New York Riesling Diary: Day 13 – 55 and Still Alive / Frappato, Egon Müller Riesling & American Grooner

Yes, that crazy color is very real!

This picture was taken with the iPhone of the Special Person who generously took me out to dinner at Gramercy Tavern at 42 East 20th Street last night. The wine in that glass was my 55th birthday party, and I promise you the color has not been tweaked, altered or paint-shopped in any way. The 2013 Frappato from Manenti in Sicily, a producer I’d never heard of before, and the first wine from the Frappato grape that ever lit my fire. I know I was quite intoxicated by that point, but I remember saying, “this tastes better than any Beaujolais I ever drank!” You see, I love well-made Beaujolais, but this was just drop-dead delicious.

It was a great meal with many memorable courses, most notably the Thai-style spicy scallops and the pea, asparagus and garlic soup. For a restaurant that draws this many non-foodies, they both packed an uncompromising punch of flavor. In contrast, the 2008 Scharzhofberger Riesling Kabinett from Egon Müller on the Saar/Germany was about as subtle and delicate as wine gets, period. In spite of that, it held its own against the full-on intensity of those dishes, which proved again how Riesling with a few years of aging on its back is one of the world’s great food wines. Of course, that’s no news to regular readers of this blog.

Another grape I find inspiring is Grüner Veltliner, aka Grooner. Austria’s most important indigenous grape variety (almost 30% of the total vineyard area) has only been in commercial production in the US since 2005, and when a colleague told me she was writing a big article about the grape and wanted to taste a range of American Grooners this proved me into action. Yesterday afternoon the First US Grooner Tasting took place at Aldo Sohm Wine Bar on at 151West 51st Street, and it gave all who attended plenty to think about. As one of the tasters observed at the end of the tasting, a work-in-progress like this group of wines is much more challenging to make sense of than a well-behaved group of wines of an established category, precisely because there are no lines marking out the playing field.

Tasting the seriously dry, aromatically and texturally complex Sohm & Kracher Grooners from the Waldviertel/Austria was a great introduction for the American wines. Aldo Sohm, pictured above, concisely analyzed how his and Gerhard Kracher’s wines tick, I learnt a bunch about Austrian Grooner, and along the way found out that most white burgundies are fined and the winemakers are convinced this makes them taste better. That’s exactly the opposite of what the Great Burgundy Wine Myth says!

Graham Tatomer of Tatomer Wines in Santa Maria/California not only made the most    exciting American wines in the tasting – I particularly loved his fresh and fleshy 2013 Paragon Vineyard  – but also said some important things, no least, “One of the big draws, why we are planting so much Grüner Veltliner in the US, outside Austria, is that it has at least as great a range of styles as Chardonnay.” This very well described the dozen American wines which went from the Sauvignon-like freshness and vitality of the 2014 from Dr. Frank in the Finger Lakes/NY (12% alcohol) to the peachy and floral richness of the 2013 Steiner Vineyard from Carlisle Winery in Windsor, Sonoma County/CA (14.1% alcohol, but not directly perceptible). Who thinks of Grooner when they think of Oregon wines? Almost nobody, because of what I call the Pinot Fog (plantings of Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris dominate the state’s vineyards). However, the 2014 from Chehalem in Newberg in the Willamette Valley has a great nose of herbs, white fruits and lemon, was succulent and very bright. I never tasted an Oregon Pinot Gris that good! Most surprising of all were the concentrated and still embryonic 2014s – Stone Cellar and Stone Cellar Reserve – from Galen Glen in Andreas/PA. Yes, Pennsylvania makes serious Grooner, and Galen Glen makes serious Riesling there too!

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New York Riesling Diary: Day 9 – Proud to be a Small Cog in the Great Machine that is SUGAR AND SWEETS!

