Yearly Archives: 2013

Coffee in Firenze can be inspirational…

Walking into a typical Italian café for breakfast, which in Italy is usually a café latte and a pastry for me. There is one particular pastry I love in Italy. It’s a donut filled with custard. Yum, really delicious and their coffee, made with an espresso poured into a jug of hot milk, is what dreams are made of. So this particular morning I was in Firenze, by all accounts one of the most beautiful cities on the face of God’s earth. I was kinda sleepy and needed that coffee to wake me up. As I entered the café, a lady was standing outside the door wearing a large coat. The weather was fairly balmy, and I could tell within two hours give or take, it was gonna be sticky hot. She had Kleenex tissues in one hand and socks and underwear in the other, all for sale. She...

French Etiquette: A Very French Tale

There I was driving through the French countryside in my shitty little Renault Clio, I realized that not all foreigners understand how attached the French are to their dining culture and French etiquette. Are you aware that the entire country more or less grinds to a halt between noon and two p.m? And did you know that later in the evening, dinner is served from seven till nine and beyond? This is not up for debate or choice, it is what it is! The French believe that family values are of national importance, le repas du midi, (lunch) is sacrosanct. French families, work colleagues, school chums, whomever, all congregate at noon, whether it is at home, the factory canteen or in a restaurant, and they eat together. They discuss the up’s and down’s of their daily lives. In towns and villages all over France the line outside the boulangerie...

Chateau d’Armajan Des Ormes, Sauternes France

I made a cold call from my home in Pasadena, California, to the owners of Chateau Beauregard Ducasse in the Graves area of Bordeaux. The Perromat Family owns the estate, the French call it une exploitation. Exploitation is the French word for a farm, property, or general enterprise in the agricultural sector. In the world of wine in Bordeaux, especially the Medoc, there are few family owned and run estates. For the most part in the Medoc, they are owned and run by insurance companies, banks, major private equity groups and such-like. In the right bank and further south in the Graves appellations, some families have held onto the land and still run the estates. The average size of a property on the right bank is considerably smaller to that of the left bank. The right bank averages out at roughly seven hectares; if I am not mistaken, in the...

2009 Chateau Aney Appellation Haut-Medoc Controlée

    This wine is a Great example of typical French winemaking from Bordeaux situated in the Haut-Medoc between St Julien and Margaux. Mr. Aney founded the property in 1850. Since 1972, the estate has been in the hands of Jean Pierre Raimond. This wine is a hearty expression of all that is good from Bordeaux and reasonably well priced. 65% cabernet Sauvignon, 25% merlot, the rest is Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot, the lynchpins of classic Bordeaux wine. The soil type here is clay-gravel and sandy-gravel over a limestone substratum. The gravel stones retain the heat from the sunshine, protecting the vines from the frost in wintertime, and during the ripening season, they provide the necessary heat to promote sugar synthesis in the grapes. Cru Bourgeois is a guarantee of quality with strict governing rules that mean a wine can be promoted or relegated from the class on...

2010 Domaine Tempier Appellation Bandol Controlée

    In the southern regions of France, we can guarantee a few certainties almost every-day. The weekly activities and day-to-day tribulations of the local football team Olympique Marseille go hand in hand with a Ricard, and Gitanes cigarettes. Another stalwart from this region of the Midi, is Domaine Tempier. Situated in the hills above Toulon, twenty kilometers due east of Marseille, this is where the now famous impressionists lived and worked, Lautrec, van Gogh, and Monet, where lavender and olives trees grow wild, and a beautiful softness to the air. It can be hot in the summer, which is perfect for the cultivation of Mourvedre. This varietal produces medium to big bodied wines that are capable of ageing for many a year. This innate ability owes itself to Mourvedre’s ability to resist oxidation. Abundant sunshine, intertwined with clay limestone soils, and a cool breeze that blows from the...

2006 GD Vajra Barolo ‘Bricco Delle Viole’

    My friend a talented actor Tony Curran described this wine ‘like an angel weeping on your tongue’. When I went to Barolo for the first time I was attracted to the wine as it forms fragile droplets in your mouth, something like droplets of water floating about the space shuttle whilst in orbit. The droplets literally float around in your mouth and the flavors are exceptional. The Bricco Delle Viole is roughly 450 meters above sea level, a microclimate which neither gets too hot in summer nor too cold in winter. The Alps sit behind this plot and on a clear day, it is one of the most impressive sights I have ever seen. The soils that make up this terroir are rich in clay and calcium with high concentrations of minerals such as magnesium and manganese. These ingredients provide for an amazing wine of sheer quality...

2009 GD Vajra Kye DOC Langhe ‘Freisa’

    I went for a tasting with Giuseppe Vajra at the winery in Barolo. We were sitting along side some young Norwegians whom I might add are great lovers of wines. Whilst tasting this wine I asked the man from Oslo to my left what he felt about this particular 2009 Freisa. He started by telling a story; In Norway military service is obligatory; he had been assigned to the Tank regiment for his military service. His description of what lay before him was fixating, revealing the intricacies of firing a shell from a tank for the first time, detailing the sheer concentration involved. Glancing at the Kye Freisa, we had tasted that morning he equated the stimulation and concentration levels to those whilst firing off rounds in a tank. I laughed, but you know what? He was right. I am sure he was extrapolating his sensations, however,...

2007 Oddero DOCG Barolo

    The grapes used to make this wine come from two different plots; La Morra, Santa Maria Bricco Chiesa where the vines are situated approximately two hundred meters above sea level with southeastern sunshine exposure. The average age of the vines is thirty years, and this plot is no more that five acres. The second plot is in Castiglione-Falletto Bricco Fiasco. Bricco means the peak of the hillside. This plot has southwestern exposure to the sun with forty-year-old vines and measures roughly five acres. The annual production is no more than twenty-five hundred cases. A Rigorous manual selection of the finest quality grapes is undergone followed by the fermentation and maceration in stainless steel tanks for twenty days under temperature control of twenty-eight degrees Celsius. The grapes from the two different plots are kept separate throughout the process. The ageing process in forty, sixty, and seventy hectoliter Slavonian...

2006 Oddero DOCG Barolo ‘Villero’

    From Giacomo Oddero How can I really express what I feel about Barolo? It is alongside Burgundy the most delicate of wines. Linear in structure, composed of one varietal, yet so generous in its myriad of flavors. Bordeaux can have four different varietals in the blend and Chateauneuf du Pape can have up to thirteen. Barolo is not big in your mouth; it is very soft and small. It takes its time to cover every square cubic millimeter of the tongue, once completed, you will understand the definition of finesse in fine winemaking. One hundred percent Nebbiolo, this Villero wine comes from the village of Castiglione Falletto. This plot has southwestern sunshine exposure. The average age of the vines is fifty years old. The plot is no more that two acres. The harvesting period is usually around the first ten days of October. There is great care taken...