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Wine Blog from The International Wine of the Month Club

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Grilled Steak With Tapenade

April 28, 2017 by Kristina Manning

Healthy and delicious, this flavorful dish comes together in a snap and pairs perfectly with our Viña Magna Tempranillo Crianza Ribera del Duero 2011 from our April’s Collector’s Series.

Ingredients

Directions

Preheat a grill or grill pan to high. Pulse the olives, shallot, garlic, rosemary, red pepper flakes, 2 tablespoons olive oil and the juice of 1/2 lemon in a food processor; season with salt and pepper.

Pierce the steak all over with a fork and season with salt and pepper. Rub 1 heaping tablespoon olive mixture all over the steak, then set aside, about 10 minutes. Meanwhile, toss the remaining olive mixture with the tomatoes, parsley, the remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil and the juice of the remaining 1/2 lemon in a small bowl.

Grill the steak until browned on one side, about 7 minutes. Flip and cook about 7 more minutes for medium rare. Transfer the steak to a cutting board and let rest 5 minutes. Cut in half; reserve one half for steak sandwiches (at right). Thinly slice the remaining steak against the grain and top with the olive-tomato tapenade.

Recipe and photo by Food Network Kitchens courtesy of www.foodnetwork.com

Posted in: Recipes and Pairings

What to Look For In April

April 21, 2017 by Don Lahey

Each month The International Wine of the Month Club delivers to our members the finest quality and value wines available from around the world. This April The International Wine of the Month Club Premier Series features a host of springtime wines to grace your table and delight your palate. The 2015 Château Sainte Eulalie Plaisir d’Eulalie Minervois, a plump, round and beautifully textured red wine from old vines in a great vintage, begins this month’s offerings. The 2015 Plaisir d’Eulalie captures the taster with savory scents of black cherry and plum, intertwined with hints of violet, Provençal herbs and black pepper – all of which continue to develop and impress for hours on end. We have come to expect nothing less from Madame Coustal, who consistently fashions fleshy, juicy wines with soft, seductive tannins. For those looking for a mouthful of beautiful fruit and a taste of traditional country wine from France’s oldest wine producing region, there is no better offering than Château Eulalie’s 2015 Plaisir d’Eulalie.

Our next Premier Series offering is the 2015 Emile Beyer Pinot Blanc Tradition from Alsace. Emile Beyer’s 2015 Tradition Pinot Blanc exudes charm, flavor, and a roundness that comes only in great vintages such as 2015. In this wine, winemaker Christian Beyer captures the lush fruit that characterizes the vintage, without sacrificing the ethereal quality that makes his Pinot Blanc both easy to drink and completely satisfying. The aromas of Bosc pears and mountain apples laced with soft seductive hints of freshly baked bread and spices delight the nose, all of which set the tone for the finely honed fruit flavors, subtle complexity, and underlying energy that always seem to emerge from Beyer’s wines.

Next in this month’s exciting quartet is the 2011 Antucura Calcura from a highly acclaimed winery with a reputation for fashioning bold, age-worthy wines that are literally packed with flavor. The 2011 Antucura Calcura offers a visually intense ruby color, brilliant aromatics, and stunning concentration. A blend of 40% Merlot, 33% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 27% Malbec, the 2011 Antucura Calcura is an outstanding Meritage offering and the finest Calcura to emanate from this illustrious winery. It offers ripe blackberry, plum, currant, and spice flavors that truly fill the senses. Velvety and smooth upon entry into the mouth, Calcura explodes on the palate with a riot of flavors. Tremendous fruit and complexity are backed by ripe tannins and 15.5% alcohol, the latter being nearly imperceptible until after you have consumed it. Given the complexity, size, and even the elegance of this wine, it is no wonder that it has received such favorable press. The 2011 Antucura Calcura received 94 Points from Patricio Tapia’s Descorchados, South America’s illustrious wine guide. Patricio Tapia, a journalist and Bordeaux trained winemaker, also writes for Wine & Spirits magazine, where he covers the wines from South America and Spain, and Decanter.

Rounding out this month’s Premier Series offerings is the 2016 Casas del Bosque Reserva Sauvignon Blanc, which continues Casas del Bosque’s “hot hand” with Sauvignon Blanc and adds further testimony to the superiority of Chile’s Casablanca Valley for growing cool climate grapes. The 2016 Casas del Bosque Casablanca Reserva Sauvignon Blanc offers the crispness of French Sancerre, the juicy citrus flavors of New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc, and beautiful fig and melon flavors along with an aromatic intensity that only Chile seems to impart to Sauvignon Blanc: a delightful mélange of citrus, melon, and herb that intensifies as the wine rests in the glass. Bright in color, captivating in aroma, and delicious in flavor the exuberant 2016 Casas del Bosque Casablanca Reserva Sauvignon Blanc is even more alluring than the winery’s award winning 2015 Reserva Sauvignon Blanc.

