Caviar

Caviar

Treated recently to lots of those salt cured fish eggs – a delicacy called caviar. Historically it was caught wild with the roe being taken from sturgeons by the Persians, the Russians, the Iranians and later the Americans. Overfishing brought scarcity and as an endangered species a substantial increase in prices. Remember the bigger eggs “ocean taste” Beluga, the nutty Osetra with the yellow gold oil, and the smaller stronger tasting Sevruga. Today most of the caviar is domestic from sustainable farm raised sturgeon. The American west coast has emerged with the new centre being those Sacramento Valley aquaculture farms (including Sterling & Tsar Nicoulai) and development by Seattle Caviar, and Northern Divine in BC Canada (www.northerndivine.com). Tried the latter one again this weekend and impressed as their best showing ever with more malosol lightly salted individual eggs explosive crunch. The leader Petrossian used to be 100% wild using imports but now is 100% sustainable producing white sturgeon caviar in the USA. Eggs are graded for size, colour, uniformity, freshness, shininess, and fragrance. Still quality control can be an issue. I have opened tins that had different batches of varying colour and size. I sometimes long for the good old days spent with long time IWFS member Gerald M. Stein who became president in 1969 of Iron Gate Products quality caviar importers and who produced in 1981 that wonderful book Caviar! Caviar! Caviar!. Gerry became President of the New York Branch of IWFS in 1979 and his car sported the NY licence plate “CAVIAR-1”. I am grateful to him for teaching me so much about caviar including several tasting seminars he brilliantly conducted at The Culinary Institute of America College in Hyde Park, NY.  Enjoy his comment “Don’t just serve caviar; Present it!”. Now there are many other specific fish caviars out there including popular salmon caviar, whitefish caviar, flying fish caviar, trout caviar etc. Caveat Emptor still applies.


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Vins du Québec: A look at French Canada’s emerging wine industry

Quebec wine

By Joseph Temple

Ever wonder why no commercial wineries existed in Québec until 1980?  After all, the French are known for wine.

The most obvious answer is the terrain where temperatures are known to drop down to -13º Fahrenheit (-25º Celsius) on a regular basis.   Frigid winters combined with humid summers that shorten the growing season on both ends make this province one of the least desirable places to harvest a vineyard.  And yet over the past 30+ years, an entire generation of winemakers has met this daunting challenge head on – defying the naysayers by slowly improving the quality of their vintages through what can only be described as a labor of love.

Welcome to La Belle Province, now home to nearly 100 wineries that generate approximately $28 million dollars in annual sales.  Although vineyards are scattered throughout Québec, the majority of activity takes place south of Montréal near the U.S. border.  Located on opposite sides of a large glacial plain are Estrie (Eastern Townships) and Montérégie, two regions that have become ground zero in the battle against Mother Nature.

“You’ve got to be a bit crazy to do this,” said one vintner to Canada’s Financial Post newspaper earlier this year.  That’s because vitis vinifera varieties that are popular with consumers don’t stand a chance against Jack Frost.  In order to make it past the frigid Québécois winter, winemakers must plant hybrid grapes such as Seyval Blanc or the frost-resistant Sainte-Croix.  But even these varieties require special care, which is resulting in numerous innovations by these modern-day pioneers.

Quebec wine regions

One effective yet labor intensive way of fighting the chill is a technique known as “hilling.”  Following the harvest, vines are cut down and earth is placed over the stump, giving them an added coat of protection against the brutal winter.  Additionally, other unorthodox methods have included installing geothermal systems to heat the soil, sheltering vines with greenhouses or planting your harvest on a sheltered slope.  Being such a relatively new and weather intensive endeavor, the rule book hasn’t been thrown out because there simply is no rule book.

What does the future hold for this province?  Perhaps with the right amount of research and development, Québec could parallel the breakthroughs happening in the similar subzero state of Minnesota.  Working with U of M, vintners have developed a number of grape varieties that are able to withstand the harsh conditions synonymous with the North Star State.  And with the same degree of government support that Ontario winemakers received in the late 1980s, Québec could easily create a niche market for adventurous Millennials eager to explore a diverse selection of wines.

Sources:

Aspler, Tony & Leslie, Barbara. Canadian Wine for Dummies. Mississauga: John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd., 2000.
Van Praet, Nicolas. (2014, August 15). Small and crafty, Quebec’s band of merry winemakers awaits breakout moment. Financial Post. Retrieved from http://business.financialpost.com


Since 1963, the International Wine & Food Society has had a presence in the province of Québec with a branch located in the city of Montréal.


