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Wine (alt.food.wine) Devoted to the discussion of wine and wine-related topics. A place to read and comment about wines, wine and food matching, storage systems, wine paraphernalia, etc. In general, any topic related to wine is valid fodder for the group. |
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The last few days have been a blur of work and dealing with cold temps. But
Betsy still managed to make sure that good dinner was served, even overcoming her bunny aversion to put a rabbit in a balsamic marinade. Served alongside a saffron risotto from Mario Batali's cooking show, both were delicious. I opened the 2000 Francoise & Denis Clair Bourgogne-Hautes Côtes de Beaune. Bright, pleasant little Burg, good acidity and clean red fruit. Just a note of herbs on the nose, nice wine. B+ The next night Betsy served some duck breast with roasted grapes. The 2001 Graillot Crozes-Hermitage had initially grapey flavors, but these soon transformed into firm black fruit. Some earth and meat aromas, but not super-expressive. Nice wine, but a few years might let it really shine. B+ (with A- potential) Saturday we went to celebrate a friend's birthday at her house (well, her living space- it's bigger than most houses, though it's actually the refurbished servants' quarters of a dilapidated mansion - just too cool). They served pork loin with applesauce and red cabbage, and we had a cheap Riesling duel. My contender was the 2001 Thanisch (Erben-Thanisch) Estate Riesling (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer). Nice Qba, sweetness and acidity well-balanced, white fruit and some minerality B/B+. The other was an Alsace, the 2002 Leon Beyer Riesling. Medium acidity, bone dry, but a bit of a short finish. I thought the sweeter German did better with the applesauce, but the Alsace was an ok wine, say a B. Also served that evening were a couple of reds. The 2001 La Rose du Pin was a soft easy quaffer, red plum fruit and little more. B- being generous. The 2000 Los Vascos Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve (Colchagua, Chile) wass a little more interesting, with black fruit framed by some cedary oak. B Sunday my organization had their annual meeting, and I was bone-tired by time I returned home that evening. But I perked up as some great smells started coming out of the kitchen. "Would you mind grilling a steak?" Betsy said, and I fired up the Weber. What a meal- ribeye with a chutney over salad, baigan bharta (eggplant) and nimbu bhat (piquant lemon-cashew rice). Steak meant red wine to me, but the spices made difficult. So I chose a cheap ( no need to waste an expensive wine) red with a hint of spice. The 2001 Domaine Lafond Roc-Epine Cotes-du-Rhône was a nice lighter CdR, red berry flavors and some pepper and oregano. Nothing to get excited about, but a decent $7 wine. B My usual disclaimer: I'm a pretty easy grader, basically A is a very good wine, B a good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party where it was only choice Dale Dale Williams Drop "damnspam" to reply |
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Bloody hell, does Betsy want to visit Wagga Wagga in Australia? I can't
promise her the same wines, but I can certainly promise appreciation of the food... I can offer her wagyu beef, naturally fermented olives, freshly shot bunnies, roo (not roux), trout, and a range of locally grown produce. BTW, the temperatures even in winter will be 10-20°C. Of course, you're welcome too, but given your description of menus, Betsy would be the honoured guest! Cheers, Andrew "Dale Williams" > wrote in message ... > The last few days have been a blur of work and dealing with cold temps. But > Betsy still managed to make sure that good dinner was served, even overcoming > her bunny aversion to put a rabbit in a balsamic marinade. Served alongside a > saffron risotto from Mario Batali's cooking show, both were delicious. I opened > the 2000 Francoise & Denis Clair Bourgogne-Hautes Côtes de Beaune. Bright, > pleasant little Burg, good acidity and clean red fruit. Just a note of herbs on > the nose, nice wine. B+ > > The next night Betsy served some duck breast with roasted grapes. The 2001 > Graillot Crozes-Hermitage had initially grapey flavors, but these soon > transformed into firm black fruit. Some earth and meat aromas, but not > super-expressive. Nice wine, but a few years might let it really shine. B+ > (with A- potential) > > Saturday we went to celebrate a friend's birthday at her house (well, her > living space- it's bigger than most houses, though it's actually the > refurbished servants' quarters of a dilapidated mansion - just too cool). They > served pork loin with applesauce and red cabbage, and we had a cheap Riesling > duel. My contender was the 2001 Thanisch (Erben-Thanisch) Estate Riesling > (Mosel-Saar-Ruwer). Nice Qba, sweetness and acidity well-balanced, white fruit > and some minerality B/B+. The other was an Alsace, the 2002 Leon Beyer > Riesling. Medium acidity, bone dry, but a bit of a short finish. I thought the > sweeter German did better with the applesauce, but the Alsace was an ok wine, > say a B. > > Also served that evening were a couple of reds. The 2001 La Rose du Pin was a > soft easy quaffer, red plum fruit and little more. B- being generous. The 2000 > Los Vascos Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve (Colchagua, Chile) wass a little more > interesting, with black fruit framed by some cedary oak. B > > Sunday my organization had their annual meeting, and I was bone-tired by time I > returned home that evening. But I perked up as some great smells started coming > out of the kitchen. "Would you mind grilling a steak?" Betsy said, and I fired > up the Weber. What a meal- ribeye with a chutney over salad, baigan bharta > (eggplant) and nimbu bhat (piquant lemon-cashew rice). Steak meant red wine to > me, but the spices made difficult. So I chose a cheap ( no need to waste an > expensive wine) red with a hint of spice. The 2001 Domaine Lafond Roc-Epine > Cotes-du-Rhône was a nice lighter CdR, red berry flavors and some pepper and > oregano. Nothing to get excited about, but a decent $7 wine. B > > My usual disclaimer: I'm a pretty easy grader, basically A is a very good wine, > B a good wine, C mediocre. Anything below C means I wouldn't drink at a party > where it was only choice > > Dale > > Dale Williams > Drop "damnspam" to reply |
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In article >, "Andrew L Drumm"
> writes: >, does Betsy want to visit Wagga Wagga in Australia? She probably does. I know one of her major regrets from her Meliora Quartet days was that they did some concerts in Melbourne, but never left the city. What's the point in flying halfway around the world just to work? I'll work on getting her back to Oz. ![]() Dale Dale Williams Drop "damnspam" to reply |
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