Posts Tagged ‘pinot noir’

Wine for St. Patrick’s Day? Why not?!

Friday, March 11th, 2011

St. Patrick's Day Wine PairingsPerhaps it’s the Irish red head in me, but I’m going rogue this St. Patrick’s Day. Don’t get me wrong, I love a great beer just as much as the next person (after all, we’re offering a great beer flight and $4.00 black-and-tans in the shop at our St. Patrick’s Day tasting), but I’m thinking, why not try something new this year? Why not wine?

We put our wine-o and foodie crew to work to come up with some not-so-traditional pairings for traditional St. Patrick’s Day dishes. Give them a go for your day of green, and who knows, you might find a pot of gold at the end of that rainbow!

Corned Beef and Cabbage? Pick a nice Pinot Noir.

An Irish-American version of the traditional bacon and cabbage, corned beef and cabbage takes its place as the King of St. Patty’s Day Plates. Created by brined beef boiled with cabbage, vegetables, and traditional seasonings, corned beef and cabbage pairs best with a Pinot Noir or a Grenache which brings fruit and acidity to the dish, but not overwhelmingly so.

  • Our recommendation: Melville’s 2008 Santa Rita Hills Pinot Noir

    Sure it’s from famous Santa Rita Hills, but more importantly, it brings to the dish a aromatics of black rasberry, black cherry & fig mixed in with spice nuances of pink peppercornss able to stand up to but not bowl over your corned beef and cabbage.

Bangers & Mash? Bring on the Syrah!

Traditionally an English dish, these bold and spicy sausages and mashed potatoes need a bold and spicy wine. A Syrah or Zin with their combination of fruit and spice will match up nicely here, and complement the flavors in the dish.

  • Our recommendation: Jaffurs 2009 Santa Barbara County Syrah   From our local Syrah specialists, Jaffurs, the 2009 SBC Syrah offers a chewy mix of spice, wild berry, pepper and blackberry fruit ending with a long, zesty finish that will leaving you looking for a second sausage.

Fish & Chips? Lighten up with Pinot Grigio.

There’s nothing wrong with serving a crowd pleaser on a holiday. Lighten it up with a fresh Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc or a Riesling that cuts through the oils with citrus and mineral tones.

  • Our recommendation: Di Bruno’s 2008 Pinot Grigio

    Straight from our local Santa Rita Hills, this Pinot Grigio is fresh, bright and bold with forward citron and minerals and a strong finish.

Shepherd’s Pie? Hook a Shiraz.

This traditional meat pie made with beef mince and a crust of mashed potatoes may have started from humble beginnings, but today it graces the plate in many a pubs. If digging into this “formerly known as” cottage pie, try the bright fruit and spice of a Shiraz or Syrah to stand up to the crust.

  • Our recommendation: Mollydooker 2008 “The Boxer” Shiraz

    With 91 points from the Wine Spectator, this Shiraz offers a bright and jazzy cherry, pomegranate and spice flavors with strong aromas, density, but without the weight to balance even the heaviest of pies.

Potato Soup? Cool it off with a Chardonnay.

Soup for supper? Yes please! We recommend topping off the simplicity and sublime of traditional Irish potato soup with the butter and oak of a full bodied Chardonnay.

  • Our recommendation: Rombauer 2009 Chardonnay

    We tasted this in the shop at our special Fat Tuesday tasting the other day, and it was a definite crowd favorite. We recommend its rich palate of peach, apple and tropical fruit mixed with oak undertones to bring the brightness and butter to your dish.

Until next time wine fans…cheers!

Davina DaVino

Keep up with us on Facebook or meet up with us 3/17 at our St. Patty’s Day tasting!

Babcock Wine Tasting 4/8/10

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Babcock Vineyards Wine Tasting this Thursday, 4/8 from 6-9pm. Fine Santa Ynez wines and appetizers $15/pp. Wines we’re tasting are the new releases of Identity Crisis Syrah (white), Naughty Little Hillsides Pinot Gris, Rita’s Earth Pinot Noir, Grand Cuvee Pinot Noir and Classic Rock Cabernet Sauvignon.