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Ask Sid: Best Glass For Sparkling Wine?

Best glass for serving champagne?

Question: What is the best wine glass shape for serving sparkling white?

Answer: Historically sparkling wines were served in lots of different shaped glasses including the famous Marie Antoinette shallow broad-bowled coupe. The occasion usually was festive so often fancy cut glass – even coloured – was used as part of the show. Eventually the shape evolved to better capture the bubble stream and slow the dissipation. This is the tall narrow flute in such common use today. However some of us want less focus on the fizz and more on the complex aromatics. I prefer a white wine glass in the shape of a tulip with a very thin lip for most bubbles including all Champagne. This style is becoming increasing popular and there are lots of excellent specialty ones out there now in the marketplace to check out. However the best glass answer has almost gone full circle again from designer saucers back in vogue for some and others choosing a large bowled pinot noir glass to allow more room for swirling and release of the bouquet. There is no right single answer. Experiment and find the glass you like.


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1982 Château Cheval Blanc

1982 Château Cheval Blanc
By Benjamin Zingg, Switzerland (Own work) [CC BY-SA 2.5], via Wikimedia Commons

Hope this week you will let me reflect on some personal wine indulgence. I am each week so fortunate to be able to enjoy some of the world’s best wines. This last one was astonishing with a treasure chest including rich 76 Dom Perignon, mags young 99 Salon, exquisite pure 91 Chablis Les Clos Raveneau, Coche Dury Corton Charlemagnes young 11, readier 96, and still lemony 99, full 02 Montrachet Bouchard Pere in Jeroboam, comparison of 93 Rousseau Clos St Jacques, Clos de Beze, and best Le Chambertin, Roumier Bonnes Mares 02, energetic 99, and 95, DRC 91s Echezeaux, delicious Oriental spice Richebourg, and La Tache, unique 29 Massandra White Muscat, mature 29 d’Yquem, and 48 Taylor Vintage Port.

Many well celebrated 82 Bordeaux where well stored are really special now at 30+ years. In Vancouver a vertical of Cheval Blanc back to 1962 showed 1982 as a complete complex beauty closely followed by a great emerging 1990. In Boston 2 flights of top properties and years included 83 Palmer Mag, 82 Margaux in Jeroboam, 82 La Mission Haut Brion in Imperiale, 85 Lafleur Mag, 85 Petrus Double Mag, and 82 Cheval Blanc in Jeroboam. For me in spite of a usual bias for Left Bank cabs the superb texture of “luxury cashmere” coined by Pierre Lurton and displayed by Cheval was other worldly!

Hail to 1982 Château Cheval Blanc a well deserved and proven super star of a legendary vintage!


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7 interesting facts about the history of California wine

California wine history
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By Joseph Temple

As the world’s fourth largest producer of wine, California’s vineyards now generate over 120 billion dollars annually and are responsible for three out of every five bottles purchased by Americans.  Internationally, 47.2 million cases were exported to 125 countries in 2012 – up 51% from a decade before.  Never has the Golden State been more of a viticultural superpower than it is today.

But if you’ve studied the region’s history, you know that there have been many trials and tribulations on the path to prosperity.  So for this week, have a look back at seven decisive turning points that helped create the wines of California that we enjoy today.
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#1: A Second Gold Rush
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Whether it was the early studio moguls that created Hollywood or Okies escaping the Dust Bowl during the Great Depression, California has historically served as a magnet for people looking to create a better life financially.  And during the mid-19th century, thousands of Americans migrated west when word spread that there was gold to be found.  Almost overnight, the population of San Francisco exploded as the first “forty-niners” arrived in 1849 with hopes of striking it rich.  However, when it all ended in 1855, the only ones making any money were the people selling shovels.

Unable to prosper in the gold fields of Northern California, many migrants turned to another potential source of revenue – the terroir of Napa and Sonoma.  Capitalizing on the region’s fertile soil and ideal climate, many traded in their pans for a new life as winemakers.  Some of these famous names included Charles Krug, Jacob & Frederick Beringer and Agoston Haraszthy who advocated tirelessly for the blending of European grapes with native rootstocks.
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#2: San Francisco, wine mecca
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Today, it might seem strange to think of foggy San Francisco as the wine capital of America.  But at the beginning of the twentieth century, with its wealthy wine merchants and close proximity to both rail lines and the Pacific Ocean, “The Paris of the West” controlled the production and distribution of nearly all Golden State wines.  Home to the powerful California Wine Association (CWA), its headquarters stored millions of bottles for shipment across the entire United States.

