Mourvedre: the next big red?

A dozen intrepid tasters gathered at the Dr. Vino World Headquarters on Saturday to answer two pressing questions: (1) is mourvedre the next grape “for men” and (2) if we see more of it thanks to global warming, is that a good thing?

The two questions are interrelated. Because mourvedre (minus one for machismo—French name) has a long hang time (plus one!) it can produce powerful red wines (plus two!) that are high in alcohol (plus three!).

Further, the late bud break and late ripening mean that it does well in warmer climates, such as its ancestral homeland, Spain. The grape has grown so well in Provence that the appellation Bandol mandates that all reds must have at least 50 percent mourvedre. As the world heats up, are we going to see more mourvedre?

Mourvedre is popping up around the world. Originally named after the Spanish town of Murviedro, it came to cover much of southern France. In the late 19th century when phylloxera devasted vineyards, mourvedre lost out since it was difficult to graft, the successful remedy against the louse. Only in the last 50 years was mourvedre able to be grafted and as a result it has swung back into favor though it still lags the other big reds.

It is often blended with grenache and syrah in the Southern Rhone. Chateau de Beaucastel has had as much as 70 percent mourvedre in the blend. Known for giving brambly, rustic, gamey or animal aromas it can take a wine to the wild side. Australia also makes blends known as “GSM” after the three grape varieties although I found it hard to locate one with a significant amount of M.

The best wines from mourvedre are known to improve mightily with age. So I wanted to be sure to include some with age as well as from various growing areas. And it tends to be good in its inexpensive incarnation from Spain, so I wanted to include a few of those too.

I bought ten wines that were mostly mourvedre—or monastrell as it is known in Spain or mataro as it is known in California. Seven of our wines are currently available on the market. One, the Castano Solanera 2001 had been in my cellar for the past couple of years since I purchased it for about $10. The two others, the Tempier and the Ridge, I purchased from Hart Davis Hart in Chicago.

They came from Spain (5), California (3), Washington State (1), and France (1). I bagged them that morning so the tasting would be free of prejudice.

The tasting (in my order of preference)

Ridge, Mataro, Evangelo Vineyard, ATP, 1993. $25 find this wine
An excellent example of aging gracefully. Soft and delicate tannins, notes of forest floor, brambles, dust, leather and some tart cherry, this bottle was quickly emptied. With only seven barrels made, this was a small production that is now out of production.

Tablas Creek, Esprit de Beaucastel, Paso Robles, 2003. $38 find this wine
Wonderfully balanced with notes of earthy rusticity. The luscious black fruits, supple tannins, and mouth-filling charm with layers of complexity including faint clove, briars, and sage made this my favorite of the young wines. 50 percent mourvedre.

Rafael Cambra, Valencia, 2003. $30 find this wine
Modern in style, this wine exhibits the intensity of the grape in its youth: a slight minerality and acidity followed by solid but fun tannins from the oak as well as the grape. This one could do with 3-5 years in the cellar.

Castaño Solanera, Yecla, 2001. $10 find this wine
Although this wine had a couple of years of age on it, the tannins were still serious. But they made it seem more grown up. Sadly, a second bottle opened after the tasting was corked.

Juan Gil, Jumilla, 2003. $15 find this wine
This highly praised wine from importer Jorge Ordonez is fun and approachable with big concentration and supple tannins and notes of dark fruit, bacon fat, and vanilla. Many tasters enjoyed it, as did I. But I couldn’t help wondering if, in the future, if it wouldn’t be just a tad dull? Still it was the best performer of the currently available under $15 group.

Domaine Tempier, La Migoua, Bandol, 1998. $35 find this wine
Still very dark in color, this single vineyard Tempier with eight years of age was a disappointment. It exhibited musty, skunky notes with licorice and fatigue. I tried it again after the unveiling. A half a bottle remained at the end of the evening.

McCrea, Mourvedre, Red Mountain, Washington State, 2003. $13/375ml find this wine
Bottled in clear glass, the wine has a bright, Jolly Rancher color. It was a prelude to a taste: odd sweetness permeated the wine. Well made and improved with some of the cheeses, but oddly sweet finish remained.