I just received my copy of  The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, edited by Darra Goldstein, one of the world’s best food writers. I received it, because I was one of the 265 experts who contributed to this comprehensive introduction to all things sweet. I wrote just two of the roughly 600 articles accommodated in the almost 900 pages. It was a serious challenge to condense the enormous diversity of sweet wines and sweet fortified wines to just a few pages, that explained how they are made and put them in the wider context of sweet beverages and foods, historic and contemporary. I hope very much that taking a very logical approach to this (the different wines are arranged by production method) enabled me to find a good solution for readers unfamiliar with these technicalities. Since unpacking the book I’ve been enjoying reading what my colleagues wrote about all things sweet. Although I’d already read quite widely on this subject, I’ve been learning so much it feels like I’ve just arrived in a new world of taste. That strikes me as a very positive sign, and I recommend this standard work to you if you are fascinated by sweet things, because it is so much more colorful and readable than most such tomes are. As the title say, I’m proud to be a small cog in the great machine that is Sugar and Sweets!

Here is one place that you can buy Sugar and Sweets for less than $50. It’s also available as a Kindle e-book:

http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Companion-Sugar-Sweets/dp/0199313393/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1432416063&sr=1-1&keywords=sugar+and+sweets

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New York Riesling Diary: Day 7 – A Tale of Two Wine Cities

Everyone has their blind spots, including me, and some of them are the product of the town you live in, as something that happened yesterday afternoon here in NYWC (New York Wine City) reminded me. It wasn’t the first time this has happened, and each time what happened was almost identical. That’s what convinces me that the story needs to be told here.

Yesterday, I met up with a friend in the NYWC industry for a glass of wine, and as we parted she told me that the wine she was lugging around in a rucksack was Chablis; a famous French wine that stands for dry white wine elegance, at a price! I told her how in my other home city of Berlin (pictured above) it’s really difficult to find top class Chablis, and that if you do the price is even higher, way higher than in NYWC. She found that very hard to believe, so to back up my argument I told her that the entire allocation for Germany from of the most famous Chablis producers is about the same quantity as just one top restaurant in NYWC buys of those wines each year from the local distributor!

The truth is that most top class Chablis goes to Paris or New York, and elsewhere this famous kind of French dry white wine elegance is spread pretty thin on the ground. The extreme shortness of supply of those wines in Berlin allows the one completely reliable source, the KaDeWe department store, to charge high prices that nobody in NYWC would pay. My friend still seemed unconvinced.

Why? Because the assumptions of our home town are deeply ingrained and get reinforced by daily contact with other people who are equally afflicted by them. The worst NYWC assumption is that everything on Planet Wine that’s any good must inevitably be obtainable here. The complete lack of distribution for many of Germany’s Jungwinzer, or young winemakers, is just one example of an NYWC blind spot. The other assumption that’s endemic to this city’s wine scene is that what is available here must also be available in all the other sophisticated cities around Planet Wine, which the example of top class Chablis reveals to be far removed from the truth. Sadly, as I told me friend I really like to drink Chablis, but only the top class stuff.

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Franz Hirtzbergers Singerriedel Riesling “Smaragd” von Frank Ebbinghaus

Kaum eine Weinbergslage auf der ganzen Welt wird so stark mit einem einzigen Winzer assoziiert wie der Singerriedel von Spitz in der Wachau/Österreich mit Franz Hirtzberger. Seit den frühen 1980er Jahre trieb er mit großem Nachdruck die Rekultivierung von den weitgehend brach liegenden Terrassen dieser Steillage voran. 1987 hat er den ersten (recht bescheidenen) Wein geerntet und schon während der 1990er wurde der Singerriedel Riesling von Weingut Franz Hirtzberger ein begehrter Kult-Wein. Inzwischen ist der Wein der Inbegriff des üppigen Wachauer Riesling “Smaragd”. Frank Ebbinghaus hat 20 Jahrgänge davon verkostet und der Mythos ergründet.

