On Kiwis, Kitties, Cocoa and Korea

I usually forget to bring my camera when I go out and about, which I typically lament about later as that means I have no photos to accompany my posts. Someone must be slipping Gingko Biloba into my drinks lately, because my memory’s been much better than usual!

I’ll keep the commentary brief. You know what they say; a picture says a thousand words – I’ll spare you the essays!

Tiki Tour of New Zealand

April 25, 2010 – My friend Robert Ketchin of New Zealand Wines kindly allowed me to drop in to the second half of one of the final events during the week of Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival, a walk-around tasting of some of the stars of this year’s Festival theme country.

Chef Chris Whitaker and the O’Doul’s team at Listel Hotel did a marvellous job of catering the tasting. My favourite dish of the night was a creamy, heavy wild mushroom risotto that paired perfectly with the New Zealand Pinot Noirs on offer.

Me and my risotto. Check out Chef Chris and his enormous cheese wheel / risotto serving dish in the background - ingenious!

Although I enjoyed all the wines, the ones that particularly stood out for me included:

  • Elephant Hill Reserve Syrah 2008 and Reserve Sauvignon Blanc 2008, both from Hawke’s Bay – super length, tight flavours and a lean elegance that seems to imply aging potential;
  • Man O’ War Flagship Dreadnought Syrah 2008 from Waiheke Island – definitely one for the cellar and one to watch for future vintages – I’m sure these young vines will evolve into greatness; and
  • Sileni Cellar Selection Cabernet Franc Rosé 2008 from Hawke’s Bay – a fresh and fragrant yet dry and subtle-tasting example of what a good New World rosé should exude.

Me and @seanminogue with Bronwyn Skuse of Man O' War Vineyards. I'm holding a bottle of their Flagship Ironclad 2008 (a very nice Bordeaux blend).

Humberto Canale Estate Malbec 2008

May 5, 2010 – Not much to say here: The bottle pictured was badly tainted! Alas, that’s the risk one should always consider with wine purchases – make sure you buy from a place with a good return policy!

I think Gucci could tell something was fishy about this wine.

Luckily, I had a second bottle on hand, which was quaffable: Deep black fruits, roots (licorice, burdock) and medium tannins were the primary flavours I picked up. It was quite different from my initial tasting of this at Playhouse, so I’m not fully convinced this second bottle was free of fault.

I’ve got one last shot available with my third and final bottle on hand, so this story is to be continued… (Here’s hoping for a happy ending!)

VCBW Presents: Women & Beer

May 13, 2010 – Although I blog mostly about wine, I’ll confess this: Sometimes there just isn’t anything more satisfying than an ice-cold beer. (You can take the girl out of Coquitlam, but you can’t take the Coquitlam out of the…)

Asking me to attend a tasting featuring quality BC microbrews and tasty local cuisine is a no-brainer. Do bees like honey? I had to buy tickets the moment I heard about Vancouver Craft Beer Week and its Women & Beer event.

What a fun night! I sampled delicious brews by Saltspring Island Ales, Howe Sound Brewing, Cannery Brewing, Red Devil Brewing and Crannóg Ales, matched with mouth-wateringly good appetizers by The Refinery. It was the perfect Mother’s Day gift for my mom and the fantastic gift bags we received at the end were a pleasant surprise.

The city’s (and country’s, for that matter) inaugural craft beer celebration was excellent and I am glad that I got to take part. See you at the next one!

Sabrina of Twenty-Something Theatre and me with Crannog's Back Hand of God Stout, a complex, malty, chocolaty brew with handmade sweets by CocoaNymph. We were in paradise.

DougieDog

I like a lot of ethnic foods – which in a city like Vancouver, is almost an oxymoron of a term – and so was very excited to try DougieDog, this new hot dog joint that I heard offered a selection of dogs with a multicultural twist.

Anyway, my mom and I stopped here following the Women & Beer tasting for a late-night snack. I just had to post this because the sausages were indeed of a snappy texture, exactly as advertised, and the Seoul Dog variation seemed quite simple, yet original. Why hadn’t I thought of this combination before?

These bad boys are big! Mom and I split one. Toppings included spicy kimchi, Korean BBQ beef, pickle and sesame. If I had to choose a wine pairing, I'd go with some cheap and cheerful cava or brut to tone down the heat.

Plus the server thought I was only 21. Vanity one, modesty zero.

Links

Rooty Tooty Fresh n’ Fruity

Anyone remember that old IHOP chestnut? I think the moniker accurately describes two of the finds I picked up at this year’s Vancouver Playhouse International Wine Festival.

Not only were the wines rooty, tooty, fresh and fruity, the prices were right too – you can buy these wines and have your (pan)cake too!

Interested Vancouverites can try to pick these up while there may still be a small amount leftover from the fest:

Finca El Portillo Sauvignon Blanc 2009

I met winemaker Gustavo Bauzá at Playhouse, who seemed to be very proud to pour this wine for me, almost more so than his signature Mendoza Malbecs and reserve Malbecs. With that much good faith, I had to take home a bottle of this for myself.