Casa Castillo, Jumilla, 2004. $11 find this wine
No great complexity, no tannic backbone left me thinking, “eh.”

Luzon, Jumilla, 2005. $7 find this wine
With the previous vintage receiving huge praise (although my experience was one good one bad), I had thought that this would be a ringer. Unfortunately it was not to be. There was an odd mustiness that would not blow off, bright berry up front and oak that was not well integrated.

Garretson, mourvedre, “la graosta,” Paso Robles 2004. $30 find this wine
This 100 percent mourvedre had odd notes of sea salt and sulfur that took a while to blow off. Bright cherry and wet dog notes also present. Perhaps blend in some grenache or syrah? The alcohol too was perceptible with 14.8 percent on the label.

Returning to our two questions, mourvedre may not be too manly since men and women enjoyed the wines equally. And if we do see more of it in an era of global warming, it is able to produce exciting wines, particularly when blended with the fruitiness of grenache and the spiciness of syrah. On its own, a great site and top winemaking skills appear needed to make a good one. If game or fowl is on your plate this fall, try matching it to a mourvedre in the glass.

Saddam: Mateus for all

In his 2002 book on the former Iraqi leader, Con Coughlin chronicled Saddam’s rise to power. In the 1970s, Saddam developed a taste for the sweet Mateus rosé–along with American-style ribs, fancy suits, and racetrack gambling.

I remembered this little vignette (indeed, who could forget this wine tragedy?) when I met a representative of Sogrape at a recent tasting. Sogrape, of Portugal, makes Mateus to this day along with a stable of other wines and ports. I couldn’t resist asking him whether the fall of Saddam had meant a reduction in sales to Iraq.

“About two containers” of wine had to go elsewhere the representative told me.

Wow, 2,400 cases is a lot of wine. Was Saddam foisting Mateus on everyone in the palaces until the end?

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Foie gras fest 2006 continues!

Michael J. Panter, New Jersey Assemblyman has proposed a statewide ban on the forcible feeding of ducks and geese to make foie gras. Hmm, but non-forcible foie gras would be OK?

The ban set Anthony Bourdain on one of his “bobble-head doll rants”–or so Michael Ruhlman asked the opinionated chef/author in an enteratining exchange on Salon.com.

And just in case you don’t like chewing your foie gras, you can now toss down the hatch and try not to trigger your gag reflex. According to NYMag, the newly opened Lonesome Dove Western Bistro has this on their menu:

FOIE GRAS SHOOTER: Liquefied foie gras, something I created a couple of years ago. I roast the foie gras with some chiles and some salt and then we take all that fat and emulsify it with orange juice, Grand Marnier, and fresh coffee grounds. Put it into a shot, top with whipped cream, and make a little tuile cookie with foie gras instead of butter. In the cowboy spirit, do it in a shot and eat the cookie. Gorgeous!

Related:
Goose gitmo” [Dr. V]
Foie gras, arrest thy neighbor” [Dr. V]

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Dr. Vino podcast!

I took time out this week to “get saucy” with David Tamarkin (pictured right) of TimeOut Chicago. Well, I didn’t get too saucy. But we did discuss terroir as well as the business and politics of wine in France and America.

The funny thing is that David hid behind that wine glass the whole time we were talking. It’s a really big glass.

Listen here

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Mapping Chicago BYOB restaurants

Do you ever wish you could bring your own bottle of wine to a restaurant to improve your selection and lower the tab? One word for you: BYOB. (Actually four letters more than an outright word.) Chicago has the BYOB bounty with a bazillion Thai restaurants, sushi, Mexican, and Indian.

For more traditional wine-food pairings, there are some Italian places and Schwa, where Michael Carlson was named one of the best new chefs of 2006 by Food & Wine magazine.

They’re all on my new map of Chicago BYOB restaurants. Surf on over and get addresses, phone, hours, a satellite view (check the street for parking) and even driving directions! As they say in the finest casual dining locations, “enjoy!”

See the new map of Chicago BYOB:

www.drvino.com/chicagobyob.php

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Tasting sized pours

Wineau RIP: R.W. “Johnny” Apple’s obit in the NYT.

