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Posts Tagged ‘pairing’

Westcave Cellars and the Austin Hill Country Chapter

20 Jun

On June 17th, 2011 – Members of the Austin Hill Country Chapter of the American Wine Society met at Westcave Cellars Winery for a presentation led by Executive Chef of Wine Arts, Oscar A. Montes Iga, who prepared a technical sensory evaluation for attendees, and members of Westcave Cellars Wine Club. The function served as the First Official Meeting of the Chapter, as well as launched the special type of events that Wine Club Members at Westcave can expect in the future.

 

Margaret and Allan Fetty, owners of Westcave Cellars Winery were present during the component tasting, and it was a great opportunity to meet with them – they offered barrel samples for our guests and disclosed details on winemaking methodology, making this even a more extraordinary evening.

Chapter Founder, Oscar A. Montes, chose the line up of 5 wines made on site, and paired them with 8 simple foods to evaluate the pairing characteristics of wine and food.

 Guests got to learn hands on, and experience what wine professionals have to think about and go through when selecting wine for food events. The list that follows is the wines selected for this specific pairing.

 

 

    • Westcave Cellars Winery, Texas High Plains, Blanc de Merlot Noir, 2010

A clear orange-red rosé made with Merlot from the Panhandle of Texas. It has a nose showcasing aromas of rose petals, strawberry, cranberry and a lemon zest. Flavors of raspberry, cherry, ripe strawberry, apricot and orange zest fill the mouth. It is finished medium-sweet balanced with a smooth yet lively acidity in this medium-full body wine with a pleasant long finish.

    • Westcave Cellars Winery, Texas High Plains, Muscat Blanc, 2010

Grown in the Texas High Plains, this white Muscat is clear straw to yellow canary hue. Simple aromas of ripe peach, honeysuckle and pineapple, and more developed aromas of lily, kiwi and wet stone. A pleasant quality of white peach, pear and apple flavors. Medium –dry and velvety to the tongue, medium-full body with a lively smooth acidity and a pleasant long finish.

    • Westcave Cellars Winery, Texas High Plains, Viognier, 2010 [light oak]

Medium-full body and medium-dry Viogner. Clear medium straw color. It has powerful and complex aromas of white peach, lychee fruit, citrus, pear and apple, floral notes, herbal tones, and grassy accents. It has supple and lively acidity, and it fills the mouth with flavors of green apple, grapefruit, lemon and lime. Pleasant long finish.

    • Westcave Cellars Winery, Texas Hill Country, Estate Cuvée, Cabernet Sauvignon, 2010

A proprietor’s select blend of Cabernet grown on the Estate. A clear, medium garnet to brick red hue. It has aromas of red berries, dark plum, and clove with a hint of toasted coffee. Fills the tongue with flavors of dark cherry, raspberry and spice. Supple full body with soft tannins and a pleasant long finish.

    • Westcave Cellars Winery, Texas Hill Country, Estate Tannat, 2010 [unbottled]

This estate grown Tannat is clear, with a dark opaque purple to red violet colors. Releases aromas of plum and black currant, and dark cherry. It brings flavors of black cherry, blueberry, dark plum and a nice anise or licorice finish. Smooth full body with balanced tannins and a pleasant very long finish.

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Wedge & Bottle – Best of two worlds

07 Dec

So…you like wine? Or how about cheese?

Both you say? What’s not to like.

 

Although most people when unsure of food and wine pairings, they can choose to easily try to pair cheese with wine and present a delectable elegant platter. However, not all wine goes with every cheese – nor all cheese with every wine. It may present a difficult dilemma, and the worst thing that can happen is your guest may find the wine completely unpalatable [or to yourself, should you attend an event hosted where cheese and wine is all you had and little research done on the pairing] – yet, you must not be afraid – there are some easy tips to make your cheese and wine pairing work, below you will find a text by Ms. Anna Malczyk:

 

 

If you’ve always thought that serving cheese and wine as a meal is a posh and pretentious thing to do, think again! In a country that makes some of the best wines in the world (and some pretty good cheeses too), you’d be missing out if you didn’t have a go at creating your own wine and cheese platter.

Pick your cheese
The first step is to decide what you want to serve. Starting with cheese, make sure you have a varied selection of textures, tastes and styles. Be sure to include soft mould-ripened cheeses like brie and camembert, blue cheeses, soft white cheeses like fresh mozzarella and cream cheese, firm yellow cheeses like gouda and mature yellow cheeses like aged cheddar. If you can find them, include a smoked cheese, goat’s cheese and a hard cheese, like parmesan. Variety is key.

Serving cheese
To serve your cheeses, consider how strong they are, and how best they are eaten. Very strong cheese like Gruyère can be cut into shavings. Cream cheeses should be easy to scoop or spread. Soft mould-ripened cheeses can be eaten on their own, while strong blue cheeses benefit from accompaniments like preserves.

