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Archive for February, 2010

Maison Louis Jadot in Austin by The Wine & Food Foundation

25 Feb
The Wine & Food Foundation & TEXSOM
Louis Jadot Burgundy Dinner & TexSom Fundraiser
Featuring Jacques Lardière, Director of Winemaking
Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010 – 7:00PM
at Mirabelle Restaurant, Austin

Often referred to as the ‘Master of Burgundy’, Jacques Lardière is one of today’s most important winemakers. Also world-renowned as an entertaining and insightful speaker, he comes as an ambassador for Burgundy and Maison Louis Jadot. Oenophiles throughout Central Texas will have an exclusive opportunity to meet and hear him speak first-hand.

About Jacques Lardière:

 

Born in 1948 in Vendée, France, Jacques Lardière decided at an early age to dedicate his life to winemaking. A graduate with distinction from the school of Viticulture and Oenology of Alentours, in Mâcon, Mr. Lardière was drawn to research in the biology of aromas and bacteria. In 1970, Mr. Lardière joined Maison Louis Jadot in the capacity of assistant oenologist under Mr. André Gagey, then Managing Director. He was appointed Technical Director in 1980, and is respected as one of France’s most brilliant, passionate and inspired winemakers.

If you are unfamiliar with Jadot, their principles of vinification balance tradition and technology, and focus on the purest expression of the “terroir,” or qualities unique to the microclimate, through the medium of the vine. With rare exception, Burgundies are single-varietal wines, produced from Chardonnay, Pinot Noir or Gamay Noir. It is Jadot’s fundamental conviction that the expression of each wine’s origin and typicity resides in interfering with nature as little as possible.

After a period of eighteen to twenty-two months’ aging in oak, with never more than thirty percent new casks, the final blend is assembled and bottled. Red wines receive neither fining nor filtration. Once bottled, Jadot’s wines are released four to six months later than those of most producers in order to set the new arrivals on the proper path toward maturity.

The most recent cellar, on the outskirts of Beaune, doubled production and storage capacity as of mid-1986, and is one of the most technologically advanced facilities in France.

 

The Wine and Food Foundation of Texas invites you to meet Jacques Lardière and share a stellar showing of wines and cuisine. The dinner will be held on Wednesday, March 3 at 7:00 p.m, at Mirabelle Restaurant in Austin.

 

Proceeds from the dinner will support TexSom; the two-day educational conference hosted by the Texas Sommelier Association. We are honored to note that Louis Jadot and its American importer, Kobrand, have generously donated the wines for this event. Guests will be served by expert Texas sommeliers.

The 2010 Texas Sommelier Association’s annual TexSom conference (for both trade and the general public) will be held August 14th and 15th at the Four Seasons Hotel in Dallas. Visit the Association website www.texsom.org for upcoming details. Last year over 30 Master Sommeliers attended the conference, providing a broad range of classes and topics.

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Posted in WinEvents

 

Quiz

25 Feb

Of the regions in Spain listed, please pick the two that are approved to carry the DOCa qualification.

A. Rioja, Navarra
B. Rioja, Priorat
C. Ribera del Duero, Rioja
D. Priorat, Penedes
E. Montsant, Priorat
F. Penedes, Galicia

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Vino Meds – Get a Spoonful!

25 Feb

Thought I’d share this with ye peeps. I grabbed it from somewhere a while back, might as well save it for the future e-kids I say.

 

A Spoonful of Vino
Why are Americans obsessed with wine being good for you?
By Mike Steinberger
Posted Thursday, March 5, 2009, at 6:01 PM ET
Taken from Slate.com

 

60 Minutes recently ran a segment about the health benefits of red wine, specifically the apparently wondrous powers of resveratrol, a polyphenol that is found in the skin of grapes and is thought to prevent illness and promote longevity. This wasn’t the first time 60 Minutes has trumpeted the virtues of red wine; in 1991, it called attention to the so-called French Paradox, which posited that the low rate of heart disease in France, despite a national diet gloriously abundant in rich foods, was due to the country’s prodigious consumption of red wine. That report not only prompted an outbreak of oenophilia in the United States; it fanned an obsessive interest in the nutritional and therapeutic properties of wine. This seems to be a particularly American fixation, and it raises an intriguing question: Why are we—Americans—so anxious to find justifications for drinking wine beyond the fact that it tastes good and we like it?

Obviously, scientists aren’t investigating wine’s physiological impact because they are shills for the wine industry and want to encourage Americans to imbibe; the research is being pursued and the results disseminated because it appears that there really is a link between red wine and well-being. (For their part, vintners are not allowed to publicize these findings; federal and state laws prohibit advertising that touts the health benefits of alcoholic beverages.) It is now widely recognized that moderate red wine consumption—generally defined as one or two 5-ounce glasses a day for women and two or three for men, drunk with food—boosts HDL cholesterol, the “good” cholesterol that purges arteries of fatty deposits. In addition, scientists have determined that the flavonoids in red wine have an anticoagulant effect that can help prevent blood clots leading to heart attacks.