The International Wine of the Month Club’s Collectors Series presents three exceptional and uniquely different wines this April. The 2011 Viña Magna Tempranillo Crianza (Gold Medal recipient at Europe’s renowned Concours Mundial de Bruxelles) spearheads this month’s selections. The 2011 Viña Magna Tempranillo Crianza drinks like a first-class Reserva from Ribera del Duero, Spain’s most illustrious Tempranillo appellation, and aptly reflects Viña Magna’s pre-eminence in crafting traditional Ribera del Duero. This wine displays a robe of deep garnet and purple, which makes it appear nearly impenetrable in the glass. Although built for the long haul (10-15 years of a healthy life), the 2011 Viña Magna begins to sing from the glass from the moment it is poured. It offers a deep draught of plum and black cherry fruit, minerals, spice, and well-integrated oak tones to delight the nose. In the mouth, the wine reveals its power and concentration as well as its plush texture and broad palate appeal. Unfolding slowly, revealing layer upon layer of boysenberry, fig, dark chocolate and spicy oak tones, the 2011 Viña Magna Tempranillo Crianza ingratiates itself to the palate before finishing with a bang. There is no lack of tannin or structure in this Ribera del Duero, but all is in sync. Savvy consumers will want to lay away some bottles of this wine to enjoy in the years to come.

Our next April Collectors Series offering is a highly allocated white Burgundy from one of Chassagne-Montrachet’s preeminent producers, Amiot Guy. Amiot Guy’s 2014 Bourgogne Chardonnay emanates from vines just outside the boundary of Chassagne-Montrachet and drinks like classic white Burgundy from that renowned village. This Bourgogne Blanc is a wine of grace, precision, and subtlety that bears little resemblance to the tropical fruit-bomb style of many New World Chardonnays. Rather than overlay the exemplary mineral rich flavors of Chardonnay or obscure the appellation’s unique terroir with copious quantities of new oak, as is often the case with New World Chardonnays, Guy and Thierry Amiot capture the complexity, sophistication, and eminent drinkability of Chardonnay in the family’s brilliant 2014 Bourgogne Chardonnay, a wine that sports a sun-kissed robe that radiates the glow of morning sunshine. Along with a brilliant color, the medium-bodied Amiot Guy Bourgogne Blanc possesses a mineral rich nose and a wealth of soft, seductive flavors. In the mouth, a cache of flowers, minerals, and spices wells up from the center of this wine, adding complexity and framing the racy finish of this elegant concoction. Although still in the fresh bloom of youth, the 2014 Amiot Guy Bourgogne Chardonnay has several years of favorable evolution ahead of it. Enjoy it now and over the next couple of years.

Completing this month’s Collectors Series is the magnificent 2012 Edgebaston GS Cabernet Sauvignon, a wine dedicated to the late George Spies, former winemaker at Monis of Paarl and Stellenbosch Farmers Winery. Spies’ 1966 and 1968 GS Cabernets have been heralded as two of the most extraordinary Cabernets ever made in South Africa and they have been compared to the legendary California Cabernets of André Tchelistcheff from that same era. Having tasted numerous Cabernets made in the 1960s by André Tchelistcheff and a string of Edgebaston’s GS Cabernet Sauvignons over the past 7-8 years, it is clear that Edgebaston’s GS Cabernets do indeed bear more than a passing resemblance to Tchelistcheff’s legendary wines. Both wines are deep, dark, and tannic in their youth, not unlike First Growth Bordeaux such as Château Margaux, Lafite or Latour, which is why the highly allocated 2012 Edgebaston GS Cabernet Sauvignon remains the current release. Although still extraordinarily deep and powerful and far from its ultimate maturity, the 2012 Edgebaston GS Cabernet Sauvignon already displays beautiful aromatics and a core of fruit, earth, and spice in the form of a wellspring of voluptuous blackberry and blackcurrant fruit imbued with cedar, spice and plenty of ripe tannins, all wrapped in a satiny patina. David Finlayson’s GS Cabernet comes across as an artful blend of Classified Bordeaux and super premium Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, blessed with a touch of the fabulous terroir of Stellenbosch. This should come as no surprise given David’s experience with great Cabernet Sauvignon while at Château Margaux and now at his own estate. Enjoy!