Man schließe für einen Moment die Augen. Und male sich den verführerischen Gedanken aus, von einem der besten Weißweine der Welt 20 Jahrgänge am Stück verkosten zu dürfen. Was wäre da zu erwarten? Eine blitzsaubere Reihe von Topweinen, die witterungsbedingten Unwägbarkeiten trotzen und in jedem Jahr gleich hell strahlen, um alles in den Schatten zu stellen? Edle Tropfen, deren jahrgangstypische Ausprägungen ihren Spitzenrang kontinuierlich bestätigen? Oder Weine, in denen sich natürliche Einflüsse wie Mikroklima, Boden und Witterungsverlauf konsequent spiegeln sollen, weshalb der Winzer seinem Gestaltungswillen bewusst Grenzen setzt. Diese Fragen gingen mir durch den Kopf, als ich vergangenen Samstag das Restaurant Annabelles Kitchen in Berlin verließ. Hinter mir lag eine Verkostung von 20 Jahrgängen des sehr berühmten, teuren und hoch bewerteten Riesling Smaragd Singerriedel des ebenfalls sehr renommierten Wachauer Weinguts Franz Hirtzberger (Spitz/Österreich).

Franz Hirtzberger muss der Welt nichts mehr beweisen. Jahr für Jahr werden seine Spitzenweine von der internationalen Kritik mit hohen Bewertungen bedacht. Sein Weingut steht im Zeichen einer ausgeprägten Kontinuität, die auch seinen längst in den Betrieb eingestiegenen Sohn einschließt. Umso bemerkenswerter, dass er zu dieser Probe persönlich nach Berlin gekommen war und einem kleinen Kreis von Weinfans Rede und Antwort stand. Er tat dies mit einem ganz unaufdringlichen Selbstbewusstsein, das seinen Weinen genug Platz bot für sich selbst zu sprechen. Und das taten sie vernehmlich.

Deshalb zurück zur Eingangsfrage: Welches Ergebnis brachte die Verkostung von 20 Jahrgängen eines solchen Ausnahmeweins? Zunächst ein ernüchterndes: Acht Weine waren nach meinem Geschmack lediglich gut oder sehr gut, bei zwei Weinen notierte ich mir Steigerungspotential, das sich mit weiterer Reife einstellen könnte. Von herausragender Qualität erschienen mir neun Weine, wovon zwei zu wahrer Größe heranwachsen könnten. Nur zwei Weine habe ich als vorbehaltlos groß eingestuft. Bei einem Wein, dem 2007er, den Franz Hirtzberger für sehr vielversprechend hält, lag womöglich ein Flaschenfehler vor. Er ging nicht in die Bewertung ein.

Man sollte das nicht auf die Goldwaage legen. In dieser Bewertung spiegelt sich natürlich mein persönlicher Geschmack. Überdies relativiert genauere Betrachtung das kritische Fazit: Kein einziger Wein schmeckte alt. Und in keinem Jahrgang vermisste man das typische Singerriedel-Geschmacksbild: In der Jugend sind das überschwängliche Marillen- und Litschi-Aromen, mit zunehmender Reife stellen sich Waldhonig ohne Süße, Tabak- und Kräuteraromen ein, wobei diese Weine bei aller Reife über eine sehr präsente Säurefrische verfügen.

Zu diesem sensorischen Eindrücken passen die Aussagen des Winzers, die eine klare Philosophie ausdrücken: In jedem Jahr, so Franz Hirtzberger, wolle man herausholen, was möglich sei. Das bedeutet: Eine späte Lese möglichst reifer Trauben. Wenn Botrytis, dann nur von gesunden, voll ausgereiften Beeren. Und in der Regel wird dem Wein vier bis fünf Gramm natürlicher Restzucker oder mehr gelassen, der für Balance sorgt. Hier hat ein Winzer über Jahrzehnte hinweg ein tiefes Verständnis für „seinen“ Weinberg entwickelt. So ist eine Partnerschaft zwischen gestaltendem Subjekt und Natur gewachsen, wobei letzterer alle Möglichkeiten eingeräumt werden sollen, um sich ohne Zwang bestmöglich zu entwickeln.

