Italian Street Food Festival A Different Cultural Outing

Seeing more streets closed for car free days and especially annual food festivals. Really a good idea bringing the community closer together. Some interesting ones in Vancouver including the popular Greek Day on Broadway Street coming up again on June 23. They know how to have fun. However, by far the most massive in Vancouver is free Italian Day on The Drive (Commercial Drive) just held on Sunday June 9 for their 10th year with hundreds of thousand mashed onto a lively closed off 14 street block promenade – only really crowded. What a transformation of The Drive. It is a special cultural street festival celebrating everything Italian with prominent green, red & white decorations plus balloons with live music and fashion, so many food items, patios, food trucks etc. Even a choice of Italian wines served in a closed off side street area. Lots of pizza including portable wood burning ovens, pastas, pastries (including cannoli), donuts, and of course gelato. Three of my top favs this year were grilled octopus, samples of aged Parmigiano Reggiano and especially grilled fresh sardines – best in town! Lots of kids enjoying special activities, bocce ball, and a unique vibe throughout the region. Fun outing with a real taste of Italy.

What street closure that includes a food fair is the most popular one in your city?


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Ask Sid: What is it called when a person is afraid of wine?

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what is a person called who is afraid of wine?

Question: What is is it called when a person is afraid of wine?

Answer: Never met anyone who was actually afraid of wine in the same way they might be with say snakes (called Ophidiophobia or Snakephobia). However know people who worry about having an adverse reaction to drinking wine because of an allergy to sulphites (or sulfites). Also those who have quite a strong passionate dislike in general for all wines. I guess this would really amount to almost a fear of wine. This condition as you might suspect is naturally called OENOPHOBIA.


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Search Out Vintage Wines Ending in 9 – Like An Outstanding 80 Year Old 1939 Rose Muscat!

One of the intriguing fun aspects of wine study is to search out and try wine anniversaries by the decade in 10 year periods from the current year. An opportunity as well to try some older vintages. Last year had its memorable moments finding some amazing choice bottles that included treasures from 2008 (vibrant white Burgundy & Chablis), 1998 (Bordeaux – especially merlot & Right Bank), 1988 (last true classic red Bordeaux old style plus fresh lively Sauternes), 1978 (solid red Burgundy year), 1968 (some killer pioneer California Cabs from Napa – like BV Georges de Latour, Heitz & Mayacamas), 1958 (more difficult but some fine Spanish wines like Marquis de Riscal Rioja) and older ones from 1948 (super Vintage Ports -Taylor, Fonseca, and Graham) & 1928 (long ageing year highlighted by Chateau Palmer). Already a buzz in the air from friends searching out that magical “0” bottle to try next year when 2020 arrives. Start your own bottle hunt now! Will be lots of fine wines to look back at by the decades and see how they are developing including 2010 (killer Barolo year for ageing to check out at 10), 2000 (double 00 very specially unique), 1990 (some solid consistent wines at 30 from many regions), 1980 (maybe can skip this year), 1970 (some well stored Bordeaux at 50 will still be hitting it out of the park like Chateau Lynch Bages), The rest of the decades were less exciting but but if you can avoid fraudulent bottles that 1900 has a remarkable true Chateau Margaux.

What should you drink in this year 2019? Your scribe has experienced already some delightful libations with the year not yet half gone. 2009 generally are excellent earlier approachable at 10 because of the hotter riper softer style in many regions. Bordeaux has many 100 pointers – with an admirable warm spot for that amazing 2009 Chateau Haut-Bailly from Veronique Sanders and her team. Several excellent bottles from Burgundy including underrated white Meursault Perrieres Bouchard Pere & big still primary intense red Savigny-Les-Beaune Dominodes Pavelot. 1999 Bordeaux lighter and charming now like reasonably priced Chateau d’Armailhac while red Burgundy really an incredible vintage across the board! 1989 underated for elegant red Burgundy at 30 – remarkable Chambolle-Musigny Les Amoureuses J. Drouhin singing beautifully!

