• CL HOME
  • NEWS & POLITICS
  • MUSIC
  • MOVIES & TV
  • ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
  • FOOD & DRINK
  • GREEN COMMUNITY
  • SEX & LOVE
  • PLAYGROUND

Daily Loaf

Your daily source for the best in blog.


Corkscrew: Get your drunk on during life transitions

Posted by Taylor Eason on Sep. 1, 2009, at 4:04 pm

This week, life threw a massive curve ball at Creative Loafing Media. Taken over by the NYC-based hedge fund to whom we owed a ton of money, each employee processed the news in a different way: sadness, optimism, relief. Me? I got shit-faced. On great wine. I figured if my family’s legacy is going down [my parents founded Creative Loafing and my brother was CEO until last Tuesday], I should consume voluminous amounts of quality juice. Fast. However, the questioned remained … which ones? So many choices, so little time to race and get to the promised land.

Obviously, I needed something high in alcohol. These sorts of wines emerge from hot areas, where the grapes grow fat with sugar and the resulting wine has more punch (sugar converts to alcohol in fermentation). Napa, Sonoma, Barossa Valley (Australia), Washington State (yes, there are areas where it isn’t miserably rainy), and a host of other delicious choices for the perfect Zen state of non-thought. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: Australia, barossa, Ben Eason, Corkscrew, Creative Loafing Tampa, Creative-Loafing, dave madera, favorite, italy, mise en place, neprica puglia, News, recommended wines, rose, rose barossa valley, Sommelier, Tampa-Bay, taylor eason, Tormaresca 2007 Neprica, turkey flat 2007, turkey flat rose, wine, wine recommendations, wine review
Posted in Drink |



Practice makes perfect: Tasting wine trains your palate

Posted by Taylor Eason on Jun. 9, 2009, at 3:30 pm

Like the violin I misused as a tot, wine requires practice. I don’t read many books about it, although I definitely should; I don’t study it much anymore, although that might make me sound smarter. But I drink. A lot. Not to alcoholic levels – though the thought has fluttered in my throbbing, hungover head — but enough to become intimate with countless grapes. It’s important since habitual tasting trains the tongue to decipher chardonnay or riesling and, with practice, you can discover what makes music in your mouth.

Each month for the past eight years, I’ve invited an eclectic group to practice their drinking in my home. We blind taste 12-15 bottles at one sitting and the attendees have mostly an untrained yet keen interest in wine. From this base camp I’ve personally converted dozens into wine geekdom; some have even moved on to California winemaking. Sure, I could taste the wines alone – Husband and I make regular progress through the bottle stash – but how much fun would that be?

Not much, but it’s not just fun. Tasting with this group allows me to uncover what average consumers enjoy so I can tailor my writing. More often than not, they prefer the really fruity, new-world-style wines. Like California chardonnay.

For a recent tasting, I saved up four single-vineyard wines from the same producer (Patz and Hall), same varietal (chardonnay), same vintage (2006) but from different vineyards. This “appellation vertical” tasting — as I coined it — allowed me to teach “terroir,” an elusive yet critically important tenet in wine appreciation. It explains the grape’s soil and climate blend and why fruit from one vineyard can taste completely different in another.

I knew the wines wouldn’t suck. Patz and Hall – a smallish, esteemed, wallet-crunching winery based in Napa — makes first-rate stuff. To craft these chardonnays, they bought fruit from well-respected growers all over California and used almost identical winemaking techniques. All things were equal except the grapes, so this line-up fit my terroir bill. The vineyards represented were Zio Tony Ranch in Russian River, Alder Springs in Mendocino, Dutton Ranch in Russian River and Hudson Vineyard in Carneros.

For chardonnay, everything from the grape clone to the forest which birthed the oak barrel influences the juice in the bottle. But as any winemaker will tell you, good wine starts in the vineyard. This grape requires a cooler climate to develop all the peach, pear and apple flavors inherent in the variety, and these four vineyards enjoy less heat than most. But it’s the soil and location that makes these wines distinct. For instance, Zio Tony’s reddish, sandy soils are rich with deep iron deposits, yielding fruit that struggles for water and thus develops personality, complexity and minerality. By contrast, the Hudson Vineyard has loam soil and an unusually cool, hillside location which allows the grapes to ripen longer on the vines, building up more flavor and sugars. The only variation in the winemaking? Zio Tony’s fruit sees ten percent more new French oak. But they taste drastically different from one another.

The group agreed. In fact, they were somewhat flabbergasted by the vast diversity in the wines. Did everyone love all of them? No, but now they know the influence of terroir on chardonnay. With wine, as with all other things, practice makes perfect. (Read about terroir).

Shameless self-promotion: VOTE FOR MY MURPHY GOODE “REALLY GOODE JOB” VIDEO!!