Es wundert daher nicht, dass die Weine sehr unterschiedlich schmecken und meine Vorstellung von einem großen Wein mitunter deutlich verfehlen. Das gilt besonders für die Jahrgänge 1998, 1999 und 2000, die bei allen Unterschieden eine übermächtige Wucht einte, die mir jedes Trinkvergnügen raubten. Auch der seinerzeit von der Kritik zum Super-Jahrgang hochgejazzte 2006er enttäuschte mich mit seiner Schwerfälligkeit und dem brandig-süßen Abgang.

Überhaupt: Wer auf Finesse und Eleganz steht, wird mit dem Singerriedel nicht zwangsläufig glücklich. Über einige Feinheit verfügt der 1997er, der heute bereits sehr beeindruckt, aber noch zu echter Größe heranreifen kann. Den 1992er Singerriedel zeichnet eine seidige Säure aus und eine große Harmonie – ein tolles Ergebnis für diesen Jahrgang. Eine echte Überraschung bot der 2003er Singerriedel: Im Hitzejahr gelang Franz Hirtzberger trotz geringer Säure ein sehr animierender, keineswegs fetter Wein. Gelbe Früchte werden von einer nur leichten Süße und von Tabaknoten umspielt, so dass sich ein schöner Trinkfluss einstellt.

Ebenfalls sehr eindrucksvoll, wenn auch geschmacklich aus dem Rahmen fallend, der außergewöhnlich schlanke 1990er. In diesem Jahr hat Hirtzberger einen völlig trockenen Wein erzeugt, der trotz neun Promille Säure und nur einem Gramm Restzucker, sehr harmonisch schmeckt, aber aufgrund seiner markanten Säurefrische nicht jedem am Tisch gefiel.

Was aber macht die wirklich großen Singerriedel-Rieslinge aus? Es ist wohl vor allem die perfekte Balance aus gezügelter Reife und mineralischer Säure, wobei die Frucht in der Jugend nicht zu reif schmecken darf, die Säure hingegen nicht reif genug sein kann. So ein Wein ist der 2004er Singelrieder Riesling Smaragd, ein sehr konzentrierter, aber keineswegs übermächtiger, sondern eleganter Wein, der jetzt in einem ersten Reifestadium ist und mit feinen Fruchtnoten einen charmanten Gegenpol setzt zum lebendigen Mineralienspiel – für mich der beste Wein der Probe, der mühelos neben allen großen trockenen Weißweinen besteht, die ich je probieren durfte. Kaum weniger eindrucksvoll der 2002er aus einem Katastrophenjahr, wie Franz Hirtzberger erzählte, als durch starke Regenfälle im Sommer rund 50.000 Quadratmeter terrassierendes Mauerwerk in den Wachauer Weinbergen eingestürzt waren und zur Rettung das Bundesheer anrücken musste. Der Herbst aber war gut. Und so brilliert auch dieser Wein mit einer eleganten, sehr animierenden Art.

Drei weitere Jahrgänge haben das Zeug, sich ebenfalls zu derartigen Monumenten der Rieslingkultur zu entwickeln: Das ist der recht leicht, fein und ebenfalls elegant wirkende 1997er mit seiner feinen, leicht röstigen Paprikanote, dessen Trauben vor der Lese Frosttage zu überstehen hatten, ohne dass sie selbst gefroren waren. Ebenso der 2001er, der mit einer kühlen Tabaknase besticht, nicht zu reif wirkt und dessen im Moment noch recht deutliche Säure sich mit den Jahren zu einem noch mineralischerem Finish entwickeln kann. Und dann ist da noch der 2013er, der zwar sehr gelbfruchtig-reif wirkt, aber im Gegensatz etwa zum 2009er und 2011er nicht üppig schmeckt, sondern seine reife Frucht durch eine bereits perfekt eingebundene mineralische Säure in einer feinen Salzigkeit bändigt – der macht viel Spaß und hat eine große Zukunft.

