Sunday, March 31, 2013

Tasting - Cono Sur Bicicleta Pinot Noir

Name: Cono Sur Bicicleta Pinot Noir
Variety: Pinot Noir
Region: Central Valley
Country: Chile
Year: 2011
Price: $21 but it was WW so 10.50
Website review:Dressed in fresh purple red colour, this is a voluptuous Pinot Noir with rich fruit notes of cherry, raspberry, plum and strawberry – a red fruit party! – enhanced by subtle smoked hints. In mouth sweet fruit notes stand out, and its fine tannins give it a great texture and a mouth filling structure. Balanced and New World styled, this is a wine of personality and elegance. Sexy, pure and simple, it’s a young and refreshing Pinot.  Our Bicicleta Pinot Noir is a great choice for all sorts of pasta, grilled poultry, seafood and mild fish. It’s also excellent when accompanying dishes served with pesto sauces. If ordering in, mushroom pizza and sushi go great with this wine.
My review: Round 3 of WW.  I thought this wine definitley smelled like cherry.  It tasted like dark chocolate and plums.  It was medium bodied and medium tannins.  The review says it goes well with seafood and mild fish.  I think it went really well with the shrimp! This was easy to drink but I've had better pinot noirs.  Sorry not much more to say about it... this was after quite a few glasses and reminiscing with friends :). 
Food: Grilled, Spiced Shrimp

XOXOVINO,
LJ

Tasting - Heron Cabernet Sauvignon

Name: Heron Cab Sav
Variety:  Cab Sav (small amount of Cabernet Franc & Malbec for added complexity)
Region: Mendoncino, CA  
Country: MMMMmurica
Year: 2011
Price: $22 but it was WW so $11
Website review: “A delicately pleasing nose of soft black fruit, clove, and toasty oak aromas, over notes of vanilla and herbs. Gentle on the palate, with ripe blackberry, dark cherry, peppery spice, and a hint of earth. Smooth and balanced finish.”
My review: Number 2 of the Wine Wednesday fun.  Smelled O-A-K-Y and earthy.  It reminded me of eating a tree.  Like if you just bit off a piece of bark and leaves.  But believe it or not, it was pleasant to drink.  I picked up some vanilla maybe which was nice and it had low tannin and more oaky taste.  It tasted super earthy too but spicey as well...I'll have some pepper with my dirt.  It didn't pair super wonderfully with the dip, but it wasn't like it was bad or anything.  They were just very different.  Maybe that's a good thing?  
Food: Crawfish and Artichoke Dip

XOXOVINO,
LJ

Tasting - Bulletin Shiraz


Name: Bulletin Shiraz
Variety: Shiraz
Region: South-Eastern Australia
Country: Australia  
Year: 2011
Price: $21 but it was Wine Wednesday so $10.50
Website review:The color has bright youthful purples and dark red, with an aroma of mixed berries with peppery, spicy overtones. On the palate the wine has very sweet fruit with fine grained tannins, excellent fleshy middle palate and a long soft finish.
My review: Well if I would have thought about it, I could have made this a wine dinner and got a lot more points, but oh well... I'm still building my wine inventory for future reference :).  My friends and I went to Boudreaux's for Wine Wednesday and we each bought a bottle of wine and an apetizer for the table, so this is the first of those.  This was a great wine! It smelled buttery (if you haven't noticed, that's my new thing haha everything smells or taste buttery to me) and fruity: black corrent and fig"ish".  It was very easy to drink.  No abbrasive tannins.  Smooth.  It had nice berry overtones.  When I ate it with the fried alligator, the buttary, creamy aspect was intensified.  I'd totally buy this one again.  <3  
Food: fried aligator

XOXOVINO,
LJ

Tasting - Cloudline Pinot Noir

Name: Cloudline Pinot Noir
Variety: Pinot Noir
Region: Williamette Valley, Oregon
Country: Mmmmurica
Year: 2011
Price: $18.95
Website review:A beautiful, dark ruby color, the nose develops well in the glass, and it possesses an intense aromatic bouquet, reminiscent of spices, blackcurrant and other red and black berries. On the palate, Cloudline offers a caressing texture and a long flavorful finish.
My review: These Oregon Pinto Noirs are what's up.  This is the second (or maybe the 3rd) that I've had that I've loved! I'm going to keep looking for labels that are from this region! I've actually had this wine before.  My boyfriend and I ordered it at my favorite Italian restraunt last time I was home.  I really liked it then, but I couldn't really remember anything about it other than that.  SO, the BF bought it for me again for easter Linner (lunch/dinner).  It smells berry on the nose for sure... probably red berries but also spicey which I'm a fan of.  I also liked the low tannins and buttary type taste.  The after taste really sticks with you but it is still very smooth and easy to drink.  It's just an all around balanced and drinkable wine and it went really with the food we ate. Not that it really brought out any flavors or anything like that, but it just complemnted the fact that I was eating (probably because it's a new world).  I recommend it!
Food: steak and potatoes
XOXOVINO,
LJ