Day 4 Tahoe Food and Wine Report

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

Read below for day 4 of Mark and Kathie Johnson’s Lake Tahoe via Sonoma and Napa food and wine report:

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1

It was another beautiful day so we drove around the lake with a stop at Truckee www.truckee.com . We got back as the sun was setting and the sky was turning pink. Tonight’s dinner was at Café Fiore www.cafefiore.com , a tiny little Italian restaurant, and one of our favorites. We started with our usual cheesy garlic bread oozing with butter. Sinfully good. Then after a simple salad and minestrone soup we received our entrees. Kathie got the spaghetti con salsiccia: thin spaghetti tossed with spicy Italian sausage, spinach, crushed red chilies, garlic, olive oil and lots and lots of pancetta. Delicious and a huge potion too. I ordered lamb chops (3 thick double cut) that were brushed with Dijon mustard, then coated with Italian bread crumbs, pan fried, then roasted to a rosy pink. Finally they drizzle an aromatic butter-garlic sauce on top. It was heavenly – crunchy on the outside and tender and juicy on the inside. But as great as the meal was it was topped by the wine: a 2004 Kosta Browne “Amber Ridge” Pinot Noir www.kostabrowne.com . This is the Holy Grail of Pinots, the kind of wine that you always search for but rarely find. It was simply amazing. A fabulous nose, bright cherry fruit, smooth yet complex…just nirvana. Kathie said it was possibly the best Pinot she had ever tasted. Alas, this was my very last bottle of the 2004 KB Amber Ridge, bottle # 1956 of 2546 bottles produced.

Day 2 Sonoma Food and Wine Report

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

This Sonoma Food & Wine Report is courtesy of my dear friend Mark Johnson, who took is lovely wife, Kathie Johnson on a food and wine vacation through Sonoma and Lake Tahoe.  Following is Mark’s review of the restaurants and wines they sampled on Day 2…

SATURDAY, JANUARY 30

The next morning we went back to Carneros Bistro www.thelodgeatsonoma.com for breakfast. Great coffee! They are really into the Locavore thing so most of the meats and produce are sourced locally. The house-made pico de gallo was great as was the thick cut bacon. The local sausage though was very blah. Fortified, we headed off to our first wine tasting appointment at Sojourn www.sojourncellars.com, just off the square in Sonoma. It’s a nice set up, you sit down at a table in a small living room and they poured 4 different 2008 Pinots and 3 Cabernets. 3 of the pinots were excellent, but we liked only one of the Cabs. Still, much better odds than most wineries. Definitely visit if you get the chance.

Our next appointment was with Kamen www.kamenwines.com, a very small producer of premium Cabernet and Syrah. This turned out to be a great tasting! At first he said we could open one wine and perhaps barrel taste one. However, after a bit of chatting while sipping their 2006 Cabernet ($75 and it will beat most Napa Cabs at twice the price) he also opened their very small production Syrah (80 cases, $70) and it was fantastic. We also tasted multiple barrel samples of future Cabs, Cab cuvees, and Syrah.

All other tastings were downhill from there:

Tin Barn www.tinbarnvineyards.com: boring

Anaba www.anabawines.com: OK, but simple and basic

Schug www.schugwinery.com: watery and just bad

Charles Creek www.charlescreek.com: forgettable

Roessler www.roesslercellars.com: surprisingly blah – and expensive

Eric James www.erickjames.com: yuuuuk!

So we stopped tasting and did a bit of shopping. Just off the Square I came across this tiny food shop, maybe 200 square feet, called La Bodega www.yelp.com/biz/la-bodega-cheese-shop-sonoma-2. It is an unusual little spot but the proprietor Rick Vargas is absolutely passionate about freshly foraged wild mushrooms and hand-made ravioli. We discussed for a while his different ravioli options, mail-order shipping, etc. As we were getting ready to leave he asked if we could stay a just moment and he would make us each a special ravioli. A few minutes later he presented us with a personally made wild mushroom (Black trumpet) ravioli drizzled with imported olive oil. It was sublime. I will definitely be contacting Rick in preparation for my next dinner party.

Finally we went back to our cozy cottage to relax, and I made Margaritas to “facilitate” the moment. Using blanco Tequila, fresh squeezed Meyer lemons (instead of lime juice), agave syrup, and a hint of Tuaca I made perhaps my best ever Margarita – perfecto!

We had reservations that night at Meritage Restaurant www.sonomameritage.com, in Sonoma, but over the cocktails we kept reminiscing about our great meal the night before, so we cancelled Meritage and booked a table back at Carneros Bistro — and once again we were not disappointed. First we opened a bottle of Ramey 2006 “Annum” Cabernet www.rameywine.com . This is their “best barrels” blend, and it is very good. Big, robust, and marvelous complexity. As for appetizers we succumbed to the siren call of the seductive crab dip again (YUM), and we tried something new: risotto fritters with a panko crust and truffle aioli. It was pretty good, but overall not that exciting.