Was ist das Fazit? Wer große Weine sammelt, sollte ihren Stil sehr mögen. Mir ist der Singerriedel Riesling Smaragd von Franz Hirtzberger oft einfach zu mächtig und zu kraftvoll. Deshalb kommen für mich auch angesichts der Preise, die im Internet bei knapp 60 Euro gerade erst beginnt, nur wenige Jahrgänge überhaupt in Frage. Und ich würde sie nie blind kaufen. Was aber jene Fans durchaus tun, die diese Weine sehr lieben. Sie können darauf bauen, dass Franz Hirtzberger Jahr für Jahr einen Wein präsentiert, der die Geschichte des Jahrgangs und seiner berühmten Lage erzählt und sich als selbstbewusste Persönlichkeit nicht verbiegen lässt – genau wie seine Erzeuger. Es ist ein Wein, wie ihn der Winzer will und die Natur hergibt. Nicht mehr und nicht weniger.

 

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New York Riesling Diary: Day 3 – NYWC is the Place, #NOWIS the Time

The story of wine is one of the oldest, but there’s always a new way it can be told!

All the many projects I am involved with revolve around storytelling and recently (thanks Robert McKee for your wonderful book ‘Story’) I’ve come to realize that in spite of having been telling stories for more than 40 years I still have something to learn about storytelling.  Theoretically and practically it’s possible to tell a particular story anywhere that someone will listen or you can write it down, then transmit it (by whatever medium) to your readers. However, some stories really seem to grow so much better in a particular air, and, in the case of ones that demand really long-term commitment, they also appreciate some good soil to put their roots down into. So the location in which a story is told can really have an impact on how it is told in the positive sense. You also find every story, or find the new way of telling an existing story, somewhere too.

Ever since I arrived in NYWC (New York Wine City) I’ve been mentally working on a project that I’ve christened #NOWIS, although the ideas for this go back to the two semesters I spent at the wine university of Geisenheim in the Rheingau/Germany October 2008 thru July 2009. Not only did I learn a lot about wine growing and winemaking there, I also realized that a bunch of the “knowledge” I’d picked up beforehand was not just unsystematic or inexact (I was well aware of those problems when I arrived in Geisenheim), but plain wrong. The process of coming to all those realizations was a bit painful at the beginning, but I soon came to find it invigorating and inspiring, because I was jettisoning ballast and picking up a valuable cargo. That period of mind-expanding wine discovery fundamentally changed how I approach the subject I’ve been reporting on for 30 years. For reasons that will become apparent later, since I returned to NYWC from Toronto on Thursday #NOWIS has been exciting the conceptual phase and entering into the developmental one. So expect to hear a lot more about it during the months to come. WATCH THIS SPACE!

 

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Ontario Riesling Diary: Day 4 – The “Others” of Ontario

If you are on my wavelength, then you’re always interested in the things that don’t fit in, that is don’t fit into the mainstream, the pattern of convention, the box. Sometimes this is linked with failure, more commonly to modest success, so it was great to finally meet Norman Hardie of the eponymous winery in Prince Edward County who makes very unconventional, non-mainstream wines that don’t even acknowledge the box’s existence, but has managed to have a considerable success with them. His sleek and delicate, yet extremely expressive 2013 Chardonnays, Pinot Noirs and Riesling are probably the best wines he ever made. My iPhone photo shows him in the cellar of Barbarians Steak House on Elm Street in Downtown Toronto.