But in 1906 when a catastrophic 7.8-magnitude earthquake left the city in ruins, the wine industry learned a painful lesson on the dangers of centralization.  With nearly 10,000,000 unsalvageable gallons flowing through the streets of San Francisco, a major restructuring occurred resulting in bottles being stored more closely to the vineyards, creating what we now know as California wine country.
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California wine history
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Having almost ninety thousand acres dedicated to grape growing by 1920, Sacramento lawmakers understood how vital the industry was for the state’s economy.  It was no surprise then that Californians defeated four separate ballot initiatives to enact statewide prohibition prior to the Volstead Act.  With nearly seventy-five million dollars a year at stake and large Irish and Italian populations in San Francisco that were passionate about wine, those favoring temperance were never able to achieve much success in the Golden State – that is until the forces from Washington DC stepped in.
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California wine prohibition history
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Looking at back the many flaws of prohibition, one specific loophole that made millionaires overnight was a provision allowing each household to produce two hundred gallons of fermented fruit juice per year.  Suddenly, thirsty Americans everywhere became amateur winemakers eager to reap in huge profits by selling their surplus around the neighborhood.  All they needed now was a steady supply of grapes.

“Grapes are so valuable this year that they are being stolen,” wrote the St. Helena Star.  A new kind of gold rush had started in California as one acre of vineyard land shot up from $100 to $500 by 1921.  A year before Prohibition, 9,300 carloads of grapes traveled from California to New York.  By 1928, that figure had more than tripled.
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Alicante Bouschet grapes
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Unfortunately for the profiteers, Zinfandel and Chardonnay grapes didn’t travel well in freight cars across the country.  But with prices going through the roof, a new source that could maximize value was desperately needed.  And that source went by the name Alicante Bouschet, a grape that made for inferior wine with one novelist ranking it somewhere below the gooseberry.  However, it had numerous advantages that made it perfect for the lucrative east coast markets.

For starters, unlike other varietals, Alicante grew in abundance. And its thick, durable skin guaranteed that it could withstand the long train ride east.  On top of that, its dark red texture – even after three pressings and numerous dilutions made it look deceptively decent to all the novice winemakers and drinkers sprouting up across the country.

So throughout California, Alicante became the new fool’s gold as growers and traders cashed in on this new miracle grape.  Quantity trumped quality as generations of experienced vintners looked on in disgust as their craft was being tarnished for the almighty dollar.
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California wine history
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Prohibition may have ended in 1933 but the thirteen year absence of experienced winemakers cultivating the land would leave a terrible impact across the state.  And as the Alicante bubble burst, California’s reputation as a promising wine region went up in smoke.  During the postwar period, the state became infamous for producing cheap fortified blends that were the preferred choice of winos looking for nothing more than a quick buzz. 

How bad did it get?  By 1964, the tonnage of Chardonnay grapes in California was so miniscule that the state’s Agricultural Service didn’t even bother tracking it.  That’s because for many years, high-alcohol jug wines were the staple of an industry that had hit rock bottom.
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#7: rebuilding
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In beginning to turn the corner, the University of California at Davis started researching the terroir throughout the state in order to determine the best grapes to plant.  The report, issued in 1944 concluded that Napa Valley, which shared a similar temperature to Bordeaux, was the ideal spot to grow Cabernet Sauvignon while Sonoma should focus on Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.  Titled “Composition and Quality of Musts and Wines of California Grapes,” this study would lay the groundwork for a wine making renaissance in the Golden State.

Putting this document into action, the early 1960s saw a whole new generation of amateur winemakers arrive with the goal of producing award winning vintages.  And within a decade, all their hard work would pay off as the quality improved dramatically.  The proof came in 1976 when California defeated France at a blind tasting held in Paris, an event that was later the subject in the 2008 motion picture “Bottle Shock.” 

 


With branches in Los Angeles, Laguna Beach, Chula Vista, La Jolla & Pasadena, the International Wine & Food Society has a strong presence across California.


Sources:

MacNeil, Karen. The Wine Bible. New York: Workman Publishing Company, 2000.
Okrent, Daniel. Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition. New York: Scribner, 2011.
Taber, George. Judgement of Paris: California vs. France and the historic 1976 Paris tasting that revolutionized wine. New York: Scribner, 2005.

California Digital Newspaper Collection.
Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Online Catalog.
Online Archive of California.
Florida Memory Project.


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