Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Valdadige & Alto Adige

Have I mentioned how confusing Italy is to me?  Today we are looking at the northeastern corner of that peninsula.

Valdadige is the Adige river valley extending from Trentino-Alto Adige to the north down to Veneto in the south.  It extends through three provinces: Bolzano, Trentino-Alto Adige and Verona in Veneto.  Vineyard cultivation there may go back to the Iron Age with the wine industry as we think of it today being jump started by monks in the Middle Ages.

Valdadige received its DOC in 1975 but clearly plays second fiddle to the Alto Adige  DOC.  Alto Adige, or Sudtirol to the German population there, extends from Vento to the east to Lombardy in the west and Tirol, Austria to the north.  It encompasses the northern half of the Trentino-Alto Adige province.  Alto Adige is where the finest Pinot Grigio comes from.

Why this subject now?  Aside from just passing the Memorial Day seasonal marker, we have a couple stellar pinots in the store from both places.  San Pietro has the Alto Adige pedigree while Santi has the Valdadige value.  Both are great summertime pleasers.  Try them both.  You'll be needing them when it gets hot.

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Stag's Leap Winery

Restaurateur and builder, Carl Doumani, bought Stag's Leap Winery in 1970, essentially reviving a moribund winery in ruins.  He was able to restore the historic buildings on the property while enjoying the early 1970's winemaking zeitgeist, creating a product competitive with the Napa standards of the time.

The Stag's Leap District AVA wouldn't be created for another thirty years but it's notoriety was established when Stag's Leap Wine Cellars won the 1976 Judgment of Paris wine tasting.  By besting the great classified Bordeaux everyone assumed would win, a new found prominence for the Stag's Leap name benefitted Stag's Leap Winery.  Sales boomed as the Winery was regularly confused with the justifiably acclaimed Wine Cellars.  

The Carl Doumani-Stag's Leap Winery era ended in 1996 when Treasury Estates bought the winery.  Coincidentally, Stag's Leap Wine Cellars would be sold within a year to Constellation.  (And so it goes - The great estate wineries of California fade into history; replaced by mass market efforts from industry giants intended to be just good enough  to keep the dollars coming in.)   

Today the same Atlanta distributor represents both labels and we are told Stag's Leap Winery is the better product.  So kudos to Treasury.

Thursday, May 15, 2025

Gummis

I make no apologies for this post...just trying to stay current here.

The most successful thing we've done in recent years has been our chocolates and now that supplier has recommended we try their chocolate covered gummis, like it's the latest thing.  Well, I guess, from their perspective it is the latest thing.  So we'll give it a try.  I figure it's got to do better than the chocolate mints, which were a real bust.

Anyway, here's what we now know about gummis.

Chewable sweets resembling gummis were first created in Lancashire, England in 1864 as a church charity confection.  They became commercial gummis in 1920's Germany under the auspices of the Hans Riegel candy company, which would soon become known as Haribo, a company still in existence today.

Apparently trained dancing bears in street shows were popular in Europe a hundred years ago so Haribo gummis were made in bear-shaped molds.  To say these bear candies were popular would be to understate things a bit.  They were sold successfully everywhere on the continent.

Gum Arabic was the original gumminess of the candy before gelatin became the base ingredient.  Other common ingredients include corn syrup, sucrose, starch and water, food colorings and flavorings.  The flavorings may be sharpened by adding food acids like citric or malic acids.

The gelatin base is most commonly sourced from pork which is frowned upon in some circles so starch and pectin may be substituted.  And the chocolate coating is the same chocolate our customers say is the best in town.


So what do we pair with this fine confection?  Boylan's Cream Soda, of course!

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Cinsault

 Cinsault (san-SOH) gets short shrift in the Rhone Valley where Syrah dominates in the northern valley and Grenache in the south.  So it's basically a blender, adding light fresh red berry flavors to soften Syrah and using those same traits to broaden the profile of Grenache-based reds.  Someone said, Cinsault in a blend is "like squeezing lemon on fish."  It adds complexity, balance, freshness and finesse. 

Cinsault is also an ancient variety, either native to southern France or imported by traders centuries ago.   While flying under the world radar for most of us, it has impacted this industry through its success in the Rhone.  It's now planted in Chile, Algeria, Australia, Italy, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, South Africa and Lodi and Paso Robles in California.  Total Cinsault vineyard acreage worldwide approaches 57,000 acres.

Why this post now?  Clearly, after it was such a hit at our recent Lubanzi South African wine tasting, the word needs to get out.  This is your ideal all-purpose summertime red.  Light, fresh and fruity; you can marry this one with basically any similarly lighter-styled summertime meal.  And if you feel like passing on your big Cabernet because of the hot weather, try Cinsault with your steak.