In his way Ilya Senchuk is every bit as daring as Norman Hardie, for his tiny Leaning Post winery in Stoney Creek/Niagara is a work of almost complete improvisation and the old barn that is its home has only been open to the public for 18 months. In spite of this his medium-dry 2013 Riesling has unusual ripeness and textural complexity for my favorite grape in this challenging climate, and immediately places him on my list of rising Ontario Riesling Stars. However, it its way his 2012 Syrah from the Keczan Vineyard was even more impressive, because it proved that exciting Syrah is possible in this region, something I’d not been entirely convinced of before. Not only did it have some real power (something different from sheer volume and weight), but more importantly pepper, smoke and lavender aromas leapt from the glass at me. Time prevents a serious description of Ilya’s no less daring Pinot Noirs.

Pinot Noir is the main focus of another new producer, Domaine Queylus run by Thomas Bachelder (ex-winemaker of Le Clos Jordanne) and Kelly Mason, pictured right. Their cellars are situated in the most unlikely of locations surrounded by green fields up close to the highest point of the Niagara Escarpment where no wine tourist ever goes. Possibly those are people they are also trying to avoid, and that certainly fits their wine style that assiduously avoids the sweetish, fruity charm that (ignore what the books and somms say) is rather easy to coax out of Pinot Noir. Instead, their wines are hard-core dry and it is the savory and the earthy qualities that interest them, and here too the 2013 vintage – just about to be bottled – stands out for its great balance. These wines may be outside the Ontario box, but if you put them in a row of Burgundies, I think they will taste very “classic”.

For me the most exciting thing about wine is the fact that even if you are on what seems to be familiar ground – this is my third trip here within less than two years, so it’s starting to feel familiar – there’s always another surprise. I already knew the wonderful Gamay reds that Stephen Gash is making at Malivoire, but I had no idea that the winery also makes one of the most delightful and delicious dry rosés in North America. This wine is somehow dead serious (so much so that some consumers will reject it as being too uncompromising) and yet totally playful. That’s a rare combination on Planet Wine and one that I was certainly not expecting yesterday evening. Sadly, it was also the end point of this elliptical pass I made through Ontario on the search for Rieslings and wines of other kinds that excite me. I feel like I’m just beginning to make sense of the place, but have by no means exhausted its potential to excite or surprise. I will return!

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Ontario Riesling Diary: Day 3 – Let me be Franc with You

As regular visitors are aware, this blog is devoted primarily to the wines of the Riesling grape, just like my book BEST WHITE WINE ON EARTH (pub. Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 2014), but I occasionally throw a sidelong glance in another direction completely, (as a journalist I’m interested in journalism and everything relating to it), or, more frequently, to the wines of other grape varieties. This is one of the latter type of blog postings, because good and great Ontario wine is certainly not only made from Riesling.

Yesterday’s tastings proved that Cabernet Franc isn’t just another interesting variety for the Niagara Peninsula, rather a big part of the future for the region’s red wine production. As the photograph above taken in the vineyard at Stratus close to Niagara on the Lake, my favorite producer of Cab-based red wine blends in this region, shows Cabernet Franc comes through the hard winters here remarkably well. Last winter was the coldest ever recorded, and yet this vine still looks good. The thing that you can’t see from this photograph is that the team lead by director J-L Groux will prune each of these vines three times instead of one in order to optimize the crop for the growing season that’s just begun. That is an awful lot of work and it requires skill. I’ve pruned vines a number of times, but never done this kind of patient, step-by-step pruning spread over several weeks watching which buds produce shoots and which of those shoots will actually bear fruit; the whole point of viticulture!

The 2010 Cabernet Franc from Stratus is cast-iron proof of this grape’s potential to give world class wines here, because it tastes neither like a red Loire wine from this grape (there is only the merest hint of green, a hint of parsley rather than green bell pepper) nor like a red Bordeaux (the tannins are rich, but silkier than is normal there), much less like a American West Coast interpretation (it has some violet aroma, but not the opulence of California & Co). Instead, it is entirely itself and beautifully balanced. This grape also plays a role, it was 15% in the 2010 vintage, of the Stratus red blend, adding freshness and aroma to help this powerful wine remain light on it’s feet in spite of all it’s tannic power. A grape that manages a great solo performance and can play in a quartet like this (with 42% Cabernet Sauvignon, 28% Merlot and 15% Petit Verdot) clearly makes a lot of sense in this special wine growing location.

