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$100,000 Winning Burger Recipe from Sutter Home Wines

$100,000 Winning Burger Recipe from Sutter Home Wines

7 Train Caramelized Green Curry Burger became the latest $100,000 winner of Sutter Home BUILD A BETTER BURGER® recipe contest.The winners were selected in a cook-off in St. Helena, Calif on May 20th, a week before Memorial Day and the official start of the grilling season.

Erin Evenson of Brooklyn, N.Y. won the $100,000 grand prize with her creative burger featuring a sweet and spicy green-curry glaze, a little nugget of salty pancetta, creamy minted basil aioli, the crunch of roasted cashews, and a tangle of watercress salad. Sutter Home recommends its Gewürztraminer (literally “spice grapes” in German) with this spicy culinary creation.Sutter Home Wines $100,000 Winning Burger Recipe

An Indian Lamb Burger from Mark Richardson of Snohomish, Wash. was selected by a panel of judges as the Best Alternative Burger and $15,000 prize winner. Featuring a tahini pistachio mayonnaise, the Lamb Burger’s suggested wine pairing is Merlot.

Two People’s Choice Award Burgers selected by cook-off attendees were also announced. The Grilled Green Tomato Burger by finalist Mark Pyne of Troy, Alabama transforms the common burger with true southern flavors—grilled green tomatoes, garlicky lemon mayonnaise, shoestring fries, and homemade BBQ sauce. The suggested wine pairing is Sauvignon Blanc. The second People’s Choice winner was the Better than Breakfast in Bed Burger from Kim Jones of Bloomington, Illinois, which combines egg, cheese, buttermilk biscuits, sage-flavored pork sausage and a “spicy maple mayo” consisting of mayo with a touch of Sriracha and maple syrup. The suggested pairing is Sutter Home’s Pinot Grigio.

Sutter Home’s annual burger contest is one of the most fun food contests around. I’ve tried cooking some of the winners from previous years and the results are always amazing… although a little more time-consuming than than your average burger prep. The winners are excellent but the other finalists recipes are always inspiring too.

Sutter-Home-Salmon

This year’s finalists include intriguing choices like Razzle Dazzle Burgers with Raspberry-Chipotle Spread, Korean-Hawaiian Taco Truck Burgers and Smoky Sweet Salmon Sliders made with a tempting-sounding maple-mustard-gewürztraminer glaze.

Ingredients:1 cup pure maple syrup, preferably medium-amber grade, 1/4 cup Mady’s Olde Tyme Beer Mustard or other whole-grain mustard, and 2 tablespoons Sutter Home Gewürtztraminer.

To make the glaze, heat the syrup in a fireproof saucepan on the low-heat side of the grill. Combine the mustard and wine in a measuring cup. Remove the syrup from the heat and stir in the mustard mixture. Set aside.


All the Build A Better Burger ® recipes are worth checking out at the Sutter Home website. See what inspires you. If you try any of them, let us know what you chose for wine pairings. Cheers to a delicious summer!



by Jackie Wilferd
Founder & President
Wines.com

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Celebrity Vineyards – A New Wine Book with Personality Plus

Cover image - Celebrity Vineyards: From Napa to Tuscany in Search of Great Wine by Nick Wise

Celebrity Vineyards: From Napa to Tuscany In Search of Great Wine by Nick Wise

What could Thomas Jefferson, Antonio Banderas and Lillian Disney possibly have in common with Dan Ackroyd, Mario Andretti, Raymond Burr and Charlie Palmer?

If you haven’t already peeked, you’ll see all these famous names appearing together on the cover of a delightful new wine book by Nick Wise, Celebrity Vineyards: From Napa to Tuscany In Search of Great Wine.

Celebrity Vineyards is a charmer. It exudes personality from every page relating fascinating true stories of sixteen people who are established celebrities in their own fields—and share a common passion for wine and winemaking.

So many wine books fall into one of three categories: the beautiful-but-hefty tomes destined for wine lovers’ coffee tables, collectors’ volumes of serious wine reference, and the ‘guide-to-anywhere’ wine books that flood the popular market. Happily, Nick Wise’s new Celebrity Vineyards is none of these. Here is a truly new and interesting wine book you will enjoy reading cover to cover.

