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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

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“There is a Palace”: Revisiting the Mateus Rosé phenomenon

November 18th, 2016 by Joseph Temple

Mateus Rose cultural impact wine
By CTHOE (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons

By Joseph Temple

Flipping through the pages of the October 10th, 1969 edition of Life magazine, one black and white advertisement in particular seems to stand out. No, it isn’t the one for Chevy’s new pickup truck or the one explaining the many advantages of nuclear power; this ad features an odd canteen-shaped wine bottle from the land of Salazar. “There is a palace. Its name is Mateus,” says the text. “A wine aptly named after the palace by the valley. Mateus. It is a rosé wine.”

And so began one of the most popular trends of the 1970s.

Consumed by a countless number of Americans (including many celebrities and rock stars), Mateus Rosé, along with fondue parties and pasta primavera ended up becoming synonymous with this tumultuous decade. While today it may be distinctly unfashionable to be seen drinking it, one cannot stress just how popular this product once was, not only with wine drinkers but with a huge crossover market that included both beer and soda drinkers. Separating themselves from the herd, its unique bottle design was based on a Portuguese water flask used by soldiers during the Great War—a design that was instrumental in a successful marketing campaign launched by owner Fernanco Van Zeller Guedes. Wine writers Michael Bywater and Kathleen Burk state, “Mateus Rosé achieved an almost unheard-of brand recognition … the bottle … was simultaneously unlike any other mass market wine bottle.”

Ironically, while we tend to associate Mateus Rosé with the Me Decade, it actually got its start way back in 1942, during the height of the Second World War. With German U-Boats preventing neutral Portugal from selling wine to its traditional European clientele, vintners were forced to look elsewhere. Targeting the former Portuguese colony of Brazil, the Sociedade Comercial dos Grandes Vinhos de Mesa de Portugal founded by Guedes focused on harvesting Vinho Verde grapes that were popular in that country. Using varietals such as Baga, Tinta Barroca and Rufete, Mateus looked to French winemakers to help them make a fizzy pink wine that would hopefully be the toast of Rio de Janeiro. Little did they know that less than thirty years later, people from around the world would be lining up to drink their wine.

Realizing the enormous power of image, advertisements, which showed an opulent baroque estate called Palacio de Mateus on the label, repeated the claim that “since it comes from the valley of the Palace of Mateus, it may honestly be called fantastic.” In reality, the wine was never made there; its headquarters was in a rundown co-operative north of the Douro River. And the famous building printed on hundreds of millions of labels wasn’t even a palace. According to Portuguese law, for it to be given that distinction, royalty would have had to spend a night there. Then again, considering that it’s one of Portugal’s most famous buildings thanks to this wine, maybe it should be designated a palace.

So how did the Mateus estate end up on a bottle of rose? In Oz Clarke’s The History of Wine in 100 Bottles, Guedes offered the owners a 50 cent royalty on every bottle sold or a lump sum paid up front in exchange for the use of its likeness. Taking the single down payment instead, it is a decision that will go down as one of the greatest blunders in the history of both wine and business. Billions of dollars later, “It’s still not a subject to be brought up in conversation,” if you ever visit, writes Clarke.

Sources:

Bywater, Michael & Burk, Kathleen. Is This Bottle Corked?: The Secret Life of Wine. New York: Harmony Books, 2008.
Clarke, Oz. The History of Wine in 100 Bottles: From Bacchus to Bordeaux and Beyond. London: Pavilion Books, 2015.
Fisher, John & Brown, Jules. The Rough Guide to Portugal. New York: Penguin Books, 2010.


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Ask Sid: Badacsony?

November 16th, 2016 by Joseph Temple
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Badacsony wine region hungary
By János Korom Dr. from Wien, Austria (Badacsony 111) [CC BY-SA 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Question: Visited Hungary this summer and was drinking a light white wine called Badacsony. Would appreciate your thoughts on it.

Answer: Not much information given to go on. However Badacsony is a wine growing region near Lake Balaton in Hungary. There are quite a few different grape varieties grown there including almond softer focused Rizling (Riesling), open Muscat Ottonel, the unique spicy aromatic Keknyelu, and my favourite one Szurkebarat (Pinot Gris). Interesting to compare their easy rounder style pinot gris with other examples of this popular grape from around the world.


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Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir Vertical Dundee Hills Oregon

November 14th, 2016 by Sid Cross

Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir Vertical Dundee Hills Oregon
Image courtesy: sokolblosser.com

Last week at Whistler your scribe was participating in both the first Wine Summit followed by the 20th Cornucopia (www.whistlercornucopia.com). Many interesting events celebrating food & drink reported on Twitter @CornucopiaWine including a posting by @jamiegoode “What’s the future for BC wine? Specialism or diversity? Thought provoking Debate: “What should British Columbia’s identity be as a wine region?” is reported at www.wineanorak.com.

