile is in the south of Tuscany, across the river Orcia from Banfi's Brunello di Montalcino vineyards (and thus not located in Brunello di Montalcino, which is why it's $20 instead of $70). Medium-bodied, with sweet cherry and crisp tannins—that sort of dried-leaf texture that Sangiovese often suggests—it's an appealing red for a fair price. Sandro Boscaini, in his typically graceful way, observed, "It's a very cordial wine," adding that he feels the wine's cherry intensity comes from five percent Ciliegiolo in the blend—a grape aptly named, as the variety's name comes from the Italian word for cherry.

One Darn Good Pinot Noir

The other night for dinner I opened up a bottle of the 2004 Scherrer Winery Russian River Pinot Noir ($36, click here to find it) and was struck all over again by what a terrific winemaker Fred Scherrer is. I have no idea why his wines continue to fly under the media-buzz radar, since to my palate they're as distinctive and expressive as any of the more hyped Pinots floating around these days, if not moreso. 

The '04 is drinking wonderfully right now, with a deep well of dark cherry fruit at its core, svelte tannins, and a lightly citrusy/orangey edge to its acidity that I vaguely recall Scherrer saying was, for him, characteristic of RRV Pinot grown on Goldridge soil (I can't pin down when I heard him say that; a phone interview I think, but quite a while ago).

The wine's impeccably balanced, and it went really well with the very simple Italian chickpea soup I'd cooked up (rosemary, garlic, chickpeas, tomatoes, chicken stock, a drizzle of Capezzana olive oil, plus some stellar olive bread from Caputo, a local Brooklyn bakery—yum. Great Autumn evening sustenance). I'm sure it would also go well with a long list of less unlikely dinner choices (on a similar soup note,for instance, it would also make a great partner for Peter Pastan's fresh shell bean soup, from our October issue). I think for the price it would be nearly impossible to find a comparable RRV Pinot. Seriously.

Highlights from the Foxwoods Food & Wine Festival

I've had a flurry of flying around the US in the past couple of weeks, which is going to have to serve as my excuse for not posting much on this blog. But this past weekend, instead, I took the train up to Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut for the Foxwoods Food & Wine Festival (which we sponsor). A casino might not seem like the most congenial place for a food and wine extravaganza, but when you look at the restaurant and wine boom in Vegas, sort of extrapolate it out into the rest of the country, and sit back, then it seems like a natural. 

It's a little odd, admittedly, to get to a casino and find it overrun with 10-year-old girls, but that's what happens when you're sharing the bill with a Miley Cyrus concert. Nevertheless, amidst dodging Hannah Montana-crazed tots, I tasted some very good wines at the grand tasting and at a few dinners I attended. Here were my highlights:

2006 Kaesler Viognier ($32, click to find it) Barossa Viognier has always struck me as an odd idea, but I like this wine despite my philosophical bemusement at its existence. Nectarine and honeysuckle on the nose, full-bodied, honeyed, peach-nectar flavors and enough acidity to keep it elevated rather than sunk in a pool of Viognier-fat (unappealing image, sorry about that).

2005 Jacob's Creek Steingarten Riesling ($41) A benchmark Aussie Riesling, Steingarten shows beautifully in the '06 vintage, with elegant lime peel and stone notes, brisk acidity, and a long, seductive finish. It should age very well, too.

2005 Lynmar Quail Hill Vineyard Pinot Noir ($50, click to find it) Sort of a ringer, as I used this in my Pinot Noir seminar, but I was impressed with it all over again. It's a textbook Russian River pinot, with that silky, mouthfilling, seductive texture the appellation has at its peak, luscious dark cherry fruit, and a stealthy backbone of tannin. 

2004 Château La Lagune ($50, click to find it) La Lagune is the southernmost classified-growth Château in Bordeaux, and it put out a terrific wine in '04 (a vintage which is practically invisible next to the spotlight of attention on the '05s, and consequently a source for some good values). Lots of tobacco here, deep black currant fruit, refined structure. It drinks well right from the bottle, would drink even better after a couple of hours in a decanter, and in ten years should be just stunning.

2005 O'Shaughnessy Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon ($75, click to find it) Every time I taste this wine, I like it even more. O’Shaughnessy is up on the plateau that caps the Howell Mountain AVA, and the quality of its site is fully expressed in this Cab, thanks to Sean Capiaux's deft winemaking hand. Lots of deep black cherry, some coffee and black pepper grace notes, and a hint of spicy oak.