Nick Wise, Author

Nick Wise, Author

I had an opportunity to meet the author, Nick Wise, who flew to California from his home in London this past week to launch his book at the CIA at Greystone. The book is the product of three years work—two years travelling and one year of planning. Wise explained his criterion for selecting the celebrities featured in this book this way:

“I chose people who were an element of the process of making the wine—not just slapping a label on the bottle. They each add a bit of their character to the wine. They are very much involved in what they’re doing.”

Celebrity Vineyards tells each celebrity’s unique story from a perspective that is discerning yet appreciative, and often humorous. Wise approaches each celeb vineyard with curiosity and interest in the people behind it, not for profiteering or just to compile a book but, importantly, out of a real sense of admiration and honor for the craft of winemaking.

Chef Charlie Palmer, owner Carlie Clay Wines

Chef Charlie Palmer, restaurateur and owner of Charlie Clay Wines

What motivates successful people like comedian Dan Ackroyd, race car driver Randy Lewis, chef Charlie Parker, NFL coach Dick Vermeil, Doobie Brothers’ manager Bruce Cohn, or actor Antonio Banderas to become seriously involved in the risky business of grapegrowing and winemaking?

Each story’s answer is unique and instructive. Wise focuses on the vineyards they have developed, the wines they produce and their involvement in the winemaking process itself.

In prose that glides as easily as a sip of good port, Wise relates the memories of actor Raymond Burr’s (Perry Mason & Ironsides) partner of thirty years, Robert Benevides, as he tells how they came to plant the first grapes on their Sonoma Dry Creek estate near Healdsburg in 1986, and bottled the first wine in 1992. All this was back in the day when any hint of being gay could ruin a career. We’re told that Burr never wanted his name on the label, but Benevides today produces and labels their wine “Raymond Burr” to honor his friend who passed away September 12, 1993, before the first wine was released in 1995. The highlight of the winery’s portfolio is the Raymond Burr Estate Port, fortified with cognac, which Wise calls “a meditative wine [...] quite untraditional but unique and very tasty.”

Jarno Trulli, Race Car Driver and wine producer, Podere Castorani

Jarno Trulli, Race Car Driver and wine producer, Podere Castorani

He tells the story of actor Fess Parker (whom Baby Boomers will remember as both Davey Crocket and Daniel Boone) and his early faith in the now famous Santa Ynez Valley appellation near Santa Barbara. He asks what brought director Frances Ford Coppola (The Godfather, Apocalypse Now and so much more), handsome Italian race car driver Jarno Trulli, noted screenwriter Robert Kamen (The Karate Kid and Taken), Italian-born American Forumla One racing champion Mario Andretti, and esteemed Italian composer Ludovico Einaudi, to enter the capricious world of winemaking.

All 16 stories are fetching. Surely, part of the interest stems from the feeling of familiarity we have with these people who, as celebrities, have been part of many of our lives. Their stories intrigue us because each one exposes the passion and energy that leads a person to step beyond a successful career in film, or music or racing to seek new challenges in the elemental tasks of winegrowing and winemaking.

One such amazing story that I was surprised to find in Celebrity Vineyards is the chapter on Natalie Oiveros, a beautiful Italian adult film actress and star of no less than 90 sexually explicit films, who left the porn industry and followed her lifelong dream of becoming a winemaker. She is quoted as saying, “[...] that’s why I really wanted to make a wine—to bring some life, sensuality, and excitement to a world that can be so stuffy.” Celebrity Vineyards‘ author, Nick Wise, openly admires and praises her cuvées. We can see why, indeed, in a tastefully provocative two-page spread photo of Natalie reclining in the nude on a huge bed of luscious dark purple grapes. (How in the world did she manage this without stains?)

Natalie Oliveros, Film Star and Winemaker, Savanna Sampson Wines

A portion of the nude photo of Italian actress Natalie Oliveros, now Winemaker, Savanna Sampson Wines

Another surprise is a remarkably well-written tribute to Thomas Jefferson, America’s first celebrity winemaker, recounting Jefferson’s passion for wine and his frustrating attempts to grow winegrapes on his estate at Monticello. In fact, Monticello produces wine in his honor today far more successfully than Jefferson managed in his lifetime. Still, it’s a revealing portrait of America’s first celeb vinophile.