Wine glut: merlot hangs on the vine [Sonoma Press Democrat]

Wine glug
: Americans drank 2.1 percent more wine last year polishing off 273.7 million 9-liter cases according to Adams Beverage. Imported wines overall grew 5.6% while domestic wines rose 0.9%.

Wine truth: Sonoma in the brand name now must be 75 percent from Sonoma. [Sac Bee]

Wine woot: I got the loot. All arrived safely and promptly.

Holy wine: Jesus turned water into wine. The Church of St Mary in Christchurch, NZ is turning it into cold, hard cash selling its own brand of wine to fund building work. [stuff.co.nz]

Wine bling: C$30,000 for a half-bottle of ice wine from Canada. Only 5 cases produced. Yikes.

Ice wine: Dan Aykroyd gets into the ice wine action with Dan Aykroyd Signature Reserve Vidal Icewine 2005, due out next year. Not expected to be $30,000 a bottle.

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Have wine, can travel

You may not be able to travel with wine in the cabin any more, but you can still bring it on the plane–as checked baggage.

It was with a dash of hope and a tinge of desperation that I did just that yesterday. I needed some wines for a tasting this Saturday in New York. And I tracked down some Vieux Telegraphe 04 at a shop while I was in Chicago over the weekend. I ended up buying a case of wine total in the Windy City.

So I lowered twelve bottles into a previously used styrofoam shipper, sealed it up, and dropped it at O’Hare’s curbside check-in. Unfortunately, the skycap’s line was slowed with live animals and a large family, so I eventually hoisted my 40 lb, handleless box as well as my other bag to check and my carry-on and shuffled in to the computer self check-in.

After that I had to pick up my items, bring them to be weighed and continue my shuffle over to the TSA. I lingered to see the box enter the enormous scanning machine. After my corkscrew was confiscated on the outbound leg of my trip, I certainly didn’t want this delayed or destroyed. The box appeared on the belt out of the scanner and the TSA agent leaned over, gave it a squiggle with a marker, and set the box on its way down a second belt to the plane. Phew.

I remember seeing a documentary about life inside Heathrow when I lived in London a decade ago. One of the scandalous things was that the bags can have a 12-foot free fall from one conveyor belt to the next. Yikes. Hopefully O’Hare has a more gentle system.

After arriving in New York, I saw my bag, but where was my box? Finally, it appeared! And it was unharmed! I might just do this again.

Some things to bear in mind for checking wine:

* Make sure the wine is worth it. There’s a lot of lifting involved and the wine really has to be worth the schlep-faktor, either in terms of price or sentimental value.

* Get dropped off at curbside. Even though my line was slow, I was happy I wasn’t lugging it across the parking lot of the rental car company.

* Check the airline’s policy. I flew on American, and they allow a box as long is it doesn’t exceed 50 lbs or 60 linear inches (h + w + l).

* If you’re using a styrofoam shipping box, try to reuse one. They are not environmentally friendly. But then again, neither is air travel.

* Each passenger is allowed two bags on many airlines, so don’t forget that you can use the baggage quota of the whole family! (just be sure you can fit it all in the car/taxi at home)

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Seeking Vieux Telegraphe STOP


“Hi. I’m looking for the Vieux Telegraphe 04?”

“Did you buy it on futures?”

“No.”

“Then, no, I’m sorry there’s none left available.”

Such was my first call trying to find the wine, which I had tasted previously but failed to buy via futures. Actually, it wouldn’t have mattered if I had bought the futures since the retailer that I had called, Kermit Lynch Wine Merchants in Berkeley (the retail arm of the wine’s national importer), doesn’t ship to my home state of New York.

So I checked wine-searcher.com. Sam’s in Chicago had the wine. I called them.

“We don’t ship to New York,” came the reply.

What?!? I’ve ordered from them before.

I called Sherry-Lehmann in New York City. They had the 03.

“When do you expect to get the 04?”

“It’s on order but I’m not sure when it will arrive. A lot of times the distributors hold back new vintages until the current one is sold out. The 03 is really delicious.”

In fact, it did seem to be a regional phenomenon since I couldn’t find a retailer in the East with the wine in stock.

What was I to do? Stay tuned…

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