Archive for the ‘Tasting Notes’ Category

Wine Tasting- Taste

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Wine Tasting Volume 2 TASTE

By Leonard G. Logan, Jr

This article is a continuation of an Article on wine tasting printed in my recent blog.        There are three essential and different steps to tasting wines – these steps are your evaluation of a wine’s appearance, smell and taste.

            Last blog we directed you to observe the wine’s overall appearance and then smell the wine.

            Now we can begin to actually taste the wine.

            Science has taught us for several hundred years that we taste by our tongue only sweet, sour, salt and bitter flavors. The real taste of a wine and food is obtained from vapors that reach the upper nasal cavity by inhaling or from vapors rising from behind the palate after swallowing.

            The tip of the tongue is particularly sensitive to sweetness. If there is any sweetness in the wine you will taste it immediately at the first sip. The sides of the tongue and cheek area identify acidity most commonly apparent in white wines. The back of the tongue most accurately detects bitterness. Tannins are identified in the middle to back of the tongue. Tannins are mostly found in red wines or some white wines aged in wood.

            Tannins can dry the palate to excess if the wines are too young or out of balance. The result is a cottony mouth feel. Fruit and varietal characteristics are tasted in the middle of the tongue.

            In the past twenty years a newly discovered taste was identified by a Japanese scientist as umami – which is responsible for the deliciousness of some Asian foods. Briefly, unami is a savory taste of glutamic acid which occurs naturally in many foods, but is difficult to detect except in ripe tomatoes, parmesan cheese, cured ham, mushrooms, some meat and fish.

            The wine should be tasted at a proper temperature. Generally, most restaurants and people in the United States serve white wines too cold and red wines too warm. Temperature affects our perception of a wine.

            A very cold wine will release few flavor vapors. At 60 to 65 degrees most wines are capable of releasing their full flavor components. As a wine is chilled it tastes crisper, fruiter and drier – but looses fullness and complexity. A wine warmer than 65 degrees releases ethyl alcohol and as the wine warms the alcohol dilutes the flavor components and numbs the nerves.

            Most home refrigerators are chilled to approximately 38 degrees to keep milk icy cold. Only the poorest jug wines should be served directly from a home refrigerator. These wines have little complexity or acidity and cold makes them appear crisp and thirst quenching while at the same time hiding their flaws.

            An outstanding rich and complex Chardonnay will release best flavors between 50 and 60 degrees. For those used to wines served palate numbing directly from the refrigerator, our wines served at Elizabeth’s may appear “warm.” However, each wine has an ideal serving temperature that enhances the complexity of the wine while at the same time maintaining a refreshing tartness. We attempt to serve wines at Elizabeth’s as close as possible to this ideal temperature. Rieslings, Chenin Blancs, and some other white wines are intended to be served colder. We serve these wines and our wines by the glass at a cooler temperature. If these wines are too cold they will reach drinking temperature at your table in a few minutes.

            From the earliest days red wines were served directly from the wine cellar at “room temperature.” However, “room temperature” in days of castles and stone manor houses with wine cellars is not remotely similar to our present day central heat pump homes and restaurants. The term “room temperature” means 60 to 65 degrees to most wine makers. Our wine cellar at Elizabeth’s stores our fine wines at 57 degrees, enabling us to serve red wines at a recommended “room temperature” of 60 to 65 degrees.

Your First Taste

            Take a small sip. To get the wine all over the tongue’s taste buds you should gently swirl the wine around in your mouth. Some people also bring a little air into their mouth after the first sip to help release all the flavors of the wine. (Don’t gargle.) Hold the wine in your mouth for about 10 to 15 seconds and try to identify the following.

            A Bad Wine: is usually immediately apparent. You generally will have discovered a bad wine when you sniffed it in the glass. You may sip a tiny amount of the wine to confirm your nose of the wine that is corked, has become oxidized or materized (all discussed in the previous article), or become vinegary. 

            Body and Mouth Feel is the weight and texture of the wine in your mouth.  Weight -light to heavy and variations in between- an extremely important sensation when we discuss wine and food pairing in subsequent articles. (Think of a glass of skim milk contrasted to a John’s Drive-in Milk Shake.) Mouth feel- Textural impressions – velvet, satin, harsh, (also has an influence on our perception of balance.)

            Taste and flavors: Your sip may confirm or expand your initial discovery of fruit and spices identified when you smelled the wine. Try and identify a few fruit tastes.