Celebrity Vineyards is published by Omnibus Press in London in association with Welcome Books in New York. The book itself is beautifully produced with an artistic contemporary softcover and wonderful photographs. It is a lovely collector’s book, a fun and fascinating read, and an education for the palate. It would make a perfect gift for any wine lover, preferably with a bottle of wine from one of the vineyards profiled in the book.

Celebrity Vineyards Back Cover

Celebrity Vineyards Back Cover

For each of the sixteen celebrity stories, Nick Wise and Linda Sunshine (editor, writer and travel sidekick) present two or three of the best wines from each vintner’s portfolio. Wise writes, “[...] it was incredible how many of these celebrities made absolutely beautiful wines. Some of them were complex, well-made wines that could compete with the best in the world.”

I had the honor of tasting wines from six of the featured celeb vineyards in the book and they were all, in a word, stars.

I am already looking forward to volumes two and three, which are planned and promise to be equally fun and interesting. You’ll have to buy the book though to see who will be included… because shhh… we’re not giving it away.



by Jacklyn Wilferd
Founder & President
Wines.com


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Critics take notice of Zinfandel’s “coming of age”

Critics take notice of Zinfandel’s “coming of age”

Up until only recently, according to wine journalist Rod Byers CWE, Zinfandel has been presented as “the Oakland Raiders of wine… loud, proud, unruly, and unapologetic.”

But at this past January’s ZAP (Zinfandel Advocates & Producers) Grand Tasting, Byers noticed an increased “sophistication” in the Zinfandels. In a report entitled Zinfandel grape comes of age, published this past March 6 in The Union, the Grass Valley (Western Nevada County) daily newspaper, Byers wrote: “None (of the Zinfandels at this year’s ZAP) seemed overly alcoholic, sweet, or rough. Only one could have been considered moderately tannic. The wines were fruity, balanced, and even elegant.”

Which is cool, since this confirms our own observations. Mr. Byers, a Certified Wine Educator who also teaches at Sierra College, has been moderating day-long winemaker seminars at ZAP’s Grand Tasting in San Francisco every year for the past few years. This has put him in a great position to assess the evolution of California’s Zinfandels over the past 22 years.

Zinfandel ZAP was started up in 1991, says Byers, when “a small band of winemakers were growing increasingly concerned that Zinfandel was in danger of disappearing. Zinfandel, the backbone of the California wine industry for over a century, was falling out of favor with the wine drinking public. Faced with dropping sales growers were yanking out vineyards or budding over to other varieties. Much of what was left was being produced as white-zin. In fact, new wine consumers sometimes thought Zinfandel was a white grape.”

The issue with White Zinfandel, as Lodi’s grape growers were also discovering, was that demand for grapes to produce this pink toned, fruity style of wine was also beginning to drop precipitously. When grape contracts began to disappear, it was sink-or-swim time for all the growers, big and small – some from families who have been farming in Lodi for over 50 years, some for well over 100 years.

So many of them did what you do when it’s time to make lemonade out of lemons: they applied for winery bonds and began producing their own wines. Klinker Brick, Heritage Oak, Harney Lane, LangeTwins Family, Van Ruiten Family, Mettler Family, and Peirano Estate are just some of the outstanding Lodi wineries that have risen out of those circumstances over the past 20 years.

ZAP, in the meantime, began to attract up to 10,000 Zinfandel enthusiasts at a time to its annual Grand Tasting. Stylistically, according to Byers, many of these Zinfandels followed the style of ZAP co-founder Joel Peterson of Sonoma’s Ravenswood Winery, whose motto was “No Wimpy Wines.” More and more Zinfandels were deliberately scaled to be “brash and irreverent” – very popular among consumers, but less so among more and more critics complaining “that Zinfandel was too tannic, too fruity, too alcoholic, too out of balance, and not food-friendly.”