Pick your wine
Now, choose a selection of wines that suits your cheese platter. Remember to match the wines’ textures and flavours to the cheeses. Here are some tips:

  • Mild white cheeses go with milder, lighter white wines
  • Stronger, matured cheeses suit red wines
  • A creamy camembert is perfectly paired with a creamy wooded Chardonnay or a fresh, light Chenin Blanc
  • Mild yellow cheeses like gouda and edam benefit from being paired with Riesling
  • Light reds, like Merlot, suit mild yellow and goat’s milk cheeses
  • Cabernet Sauvignon complements matured cheeses and hard cheeses like Gruyère
  • Shiraz complements sharp cheese like parmesan
  • Blue cheeses need strong, sweet wines to balance them – try dessert wines, Sauternes, Sherry or Port
  • It’s a good idea to experiment to find the combination that’s right for you.

 

Extra touches
Don’t forget to include other snacks to go along with the wine and cheese. Salted crackers or good crusty bread are a must. Olives also suit the cheese very well. If you’re serving a lot of creamy mouldy cheeses like brie, or pungent blues, consider getting some sweet fruit preserves – orange and fig marmalade work particularly well. Very bland cheeses, like fresh mozzarella or unflavoured cream cheese, can be lifted with fresh basil or rocket leaves. Rich, creamy cheeses can benefit from some fresh sliced cherry tomatoes, to add texture and acidity. [Source: GetSmarter.com]

If you are still unsure of what to buy or how to pair, don’t hesitate to contact your local cheese master or wine sommelier, they can provide insights into what works best together. Such is the case in Ahwatukee, Arizona, where Troy and Krista Daily, fellow graduates of the International Wine Guild are opening up their shop in the Spring of 2011 – Wedge and Bottle – A cheese shop dedicated to extend artisan cheese knowledge to the masses, paired with a well-rounded wine knowledge to go with it. The Dailys are both Certified Senior Wine Merchants, and they know quality cheese, so who better to recommend a pairing than them. So, check the link to their website, and if you’re on the run, traveling from coast to coast, or need a break from it all and happen to head to Arizona, make sure you pay them a visit and nibble on some fromage along with a good wine or a select beer. You can buy to consume on premise, or to take home. It sure would be worth it – just don’t forget to report back and let us know how it all went! I sure wish them the best of luck!

Cheers!

 

Photography credit:Roger Ewing
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Tequila Dinner @ Cantina Laredo ATX

06 Sep

This time was as memorable as the last two!

Meal consisted of

  1. Ceviche Tostadas; shrimp and fish on a citrus marinade with avocado. Served with a Pink Lemonade Cocktail.

  2. Cranberry Salad; apple slices and crumbly cheese. Served with a Silver Pinapple Martini.

  3. Grilled Beef Tenderloin; spicy roasted potatoes, crunchy green beans and sauteed mushrooms. Paired with a Reposado Diamond Mandarin Margarita.

  4. Pastel de Mango Tres Leches with a mango sauce.

Overall we had 100% Agave Azul Tequila Blanco, Reposado and A~ejo, as well as Gran Centenario ”Blush” and A~ejo – and the star of the night was Maestro Dobel; a blend artfully aged in Hungarian Oak casks.

It certianly was one of the best dinners yet! Looking forward to the next one -

Thanks Travis, Al and AB for having me!

 

Salud! Y felices Fiestas Patrias!

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Harvest in the Hill Country

16 Jun
Come celebrate Harvest in the Texas Hill Country with your favorite wineries!

Harvest Wine Trail
August 6-8 & 13-15
The vitality of the wine industry in The Texas Hill Country begins each year in August with the birth of the next vintage.  We invite you to savor the sight, sound, smell and taste of Harvest with the Texas Hill Country Wineries.  Make your plans to join us for the 2010 Harvest Wine Trail, August 6-8 and 13-15, and enjoy a wealth of opportunities to immerse yourself in the experience and lifestyle of harvest.  

Ticket prices are $60 per couple and $35 per person and good for Friday-Sunday of both weekends…That is SIX whole days to complete your wine trail journey! 
 

As the wine trail should be, it’s all about the wine, each winery visit will include a minimum of 1 and up to 3 complimentary tastes of wine and a 15% discount on custom 3 bottle purchases.  Taste, enjoy, choose your favorites and take them home!  You will also have the option to add to your wine experience by printing off the down-loadable Label Collection Book from your confirmation email.  Print this book, visit the wineries, take notes and collect labels or memorabilia from each winery as a great keepsake from your Harvest Trail trip. 

