Ask Sid: When is it too late to open that bottle of wine?

wine vinegar
By Taro Taylor from Sydney, Australia (Splash Drip) [CC BY 2.0], via Wikimedia Commons

Question: I was at a friend’s house and saw that he had a bottle of 1998 Pouilly Fuisse Bouchard Pere in his wine console so I decided to take a few pics with my cell phone camera.  Is it still drinkable?  I don’t know what temperature he keeps his house or the humidity levels.  Is there some sort of rule of thumb on when a bottle turns into vinegar?

Answer: I would open this wine as soon as possible regardless of storage. Could still be alive as a softer Chardonnay showing a deeper yellow colour with still some regional aged spicy smoky nut character.  However, could also be an oxidizing or maderizing bottle. Check it out now as it won’t improve. Suggest you maybe have some soft runny mature French cheese like Epoisses or Soumaintrain ready to match with it. Bouchard Pere is a top firm since 1731 with large prime vineyard holdings but this wine uses purchased grapes from the more southerly Maconnais region of Burgundy with the difficult 1998 vintage conditions including hail, frost and even mildew. There is no strict rule of thumb of when a wine turns to vinegar. Dry reds usually last longer than dry whites. Chardonnay grown in the top vineyards proven to provide underlying structure to their wines like Corton Charlemagne & Meursault Perrieres age and develop consistently for the longest period – providing you can avoid the recent curse of premox (premature oxidation)! Hopefully enjoy.

 photo 1(3)  photo 2(3)

Ask Sid Cross about wine and food

Do you have a bottle of wine that you think has turned into vinegar?

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Heirloom Tomatoes

Heirloom Tomatoes

Really like those colourful tomatoes with their healthy heart friendly antioxidant lycopene properties. Lots of varieties out there but at grocery stores for most of the year we see only the new breed of hard flavourless varieties that ship well. Frustration has compelled many of us to now grow our own from seeds in the backyard. This time of year during summer the farmer markets are full of heirloom tomatoes in their many glorious shapes and colours. The small orange Sungold and SunSugar  cherry tomatoes are very sweet and most popular. Green are interesting particularly the Green Zebra with their intense tarter zippy energy. Japanese Black Trifele is dark red and rich. Yellow Brandywine are usually large softer and yellow.  So many varieties to try and mix and match in pursuit of the perfect tomato. My preference still is Black Krim which always seems to be ripe enough – so juicy, sweet, and almost smoky.

Do you seek out heirloom tomatoes? What is your preferred variety?

What's your favorite variety of heirloom tomatoes?

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Wine’s California Comeback: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and its impact on the industry

Wine's California Comeback: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and its impact on the industry.
By Joseph Temple

On Sunday morning, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit the San Francisco Bay Area and the surrounding region, injuring hundreds of people and leaving thousands without water and electricity.  There have thankfully been no deaths due to this natural disaster, but an area hit particularly hard is Napa, home to a $13 billion dollar a year wine industry.  According to one report, 33 buildings have been declared unsafe to enter with another 600 properties experiencing water and sewage problems.  The biggest earthquake to hit the Northern California since 1989, the total economic damage is estimated to be in the billions.

For anyone living in the areas affected by this earthquake, two Red Cross evacuation centers are open to those in need – one at the Crosswalk Community Church in Napa at 2590 First Street and another at the Florence Douglas Center at 333 Amador Street in Vallejo.  For those in the wine industry, you can visit Napaearthquake.com, where numerous individuals have offered their help and assistance.

At the International Wine & Food Society, our best wishes go out to the people of the Golden State.  And if history is any indication, we are confident the region will only emerge stronger from this disaster.


One hundred and eight years ago, the epicenter of California’s wine industry was not in the vineyards of Napa or Sonoma, but in the city of San Francisco. With its close proximity to both railroad lines and shipping routes, the Bay Area became an important hub during a time when merchants were in control of both production and distribution.  Firmly entrenched in the city was the powerful California Wine Association (CWA), which controlled nearly 75% of the market as  “the distinction between winegrower and wine merchant was not sharply drawn.”  According to  historian Thomas Pinney, “their [the CWA’s] produce was sent to central cellars in San Francisco where the wines were stored, blended to a uniform standard, bottled, and then shipped for sale … as a monopoly, or rather, near-monopoly, it belonged to the rapacious business style of the late nineteenth century, and, no doubt, if the full record could be known it would show a long tale of sharp practices and dubious moves.”

However, this dominant organization would be rendered helpless on April 18, 1906, when a 7.8-magnitude earthquake rocked San Francisco to its core. With over 28,000 buildings destroyed, 3,000 deaths and half the city left homeless, it is to this day one of the worst natural disasters in American history.