However, the great thing about Cabernet Franc is that it you can produce a range of different styles from it. For example, the 2010 Cabernet Franc ‘Whimsy!’ from Southbrook (not far from Stratus) is quite powerful, but already charming and graceful with a hint of bottle age, but plenty of fruit showing. Here, Cab Franc makes up fully 31% of the blended 2010 ‘Poetica’ red that is conceived by owner Bill Redelmeier as the region’s answer to Bordeaux’s Léoville Las Cases, (one of my favorite wines from the Médoc area, as long as it has some bottle age. The ‘Poetica’ also needs some bottle age to mellow its bold dry tannins, but as the 2007 (the first vintage of this wine) showed, it doesn’t take as many years to mellow this wine as it does Léoville Las Cases. At this point in the day I was about as far away from Riesling as you can get!

Cave Spring are most famous for their CSV Riesling, pictured above, and that was the main reason they were my last appointment yesterday evening. However, they also make some excellent Chardonnay (ranging from Blanc to Blanc sparkling to the elegant, discretely oaken ‘Estate’), and some Cabernet Franc that has a perfume, vibrancy and lightness of touch that no other producer in Ontario quite achieves. The 2013 vintage ‘Niagara Escarpment’ bottling will be a great introduction to this style for many people, and the more concentrated ‘Estate’ bottling makes a serious statement that will impress others. These wines are just about to be bottled, so please be patient. Patience will also be needed for the top Cave Spring Rieslings from the 2014 vintage. The 2014 ‘CSV’ Riesling has intense peach and citrus aromas (not just lemon, but mandarin too) and marries terrific concentration with a tingling mineral freshness, the hint of residual sweetness (technically it is medium-dry) perfectly balancing the generous acidity. The 2014 ‘Estate’ is a smaller scale version of this wine, and the 2014 ‘Adam’s Steps’ is a more succulent (a lot of orange, some pineapple and passion fruit) wine with serious mineral saltiness at the finale. Normally, I don’t do tasting notes here, but let me be frank with you, these are some of the best Rieslings cave Spring ever made and deserve this attention. Maybe they’ll age as well as the great 1999 ‘CSV’ I drank here last time.

 

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Ontario Riesling Diary: Day 2 – Canadian Inspiration (with Thanks to Steve Driscoll & Ian Brown)

Every time I arrive here I have the same feeling of pleasant disorientation, because Toronto is so obviously one of the great cities of the North American continent, yet this is also most definitely not America What makes it different is damned hard to pin down, and the best I can do now is to say that it its something hanging in the air that makes me feel relaxed and sets me thinking. So, when I stumbled upon this mural by Toronto artist Steve Driscoll on the side of a restaurant on College Street I was totally fascinated. It is the first work of art I’ve encountered that takes the Canadian-American relationship as its theme, and it does so in a way that I’d need to write an entire essay to describe properly. To see Steve Driscoll’s recent work go to:

http://www.stevedriscoll.com

This strikes me as exactly right, not least because historically the Canadian-American relationship has been complex and continually shifting. To be frank, the closer the two nations came to being in political lockstep the worse I found that relationship, because it always seemed to mean some Canadian politicians were blindly following the then American administration, and the more successfully Canada developed and articulated an alternative position the better I found that. Of course, the border between the two is just a line on the map and therefore its position is arbitrary. Students of Canadian and/or British colonial history will know that it has been moved several times. However, if you go to Google Earth and look at that border out West, then you will see it clearly from Outer Space due to the contrasting treatment of the land on the USA side (you can see the 1 mile by 1 mile grid that Jefferson and Co. threw over their section of the continent more than 200 years ago) and Canada side (some linear roads, but no grid). What does this say? You don’t have to do things the American way, and it isn’t always the best way. Sadly, that’s something many intelligent Americans don’t accept, because of a tendency by them to support the status quo they see as economically beneficial to them. This has lead to to long-term problems like racism or the destructive effect of US agricultural policy being ignored with major consequences.