Just three years ago, for instance, the popular wine columnist Steve Heimoff confessed (in Talkin’ Zinfandel blues), “I haven’t gone (to a ZAP) for years,” while decrying the “fat, extracted, high-alcohol sweet style… clumsy, inelegant, and undrinkable with almost anything, except for that all-purpose food group, ‘barbecue’” – ouch…

“The bombastic, frat-party-gone-wild image might have been useful for establishing an identity for Zinfandel,” comments Byers, “but now winemakers like Peterson prefer to talk about balance, elegance, restraint, and food compatibility.”

Another major development signaling the maturity of Zinfandel, says Byers, was the 2013 ZAP’s inclusion of “a Terroir Tasting Area to compare and contrast flavor profiles between different Zinfandel growing regions like Dry Creek, the Sierra Foothills, or Lodi.” In a ZAP Flights seminar, taking place the day before the Grand Tasting, the Historic Vineyard Society – dedicated to the preservation of heritage vineyards throughout the state – put on a terroir-focused tasting of three of California’s major Zinfandel regions (including Lodi, presented by Turley Wine Cellars’ Tegan Passalacqua).

McCay, 2012 Zinfandel harvest (Truluck's Vineyard)With increased sophistication of Zinfandel lovers comes increased appreciation of the specific vineyards from where the finest Zinfandels are sourced. Says Byers, “Perhaps the two wines that impressed me the most were the McCay Cellars Truluck’s Vineyard Zinfandel from Lodi and the Andis Winery Estate Zinfandel from Amador. Both of those wines broke the mold of their regions. While words like rustic and tannic are often attached to the wines of the Sierra Foothills, and raisined and ripe to those of Lodi, both these wines were fruity, stylish, flavorful, and balanced.”

McCay, of course, is not the only Lodi winery evolving in this fashion. LangeTwins, Peirano, Heritage Oak, and The Lucas Winery, to name just four, have been focused on this balanced, un-Oakland Raider-like style pretty much from the get-go. Although vintage conditions had some something to do with it, even Zinfandels like Macchia’s recently released 2011 single-vineyard bottlings, and Michael David’s 2010 Earthquake, indicate subtle movements towards the balanced style.

One could argue, of course, that Zinfandel came “of age” a long time ago – when wine lovers first began to embrace it wholeheartedly as one of the great varietals of the wine world. But as wine lovers’ appreciation of nuances –especially those related to individual vineyard distinctions – have begun to grow, so has the appreciation of heritage vineyards. This may not keep each and every ancient planting, declining in production, from being pulled out for real and practical reasons. But if anything is going to save them, it’s going to be consumer demand: the willingness to pay more for Zinfandels from vineyards that cost more to maintain.

On the aesthetic side, no longer do Zinfandels need to be “big,” or the opposite of “wimpy,” to be noticed. They just need to be true to their place of origin; or perhaps better, always go great with barbecue!

The featured blog article was first published online at lodiwine.com and is republished here with the permission of ZAP ( Zinfandel Advocates & Producers) and the author, Randy Caparoso, a long time friend of this web site, Wines.com.


Author, Randy Caparoso

Randy Caparoso

Randy Caparoso is a multi-award winning sommelier and restaurateur, founding partner, Roy’s Restaurants and longtime wine journalist, including Sommelier Journal, The Tasting Panel Magazine, San Joaquin Magazine and lodiwine.com. Randy covers the entire West Coast from his home base in the middle of a 50-year old Lodi Zinfandel vineyard.

Caparoso in the recipient of many industry awards, including recognition by the Academy of Wine Communications for Excellence in Wine Writing and Encouragement of Higher Industry Standards, and he is an Electoral College Member for the Vintners Hall of Fame at the Culinary Institute of America, Greystone.

Randy’s blog, Culinary Wine & Food Adventures is one of our favorites. He writes about wine strictly from the perspective of food. To him, wine is a food like a rose is a rose, and his words bring clarity to this concept in new, delicious ways.

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Welcome to the new Wines.com

Welcome to the new Wines.com

Welcome!  Our new look is finally here! For the last few months, we’ve been very busy remodeling and changing the vision, direction and look of this portal. It’s been awhile coming and I extend my apologies for the inconvenience, staleness and dust you may have seen lately. We hope you enjoy the NEW Wines.com.