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Dinner - 508 Center Street: College Kids Do A Wine Dinner


Our three wine we used to pair with the food 
Well this was barrels of fun (get it... wine barrels...pun-intended)! One of the main take aways that we all agreed upon was that old world wines need to be with food.  Maybe not all of them, but in our experience, most of them.  New World wines can be drank on their own and don't change as much with food.  So here are my wine reviews + my wine reviews with the food pairing (later I'll give my overall impressions)

1.  Valpolicella Classico: When I had this before food, I was so unhappy. This wine was terrible to me.  It was super spicy and kind of reminded me of iced tea.  It smelled leathery and was really dry and earthy tasting.  I've never had a wine like this before and hopefully will not again.  Good thing it was super cheap at the Vintage Cellar.  This was my buy and I made chicken fajitas with it.  The fajitas had flour tortilla and bell peppers and salsa.  When I asked the guy at Vintage Cellar what I should pair with it, he looked at me a little weird but then pointed this wine out for me.  When we ate it with food,  the taste of the wine blended in with the food! It was amazing how I thought it was undrinkable without food but then when I drank it with food, I enjoyed it.  I didn't really notice the taste of the wine, but it brought the flavor of the salsa out more in the fajitas.  Pretty neat stuff.  
How I kept track of what everything tasted like



2.  Milton Park Shiraz: Before food, this new world Shiraz was delightful (especially after that last one).  It smelled slightly like citrus and not fruity or floral.  It wasn't very spicy or anything like that to the taste.  I could perceive some acidity but all in all it was smooth and mild and highly drinkable.  This comes back to my hypothesis that new world wines don't need food... when we drank this wine with the ground beef + spaghetti sauce + noodles it didn't really change.  It also didn't really add anything to the food.  I mean it was fine that I was drinking it with this tomato based meal, but it really didn't enhance any flavors in the food or the wine.

All of us enjoying the food + wine 
3.  Tinto Figaro Red Wine: Another old world wine that I was upset to be drinking without food.  It was sour and chalky and burnt and nasty.  Pretty tannin intensive to me (although the other peeps were saying it wasn't... maybe I had already had too many glasses at this point).  We then drank this with lasagna (cooked in the microwave in true college kid style).  This was interesting because now we were trying an old world wine with a tomato based dish instead of the new world wine like the shiraz.  The food didn't help this time really.  I think it was it more pucker inducing and didn't gell well with the food like the first one did.  Maybe it wasn't ment to be paired with this type of food... who knows.

Some more friends joined and my dog 
All in all, this was a great experience! It was so fun to try our hand at being sophisticated wine drinkers, pairing food and being smart.  It was nice just to have it my apartment too because we had the basketball games on in the background and played music and goofed around.  Not as stuffy as going to a restaurant but with the same educational effects.  We are definitely going to do it again and this time, since we had so much fun, we will be able to convince more people to do it with us which = more wines and more food!
XOXOVINO, LJ     


Our Lovely photographer/wine drinker. 
Action Shot! 
Cooking!

Winery Visit: New Kent Winery

Panoramic View of outside the winery.  

I visited New Kent Winery in New Kent, VA (right outside of Richmond) with my friend Caroline and her mom.  We had a great time at the visit and the space was so unique and welcoming.  New Kent winery is a 17,000 square foot facility that was open in 2008 with the first vines being planted in 2001.
Caroline and I inside production facility  
They produce Chardonnay, Merlot, White Merlot, Meritage, Vidal Blanc, and Norton (native to VA).