            Acidity and tannins: Identify the level of acidity for white wines and the strength of the tannins for red wine. Is the acidity light, too much or just right?  Are the tannins non-existent, strong, astringent, or pleasing for your palate? The identification of acidity and tannins in the wine will become really important when you begin pairing food with wine.

            The Balance is one of the most important elements in a wine. Does every taste and mouth feel seem to be in balance – with nothing predominating when you taste? If so the wine is balanced for your palate. When we later discuss wine and food pairing sometimes a wine that may appear at first sip to be out of balance can create a good pairing with food.

            The Finish – Identifying how long the flavors linger after swallowing.

            Now for the most important decision – did you like the wine? If so, it is a good wine. Check the price to see if it is a wine you would drink often or only on special occasions. A future blog will attempt to assist in wine buying and cellar selection.

            You should purchase a notebook, any size will do, to record your immediate impression of the wines you taste. This will help in later ordering or acquisition of wines you like.

            Many restaurants are now offering wine dinners. Elizabeth’s was one of the first, twenty years ago, and now is one of the few restaurants in the United States to offer  prix fixe wine dinners nightly. Wine dinners are a way for you to taste a number of different wines without having to buy a bottle.

            Wines by the glass can offer a chance to taste different varietals however, check the glass list. At Elizabeth’s we try and place the best examples of a varietal on the list and often offer these wines at a less expensive price than one would pay for an equivalent number of glasses from a single bottle of the same wine. We want our guests to have the opportunity to taste a number of incredible wines that will help them discover the wines they like.

            Remember the admonition – Ignore ratings and other people’s opinions about a wine. If you like a wine it is a good wine for your palate – if you don’t like a wine it is not a good wine for you.

We will continue our discussions in the next blog, Santé.

© Leonard G. Logan, Jr.

Wine Tasting- Look and Smell

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

INITIAL WINE TASTING – LOOK and SMELL

 

 

This is probably an appropriate time to discuss “wine tasting” – not throwing back wine shooters, and not listening to some overblown idea of what a wine tastes like – but a tasting that can begin a lifetime of learning.

I begin all of our wine seminars at Elizabeth’s with an admonition and promise – that wine tasting is one of the great courses you can take because “you are the professor and you grade the papers.” Your palate controls and no one should tell you whether you like or should like a wine. The best advice is to ignore all ratings or write-ups about a wine, simply approach wine tasting as a food tasting – After all wine is food.

There are three essential and different steps to tasting wines. Wine tasting is your evaluation of a wine’s appearance, smell and taste.

LOOK AT THE WINE

The first step is to observe the wine’s overall appearance – your first clue to the wine you are about to taste.  Most of the following observations can be accomplished in a few seconds. Don’t spend a lot of time observing the wine. 

Color intensity: This can give a good indication of a wines quality – particularly when comparing similar wines of the same varietal. e.g.: a Pinot Noir with a Pinot Noir. If one of the compared wines has a deeper color the wine was probably made from higher quality grapes and will have more flavor and body. Also, if a red wine has a paler color it can be an indication that the grapes may have been picked before fully ripened or come from an over-planted vineyard.

To determine a wine’s true color hold the stem, tilt the glass at an angle and view the wine against a white background thereby viewing the wine on its side. 

White Wines

Generally, the paler a wine is the less intensity the wine will show.

A pale wine with slight green tints usually indicates a wine from a cool climate and a wine that probably has some noticeable acidity.  

A straw color may indicate a relatively young dry wine.

Yellow gold or “buttercup-yellow” shade can indicate a wine with more powerful, complex or medium aged flavors (3 to 5 years).

A deeper gold color will usually indicate a wine with six or more years of bottle age. A late harvest or a dessert wine such as Chateau d’Yquem can gain an even deeper golden color with long term bottle aging.

Brownish tints to the wine usually indicate excessive aging that may have become oxidized. (A wine exposed to small amounts of oxygen over a long aging which causes deterioration and exhibits a sherry smell – is not good.)

Red Wines

The color of red wine can give significant hints to us about the wine we are about to drink.

Purple: usually indicates a young wine.

Ruby (crimson): Young dry wines with minimal aging.

Red – indicates a wine with several years of bottle age such as a 2 to 5 year old Bordeaux or Cabernet Sauvignon, or a 1 to 3 year old Pinot Noir

Brick-red color occurs when a hint of brown begins to show in a wine and when the red color begins to fade. This color is evident in older Bordeaux and Burgundies.

The brownish color becomes more noticeable as these wines age more towards their maturity.

 A quick note: sometimes while observing a wine’s clarity you will observe little crystal deposits in the wine (tartrate crystals). These crystal deposits do not affect the wines taste. If they are in the bottom of the bottle a slow pouring into the glass will help reduce their appearance in the glass.