Food service tonight from our friendly waitress was lightning speed compared to the previous evening and our entrees arrived quickly. Kathie had Sonoma duck confit & housemade duck sausage cassoulet. It was outstanding! Crispy skin duck, savory sausage, and tender beans all covered in a porcini and breadcrumb crust. I had the evenings special: a kobe/wagyu beef filet and a braised boneless short rib. The short rib was falling apart and had a red wine or port sauce (?), it was very good. The kobe was not as tender as I had expected, but it was quite flavorful, especially when dipped in the savory dark amber French onion “soup” mousse that came with the dish. We returned to our cottage quite sated.

Day 1 Sonoma Food & Wine Report

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Our dear friends, Mark and Kathie Johnson, of Commander Printed Products www.commanderproducts.com visited Sonoma and Tahoe recently and provided a detailed food and wine report which I broke out into daily reports – sort of a blow-by-blow/progressive food and wine report so be sure and check back daily for each days news:

FRIDAY, JANUARY 29

We arrived at the Lodge at Sonoma about 5pm Friday night. It was raining heavily (cats, rats and dogs). Thankfully just as it was time to walk to our cottage, the rain stopped. We celebrated by making a cocktail in-room, a Blushing Geisha: Tanqueray gin, pineapple juice, Cointreau, grenadine, and fresh squeezed lime juice. It really hit the spot.

Later I went to the lobby as they we having a wine tasting social hour. The wine was forgettable but they were serving some very tasty shredded braised short ribs on wonton chips. I asked the woman behind the counter how they were made. She described the hours of work marinating overnight in soy, hoisen, crushed peppers, jalapeños, etc, then browning, braising for hours and shredding. Too much work for me but they sure were tasty. It turns out she was Janine Falvo, the head chef at The Carneros Bistro & Wine Bar www.thelodgeatsonoma.com/Carneros-Bistro-WIne-Bar-31.html adjacent to the hotel. Luckily we already had reservations at this restaurant as it has received positive buzz over the years, and if these Asian rib wontons were any indication things were looking good for the night.

We arrived about 8 pm and opened two bottles of wine: the 2007 Benovia “La Pommeraie” Chardonnay www.benoviawinery.com and the 2007 Black Kite “River Turn” Pinot Noir www.blackkitecellars.com from Anderson Valley. Next we ordered our appetizers: Dungeness crab dip with warm flatbread and dayboat scallops with spicy orange aioli. Then we waited… and waited. The kitchen was moving at a glacial pace, but it was OK as we were really enjoying the Chardonnay. It is a perfectly balanced Chard — big, rich and smooth yet it had just the right amount of acid to keep it all in check. Nice integrated oak and a crisp finish too. Finally our appetizers arrived. Wow, they were definitely worth the wait! The crab dip menu description does not begin to convey how sinfully delicious this dish is. They take chunky sweet crab, then add caramelized onions, cream cheese, jack cheese, poblano peppers, bacon and other herbs and turn it into this decadent and very rich dip. (I later got the complete dip recipe from Janine. I may be willing to share it with a select few – in consideration of a little baksheesh sent my way). Even the flatbread was great. They were dusted with black pepper, sautéed onions, red chili flakes, parmesan cheese and a hint of garlic. My scallop appetizer was also very nice featuring 3 large, perfectly seared scallops perched upon tempura fried potato rounds, accompanied by the spicy aioli.

We corked our remaining Chardonnay and moved on to our Black Kite Pinot while we waited (tick tock) for our entrees to arrive. However, once again we were in no big hurry and were simply enjoying the Pinot which featured a fantastic spice box nose. The wine was pretty big and full bodied and worked quite well with our entrees.

Ahh, finally the entrées arrive and we were not disappointed. Kathie had the pan seared sea bass with lobster hash and a truffled hollandaise. It was excellent, crispy and golden on the outside, tender and almost sweet inside. The hash featured tasty lobster bits, home fries, poblano chilies, onion, and red bell pepper. (this dish was featured by the Wine Spectator in 2008). I had the thick cut pork chop with some kind of cider (?) sauce and sides of fluffy ravioli like potato pierogies, and crispy Brussels sprouts. Let me stop right here and say that Brussels sprouts are not my favorite veggie. Only once before have I actually enjoyed them (thank you Steve Grossman), but these sprouts were amazing. They slice up the sprouts, lightly batter them and then fry ‘em up. And to top it off they drizzle them with a bacon vinaigrette. Marvelous! Anyway the pork chop was perfect, and the “ravioli” were very tasty too, especially when trailed through the juicy meat sauce. We were very, very content. And to top it all off, our pleasant waitress comped us on the two corkage fees, I presume due to the slow kitchen that night. We will return soon… which in fact we did.

Day 2 will be posted 2/18/10