Another special treat there was chairing a vertical of SokolBlosser.com Dundee Hills pinot noirs with current winemaker (since 2012 – 4th one since 1977 first vintage) Alex Sokol Blosser and VP Consumer Sales Michael Kelly Brown. From an initial 5 acre prune orchard in 1971 converted to vines it has grown to 85 acres as the 6th largest wine producer in Oregon. The vineyard now has 15 distinct blocks of which 10 are pinot noir (Watershed, Old Vineyard, Big Tree, Goosepen, Blackberry, 12-Row, Orchard, Peach Tree, Walnut, and Concert) with different clone combinations (from 115, 667, 777, Pommard UCD4, Wadenswil, 12- Row, and Gamay Beaujolais type). The soils are rich red volcanic Jory soil with good drainage in the rain shadow of the Coast Range mountains and certified organic in 2005. Alex passed around the audience his “pet rock” sample of a volcanic rock from the vineyard. The wines have 100% French oak (“a fine sandpaper for finishing the wine”) for 16 months every vintage and were naturally made unfiltered up until 2012 when changed to a very light filtration. Alex used the light on his mobile phone under the wine glass to show the difference in the clarity of colour from 2012 onwards.

The wines showed a consistent terroir with bright expressive earthy rustic subtle aromas ranging from riper warm vintages of black cherry and raspberry to cooler years of blueberry and cranberries with more acidity. Not as sweet fruit forwardly as other regions say like California or Central Otago but showing admirable balance, finesse more subdued food friendly styling. Like the vintage differences they show. Some of my brief comments on the wines:

2007: 14.5 alcohol. Cooler year. Lighter maturing colour. Surprisingly good for an unheralded vintage showing fragility of drying fruit but with acidity and complex structured pretty flavours on a current drinking plateau – especially with food.

2008: 14 alcohol. Warm year picked 2nd week of October with minimal rain. Shows darker tones with rich vivid fully flavoured attractive styling. Easy to like as the riper dark fruits are so prominent.

2009: 14 alcohol. Warm year. Supple and easier drinking both on release and now showing bolder baking spices. Ready.

2010: 13.5 alcohol. Cooler Year but has depth and a remarkable balance of fruit with wonderful structure. Excellent wine and no rush to drink this up. Really like it.

2011: 12.5 alcohol. Cool year results in light colour and low alcohol. Some delicacy but has enough fruit to be tantalizingly seductive. Acid is working to the best advantage. This would show perfectly matched with a salmon dish.

2012: 14.5 alcohol. Warm perfect ideal growing conditions and harvest without rain has resulted in a deep generous almost dried raisin darker fruits pinot noir that impresses. Everyone in Oregon should have made good wine in 2012 from perfect grapes. Well done.

2013: 13.5 alcohol. Warm summer with very ripe grapes but heavy rains at harvest resulted in an all hands on need for picking and much sorting. The wine is much better than I had expected from this vintage and though lighter than 12 is a lovely example of the Dundee Hills style.

2014: Wine samples got lost in shipment but it was a large production yield requiring crop drop and has resulted in better balanced wine with depth than initially was predicted. 2015 is similar with the higher yields but 2016 which was just picked has lower yields of less than 2 1/2 tons per acre.

Alex is a big supporter of IWFS and has been doing an outstanding job as our Oregon wine consultant helping us with valuable input for the annual Vintage Card. Many thanks.


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Inspiration for the Thanksgiving table

November 11th, 2016 by Joseph Temple

pumpkin and squash recipes for thanksgiving

By Joseph Temple

With Thanksgiving just around the corner, here are 21 pumpkin and squash recipe ideas to compliment your turkey during the holiday season!


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1. Baked Squash Appetizer

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2. Sriracha Pumpkin & Squash Soup

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3. Roasted Garlic Baby Pumpkin

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4. Pumpkin and Goat Cheese Risotto

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5. Grandma’s Best Pumpkin Pie

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6. Pumpkin & Candied Almond Cake

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7. Spicy pumpkin and shrimp with noodles

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8. Squash and spinach salad with blue cheese

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9. Wholesome Pumpkin Muffins

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10. Squash and plum tofu

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11. Pumpkin and orange cake
with cream cheese icing

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12. Pumpkin bread

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13. Sage roasted pumpkin

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14. Pumpkin donut cake

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15. Pumpkin and mushroom risotto

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16. Pumpkin Cheesecake

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17. Pumpkin carpaccio

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18. Strawberry breakfast bowl with pumpkin seeds

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19. Zucchini and squash veggie pizza

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20. Stuffed zucchini blossoms

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21. Butternut squash and pomegranate quinoa salad

 


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Ask Sid: What is lanolin?

November 10th, 2016 by Joseph Temple
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Ask Sid: What is lanolin?

Question: What wines are likely to have a smell of lanolin?

Answer: That wine term brings back old memories. The Oxford Dictionary defines lanolin as “a fat found naturally on sheep’s wool”. You don’t hear or read about it being used much lately. It was a favourite wine expression of Michael Broadbent in his early Wine Tasting books by Christie Wine Publications back in the late sixties. He often used it to describe this as the aroma of the Semillon grape in Bordeaux and the Chenin Blanc of Coteaux du Layon in the Anjou of the Loire. Interesting that both grapes deepen with a rich honeyed texture with some bottle age.


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