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Wine Blog from The International Wine of the Month Club

A wine blog written by the experts from The International Wine of the Month Club

A Special 83 Year Old Winemaker Named Angel

September 13, 2012 by Don Lahey

On a recent visit to Spain I had the opportunity to spend time with Angel Rodriquez, one of Spain’s most revered winemakers.  Anyone who has met Angel Rodriguez stands in awe of his tremendous accomplishment.  Visiting this spry, witty 83 year old winemaker and his beloved Martinsancho Vineyard is a rare treat and valuable lesson in the value of dedication, history, and wine.  Angel’s story is the story of a unique grape called Verdejo.  Although Verdejo is one of only a handful of truly noble Spanish white grape varietals, it was in serious danger of extinction by the early 1970s due to the pervasive planting of more prolific native varietals such as Viura and Palomino and the introduction of international favorites such as Chardonnay.  Through his loving refusal to uproot his ancient 17th century vineyard called Martinsancho, Angel Rodriguez saved the delicious, but shy bearing Verdejo from extinction

The original majuelo or 17th century vineyard of Martinsancho comprises less than two acres of ancient vines, all of which are in excess of 250 years of age.  These gnarled, ungrafted vines grow out of a bed of stones over thirty feet deep, preserved in isolation as a museum of pre-phylloxera viticulture and a continuing source of undisputed varietal authenticity.  Once considered an anachronism and an economic liability, nurseries throughout Europe now treasure the Martinsancho Vineyard and its beloved Verdejo for the vine cuttings it provided and the viticultural legacy it has preserved.  Yet, more than forty years ago no one seemed to care about this old vineyard with its unprofitable, extremely low yielding vines; in fact, few had even heard of Martinsancho’s existence.  Verdejo was on the verge of extinction as it was deemed not profitable enough then by most experts to preserve, let alone grow, despite the vine’s noble pedigree and the undisputed quality of the wine it produced.  Yet, in spite of the prevailing pressure and “expert advice” to uproot the old vineyard, Angel Rodriguez preserved it, and then undertook the near impossible and what many have called sheer lunacy: he re-grafted Martinsancho’s Verdejo by hand into 25 acres of a nearby vineyard with nearly identical soil – a monolithic undertaking.

Subsequently, other Rueda growers have planted Verdejo with the help of Angel Rodriguez, to the point that today Verdejo is once again the leading white grape varietal in Rueda.  For his great sacrifice and untiring efforts in favor of re-establishing Verdejo’s prominence in its region of origin, Angel Rodriguez has been officially honored by King Juan Carlos of Spain. Yet, in spite of his great accomplishment and the recognition that has followed, Angel Rodriquez remains a humble man who believes in tradition.  He steadfastly maintains a very low-tech approach to the natural production of his wine, which is totally organic and includes little or no added sulfites – a rarity, especially among white wines.  Look for Angel’s Rodriguez’s outstanding 2011 Martinsancho Verdejo in an upcoming feature.

 Don

Posted in: Interesting Wine Info, Notes from the Panel, Wine Regions Tagged: Martinsancho Vineyard

Priorat

September 10, 2012 by Don Lahey

It’s hard to imagine a more inhospitable climate and a more remote, godforsaken locale than Spain’s Priorat.  Nothing but grapes could possibly thrive in such a rugged terrain scoured by gales and mistral like winds, a land set apart from life as most of us know it.  Tiny towns, which cleave to  Priorat’s precipitous mountains and are inhabited by fewer than a hundred hardy souls, pay testimony to the area’s isolation and add to the region’s desolate feel.  In Priorat, unlike Rioja, Ribera del Duero, and most other Spanish wine regions, there are no golden fields of waving grain or long undulating rows of vines stretching as far as the eye can see.  So, what makes Priorat so appealing?  It’s the region’s high mountain vineyards and dramatic scenery that make this inaccessible part of Catalonia hallowed ground.  Nowhere else in Spain does old vine Garnacha and Cariñena produce such dramatic wines – full-bodied beauties – that are often blended with hedonistic dollops of Syrah, Mourvèdre, Merlot, and Cabernet Sauvignon.  What I find so appealing about Priorat are the many variations on the same theme, all with pure natural flavors, simple elegance, rusticity, and warmth.  These are high alcohol wines with heart and soul and plenty of sensual appeal.  Stay tuned!

Don

Posted in: Interesting Wine Info, Wine Regions

The Golden Age of Wine

September 5, 2012 by Don Lahey

This is truly “The Golden Age of Wine.”  Never before in the thousands of years of recorded human history has wine been better than it is today.  Have great wines been made in times past?  Absolutely!  But never has there been so many good wines produced than in the last two decades, and nowhere is this truer than in Spain.  Although Spain is the latest wine producing powerhouse to experience an oenological renaissance, it has caught up to the other big boys in a hurry, and in many cases surpassed other wine producing nations in both the quality and value it offers the wine drinker.  Once known almost exclusively for its rich traditional Rioja Reservas and fine Sherries, Spain now fashions an enormous array of delicious wines, both red and white, from every corner of the country.  And happily Spain has not thrown the proverbial baby out with the bath water: instead contemporary and traditional styles of wines prevail in Spain, across the oenological spectrum.  From the bright, fresh white wines of Galicia and Rueda to the impeccably aged wines of Rioja, Ribera del Duero, Priorat and Jerez, Spain offers the wine consumer tremendous quality, value, and variety.  If you haven’t already experienced the delightful works of Spain’s wine masters, it’s about time you did.  After all, this is Spain’s Golden Age of Wine, so why not take part in Spain’s El Siglo de Oro del Vino.