Resveratrol is also said to have a role in preventing clots and is believed to inhibit the production of LDL cholesterol—the bad kind. Judging by the headlines, resveratrol seems to be the omnipotent ingredient in red wine—a “vascular pipe-cleaner,” as one physician put it. The recent 60 Minutes episode highlighted the work of Dr. Christoph Westphal and Harvard biochemist David Sinclair, whose research suggests that resveratrol can delay the aging process and forestall many gerontological diseases. A few years ago, scientists reported that resveratrol may discourage the onset of one such illness, Alzheimer’s. It is also claimed that this antioxidant can boost stamina, reduce lung inflammation stemming from chronic pulmonary disease, and help stave off cancer. Last fall, University of Pittsburgh scientists reported that resveratrol might offer some protection against radiation poisoning. Then there is this joyous news, possibly upending age-old assumptions about alcohol and sexual performance: According to Men’s Health in the United Kingdom, resveratrol works to enhance blood flow, which in turn may improve erectile function.

Personally, I’m thrilled to learn that red wine could help me avoid cancer, outlast opponents on the tennis court, survive a nuclear attack, and lead a long, lucid, and Viagra-free life. However, a little caution is in order. Most of the testing with resveratrol has been done on mice, and they have been given ungodly amounts of the stuff. As the New York Times pointed out in a 2006 article, the mice in one experiment were injected with 24 milligrams of resveratrol per kilogram of body weight; red wine contains around 1.5 to 3 milligrams of resveratrol per liter, so to get the equivalent dose, a 150-pound person would need to drink 750-1,500 bottles of wine a day. I weigh 195 pounds and can finish a bottle of Beaujolais and feel no different than if I’d had a bottle of Gatorade, but tossing back 1,100 liters of wine in a 24-hour period? Probably not.

This combination of lab mice, outlandishly large doses, and extravagant claims recently yielded a very funny piece in The New Yorker, one which zeroed in on an essential point: Red wine may contain resveratrol, but it contains substantially more alcohol. Regardless of how beneficial wine ultimately proves to be for the heart, lungs, groin, and other body parts, we already know it has a powerful and mostly salutary psychological influence. Wine—or, to be more precise, the alcohol in wine—leaves us happy; it is a relaxant, a stimulant, a balm. It can make a bad day good and a good one better. All this, coupled with the gustatory pleasure that wine confers, ought to be reason enough to uncork a bottle. So why are we so concerned about these other possible gains to be reaped?

Part of it is that we are a nation infatuated with quick-fix diets and painless remedies; the idea that sitting on a couch nursing a syrah could actually be making us thinner and fitter is irresistible. We are also a culture that fears growing old, and the possibility that a glass of red wine could be a fountain of youth is likewise a tantalizing prospect. I suspect the preoccupation with wine’s health impact is a reflection, too, of our Puritan heritage and the conflicted attitude that Americans have always had about wine. Although we are consuming it in record quantities, wine is still seen as something effete and vaguely foreign. That’s why the wine vs. beer dichotomy continues to be invoked every election season as a way of distinguishing urban elites from other Americans, and it is why candidates favored by those elites are invariably tarred as chardonnay-swilling swells.

At the risk of tarring myself as one such specimen, I think we should just lighten up and enjoy wine for the immediate gratification. It is great that science is uncovering so many possible ancillary benefits to merlot and pinot noir, and I hope that resveratrol is indeed the cure-all that mankind has been hoping for. But if and when a proven resveratrol tablet hits the market, I won’t be liquidating my cellar, nor do I intend to load up on any of the resveratrol-enhanced wines that are apparently coming our way (unless, of course, they happen to be seriously good). Likewise, if it turns out the mice have been screwing with us and that red wine carries none of these magical side effects, there will still be a bottle on my dinner table every night. Wine is a habit that requires no rationale other than the pursuit of enjoyment.

The French, despite being the inspiration for so much of this research, have never much cared about wine’s medicinal qualities; for them, a glass of vin rouge is simply a mealtime ritual. (Though, sadly, that is changing.) Jancis Robinson, Britain’s leading wine writer , tells me that her compatriots give little thought to the health aspects of wine; they just like to drink (and are certainly very accomplished in that pursuit). In his excellent book A Hedonist in the Cellar, Jay McInerney notes, “In Europe, where wine has been a part of daily life for thousands of years, American oenophiles are sometimes viewed as monomaniacs—zealous and somewhat narrow-minded converts to a generous and pantheistic faith.” He goes on to say that “American wine lovers need to broaden their vision and relax: to see wine as just another aspect of the well-lived life.” L’chaim.

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Posted in Diet & Health Science

 

Quiz

24 Feb

Please name a synonym for the Tempranillo grape in Spain

A. Tinto
B. Tinto de Toro
C. Alicante
D. Carinena
E. Samso

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Quiz

23 Feb

What does the word “estate” mean on a wine label?

A. All grapes grown in the AVA listed on the bottle
B. This lot represents less than 10% of production
C. The winery is in a really cool building
D. Nothing when in the name of the winery
E. All new french oak was used

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Posted in VinoTrivia

 

The Georgetown Swirl!

16 Feb

The weekend before Valentine’s Day, 2010, I was invited [ by friend KjB via the Texas Wine & Grape Growers Association] to help out during the First Annual Georgetown Swirl. I believe the guests had a good time, tasted great food, and wine, and did some shopping on the main square while musicians played outdoors.

I helped during the Silent Auction ( and also got to take home one of the items auctioned!)…and also got to pour a Dessert Wine in the style of a port non-vintaged produced by Georgetown Winery. What a delight!

It was rich in color and taste, great dark ruby red, smelled of prunes and plums, and dark cherries. It wasn’t overly sweet, just right amount of alcohol (18%) and sugars.

I hope next year the event producers make it better and bigger!

For more information check out: http://swirl.georgetown.org/

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Posted in WinEvents