The New Normal of Sharing Meals Online Brings Joy Among Friends

Currently your scribe spends many hours most days online hopefully inspiring others about the fascination of food & wine plus always seeking to learn more myself. My new normal is a plethora of webinars scheduled on the vast array of quality wines now available from around the world. It is challenging just trying to keep up to date on the many new current releases. Presently I am addicted to the marvellous work of 67 Pall Mall with their wide selection of live streaming programs plus their later replay on YouTube. Already this morning have participated in their Pomerol masterclass by Jane Anson featuring top chateaux from 1998, 2009, and 2015 which followed earlier ones on 1996 Pauillac wines & 1990 First Growth Bordeaux among others. All highly recommended. Obviously many aficionados of food & wine are also impressed with their dedicated work as this popularity is resulting in an expected April launch of their own 7 days a week TV channel now filming in 4K. Besides wine tastings many of us are missing the camaraderie of sharing meals in restaurants. We frequently are seeing more online events (usually on Zoom) enjoying within your own bubble the same food and wine for dinner as your friends. Certainly some joy can result from this effort of keeping in touch and sharing impressions on the culinary dishes and paired wines.

This latest report is from March 2 on the Vancouver Tastevin group of Burgundy lovers with food from New Fishport Seafood Bistro. An ambitious undertaking by talented Executive Chef Sam Leung and his brigade with many courses prepared for us to plate at home and where necessary to follow detailed reheating instructions. Even alternate choices were available for pescatarians or to share with your partner. All very tasty indeed and a lot of pleasurable fun. Cherish the still good value St.-Aubin whites that are available with here the 2013 Domaine Marc Morey Premier Cru Charmois but sulphur notes + quite reductive initially but improved marvellously with decanting and further airing. Pure delight with the innovative Conch, delicious King Crab & lobster dishes. Also continue to admire those structured outstanding 2005 vintage red Burgundy that always seem to need more cellaring to come together. This Gevrey AC 2005 from old vines by Patrice Rion is another one that is drinkable already but still showing that rather typically harder edged structure of this top commune. Presently prefer the easier more accessible village wines from say Pernand or Savigny among several others. Makes for a wonderful evening of hospitality in shared dining. Suggest you give it a try one night among your IWFS friends. If you are already doing so with friends and/or family please post a few words of insight about them.


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Ask Sid: What is Vinho Verde?

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Question: What is Vinho Verde?

Answer: It is a region in the hills of northern Portugal using rather immature less ripe earlier harvested greener indigenous grapes resulting in a fresh lower alcohol white wine often with a little fizzy spritz. You can also discover there products of increasing quality using more structured Alvarinho (Albarino), some Rose made from Touriga Nacional & reds often produced from the Vinhao grape.

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A MEMORABLE 50 YEAR WINE DESERVES ADMIRATION WITH RESPECTED NOSTALGIA

Both fortunate and appreciative to be enjoying some quite old wines these past months during our hibernation. Quite a few 50 year old Bordeaux cellared from the 1970 vintage have been surprisingly impressive – like Latour, Ducru-Beaucaillou, Lynch Bages, Palmer, and Montrose among others. However you expect classified Bordeaux to show their magical staying power. Not so much with some other wine regions including just AC red Burgundy. However a 1971 Vosne-Romanee with dinner on February 28, 2021 was a wonderful exception. Asking a lot for any 50 year old wine to remain exciting and complex let alone be drinkable. Probably 3 main factors contributed to this amazement : vintage, commune, and shipper.

The vintage 1971 is historic in Burgundy rivalling 1978 for best of the decade. It was a small ripe crop with some hail damage resulting in powerful concentrated wines of rich generosity the best of which have aged well.


The commune of Vosne-Romanee is arguably the best site in the world with so many Grand Cru & 1er Cru wines including the brilliant DRC and other top producers. The appellation is small and the vineyard land is very expensive so it’s pretty hard to find AC wine here these days. Clive Coates in his “The Wines of Burgundy” quotes Abbe Courtepee writing before the French Revolution “Il n’y a pas de vins communs” – There are no common wines in the village of Vosne-Romanee.