Another note: What are legs and are they important? Legs, sometimes referred to as tears, assist in identifying a wine tasted blind. When wine is swirled in the glass the rivulets that are formed on the side of the glass give us an indication of the wine’s alcohol level, or a wines richness. When tasting from a bottle just look at the alcohol percentage on the bottle don’t bother with legs.   

But, you say we are here to taste.

True, but our next step is the most important and must be taken before actual tasting.

SMELL 

First you should avoid the use of perfume or scented after-shave lotion if you are going to be tasting wines or dining in a fine dining wine restaurant. Not only for you but in consideration of others who will be tasting near you.  

You will create your own technique for getting the nose of a wine. Try placing your nose in the glass and taking a gentle sniff. Then swirl the wine in the glass and take another more deeply inhaled sniff. Repeated attempts at smelling the same wine aren’t helpful as your nose will develop fatigue. If you don’t get any discernable nose after the first two sniffs try placing your hand over the top of the wine glass and after lightly swirling take your hand away and immediately sniff from the glass.

The ability to discern different smells of fruit, spices and oak is essential for wine and food pairing.

Our ability to smell is far greater than our ability to taste. Smelling is important because it is the easiest way to reveal a problem wine. One such smell is moldy, wet cardboard or newspapers – an indication of a wine that is corked. White table wines that smell stale and sherry-like with a smell of overripe apples indicates the wine has become oxidized (air exposure) or maderized (baked) which can be an indication of improper warm storage. The term maderized indicates a table wine with Madeira like character – great for a Madeira wine – terrible for a table wine.

Now we can begin to taste.

Our tongue can taste salt, sour, sweet and bitter (considerably less than the thousands of smells we can remember and identify.)

Remember the admonition – if you like a wine it is a good wine for your palate – if you don’t like a wine it is not a good wine for you.

We will fully discuss actual tasting in the next blog

 

© Leonard G. Logan, Jr.

Wines on Wine Dinner 4/08/09

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

Wines Mel and I enjoyed for our wine dinner at Elizabeth’s, April 8, 2009.

Perrier Jouët Grand Brut Champagne

Chalone 2004 Chenin Blanc-Wonderful nose with refreshing acidity – perfect balance- pear notes . Served with Pecan crusted Sweet Onion torte drizzled with an aged balsamic reduction

 Joseph Drouhin 1993 Beaune Blanc Les Clos des Mouches  -Hard to believe this wine is 16 years ago. Refreshing youthful acidity married to an earthy Burgundian style wine.  Honey and lemon drop flavors with spice, stone, and honeysuckle aromas. A wonderful treat.  Unfortunately, this is our last bottle and may well be the last bottle in the United States. Served with Grilled smoked mozzarella roasted red pepper ravioli in a white truffle sauce

Halleck 2005 Pinot NoirThe tannins frame ripe flavors of cherry jam, cola, rhubarb pie, mocha, new oak and Asian spice, and the texture is pure silk and satin.” Deliciously gentle, it’s a wine that changes in the glass as it airs and warms.” — S.H. (6/1/2007)THE WINE ENTHUSIAST.  Served with Pan seared sesame crusted sushi grade Tuna with a soy ginger beurre blanc and an Asian Seaweed salad

 

Lewis 2005 Reserve Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon – Smooth and intense- wonderfully balanced. Toasty, smoky oak spices, chocolate, clove and caramel aromas ,  black currant and Turkish coffee flavors. This wine is a treat. Served with Belgian chocolate buttons and cheese tray – A new Mel  favorite.

Notes from Elizabeth’s Tasting Table

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

NOTES FROM ELIZABETH’S TASTING TABLE

2009 TASTING NOTES

                Prepared with the assistance of the entire Elizabeth’s Serving staff, Alice, Brad and Leonard.

Tasting March 18, 2009

Emp998-997 Hess 2007 Lake County Sauvignon Blanc

                                                            Under $20.00

Two different clones from a vineyard of 1700 feet. An American Sauvignon Blanc clone providing stone fruit and peach notes and a  Musque clone bringing in grapefruit notes.  Made in stainless steel and aged in French oak barrels.

This is a pale yellow pleasant and powerful wine. Notes of tangerine, pineapple, nectarine, stone fruits, white peach, spice and almond- not overblown with grassy flavors. Dry and medium body with refreshing acidity.

Pare with our grilled shrimp and mango chutney. 

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

We loved this.