And while some people tried to save their wine from the destruction, in some cases, it was wine that was saving them.


Silent film documenting the aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
Courtesy: Prelinger Archives

With fires spreading throughout the Bay Area and the water supply shut off due to the intense shaking that ruptured nearly 30,000 city pipes, wine became an important weapon to combat the roaring flames.  Luckily, thousands of recent immigrants who successfully fought against statewide prohibition, had homemade wine operations that proved useful in saving San Francisco from total ruin.  “In those days, many Italian immigrants fermented wine in their basement and there are stories of old-timers getting them out and pouring them on the fire,” declared one resident.

At CWA headquarters, efforts were made to salvage whatever they could of its enormous stockpile.  Using a city-owned fire engine, a million and a half gallons of wine was pumped out from one of their still burning cellars and placed into a barge where it was then distilled into brandy.  Still, the CWA lost approximately 10,000,000 gallons due to the earthquake, while its competitor, the Italian Swiss Colony (a company also located in the area) lost over 12,000,000 gallons and roughly $3,500,000 (over $88,000,000 in today’s dollars) in damages to their building and the equipment inside it.

Wine articles about the earthquake
Newspaper articles reporting on the disaster.
Credit: California Digital Newspaper Collection.

In the aftermath of this devastating disaster, the wine industry learned a painful lesson on the dangers of centralization.  W. Blake Grey of the San Francisco Chronicle writes, “With their headquarters and most of their wine destroyed, wineries moved their operation closer to the grapes, and thus what we now think of as Wine Country was also changed forever.”  Remarkably, after just a few years of restructuring, the California wine industry successfully rebounded from this devastating loss.

Whether an earthquake, phylloxera, numerous droughts, two economic depressions or thirteen painful years of prohibition, the Golden State and its wine have clearly faced numerous challenges over the past century.  Yet after each of these catastrophic events, California fights back, becoming an undisputed leader around the globe for quality wine.  If history is any indication of the resilience of Californians and their wine industry, they are sure to overcome this most recent devastation and maintain their world class designation.

Ask Sid: Toasts?

Toasting

Question: Would you share your top 10 toasts? I could also use one for a rehearsal dinner for my son’s wedding too.

Answer: Not big on memorized rigid toasts. Prefer to personalize something to the actual person or specific occasion. I would suggest you do the same for your son’s wedding. However there are hundreds of proven popular ones on the web that you could use or adapt by just googling wedding toasts. When I practised law I used Shakespeare’s Taming of the Shrew: “And do as adversaries do in law, strive mightily, but eat and drink as friends”. Now older and more philosophical I like Robert Louis Stevenson: “A bottle of good wine, like a good act, shines ever in the retrospect”.

I often finish with a short one word toast in a specific language so my top 10 go to are simple:

1. Cheers  English
2. Chimo  Eskimo
3. A Votre Sante France
4. Prost German
5. Cin Cin (Chin-Chin ) Italy
6. Skol Sweden
7. Kampai Japan
8. Salut (Sah-Lud) Spain
9. Gan Bay China
10. Yass-Ooh Greece

Have you ever given a toast?

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Yeasts and other additives influencing your wine

Yeasts and other additives influencing your wine?
I, Tomas er [GFDL, CC-BY-SA-3.0 or FAL], via Wikimedia Commons

Lots of new information out there recently on what is actually influencing the aromas and flavours in your wine. Used to be just mainly the grape variety, the place where those grapes were grown and the winemaking. No longer. Allegations abound as to which of many possible additives are being used by various wineries. Lack of the ingredient labeling usually found on packaged food is becoming a problem for the wine consumer. Really admire what some wineries like Ridge & Bonny Doon are doing to raise awareness of this problem. Excellent article on August 19, 2014 by John Tilson in the Underground Wine Letter “Caution! What’s In Your Wine?” Yeasts are another important influence on your smell and taste sensations. Benjamin Lewin MW on August 1, 2014 in Decanter presents a thought provoking analysis of “Yeasts: Do You Know What’s Flavouring Your Wine?” Specialized cultured yeasts have been developed to enhance specific aromas and flavours from the grapes. To what extent is debatable because clones and canopy management can also be important factors. However if you “want your chardonnay to taste more like Meursault … use Lalvin CY3079 yeast , which increases the impression of hazelnuts and brioche, and mouthfeel.”  “Reduce pyrazine quantity or perception of cabernet sauvignon herbaceous character in the glass by using Enoferm CSM.” Using just the native or indigenous yeast let’s nature take its usual course. I am against manipulation. I am a strong advocate for wanting as much information and disclosure as possible so I know what is in my wine and what is influencing those aromas and taste flavours I am experiencing!

What about you? Are you concerned? Do you want more information?

Are you concerned about what is in your wine?

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