The shipper and bottler of this treasure was Avery’s of Bristol established in 1793 (printed on the red capsule and the label). Called a red table wine of 12-14 alcohol imported by San Francisco Cellar Masters the astute quality buying of grapes, wine, and bottles by the Avery family showed yet again. While savouring this outstanding wine your scribe kept wondering if perhaps some declassified top cru juice had found a way into this bottle. Certainly brought back so many fond memories and a toast to our close friend John Avery MW who passed away in March 2012 and who has been fondly remembered on this Blog including a posting here of January 2, 2017.

At 50 years of age this Vosne-Romanee was singing brightly in colour with a superbly complex exotic bouquet highlighted by amazingly sweet smooth textures. This village has a respected reputation for producing such silky wines but this bottle was truly remarkable in that regard with pure velvety silk indeed!

As well, I want to give kudos to IWFS Vancouver members Maggie & Larry Burr who invited us a few years ago to their home to celebrate at his birthday party but also gave everyone on departure a choice bottle to take away. Ours fortunately was this lovely Burgundian treasure. What an amazing way to celebrate your own birthday by giving friends their own reason to later celebrate!

This memorable experience was made even more so by the outstanding
matching of this special bottle to a remarkable baked chicken paillard with tomatoes dish credited to Eric Ripert (from his Avec Eric TV Show) of Le Bernardin in New York, The combination of vegetables with fennel, olives, shallots, garlic, raisins, pine nuts, capers, and fresh thyme & basil leaves topped with a top olive oil, sea salt, and choice ground black pepper makes one fantastic pairing!

Find your own old wine with exciting food pairing and please share it.


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Ask Sid: Viticulture or Vinification?

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Question: What is the difference between viticulture and vinification?

Answer: Viticulture is everything concerned with growing the vines and grapes in the vineyard. Vinification is everything involved with producing the wine in the winery including the time spent fermenting to the decision when the wine is to be bottled.

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WHAT A DIFFERENCE 5+ YEARS OF CELLARING DOES FOR TOP WINES!

A majority of consumers are buying and drinking earlier on the wines that are available to them from currently released vintages. Nothing wrong with that and in fact in most cases that is probably the wise decision. Wines from everywhere are generally better made these days with advanced knowledge learned for best use in both the vineyard and in the cellar. Current releases usually are showing wonderful freshness of fruit plus balance for rather immediate enjoyment. A good example is the riper 2018 Chablis AC from William Fevre. Got to like that!

However there is another possible dimension to search for besides just simpler yet impressive grape juice by giving some top wines more time in bottles to come together and develop other complex nuances to appreciate. This thought has come back to me rather vividly this month in my wine selections for enjoying with dinner. Your scribe has been trying again most of the wines listed in our recommendations in this Blog on January 4, 2016 referencing wines purchased in 2015 for cellaring. Without exception they all have improved to my nose & palate with 5+ years of cellaring. Previously mentioned the opening up currently of 2013 Wynn’s Coonawarra Cabernet Sauvignon but 2010 (and 2009) Savigny-Les-Beaune 1er Cru La Dominode Domaine Pavelot though textures are rounding out still is structured for further development. What is showing dramatic improvement tasted this month are three 2012 Chablis from Christian Moreau and 2010 Barolo Serralunga D’Alba Fontanafredda. The Chablis are remarkable in their progress. The original mineral vibrancy has mellowed to become a better complex old vines beauty 1er cru Vaillon Cuvee Guy Moreau, as well as Grand Cru sites of rich forwardly Valmur & brilliant complete Les Clos. All are now treasures to pair with food especially Brill sole (Petrale) with pistachios. The biggest leap was taken by the 2010 Barolo. An outstanding classic vintage is showing some tertiary notes of lovely bouquet typicity plus 90% Serralunga nebbiolo fruit helps the overall depth. Really singing now with a delicious pasta course of Cacio e Olio Tarajin. Buy a few of those 2016 Piedmont classic reds on the market now and hold them a few years to replicate hopefully a similar memorable experience.


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