What I found most interesting about this winery is the "green" construction.  For example, the brick on the exterior of the building was originally made by hand for a mill in Richmond before the Civil War.  They are the third users of this brick.  One cool fact the tour guide shared with us is that the white bricks scattered throughout the walls used to spell out "Lucky Strike" on the side of the second user's building.  There are also 150 year old cypress on the exterior siding that were cut down in Florida and sank while floating to mills along the river.  This same wood was also cut into 72,000 handmade shingles for the roof.  What I found most interesting and neat was that antique railroad trusses are featured in the production room that date back to 1901.  They still retain all of the original hardware! I know that was some text book type information, but I think they way they used reclaimed building materials was really neat!      

So on to our tour.  When we got there, we were a little early for the tour, so we hung out in the waiting room for a while.  It was stunning with it's large wooden beams and really amazing wine bar.  I bought my mom a coaster because it was the only thing semi reasonably priced that had the name of the winery on it haha.  Our tour guide began outside even though it was really chilly that day and told us all about the architecture and the building materials I mentioned earlier.  Then we proceeded into the productions facility.  She really didn't give us any good information on making the wine or anything like that but I was able to locate and know what the equipment was for because of taking this class.  The pictures below highlight some of my favorite features of the productions room and the waiting room.

After the tour, we participated in a tasting (best part of course!).  My notes are below for each of the wines (what they said about it is in italics):

Chardonnay: "fruit forward, lively, and expressive" I thought this Chardonnay was very clean and crisp.  It smelled buttery and almost like a cake.  It was nice but nothing too remarkable about it.
Reserve Chardonnay: "well rounded, creamy, yet youthfully aged" HELLO OAK! I could absolutely tell the difference between the chardonnay aged in stainless steel and this reserve that was aged in oak!  It smelled and tasted like a piece of wood and was spicy to me.
Meritage: "versatile, approachable Bordeaux-style blended red" This one was definitely dry and had a spicy finish.  I couldn't detect any fruit on the nose or in the taste.  (Made of cabfranc [60%], merlot [30%], and cabsav [10%]).  It was a nice blend, but nothing to write home about.
Merlot: "hand selected with mild color, tannins, and flavors" NO ME GUSTA! it had a strong aftertaste and I couldn't really pick out any distinct flavors.  It was definitely not fruity to me, but I don't know what it was.  I guess it had mild tannins like they said.  Sorry I'm not being very descriptive  I think I just wrote it off because I didn't like it so I was trying very hard to analysis it.  
Vidal Blanc: "clean, fruity and subtle white wine" SUGAR! Refreshing but taste like sugar water.  I've had better Vidal Blanc.
White Merlot: "a truly white wine made from the red Merlot grape" <<<< LOLZ NO SHIT.... They said to drink it with spicy food to cut the spice and dry it out (much more helpful than their description haha) I thought it was very refreshing and would be perfect for summer time.  I could see myself drinking this with a bowl of jambalaya out of the porch in June.
White Norton: "an extraordinarily complex Norton rose" I thought this was great.  The spiciness of the finish really helped balance the sweetness.  Good, solid white wine (and the grape is native to VA, sweet!).
Sweet Virginia: "romantic and sassy sweet red wine" This literally tasted like grape juice... like welches.  Sassy.... mmmmmm don't think so.
Mulled Wine: It was a white norton with the spices.  It tasted like Christmas in my mouth! LOVED it. Like drinking apple pie.  I want to make some for the next wintery day which hey, even though it's almost April would totally work out for today.  ... No one told Blacksburg it was spring apparently.

All in all, this was a wonderful, unique winery with nice wines.  They won a lot of awards for their wines but I wasn't particularly wowed by any of them.  However, if they were on sale, I'd pick them  up.

XOXOVINO, LJ    


40 foot Heart Pine beams 
Steel Barrels for aging 
Oak Barrels for aging  
Antique Railroad Trusses 
Grape Processing 
View of the outside of the winery 





Really artsy picture I took with my iPhone camera... impressive right ? 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Tasting - Skinnygirl California White

Name: Skinnygirl Califronia White
Variety: Chardonnay and Pitnot Grigio
Region: California
Country: Mmmmurica 
Year: 2011
Price: $15.99
Website review:Everyone loves a great glass of wine, but shopping for wine can be confusing. That's why I created the Skinnygirl California White Blend. It's an aromatic and pleasingly crisp blend of my favorite white grapes with notes of peach and apricot. This white wine is balanced with a lingering finish and is only 100 calories per serving so you can enjoy it guilt-free. 
My review: OKAY, OKAY, stop laughing... I just wanted to try it! .... and it was just as terrible as I thought it would be... I poured the rest out... sixteen dollars down the drain but I'd probably pay hundreds of dollars to never have to taste a wine that awful again.  It literally was sugar water... no, I take that back... it was watered down sugar water.  It had no complexitiy, no stand out fruit taste and smelled pretty foul too.  I guess you live and you learn.  I used brocoli to get the taste out of my mouth if that gives you any indication ... You stink bethany frankel.
Food: vegetable tray
XOXOVINO, 
LJ 