Salud!
Don

Posted in: Featured Selections, Notes from the Panel

Tomato-Cheddar Strata with Broccoli

April 14, 2017 by Kristina Manning

Perfect for Easter Brunch, this flavorful and impressive dish works best if made the night before to ensure the bread has time to soak up all the flavors.

Ingredients

  • 4½ c. 1-inch bread cubes
  • butter
  • 6 oz. shredded Cheddar (about 1 1/2 cups)
  • 1 c. halved grape tomatoes
  • 1 c. frozen broccoli florets
  • 1½ tbsp. chopped fresh Italian parsley
  • 8 large eggs
  • 3 c. milk
  • 1¼ tsp. salt
  • .13 tsp. Freshly ground pepper
  • 4 oz. ricotta cheese
  • 1 tsp. herbes de Provence

Directions

Place bread in a buttered 9- by 13-inch baking dish. Top bread with 1 cup Cheddar, tomatoes, broccoli, and 1 tablespoon parsley.

In a large bowl, whisk together eggs, milk, salt, and pepper. Pour egg mixture over bread and gently press to soak every cube. Add dollops of ricotta over top. Sprinkle strata with herbes de Provence and remaining Cheddar. Cover and refrigerate for several hours or up to overnight.

Remove strata from refrigerator and bring to room temperature, about 1 hour. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Bake until strata is puffed and lightly golden brown, about 1 hour. Set aside to cool for 10 minutes. Garnish with remaining parsley. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Recipe by Susan Sugarman and photo by Quentin Bacon courtesy of www.countryliving.com. 

Posted in: Recipes and Pairings

Springtime Delights: Great Wines for Spring

April 7, 2017 by Don Lahey

Every season offers its rewards but none more so than spring. Spring breathes life back into the earth, harbingers new beginnings, and brings forth the newest and most heralded wine releases as well as the opportunity to taste the first fruits of the previous vintage. So many wines, so little time!

Spring is also a time to think about delicious rosé wines, crisp, light whites that enliven the senses, and fresh, vinous reds that go down easily. For starters, it looks to be another banner year for Provençal rosé, at least in terms of quality, with Provence experiencing smaller yields but exceptional quality in 2016 (the 2016 Provençal rosés will begin arriving shortly), while many of the 2015 Provençal rosés are still drinking well, including the delicious 2015 Le Provençal Côtes de Provence Rosé. Newly and soon to be released 2016 rosés from California, Chile and South Africa are also worth seeking out. Other wonderful springtime selections include plush Alsace Pinot Blancs from the 2015 vintage from premier producers such as Dopf au Moulin and Emile Beyer.

The springtime market is also flush with outstanding red wines from Languedoc, Provence and the southern Rhône Valley. For example, the 2015 Château Sainte Eulalie Plaisir d’Eulalie Minervois makes a splendid springtime red: it’s fresh, easy to drink, and it enlivens the palate but spares the wallet. Newly released 2015 Côtes-du-Rhône reds and 2015 Côtes-du-Rhône Blancs from reliable producers such as Château du Trignon are also exceptional. They capture the magic of the 2015 vintage: beautiful ripe fruit, excellent balance, and firm structures that recall the fecundity of spring.

Wonderful, crisp Sauvignon Blancs from the 2016 vintage in New Zealand and South America are also now rolling in to provide tasty springtime libations. Who can resist Casas del Bosque’s exemplary Reserva Sauvignon Blanc or Casa Silva’s Sauvignon Gris from 100 year old vines? Certainly not many of us, given the tremendous quality and overwhelmingly flattering press these wineries have received.

Spring also means the first real peek at Bordeaux’s much heralded 2015 vintage, as the 2015 Petits Châteaux begin to arrive. From early tastings and all indications, the 2015 Bordeaux reds are certainly the finest since 2010. White Bordeaux in 2015 also offers a breath of spring with full, lively whites that fill the mouth. Enjoy!

Salud!
Don

Posted in: Interesting Wine Info, Notes from the Panel, Wine Education

Potato Leek Soup

March 31, 2017 by Kristina Manning

Ingredients

  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 4 leeks, white and light green parts only, roughly chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed
  • 2 pounds Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and roughly chopped into 1/2-inch pieces
  • 7 cups low sodium chicken or vegetable broth (best quality such as Swanson)
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 sprig fresh thyme, plus more for garnish if desired
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • Chives, finely chopped (optional)

Instructions

  1. Melt the butter over medium heat in a large soup pot. Add the leeks and garlic and cook, stirring regularly, until soft and wilted, about 10 minutes. Adjust the heat as necessary so as not to brown.
  2. Add the potatoes, stock, bay leaves, thyme, salt and pepper to pot and bring to a boil. Cover and turn the heat down to low. Simmer for 15 minutes, or until the potatoes are very soft.
  3. Fish out the thyme sprig and bay leaves, then purée the soup with a hand-held immersion blender until smooth. (Alternatively, use a standard blender to purée the soup in batches; see note.) Add the heavy cream and bring to a simmer. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. If soup is too thin, simmer until thickened. If it’s too thick, add water or stock to thin it out. Garnish with fresh herbs if desired.