Posted in: Interesting Wine Info

Collector Series Top Picks

August 20, 2012 by Don Lahey

Artesa continues to fashions outstanding estate bottled Chardonnays, and the property’s 2010 Estate Reserve may be this formidable property’s best Chardonnay to date.  Consequently, our First Top Pick goes to the 2010 Artesa Estate Reserve Chardonnay.  Drink it now and enjoy it, or lay it down to garner additional complexity.  This Chardonnay will offer great drinking for five years or more.  This month’s second Top Pick is where the guilt sets in.  For present consumption, Peltier Station’s rare and superbly rendered 2006 Teraldego from a tiny 2 acre vineyard on the estate, is simply not to be missed.  Suave, sophisticated, and drinking beautifully right now, it’s earned a spot at the top.  It’s a Top Pick for sure.  However, Tremonte’s 2010 Monte Rekewa Oro de Los Coipos deserves to be mentioned as well.  Granted, this full-throttle blend of Malbec and Cabernet Sauvignon begs for more time in the bottle to reveal all that it has to offer, but if what we tasted is any indication of what one can expect from this youthful giant, we’re in for one heck of a treat.  So it also deserves a spot at the top for the awesome potential it portends.  A votre santé!

Posted in: Featured Selections, Notes from the Panel

Premier Series Top Picks

August 17, 2012 by Don Lahey

This month’s Premier Series Top Picks causes me a bit of consternation.  Yeah, it’s the choice thing again.  I’ve always been fond of Italy’s estate bottled white wines.  They stand in stark contrast to the oceans of commercial Soaves and Pinot Grigios that the “industrial producers,” whose names everyone can recite, turn out.  This month’s Premier Series wine, the 2010 Forchir estate bottled Pinot Grigio, is the mirror opposite of the “commercial grade” of wine that rarely excites.  Hence, this month’s first Top Pick goes to Forchir’s 2010 Villa del Borgo’s Fruili Pinot Grigio – a pure, refreshing, flavorful white wine that captures the ethereal quality of Pinot Grigio without sacrificing flavor.  It’s not buttery or complex, but it’s a perfect feature for the month of August and a great value, too.  So, it’s the red wines this month that make my job tough.  Peltier Station’s 2009 is a luscious Cabernet that rocked our tasting panel.  The wine’s texture, flavor, and seamless quality put a lot of the more expensive California Cabernets we tasted to shame, so it, too, has earned a  Top Pick for the month.  Better value in California Cabernet is hard to find.  But we have a co-recipient in Bodegas Carchelo’s 2010 Carchelo from Jumilla.  Carchelo captures the power and flavor of Monastrell (Mourvedre).  Although already drinking beautifully now, this wine will knock your socks off if given a few more months in bottle.  It stands in testimony to the quality and variety one can expect from Spain, so it, too, deserves to be a Top Pick.  A votre santé!

Posted in: Featured Selections, Notes from the Panel

Vegetable Panini

August 9, 2012 by Don Lahey

  • 1 loaf round (boule) crusty bread – sliced
  • 1 zucchini -sliced
  • 1 bunch fresh basil leaves
  • 1 small eggplant – sliced
  • 1 red bell pepper – sliced
  • 1 large tomato – sliced
  • olive oil
  • salt & pepper

Brush zucchini, eggplant and red pepper with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper. Grill vegetables until well cooked (even a little charred is okay). On one side of bread, drizzle olive oil, line with basil leaves, top with mozzarella, grilled vegetables and then tomato slices and top with another piece of bread. Place on a grill pan or in a panini press and cook over medium high heat for 5 minutes on each side or until cheese is melted.

Posted in: Recipes and Pairings Tagged: #recipe

Wines are a lot like kids

August 6, 2012 by Don Lahey

Wines are a lot like kids: on any given day they can make a liar out of you. One day they’re perfectly well behaved, and the next day . . . well you get the picture. Johnny is an angel in school but a devil at home. Mary is just the opposite, sweet as pie when Mom and Dad are around, and a fallen angel away from the house. What makes us think that wines are all that different from kids? Well, I realize that wines can’t think, yet I know they have minds of their own. One day a wine shows great and blows the panel and everyone else away, and the next day that same wine just might not have quite the same appeal. Why? So many factors affect how a wine tastes on any given day: storage, serving temperature, weather (particularly barometric pressure) and accompaniments to a wine all have something to do with how a wine is perceived by the majority of tasters. However, the common denominator is probably us. We humans are influenced by our companions, experiences, moods, and most acutely by the foods we consume prior to tasting a particular wine. Our palates get tired, just like the rest of our bodies. Moreover, we all know that certain foods can wreak havoc on our taste buds. Horseradish, Tabasco, raw garlic and onion are just a few of the foods most commonly cited as affecting our taste buds, but almost any food can alter one’s perception of a wine. So, tasters beware! What you had for lunch can affect how a wine shows or is perceived at dinner.

Posted in: Interesting Wine Info, Wine Education

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