 

Two Sultry Wines for a Rainy Weekend

I'm not sure why these two wines, which have almost nothing whatsoever in common, seemed particularly appropriate for this rainy Friday (not that we can complain here in NYC; my hometown of Houston is about to be submerged). Maybe it's the creeping sense that Autumn is arriving, and a warm, luscious wine is starting to feel appropriate. Anyway:

1999 Château Musar Blanc ($35, buy it here) The great Lebanese producer (yes, great, that's right) Château Musar is primarily known for its red, which is indeed terrific, but I've always loved Musar's top white as well. A blend of the Lebanese grapes Obaideh and Merwah (Semillon), in 1999 it shows fig, pear and nectarine flavors and has a dense, unctuous, beeswaxy texture. It's deep gold in hue but by no means losing its life; rather, it feels as though it's just come to its peak. (There is, by the way, a terrific article by Elizabeth Gilbert (Eat, Pray, Love) on Château Musar on Musar's site here, which ran in GQ in '04.)

2004 Macauley Vineyard Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($72, buy it here) I somehow lost track of this bottle in the vast ocean of wine that lives in our tasting room, which annoyed me for quite a while; then, of course, as soon as I stopped thinking about it, it reappeared. Go figure. Regardless, I'm glad it did: This is truly sexy Napa Cabernet, with a touch of roasted red currant and lot of black cherry on the nose, then more of that sweet black cherry and some cassis in the mouth, along with a grace note of oak and lush, velvety tannins. It comes from the To Kalon and Star vineyards, was made by Kirk Venge, and given the prices of Napa Cab these days, it's actually quite a good deal for the money. The other good thing is that even though I've been slow out of the gate tasting this wine, there still seems to be some left in the market (also at the winery's website, though today for some reason their shopping cart function is fritzed out).

Two Under Twenty: Good Rhônes

The weekend is here once again (odd how it does that—will have to investigate), and so it seems a couple of good affordable wines are in order. The Guigal should be easy to find; the Montpertuis will take some hunting, but it's worth buying by the case if you can find it.

2006 E. Guigal Côtes du Rhône Blanc ($14) You could drop a couple of hundred bucks or so on Guigal's Ex Voto Ermitage and have one of the great whites of the Rhône, no doubt, but if you exist in the same sort of financial realm as me, a crisp, minerally white Rhône with appealing peach, spice and lemon rind notes for under $20 sounds like a great idea, which this is. (55% Viognier, the rest Roussanne, Marsanne, Bourbolenc, Clairette & Grenache Blanc)

2005 Domaine de Montpertuis Vignoble de la Ramiere Cuvée Counoise ($12) I picked this up at Astor Wines the other day, operating under the basic principle that if Neal Rosenthal is importing it, at the very least it's going to be interesting, and usually it's going to be much better than that. Once again, this proved true. I love this unpretentious red, its scent of wild berry liqueurs, its abundance of bright, luscious fruit, its lightly earthy finish. Just terrific, and an utter no-brainer at the price.

Some Good Barberas

I tasted through a number of affordable Barberas and Dolcettos recently. Here are four under-$20 Barberas from the '05 and '06 vintages that I thought offered mighty good value for money. 2005 was an odd year, with a lot of rain, but early-ripening Dolcetto and Barbera fared better on the whole than Nebbiolo. 2006 was better—still some sporadic rain in September, but not so much that it wrecked the crop. Neither is a transcendent year, but good producers had enough to work with to make some very good wines.

2006 Prunotto Barbera d'Asti Fiulot ($15)
Graceful and bursting with lively berry fruit, this youthful Barbera is popped into stainless steel tanks for a mere four months before it's bottled; hence the name, fiulot, which means "young man" in the Piedmontese dialect. Or so they tell me.

2006 Vietti Tre Vigne Barbera ($16)
The grapes for this herb-scented Barbera come from three separate vineyard sites—Monforte, Novello and Castiglione. Aging in stainless steel tanks rather than oak barrels keeps the fruit flavors bright and dominant.

2005 Coppo Camp du Rouss Barbera ($19)

Coppo got its start in the 1800s making Moscato d'Asti, oddly enough, but has since transformed into a Barbera specialist. This is modern-style Barbera, with its rich black cherry flavor and a fair amount of spiciness from 20 percent aging in new French oak barrels.

2005 Tenimenta Ca'Bianca Antè Barbera ($20)
Ca'Bianca is a youngster of a winery in Piedmontese terms—it was only founded fifty-odd years ago. But it seems to be achieving some recognition, and wines like this fragrant, lush red aren't going to hurt that at all.



 

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