Note: If using a standard blender to purée the soup: be sure not to fill the jar more than halfway; leave the hole in the lid open and cover loosely with a dishtowel to allow the heat to escape; and pour blended soup into a clean pot.

Recipe and photo by Jennifer Segal courtesy of www.onceuponachef.com

Posted in: Recipes and Pairings

What to Look For In March

March 24, 2017 by Don Lahey

The International Wine of the Month Club is pleased to deliver in March to our Premier Series members four exciting, high quality wines from around the world. The 2015 Dominio Basconcillos Seis Meses Ribera del Duero, a traditional style of red wine, leads the way. Dominio Basconcillos’ 2015 Seis Meses Ribera del Duero truly reflects the estate’s pre-eminence in crafting traditional Ribera del Duero, as this wine offers a deep red color, superb concentration, and ample tannins to live a long illustrious life. It begins its magic with a tantalizing aroma of dark cherries, sassafras, and fresh, un-smoked tobacco. It follows through in the mouth with plenty of robust fruit and spice flavors backed by ripe bodacious tannins that let you know there is no wimp in this wine, and that it plans to live a long, healthy life with all the requisite requirements it needs to age gracefully.

Our next March Premier Series offering comes in the form of Simone Santini’s 2015 Le Calcinaie Vernaccia di San Gimignano. Rare among Tuscan white wines for its flavor, freshness, and longevity, Vernaccia di San Gimignano owes its 800 year reign as Tuscany’s most lauded white wine to the predominance of the relatively rare Vernaccia clones that thrive in the environs of San Gimignano. Whereas most Tuscan whites rely upon the more innocuous and ubiquitous Trebbiano and Malvasia grape varieties, Vernaccia di Gimignano must be comprised predominantly or entirely of Vernaccia. The 2015 Tenuta Le Calcinaie Vernaccia di San Gimignano is produced from 100% Vernaccia di San Gimignano from Simone Santini’s estate. It sparkles in the glass with glints of gold, a combination of the soft green of the magical landscape and the golden yellow glow of the Tuscan sun. Pure and aromatic, the 2015 Le Calcinaie Vernaccia di San Gimignano offers up a refreshing draught of fruit, soft scents of almond blossom, a subtle minerality, and a twist of ripe citrus and raw almond on the finish that lingers splendidly on the palate.

Next in this month’s exciting quartet is the 2014 Casarena Sinco, a rare, highly allocated blend of 60% Cabernet Sauvignon and 40% Malbec from one of Argentina’s most acclaimed wineries. The 2014 Sinco has garnered many 90+ point scores, including 92 points from Wine & Spirits Magazine. The 2014 Sinco deserves high praise for seamlessly wedding Cabernet Sauvignon and Malbec into a delicious, sophisticated blend that would be hard to resist at twice the price. The deeply colored 2014 Sinco offers an amplifying bouquet of red and black fruits, cassis, and well integrated floral and spice tones that seem to leap from the glass and at the same time seep into the center of the wine. Ripe, plush, and silky smooth in the mouth, the 2014 Sinco captivates the palate with ripe blackberry, mulberry, and cassis flavors infused with tantalizing touches of cinnamon, violets and dark chocolate. Authoritative, yet perfectly balanced, the 2014 Sinco finishes with great length and panache.

Completing this month’s Premier Series offerings is the 2015 Morgadío Rías Baixas Albariño, a truly dry wine that exhibits sophisticated fruit flavors, pinpoint minerality, and balanced acidity. Morgadío adheres to the traditional style of Albariño, which means a focused, highly structured wine with laser-like precision. The wine’s fruit emerges subtly, almost imperceptively. Dry, pure, and aromatic, this remarkable white wine whispers the enticing aromas of freshly picked apples and pears. It fills the mouth with fresh, racy flavors before finishing crisp and bracing.