Tasting - Estancia Pinot Noir

Name: Estancia Pinot Noir
Variety: Pinot Noir 
Region: California
Country: Mmmmurica 
Year: 2011
Price: $15.99
Website review: Estancia relies on the benefits of boutique-style winemaking techniques including whole-berry fermentation, gentle punch downs and basket pressing for our estate grown Pinot Noir.  The Monterey based winery uses only native yeasts to increase aromatics and gentle gravity flow systems to minimize aggressive tannins and bitterness.  This hand-crafted approach results in Pinot Noir with soft, luscious aromas and flavor and rich, deep color.  
My review: So we (my mom, sister, and boyfriend's sister, and I) tried the decanting test with this wine.  When I tried it before I decanted it, it smelled slightly fruity but was hard to really detect anything else.  The taste had some drying effect (tannins) to it and no sweetness.  It had a faint rasberry taste to it. After we decanted it (maybe this was in my head, but even if it was, it works for me) it tasted so much better.  It was so much easier to drink and didn't have such an offensive after taste.  It smelled less dense/lighter and more fruity.  It tasted similiar but had less pronounced tannins and was so much lighter.  It still wasn't too sweet also, so I appreciated that.  Food: no food 

XOXOVINO, 
LJ 

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Tasting - Rainstorm Pinot Noir


Name: Rainstorm Pinot Noir 
Variety: Pinot Noir 
Region: Oregon 
Country: Mmmmurica 
Year: 2009
Price: $17.95
Website review: To craft our wonderfully balanced Rainstorm Pinot Noir, we take advantage of our diverse landscape by selecting grapes from our vineyards in the Willamette and Umpqua Valleys. With its cool, mild climate, the Willamette Valley of northern Oregon produces Pinot Noirs with an earthy, elegant style and complex flavors and subtlety. The hotter and drier climate in the southern Oregon’s Umpqua Valley region produces Pinot Noirs bursting with brilliant, ripe, rich fruit flavors. By creating a 50/50 blend of these two wine regions, we’ve crafted an Oregon Pinot Noir that reflects the dynamic diversity of our very green (and sometimes very wet) state. The result: Rainstorm Pinot Noir is a perfect harmony.
My review: HECK YAH! THIS STUFF WAS AWESOME! HOLY KROGER 90 UNDER 20 SECTION! This wine was so great.  I'm 100% buying it again.  It was one of the most perfect Pinot Noirs I've ever drank (dranken? dranked?).  It smelled very earthy, nothing floral or fruity on the bouquet.  It tasted very earthy too but had some fruitiness, maybe cherry, to it.  I felt like it was more complex in that way.  I could also pick up some of the oak.  I felt like the spicy finish at the end was great too because it really rounded out the flavor complexity.       
Food: no food 

XOXOVINO, 
LJ 

Tasting -Dante Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon


Name: Dante Reserve 
Variety: Cabernet Sauvignon 
Region: California 
Country: Mmmurica 
Year: 2010 
Price: $11.95
Online Review: Inspired by the wines he enjoyed while traveling through the Tuscan countryside, winemaker Michael Pozzan created Dante. This generous Cabernet is medium bodied with bright, rich scents of juicy black cherry. Flavors are ripe and supple with juicy, concentrated blackberry that coats the
mouth with moderate tannins. A real crowd pleaser, enjoy today, with Swedish meatballs or Beef Stroganoff.
My review: Here's my dilemma .. I REALLY liked this wine... thought it was absolutely fantastic.  Easy to drink, not too fruity, not too much tannin overpowering, smelled pretty earthy and nice... however... I had already had quite a few libations before drinking this wine.  I don't remember it complimenting the dessert well, but that makes sense because all of the reviews on line say it's good with something more savory and hearty.  I'm intrigued to try this wine again and see how I really like it.  If I do, I'll update this post.     
Food: Chocolate cake and flan dessert 

XOXOVINO, 
LJ