Wine Recommendation

Patz and Hall 2006 Chardonnay Zio Tony Ranch (California) Layered with flavor and full-bodied with toasted coconut, soft vanilla, pear, creamy peach custard, refreshing acidity, iron-like minerality and a chalky aftertaste. Sw=2. $60. 4.5 stars. 

Patz and Hall 2006 Chardonnay Hudson Vineyard (California) Lean, medium-bodied and bright with green apple napped in butter and pumpkin-pie spices. Fantastic, lingering acidity that complements the roasted hazelnuts, fresh peaches and caramel flavors. Sw=2. $45. 4.5 stars.

Sweetness (Sw) rating: 1-10. Star rating: 1-5. Reach Taylor at taylor.eason@cln.com, on Twitter @tayloreason, and on Facebook.  

Tags: Corkscrew, dutton ranch, good chardonnay appellation, hudson vineyard, mendocino wine, patz and hall, Patz and Hall 2006 Chardonnay Hudson Vineyard, russion river wine, taylor eason, wine review, wine tasting, zio tony
Posted in Drink |



Wine review: Wild Rock 2008 Elevation Sauvignon Blanc Marlborough

Posted by Taylor Eason on Apr. 13, 2009, at 11:00 am

From an innovative, fun-loving Wild Rock winery in the rugged hills of New Zealand comes a wine for spring if I’ve ever tasted one. They farm the grapes sustainably, taking care to be empathetic to the land. Smells and tastes like honeysuckle flowers dipped in honey but with a bracing backbone of tart grapefruit, lime and fresh green herbs. Finishes dry and would pair well with light seafood, cheeses and egg dishes. A interesting, unique blend of 91% sauvignon blanc, 5% viognier and 3% reisling. Sw=3. $16. 4 stars.

Wild Rock is the collaboration of Steve Smith (Master of Wine) and the crew from Craggy Range winery. They have a pretty yummy pinot noir called Cupid’s Arrow too.

Tags: Wild Rock 2008 Elevation Sauvignon Blanc, wine for spring, wine for summer, wine review
Posted in Drink |

Loading search

WHAT IS DAILY LOAF?

It's Creative Loafing's one-stop-shop for all news relevant and irreverent.

Visit our homepage, cltampa.com, for more goodness.

SUBSCRIBE/FOLLOW

RSS Feed (click button for feed)
Facebook (follow us on Facebook)
Twitter (follow us on Twitter)

CATEGORIES

  • Activism
    • Opinion
  • Arts & Entertainment
    • Art Squeeze
    • Backstage Tampa Bay
    • Bill McKeen’s Book Blog
    • Events
    • Movies
      • Blockbusters
      • Movie Review
      • Reel Projections
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Best of the Bay
  • books
  • CL Radio
    • ArtsSpeak Podcast
    • CL Sessions Podcast
    • Fusionistas podcast
    • Gamma Testing
    • Lost podcast
    • Mitch Perry Report
    • Nosh Pit Podcast
    • Reel Projections Podcast
    • Top Chef Podcast
  • CL TV
  • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Fusionistas
    • Mode Maven
  • Food and Restaurants
    • Drink
    • Food & Drink Events
    • Food News
    • Recipes & Cooking
    • Restaurant News
    • Restaurant Review
    • Top 50 Restaurants
    • Tournament of Tacos
  • Green Community
    • Green Jobs
    • Green Living
    • Green Policy
  • Holiday Guide Auction
  • Music
    • Bombardier Manifesto
    • Concerts
    • Indie 101
    • Local Music
    • Music Review
    • Nine Bullets
    • Phish Saves America
    • Routes Music
  • Neighborhoods
  • News
    • Politics
      • Florida Politics
      • Media Watch
      • Recessionomics
      • Tampa Bay Politics
  • photography
  • Playground
    • College
    • Free shit
    • Lifestyle
      • Dreams
      • Health & Wellness
      • Parenting
      • The Stinky Drinkers
    • Shopping
    • Sports
      • MMA 101
      • Super Bowl
    • Tech
  • Poet's Notebook
  • Sex and Love
    • Education
    • LGBT
    • Relationships & Dating
    • Sex and Love events
    • Sex Reviews
    • Sex Terms Glossary
  • Summer Guide
  • The Short List
  • tiglff
  • Uncategorized
  • video
.

ARCHIVES/OLD STUFF

  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
  • July 2009
  • Home
  • Best of the Bay
  • News
  • Music
  • Arts
  • Food & Drink
  • Blogs
  • Movies
  • CLTV
  • Sensory Overload
  • Bad Habits
  • Business Directory
  • Super Bowl
  • The Straight Dope
  • Promotions
  • Classifieds
  • Listings
  • Personals
  • Archives
  • CL on your Mobile
  • FAQs
  • Info
  • Advertising
  • Jobs
  • About Us
  • Submit a Listing
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Staff
  • RSS
  • National Advertising

© 2009 Creative Loafing Media All Rights Reserved.