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Ask Sid: Feta Cheese?

June 10th, 2015 by Joseph Temple
Ask your question here The International Wine & Food Society

Feta Cheese?

Question: My husband and I are arguing about whether or not feta cheese can have cow’s milk in it. Please settle this.

Answer: Both of you are correct. Traditionally there are specific rules that Feta Cheese must have at least 70% sheep’s milk and up to 30% goat’s milk – no cow’s milk. It is a Protected Designation of Origin product from Greece within the European Union. However many countries including Greece now produce a different type of feta using some or even all cow’s milk in making it. Lots of recipes on line for a home-made “modern” feta using cow’s milk. Hope this helps.


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The Frank Factor: How one man transformed wine in the Finger Lakes

June 5th, 2015 by Joseph Temple

The Frank Factor: How one man transformed wine in the Finger Lakes
By Visit Finger Lakes (Flickr: Sunrise overlooking a vineyard) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

By Joseph Temple

In Upstate New York, between Rochester and Syracuse, stands one of the country’s oldest wine regions known as the Finger Lakes.   Discovered by American explorers during the Sullivan Expedition, the area today is second only to California in terms of overall grape production.  Being a certified American Viticultural Area (AVA), the eleven lakes—some with depths of over 500 feet—moderate the harsh winter temperatures, giving the adjacent vineyards an opportunity to produce some outstanding wines.

From Chardonnay to Cabernet Sauvignon, dozens of Vitis vinifera grapes are cultivated across the Finger Lakes.  However, the region’s crown jewel is clearly Riesling.  Eric Asimov, wine critic for The New York Times writes, “Nowadays, top [Finger Lakes] producers are not simply making good Finger Lakes rieslings, or good American rieslings. They are making seriously good world-class rieslings, in a multitude of styles.”

With endorsements like that, it’s hard to believe that just sixty years ago, the situation was almost entirely different.  Back then, European rootstocks that currently dominate the landscape were nowhere to be found.  Instead, North American Vitis labrusca and hybrid grapes such as Baco Noir, Catawba and Concord were the order of the day.  Believing only native varietals could withstand the frigid upstate weather, the idea that grapes synonymous with Alsace and Bordeaux could not only grow but also thrive in the Finger Lakes was considered crazy talk.

Vineyards in the Finger Lakes wine region
A Finger Lakes vineyard on Seneca Lake, New York.

So when a Ukrainian immigrant named Konstantin Frank arrived in 1952 and began espousing a philosophy that harvesting Riesling was just as feasible as harvesting Marechal Foch, most Finger Lakes vintners dismissed him as nothing more than a delusional crank.  Little did these New Yorkers know that Frank was equipped with a PhD in viticulture from the University of Odessa where his doctoral thesis was on the subject of growing high-quality grapes in cold climates.  And what better place to implement his theories than the Finger Lakes?

Working alongside another grower, Charles Fournier, Frank was determined to get these noble grapes past the winter months while working as the Director of Vineyards Research for Gold Seal winery in Geneva, New York.  Trying many different varieties and techniques through trial and error, he saw Riesling as the ideal Finger Lakes wine, sharing many similarities in terms of climate with Germany and Austria.  The real problem was poor growing techniques throughout the region, which he intended to fix.  His grandson Fred Frank states:

“Today, all 50 states now have wineries and a lot of that knowledge started with Dr. Frank introducing the European wine grapes to the East Coast. He was very giving with his knowledge. He wanted the industry to prosper. Many of the early neighboring states growing vinifera owe their start to Dr. Frank and his guidance and knowledge.”

Starting his own winery in 1962, which still exists to this day, Konstantin Frank had proved all the naysayers wrong.  Arriving in America with little money and speaking hardly any English, he was able to transform both the Finger Lakes and vineyards across the country.  Today, his pioneering spirit can be seen in the snows of Minnesota and Quebec to the southern states plagued by Pierce’s Disease.  Winemakers who thrive on adversity and challenge, growing grapes under less than ideal conditions are proudly carrying on his legacy of defying the odds.

Sources:

Asimov, Eric. (2011, Oct 11). From the Finger Lakes, Seriously Good Wines. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://nytimes.com.
Barnes, Christopher. (2014, July 6). Dr. Konstantin Frank, The Innovative Finger Lakes Winery. Grape Collective. Retrieved from http://grapecollective.com
Dawson, Evan. Summer in a Glass: The Coming of Age of Winemaking in the Finger Lakes. New York: Sterling Epicure, 2012.


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Ask Sid: Alternatives to Chablis?

June 3rd, 2015 by Joseph Temple
Ask your question here The International Wine & Food Society

Chablis alternatives too expensive

Question: I like the classic pairing of Chablis with oysters and other fresh seafood but notice the prices are rising. Would you please suggest a cheaper alternative?

Answer: Yes the consumer now is recognizing the distinct terroir and fresh minerality of Chablis which is increasing the demand while crop levels have been reduced by difficult weather the last few vintages. Lots of other fresh clean unoaked whites from all corners of the world that will be a good alternative. Okanagan Crush Pad (@OKCrushPad) in the Okanagan are making some lower alcohol dry ones to seek out and experience. There is growing interest in Muscadet from the western end of the Loire Valley  around Nantes. Made from the Melon de Bourgogne grape these wines are much improved in quality many with extended time spent of the lees for extra texture and complexity.  Muscadet has vibrant acidity with citrus, apple, almost salty notes that will pair well with seafood. The prices still are undervalued. Try one.


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The top 3 wine trends of the 90s

May 29th, 2015 by Joseph Temple

The top 3 wine trends of the 1990s

By Joseph Temple

There was such a great response for the blog entry titled Looking back at 5 wine trends from the 1980s posted earlier this month.  Thanks for all the positive feedback about this slice of 80s nostalgia!  So, let’s fast forward into the next decade that gave us Monica Lewinsky, the O.J. Simpson trial and a tech boom that led to unprecedented economic prosperity.