Yesterday, I attended the Terroir 2015 conference (the twitter hashtag is #Terroir9, for those interested to get an overview of what happened) here in Toronto where I spoke, but much more importantly listened. The very first presentation of the day, by Ian Brown, Roving Reporter for the Globe and Mail – “Canada’s rational newspaper” – here in the city, was worth the journey here and the serious state of burn out I experienced last night. Early in the summer of  2013 Ian Brown set off on a journey of culinary discovery traveling across Canada coast to coast to find out what people actually eat. He did this without a list of top restaurants to test or fast food joints to check out, and with no political agenda of any kind, although he was clearly intensely aware of the economics and social context of all that encountered. He didn’t avoid saying what tasted good and what didn’t, for example, daring to say that some First Nation (Canadian for the native inhabitants of this land) food was horrible, but in the final analysis he undertook this epic journey, “as an empty vessel”. To read his stories go to:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/authors/ian-brown

Not only was the way he described things he ate, like a humburger in a nudist restaurant (called The Naked Lunch – had they read Edgar Burroughs book of the same name?), very finny and extremely perceptive, he came to some inspiring conclusions of which the following are the most important: “anything that might qualify as the national dish has been eaten by the First Nations for millennia,” and “there’s something more important than judgement, and that’s gratitude for having been fed, or for having someone to cook for.” Thanks Steven Driscoll and Ian Brown for feeding me with your distinctively Canadian inspiration. Now it’s time to taste some wine and seek liquid inspiration!

 

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New York Riesling Diary: Day 2 – Where the Next Story is to be Found (Welcome to the Corner of West 16th and 6th Ave)

I often ask myself where the next story is to be found, particularly when I’ve been in one place for a long time and familiarity has made me contemptuous of my surroundings, so that I have ceased to take them in properly. Let’s be frank, that means I’m less alive than I could be and ought to be. Then life gives me a jolt and brings me back to my senses. That happened most recently on Thursday when I flew from Berlin to New York, then I was suddenly confronted again with things like the corner of West 16th Street and 6th Avenue in Manhattan, just a few yards from where I live when I’m in New York Wine City (NYWC). As you can see, even the closest and most familiar street corner can still be full of surprises. However, this time I hardly have the time to take all this in, because tomorrow (Sunday) I’m flying up to Toronto for the 2015 Terroir Symposium on Monday, May 11th. I would be able to write more here if I hadn’t spent much of the day figuring out exactly what I have to say on Monday afternoon, and I’m still not entirely sure…but as you can see from the picture above, my heart is in the right place.

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Berlin Riesling Diary: Day 8 – Very Long-Term Planning

Most of my work is horribly short-term stuff. I taste a wine/various wines in order to write about it/them here or in my column in the Sunday edition of the FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG (German language) on the same day, or within a few days at most. Rarely can I chew over these impressions for months, in fact only in books like BEST WHITE WINE ON EARTH / PLANET RIESLING or in my quarterly column in FINE magazine (German language) can that happen. Today’s main task was in stark contrast to this very short-term turnover of material and deserves the description “very long-term planning” because it has implications that potentially stretch decades into the future. I just purchased a small, but extremely centrally located apartment in Berlin where this eternal student of Riesling will reside (when in this city) for the foreseeable future. As you can see from the picture above, it is currently under construction, and I won’t be moving in until the end of 2015 or very early 2016. I will, of course, keep you posted and the short-term turnover of wines tasted and things experienced will continue unabated. By the way, I don’t intend to stop doing this until I die, and given that my grandmother lived to be 101 that could mean several decades more!

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