Ask Sid: How is climate change affecting wine and wine growers?

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Question: How is climate change affecting wine and wine growers?

Answer: Big important question with not enough space to fully answer here. Certainly there seems to be more weather extremes in wine growing regions than ever before. California used to be almost perfect with their late October picking in Napa in the early years like those successful 1974. Now a shorter hang time usually is necessitated by the higher temperatures. There are similar issues in other hotter regions including Australia, South Africa, South America etc. Alcohol levels usually go up with riper fruit. Even in cooler Piedmont especially in Barbaresco the best sites were generally considered to be south facing (Montestefano, Montefico) in order to ripen the grapes but now many growers feel the south east or even south west sites (Asili, Rabaja, Ovello) are preferred in hotter vintages. Naturally frozen grapes for ice wine is becoming more difficult to depend on every year with global warming. The 2003 European heat wave affected Bordeaux which now is looking for more heat-resistant vine stocks and are reluctant to replant the Merlot variety on gravelly sites when it is so much better on clay when the weather is hot. Burgundy is suffering with reduced crops from inopportune hail storms in recent years. Everywhere elevation of vineyards (Mendoza in Argentina) and acidity are back in vogue (Chablis) as are formerly cooler regions (Okanagan in Canada, Tasmania in Australia & Bio-Bio in Chile). Good article last year in The Guardian on how climate change will threaten wine production areas suggesting global warming will make it difficult to raise grapes in traditional wine country, but will shift production to other regions: See http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/apr/08/climate-change-wine-production


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Do you think climate change will negatively impact wine growing over the long term?

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Retrospective on 6 Special Chefs by The New Yorker

A look at celebrity chefs
By David Shankbone (Shankbone) [CC BY 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons
By Charles Haynes (Charles Haynes’ flickr account) [CC BY-SA 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons
By David Sifry (Alice Waters at dinner – 9722.jpg) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Celebrity chefs are in your face almost everywhere these days from cookbooks to reality TV shows. Wonderful to look back to the times when chefs really lived the simpler true culinary life. The New Yorker magazine has produced over the years some excellent pieces on the lives of chefs. They have released a “Double Take” collection on October 11, 2014 of six earlier insightful stories on Julia Child “Good Cooking” (1974), Alice Waters “The Millennial Restaurant” (1998), Anthony Bourdain “Don’t Eat Before Reading This” (1999), Mario Batali “The Secret of Excess” (2002), David Chang “Chef on the Edge” (2008), and Grant Achatz “A Man of Taste” (2008). You can read these and enjoy them here.

Do you have a chef story? Do you have a preferred chef?


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10 Halloween Candy & Wine Pairings

Halloween Candy and Wine
By Joseph Temple

Next Friday is Halloween!  And if you’re handing out candy to all the trick or treaters knocking on your door, you might want to consider putting aside some of your sugary stash for later.  That’s because we’ve concocted ten wine pairings in our labratory to go with your all-time favorite sweets.  Of course, if you have any additions, post your own graveyard smash in the comments section.  Enjoy!
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candy and wine pairing
By Windell H. Oskay from Sunnyvale, California, United States (Flickr) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

1. Red Licorice and Pinot Noir
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candy and wine pairing
2. Chocolate Wafer Bars and Malbec
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candy and wine pairing
3. Peanut and Caramel with Grenache
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chocolate and wine pairing
4. Coconut Dark Chocolate and Syrah
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candy and wine
5. Caramel Squares and Port
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Chocolate and wine pairing
6. Milk Chocolate and Moscato
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Chocolate wine
7. Peanut Butter Cups and Chardonnay
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champagne and candy
By liz west [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

8. Candy Corn and Sparkling Wine
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skittles and wine
9. Fruity Candies and Riesling
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chocolate raisins and wine
10. Chocolate Covered Raisins and Muscat
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Ask Sid: Pairing craft beer with food

Craft beer pairing
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Question:  What are your thoughts Sid on pairing craft beer with food?

Answer: Just go with the potato chips and beer nuts. Just kidding! Craft beers are a strong market and often the beverage of choice particularly with the younger crowd. Having a beer seems to be a more casual relaxed and less intimidating activity for them than the more formal wine service. Small independent traditional microbreweries continue to explore different experimental brews so there is always a brand new one to try. Craft beers are very diverse from dry to sweet and subtle to assertive – just like wine. Certainly quality craft beers can work very well with different foods – especially where you want to refresh your palate with a gulp. Wine is more suited to sipping and consuming less liquid volume but this is only a generalization. Some craft beers now are nearly the same alcohol as wine and in the same 750 ml size bottle. Be open minded and experiment yourself as to how you enjoy craft beers with food. There is a lot to learn.

Also check out the dinner party fare served with beer at www.brooklynbrewery.com/blog.

I participated with their Brew Master Garrett Oliver in a competition where chefs prepared the same food for both beer and wine pairings. The large audience vote was for beer but many of the dishes were quite hot spicy and BBQ styled. Tomorrow they are matching beer with sustainable seafood including oysters. I already know that I prefer top Chablis with that matching!


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Have you tried craft beers?

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Which Cruise Line Offers the Best Food?

Which cruise line offers the best food?

Which cruise line offers the best food? This question is no longer an oxymoron! Not just the Buffet Table now. Since Norwegian Cruise Lines first started providing specialty restaurant choices at sea this concept really has taken off. Many lines now offer this. Perhaps the most well known one is Oceania with their Executive Culinary Director the renown Chef Jacques Pepin orchestrating top French Cuisine on the Marina. There are lots of others to choose from including Silversea (Relais & Chateau Le Champagne), Celebrity on Silhouette and improved Disney. Even Carnival “Fun Ships” & Royal Caribbean are battling it out for the best burger at sea. Smaller ships like Seabourn and Windstar offer outstanding culinary standards with wonderful service.

All this was brought to mind yesterday when I was invited on a Crystal Cruises preview 3 hour cruise in Vancouver with good friend talented Chef Darren Brown www.chefdbrown.com. He has an impressive resume of Executive Chef positions including Fairmont Pacific Rim and was the personal chef for Merv Griffin on a mega-yacht. He is leading a 12 day Mediterranean Tour on the refurbished Crystal Serenity October 25, 2015 roundtrip from Monte Carlo through Italy and Barcelona with daily market shopping and cooking on board. Should be an interesting amazing culinary adventure I highly recommend. Crystal also are proud of their specialty Silk Road “Nobu” Matsuhisa & Prego Piero Selvaggio Valentino restaurants on board.

What has been your most memorable food experience on a ship? Which Cruise Line would you recommend for high culinary standards?


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