According to Matt Kramer in his book Making Sense of Wine, “The 1990s were the most transforming ten-year span in the history of fine wine.  Everything essential to fine wine—wine grower ambition, a passionate and informed audience and abundant money—coalesced.”  But how did this decade differ and evolve from the one before, which was all about Chardonnay, wine coolers and Beaujolais Nouveau?  Have a look below to see three ways the 90s changed our wine drinking habits.  Cheers.


Wine becomes healthy to drink in the 1990s

On November 17th, 1991, the television program 60 Minutes aired a segment about something called the ‘French Paradox.’  Despite Americans exercising more regularly and eating fewer fatty foods than their counterparts in France, the latter reported far less cases of heart disease.  The only answer to this paradox was red wine, which if consumed in moderation could actually be healthy for you.  It was a clear break from the 1980s where some individuals had lumped wine in with marijuana as a potential “gateway drug.”

Providing an assist to the 60 Minutes piece was an endorsement from the highest office in the land.  Appearing on MTV in 1993, newly elected President Bill Clinton told the interviewer: “if you use it in moderation, there’s no evidence that it causes harm.  And there’s some evidence that wine, for example, is good for your heart if you use it in moderation.”  The idea that a daily glass was good for your health had clearly entered the mainstream as sales of red wine grew by more than 125 percent from 1991 to 2005.
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Merlot explodes in popularity during the 90s
By Dianne Patrizzi [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

As more and more Americans switched over to red wines during the 1990s, Merlot emerged as the grape of choice for many oenophiles.  Analyzing its popularity, one sommelier writes, “First, it’s easy to pronounce—and, laugh as you may, that’s a big deal.  Second, Merlot is often rounder, plumier, more fruit-forward, and plusher in tannins that many of its counterparts, so it makes for easier and, for many wine drinkers, more pleasant drinking.”  By the mid-1990s, the wine had reached its zenith in terms of popularity as Robert Mondavi and others frantically bought surplus bulk Merlot from France to satisfy American demand.

Benefiting the most from this boom was Washington State.  In a book by Paul Gregutt, he recalls, “By the mid-1990s it seemed that Washington merlot was everywhere … Merlot was both trendy and spendy.  National publications that had scorned Washington as the land of cheap riesling were falling all over themselves to honor the state’s reds, especially its merlots, as the most Bordeaux-like in the land.”  Unfortunately for Merlot lovers, the 90s gold rush resulted in a focus on quantity more than quality, cheapening it in the eyes of many.  More devastating however was a certain award-winning motion picture released in 2004 that made the grape lose its cool factor almost overnight.  In fact, to this day, wine geeks are still debating the impact that Sideways had on Merlot and its drop in sales.
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90s tech boom boosts California wine
By Thomas Schanz (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

During the dot-com bubble of the 90s, it seemed that a new millionaire was being minted every day as tech stocks skyrocketed to new heights on Wall Street.  And with most of this innovation occurring in California, it wasn’t surprising that the thunderous tide of Silicon Valley lifted a lot of boats throughout the Golden State.  The number of wineries had more than doubled from 807 in 1990 to 1,950 by the end of the decade according to George Taber.  Of course, the rise of the Internet and the phenomenal growth in California vineyards were not mutually exclusive either.  Taber writes, “Some executives were making fortunes at start-up companies in Silicon Valley, not far from Napa Valley.  Those people admired the sophistication that wine represented … Rich people wanted to buy into that by owning a winery.”  Writer James Conway concurred, stating that “a personal wine label for the status conscious had become the twenty-first century equivalent of a coat of arms.”

Sources:

Goldstein, Evan and Esersky, Joyce. Perfect Pairings: A Master Sommelier’s Practical Advice for Partnering Wine with Food. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006.
Gregutt, Paul. Washington Wines and Wineries: The Essential Guide. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010.
Page, Karen and Dornenburg, Andrew. The Food Lover’s Guide to Wine. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2011.
Slinker, Stacy. Idiot’s Guides: Wine. New York: Penguin Group, 2013.
Taber, George. A Toast to Bargain Wines: How Innovators, Iconoclasts, and Winemaking Revolutionaries Are Changing the Way the World Drinks. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011.
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Ask Sid: A cost-friendly alternative to Prosecco?

May 27th, 2015 by Joseph Temple
Ask your question here The International Wine & Food Society

Alternatives to Prosecco

Question: I recently read an article saying that the price of Prosecco is about to go up drastically due to a poor harvest. Can you recommend a cost-friendly alternative to this Italian sparkling wine as summer barbecue season begins?

Answer: I wouldn’t worry too much about the crop shortage or price increases predicted caused by the heavy rains in 2014 as stated by Bisol in that article. Their luxury expensive stony hill Cartizze may be more difficult to find but there are many other competing Prosecco producers out there to supply the light crisp value market which is growing. It is not quite like Grand Cru Chablis where there is a very limited supply every year. Lots of countries now produce well priced fresh bubbles suitable for the BBQ season. I have referred to many of them before including Spanish Cava from Penedes, England (Nyetimber among many), Canada (Benjamin Bridge Nova Scotia; Bub, Bella, Blue Mountain, Cipes, & Steller’s Jay in BC; Trius Rose, Cave Spring, Henry of Pelham, Huff Estate, 13th Street, and Hinterland in Ontario and many more emerging), and from Down Under. At the recent 37th Vancouver International Wine Festival the classy Jansz sparklers from Tasmania were big hits. Check out your wine shop for their latest unique “grower” arrivals.


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