We all love a little food with our wine…and what could be better than local offerings chosen by locals?  Each winery has chosen a great local food company to partner with during the Harvest Wine Trail and will be offering perfection in wine and food pairing.  Imagine the local favorites we’ve come to crave, including Bistro Blends, fresh fare cultivated from our winery gardens and Dutchman’s cheese, paired with award wining wines.  (Please see event details to discover each wineries partner and offering). 

Are you a great photographer?  Do you take hundreds of photos on your trips?  Want to share them with all Texas wine lovers and get rewarded?  Of course you do!!  New to the Harvest Trail each winery will offer a unique photo opportunity showcase for you to capture that perfect picture at all 26 wineries.  After you catch that  ‘just-right-pose’ at the wine bar, in the vineyard, in front of barrels or the grape stomping action shot, just download and send direct to us for the Photo Contest.  Categories include: Wine Trail Troopers (most creative photo), Wine Lovers (any TWO people) and Viticulture Vagabonds (ex: Grape Stomps, vineyard or wine barrel shots.  Not all wineries offer a grape stomp, a list of THCW grape stomps will be posted to event details below).  Each category will include a Grand Prize of a Wine Country Getaway Package (lodging, dining and private tasting), 1st and 2nd runner up of upcoming 2011 upcoming Wine Trail tickets.  (Always a sellout!)  All entries will be reviewed by THCW Committee and narrowed down to semi-finals.   Finals will be voted on by public vote on THCW website. 

Harvest is the season when wineries bring to the forefront those rarely seen vineyard and crush activities for wine enthusiasts to appreciate.  Ticket holders traverse the twenty-six participating wineries sprinkled throughout the Hill Country debuting exciting new wines, watching and learning vineyard practices in motion, taking part in wine seminars or jumping feet first into a two ton grape stomp.  The wine trail weekends are yours to plan…no need to start at 6am with the harvest however. 

Enjoy the festivities, taste your favorites, enjoy exclusive discounts and take home the memories of harvest in the Texas Hill Country. 
 

For more details and tickets please visit www.TexasWineTrail.com 

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Tequila Dinner / Austin TX Cantina Laredo

04 Jun

Another lovely evening in the company of friends, and surrounded by amazing food and good drinks; thank you again Brittashton for the invitation. Also thank you Ivan C, Toncia C, and Victor M for joining and being there!

Our first course was a spicy shrimp wrapped in bacon with a light salad. It was paired with a mango-cilantro ‘rita!

Second course was a refreshing mango salad, with cheese, pine nuts and grapes, quite delish, it was paired with a pineapple paloma cocktail.

My entrée was a super spicy snapper, quite hot and tasty, served with calabazita and potatoes, and a light jicama salad. The food was paired with a raspberry chipotle cocktail.

Lastly,  a fresh berry and Chantilly margarita, paired with an astonishing blackberry cocktail.

Overall, we tasted Tres Generaciones, Blanco,  Reposado and Añejo.

I certainly look forward to the next one! Salud!!

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Pedernales Wine Dinner @ Le Cordon Bleu Austin

26 May
Le Cordon Bleu Hosts
Pedernales Cellars Wine Dinner
 

Join us Friday, May 28, 2010 for an extraordinary wine dinner sponsored by Pedernales Cellars, and presented by Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts (formerly Texas Culinary Academy). Winemaker David Kuhlken and his wife Heather, along with David’s parents Larry and Jeanine Kuhlken, the founders of Pedernales Cellars, will be on hand to present and discuss the wine.
 


Pedernales Cellars Wine Dinner
Friday, May 28, 2010, 6:00 PM
Ventana Restaurant at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts
3110 Esperanza Crossing, Suite 100
$75 per person
Purchase tickets at The Wine & Food Foundation of Texas

   

Pedernales Wine Dinner Menu

  

Passed
Apricot Stuffed Foie Gras Torchon on Brioche
Seafood Salad in Butter Lettuce
Crab, Shrimp, Fennel Aioli
Pedernales Cellars Vino Blanco

RoseGarnachaPedernales Cellars 

   

  

First
Quail Confit and Lamb Lettuce Salad
Chanterelles, English Peas, Peruvian Potato,
Brown Butter Vinaigrette
Pedernales Cellars Merlot

   

Second
Pintxos Muranos
Skewered Pork Shoulder, Chickpea Fries, Chimichurri

 TempranilloPedernales Cellars

  

Main
Double Cut Lamb Rib Chop
Smoked Arugula, Israeli Couscous, Pomegranate Gastrique
Pedernales Cellars Family Reserve

   

Dessert – Courtesy of Keith Hildebrant, 2010 Stephan Pyles Scholarship Winner
Chocolate Pave  

  

 

 

Pedernales Cellars logo.gif 
Tickets are going fast!  Pedernales Cellars vineyard shot.jpg  

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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