This refreshing white offers a fruit salad nose with dry, crisp flavours of green Thompson grapes, citrus and fresh, sweet wheatgrass on the palate. Clean, stretched out acidity from start to finish makes this a perfect wine for summer food. Opened on Mother’s Day (May 9). $15

I did end up having spot prawns with this wine, as I was hoping to, which worked out beautifully, as did the other dishes I made for Mom: Curried fresh tomato gazpacho soup with cucumber and Saltspring Island mussels cooked in the same wine. Yum!

El Portillo also makes a sparkling wine in the traditional method with Champagne varietals Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, which I’m very curious to try.

Domaine des Cèdres Rosé de Loire 2008

This wine is from a little biodynamic winery in the Loire Valley with about 19 hectares of vineyards, up from an original 6 ha when it was founded in 1936. Domaines des Cèdres produces a Vin de Pays red, Vin de Pays rosé, an AOC Côtes du Rhône red and an AOC Côtes du Rhône Villages red.

I opened this last week to celebrate a recent achievement, and was rewarded with delicate flower petal aromas, fresh strawberries and sweet rhubarb coming off the nose. On the palate, this medium-bodied salmon-coloured beauty was dry – more dry than one would expect from the juicy nose – although the round fruity flavours remained right into the finish. $18

Ed.: See? What’d I tell you about the rooty part? Well, rhubarb… Stalk, root; whatever.

All I had for food that night, sadly, was a box of Vietnamese takeout, because I had no time to cook. But the bun thit nuong’s grilled pork with fresh raw vegetables on warm vermicelli in a sweet/sour/salty fish sauce (nam pla) formed an inspired East-West pairing with this Loire rosé.

Links

Finca El Portillo www.bodegasalentein.com

Domaines des Cèdres www.domainedescedres.fr

Black Cloud 2006 Pinot Noir

There is something I love but can’t put my finger on about Okanagan Pinot Noir. Because, when you really think about it, the Okanagan can be subdivided into several fairly different and diverse micro-climates: The shortchanged-on-daylight slopes of Summerland, sunny Naramata on the other side of the valley, and dry-as-British-humour Osoyoos down South, but to name a few.

So how is it that all Okanagan Pinot Noirs appeal to me in the same general way?

After all, if terroir has anything to do with the lovely Okanagan wines I’m drinking, they must all somehow each exude their own unique properties. Yet, puzzlingly, I seem to consistently taste more complexity in Pinot Noir wines from the Okanagan than I do of most other red varietals grown in this area – namely, the Cabernets and Merlots that seem to be chiselled into the woody badasses and warm fruit bombs, respectively, that I keep coming across.

Vive la différence, I say!

Maybe I simply haven’t tried enough Pinots, or perhaps it’s just that I don’t know enough about the varietal or local viticulture practices to justify my yen for yumminess. Of course, it could just be sheer kismet that Pinot Noir grows quite well in my beautiful province; frankly, I don’t know.

What I do know, however, is that I can definitely chalk up another victory to Okanagan Pinot Noir, thanks to this bottle of Black Cloud 2006 Pinot Noir I’m enjoying tonight!

(The grapes in this bottle were grown in Okanagan Falls, another interesting part of the Okanagan Valley. Did you know there are no actual waterfalls in this eponymous region?)

Look at the beautiful legs on this puppy.

Check out the beautiful legs on this puppy.

Here’s a tasty experiment for you: Have you ever smelled or eaten Morbier cheese? It’s a semi-soft, ashy AOC (controlled origin) cheese from France that smells a bit like, well, ash, as well as salt and umami. Morbier is easily recognized by its middle stripe, like someone decided to draw across its length with pencil. Anyway, go visit your local cheesemonger, smell a hunk of Morbier and remember that scent. Now pour yourself a glass of Black Cloud Pinot Noir, sniff it, and tell me that does not at all smell similar to Morbier. Ah, I knew you were a liar.

Tasty Experiment #2: Get yourself some of the aforementioned Morbier, some fatty, moist prosciutto and dried Morello cherries. Now wrap a small wedge of Morbier and a dried cherry with a slice of prosciutto. Pair with Black Cloud Pinot, duck breast, a date or your significant other and a sexy DVD. You won’t be disappointed.

Tasting Notes

Mostly mahogany in colour with flecks of deep crimson. The mature colour makes me think that this should peak either now or quite soon. As I ended up waxing poetically above, the nose begins in a rather earthy, savoury, ashy fashion – think Morbier and Reishi mushrooms (ganoderma lucidum) – followed by aromas of ripe cherries and strawberries. A slightly spicy, tamari sauce character permeates the cherry / berry palate with silky tannins, medium body and kind of bloody (but in a good way!) finish. Try the above appetizer as a food pairing, or venture into more exotic territory by serving this with Chinese five-spice beef shank (ng heung ngau yuk). It’s a cold cut normally served at the beginning of a Chinese banquet, in the same platter as the jellyfish and roast suckling pig. $25

Note: The 2006 vintage is Black Cloud Winery’s first bottling, and I certainly hope there are many more to come. Check out the links below for more reviews!

Links

Black Cloud Winery

Bradley Cooper – winemaker for Black Cloud and Township 7

Other Reviews

Full Bodied: Vancouver Food, Wine and Cleavage

Vinifico! The Original Vancouver Wine Blog

Wine Bard: Confessions of an Oenophile

Between the Vines