 

Emp998-997 Peter Lehmann 2006 Semillion

                                                            Under $25.00

  A green gold floral wine with a butterscotch, honey nose and a honey, lemon,  floral finish. A dry crispy tart acidic light to medium bodied wine with a medium finish. A perfect wine for our Scallop and brie soup. 

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

Emp4721-999 Peter Lehmann 2008 Adelaide Layers

                                                            Under $25.00

  A blend of Semillion, gewürztraminer, chardonnay, muscat and pinot gris from Barossa in Australia. A pale yellow pleasant floral and fruity wine with lemon, apricot, peach and melon flavors. Nice acidity, lively- supple, medium body with a round finish. An interesting wine with enough acidity to stand up to some heavier foods.

Perfect wine for our Scallop and brie soup.

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

Emp998-579 Colome’ 2007 Torrontes Argentina

                                                            Under $12.00

Grapefruit, peach, rose and lavender notes.

Good wine for the price but merely OK

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

 

Dee9961-9921 Lolonis 2006 Redwood Valley Chardonnay

                                                Under $34.00

A certified organic wine- 145 year old vines- “Old world heritage, new world style.” Crystal clear pale wine with a pleasant nose of tropical notes- a short pleasant finish..

Lemon, pineapple, honey, butterscotch, vanilla and toasty balanced medium bodied wine. Nice acidity- a food friendly wine. Consider a scallops dish.

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

 Dee9922-9981 Pezzi King 2005 Russian River Valley Chardonnay

                                                Under $40.00

A brilliant pale yellow wine showing banana and dried fruit. Green olive notes on the nose that do not confuse the palate. This light medium wine is pleasant.  Ripe bananas. Not a Leonard fav.

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

X  NO- not a staff favorite.

 

Emp2491-9921 Su’Skol 2006 Chardonnay

                                                            Under $30.00

Su’skol is an old Indian name. Made in 100 % French Oak Barrels. A pale yellow pleasant wine showing mango and papaya and melon notes with subdued oak -  A balanced fresh bright wine with lots of complexity. We will consider offering this wine with our scallop and brie bisque. 

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

Dee9981- 9931 Lolonis 2005 Redwood Valley Zinfandel

                                                Under $30.00

A certified organic wine- 40 year old vines- Aged in French and American Oak.

A pleasant ruby colored wine with fruity character. Black cherry, blackberry, plum, spicy pepper, vanilla, charred flavors, leather, dirt, red licorice,

A dry, smooth, balanced medium full-bodied wine with a wonderfully long finish.

A staff favorite.  Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

                Pair with Duck or Pork.

Emp9473-0062 Hess Collection 2005 Mount Veeder Napa Valley Estate Grown Cabernet Sauvignon

                                                            Under $80.00

From the best vineyard land on Mt. Veeder from an elevation up to 1120 feet.. Hand harvested made in French Oak barrels with thin staves to soften the wine. 

A violet tinted powerful wine with blueberry, raspberry and chocolate notes. A full bodied balanced wine that is smooth with soft tannins. An average finish.

We are comparing this to our previously offered by-the-glass cabernet sauvignon wines.  Will place it on our list but considering adding to by-the-glass list. It is not as big as Cedar Knoll the staff’s favorite offered on our glass list.

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

Emp9381 Artezin 2006 Dry Creek Valley, California Zinfandel

                                                            Under $40.00

From 100 year old vines.  A garnet red pleasant fruity wine with blackberry, raspberry, strawberry, dark cherry, raisin, prune fig – Port like  with vanilla, leather, barnyard, black pepper, red licorice, chocolate and nut meg flavors.  A feast of wonderful flavors that are integrated in a dry, velvety smooth, fresh, medium-full bodied wine with a long satisfying finish.. 

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

Emp0591-0521 Colome’ 2006 Malbec vino tinto de Gran Altura Argentina

                                                            Under $40.00

Made from 90 to 150 year old grapes grown in a biodynamic high altitude vineyard. 10,000 feet makes this one of the highest vineyards in the world.  The grape skins are thicker to protect against UV rays. The grapes are French from pre-phylloxera vines. 85% Malbec, 7% Cabernet Sauvignon and 8% Tannat.

The Wine Spectator selected this wine as the number 38 wine for the year.

This staff favorite is a garnet red wine with strong nose and flavors of cherries, blackberries, blue berries, white pepper, cocoa, pomegranate and violets.  It is like an incredible natural blueberry/blackberry pie without all the sugar. A dry lightly dusty full bodied rich wine with a long finish. Staff comment “Sexy”

Staff Tasting March 18, 2009

 

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