1979 has some excellent if well stored or recently released balanced complex Champagnes – splurge for the Krug Vintage. 1969 is less consistent most places and needs careful choices to find something alive at 50 but 1959, 1949, and 1929 still have some very complex aged beauties – like 59 Lafite or 49 La Mission Haut-Brion. However this past week your scribe was in wine heaven tasting a fresh lively very complex dessert wine at 80 years old from The Crimea matched with an appropriate rhubarb & fresh BC strawberry crumble cake. The wine was a special Auction item from Sotheby’s The Massandra Collection of 1939 Rose Muscat from the Gurzuf vineyard clocking in at a high 274 grams per litre of residual sugar but balanced by total acidity of 7.5 showing outstanding complexity. My best 10 year decade wine so far in 2019 and expect it will be hard to top. Joseph Temple wrote on March 7, 2014 about “A Sober Ukraine” and your scribe commented about another bottle of this wine and a 1936 Cabernet Sauvignon White Port. However, this last bottle was the best one yet and very hard to open. The outside of the bottle was covered by moldy deposits from long cellar ageing and then covered by tight shrink wrap with Sotheby’s label stuck on plus a very hard crusted capsule and difficult cork that a Durand opener was successful in pulling out intact. Vintage port-like heavy sediment but colour an enchanting dark Rose look but much more too. See the attached article on this treasure and if you see one or are able to seek one out it is highly recommended. Look for any of these old dessert wines from The Crimea and especially Massandra for a rare treat indeed.

What wine vintage bottle ending in 9 will be your favourite this year?

Russia Takes Credit for Crimean Winery’s International Awards

Ukraine says Crimea vintage wine sale at Massandra illegal

Crimea Massandra winery makes first exports since sanctions


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Ask Sid: Do you know the Pugnitello grape?

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pugnitello grape wine

Question: Do you know the Pugnitello grape?

Answer: Yes an increasingly popular old Tuscan authoctonous (or indigenous) grape variety with small tight bunches that resemble a fist (“pugno”). Tried a 100% rich full one named Leopoldo from Fattoria Santa Vittoria but see it more as contributing to a blend with Sangiovese. Tasted this month from Rocca Di Montegrossi  their organic 2013 Gran Selezione Vigneto San Marcellino with 7% Pugnitello “smoothing out” the 93% Sangiovese in this Chianti Classico DOCG.

A grape worth investigating.


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Perfect 100 Point Wine Scores Should Be Taken With A Grain of Salt!

100 point wine checkmate artisanal winery perfect score

Quite a buzz generated throughout the wine community in early 2019 by a table wine from the Okanagan Valley achieving a perfect 100 point score.

Congrats to CheckMate Little Pawn Chardonnay 2015 for their single vineyard beauty in achieving this highest possible score from experienced John Schreiner in his Blog posting (johnschreiner.blogspot.com) of February 22 titled “CheckMate wines: are they worth it?” The review ends with the comment “It is impossible to find anything negative about this wine. 100” This obviously poses the question whether that is really the right assessment test or not? These days with the improved refined procedures utilized in both the vineyard and the winery there are literally thousands of wines from around the world presently available in the marketplace very well made that have nothing negative about them. Do they all deserve a score of 100? We all agree that they don’t! Some of us feel that the perfect score of 100 should be unattainable always continuing to search for that perfect nirvana bottle in the future. You must remember that this is not an arithmetic objective score but a purely subjective one. Surely to obtain 100 or even to approach that level requires something very exceptional and exciting of an ethereal complex nature shown by the wine. There are lots of those wines that have been scored in the high nineties.

The ironic part is that 2015 Little Pawn chardonnay is more than nothing “negative” but outstanding and admired by yours truly. It should have a score somewhere in the nineties. In fact have been trying to showcase the quality of Checkmate chardonnays to some of the top sommeliers in Paris. In February 2017 we showed their first vintage 2013s at Le Gabriel La Reserve & Epicure at Le Bristol against some Lafon & Domaine Roulot Premier Cru Meursaults. Checkmate were all good but softer and less balanced than these comparable white Burgundies. How would they stack up against Grand Cru of Corton-Charlemagne & the Montrachets? 2014 and more recent vintages of Checkmate are very much improved and have tightened up considerably with a resting period to come together in stainless tanks before bottling. Excellent chardonnay but 100? Take the score with a grain of salt please. Some wines that are scored 100 initially don’t remain there. Celebrated critic Robert M. Parker gave 1975 red Chateau La Mission Haut Brion a perfect 100 out of the gate as “one of the very greatest young wines I have ever tasted.” Later updates lowered it to 99 & 98 because “it seems certain that the enormous tannins of this wine are never going to be totally assimilated.” Wine is a living thing forever evolving in the bottle. Will this chardonnay warrant 100 when you taste it or will it have changed for better (no room to give it a higher score) or worse? Your scribe has been most fortunate to experience many if not most of the very best wine treasures ever produced. Not many of them warrant 100. IMHO 100 needs to be used more sparingly. We are becoming more and more concerned with what we call the “score creep” of ever higher scores being pushed by both the wine scorer and the winery for their increased recognition on social media. Be careful! Oh well maybe 1961 Chateau Palmer deserves 99.

Have you tasted a wine that merits a score of 100 in your opinion?


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