The International Wine of the Month Club’s Collectors Series is thrilled to bring three exceptional and uniquely different wines to our Collectors Series members in March. The 2012 Silvio Grasso Barolo, a juicy, seductive style of Barolo, leads the way. In Grasso’s 2012 Barolo, one experiences a seamless design in which finesse and power play very well together, offering the thirsty imbiber plenty in the way of flavor as well as charm. The wine’s bright ruby/garnet robe first catches the eye, but it is this Barolo’s seductive bouquet that makes a truly auspicious first impression. Ripe, juicy red fruits, purple plums, rose petals, and savory spices all come to fore in this wine’s bouquet soon after pouring. In the mouth, this Barolo reveals even more of its innate charm, as it comes across as expansive, layered, and even supple and tender for a young Barolo. With extended aeration, an even greater core of polished fruits, exotic spices, and lush forest woodlands emerges. The 2015 Silvio Grasso Barolo exemplifies why Barolo is known as “the king of wines and the wine kings.”

Our next March Collectors Series offering is the 2015 Domaine Gilles Noblet Pouilly-Fuissé. The 2015 vintage produced stellar white Burgundy and yielded an exceptional 2015 Domaine Gilles Noblet Pouilly-Fuissé. Gilles Noblet himself has stated: “The 2015 Mâcon wines are the finest I have produced in 37 years.” This is high praise from a consummate winemaker not given to brash statements or hyperbole. The 2015 Domaine Gilles Noblet Pouilly-Fuissé offers even greater concentration than usual, as well as the same bright, sun-kissed robe and amplifying aromatics that one has come to expect from this property. An intriguing cornucopia of acacia blossoms, mountain apples, and soft mineral tones delight the olfactory. What’s more, the 2015 Domaine Gilles Noblet Pouilly-Fuissé exhibits an elegant, seductive mid-palate rich in fruit and minerals, which expands with each sip. Ripe, fleshy fruit, pinpoint minerality, and a delightfully racy finish balanced by just the right amount of acidity to match the fruit render the 2015 Domaine Gilles Noblet Pouilly-Fuissé a clear standout.

Completing this month’s Collectors Series is the 2010 Robertson Number One Constitution Road Shiraz, which lives up to its lofty reputation as the winery’s flagship offering. From the wine’s saturated purple color through to its long, captivating finish which lingers long after it is swallowed, Robertson’s 2010 Number One Constitution Road Shiraz sings from the glass. Intense aromas of rich, ripe blackberry fruit intertwined with seductive spice tones waft from the glass. In the mouth, what appears to be a forbidding opaque potion becomes a voluptuous elixir that caresses the palate with velvety fruit, hints of exotic spices and traces of black pepper – all chief calling cards of the finest Shiraz. And as the wine takes a long, well-deserved curtain call, supple fine-grained tannins combine with a pleasant patina of French oak to provide structure and lift. The 2010 Robertson Number One Constitution Road Shiraz is a mature wine from South Africa that begs to please.

Salud!
Don

Posted in: Featured Selections, Notes from the Panel

Shepherd’s Pie

March 13, 2017 by Kristina Manning

Ingredients:

For the potatoes:
For the meat filling:

Directions:

Peel the potatoes and cut into 1/2-inch dice. Place in a medium saucepan and cover with cold water. Set over high heat, cover and bring to a boil. Once boiling, uncover, decrease the heat to maintain a simmer and cook until tender and easily crushed with tongs, approximately 10 to 15 minutes. Place the half-and-half and butter into a microwave-safe container and heat in the microwave until warmed through, about 35 seconds. Drain the potatoes in a colander and then return to the saucepan. Mash the potatoes and then add the half and half, butter, salt and pepper and continue to mash until smooth. Stir in the yolk until well combined.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

While the potatoes are cooking, prepare the filling. Place the canola oil into a 12-inch saute pan and set over medium high heat. Once the oil shimmers, add the onion and carrots and saute just until they begin to take on color, approximately 3 to 4 minutes. Add the garlic and stir to combine. Add the lamb, salt and pepper and cook until browned and cooked through, approximately 3 minutes. Sprinkle the meat with the flour and toss to coat, continuing to cook for another minute. Add the tomato paste, chicken broth, Worcestershire, rosemary, thyme, and stir to combine. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to low, cover and simmer slowly 10 to 12 minutes or until the sauce is thickened slightly.

Add the corn and peas to the lamb mixture and spread evenly into an 11 by 7-inch glass baking dish. Top with the mashed potatoes, starting around the edges to create a seal to prevent the mixture from bubbling up and smooth with a rubber spatula. Place on a parchment lined half sheet pan on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 25 minutes or just until the potatoes begin to brown. Remove to a cooling rack for at least 15 minutes before serving.

 Recipe courtesy of Alton Brown from www.foodnetwork.com

Posted in: Recipes and Pairings

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