A new expanded wine store is coming soon, so you’ll be able to find your favorite wines and discover exciting new wines as well.

In the coming weeks and months, we’re planning to add many interesting new features.  Wines.com’s mission is once again what it was when this site was originally conceived, namely to bring inspiration, new ideas and enjoyment to everyone interested in wine.

While wine has become more popular over the last ten years, it can still be an intimidating and confusing subject. At wines.com we working to change that!  And we’re not just talking about making wine more accessible and fun, we’re just doing it.

Please join us and add your voice to the conversation. Whether you are a wine expert,  experienced collector, a casual wine drinker, or a total newcomer to the huge world of wine, Wines.com hopes to offer you fresh inspiration to enhance your enjoyment of the endless variations of the fruit of the vine.

I’m very interested in what you think of the new look and organization. Please add your comments below, if you have a minute. Thank you for joining us. 

Cheers!
Jackie Wilferd
Founder & President
Wines.com

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Did Robert Parker Just Fumble On The Goal Line? (The Wine Advocate Possibly Sold To Investors In Singapore)

While we can usually count on the wine world for providing news that can best be classified as odd-but-quickly-forgettable (Exhibit A: anybody remember the wine snob ghost??), the recent coverage of changes coming to Robert Parker’s The Wine Advocate reads like an elaborate April Fool’s (except it’s coming in December, 2012).

According to The Wall Street Journal, uber-critic Parker – who has quite recently vehemently and publicly stated his desire not to retire – is in the process of selling his wine newsletter to a group of investors in Singapore.

Felix Salmon has an interesting and well-written take on the news, and he sums up the collective “what the hell?!??” reaction of the fine wine world to the possibility of TWA moving in a direction that seems the polar opposite of what most wine insiders believed would be the future of TWA (and that includes insiders I know personally, who have direct access to Parker – so include me firmly in the “what the hell?!??” camp).

It’s long been believed that Robert Parker, whenever he decided to retire, would hand-off TWA as-is (given that he grew it literally from nothing using his own impressive hustle), grooming heir apparent Antonio Galloni to eventually take control of TWA (and speculated that Galloni, once given the full reigns, might shake up the editorial staff).

But the news coming from the WSJ suggests a very different path for TWA than what was brewing in the collective fine wine hive mind. Here are some of the highlights, as reported by Salmon:

  • TWA will be sold to a group of Singapore-based investors (described by Parker as “visionaries”), who according to Salmon have “no experience either in wine or in publishing”
  • Parker will retain the title of Chairman, but will be turning over editorial control not to Galloni, but to TWA’s Singapore-based correspondent, Master of Wine Lisa Perrotti-Brown
  • The print version of TWA newsletter will be retired (despite the fact that it’s profitable), and [see comments - RMP has corrected this via his twitter feed] there will be a specific Southeast Asian edition added, “aimed at corporate clients like airlines and luxury hotels”
  • A new China-based corespondent will be hired, specifically to report on the nascent industry of wines produced in Asia
  • Advertising – long shunned by Parker and often used by him as criticism against the intentions of other wine review publications – will be accepted at the electronic edition of TWA.

“What the hell?!??”

While one could certainly forgive Parker for wanting to bow out of the game (especially given the recent negative press levied against former TWA critic Jay Miller), this move to sell TWA doesn’t really pass the surface-level glance common-sense test when compared to how staunchly Parker publicized, adhered to, and defended the aspects and policies he felt made TWA stand apart from other critical wine publications.

Certainly no one is losing a ton betting on the wine frenzy happening in Asia right now, but other than financially the move just doesn’t seem to add up. Salmon sums it up best, I think, when he states that “none of this seems like the action of a man who wants to preserve his legacy” – certainly it doesn’t seem like the kind of consistent move you’d have expected from the man, particularly after his recent induction into the Vintners Hall of Fame in Napa, at a time when his favorable legacy in the wine world seemed all but a lock.

“What the hell?!??”

Will this move tarnish the legacy? Has Parker fumbled the ball at the goal line?

Assuming the deal actually goes through, then only time will tell…

Cheers!

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Wine Revolutionaries Call America Home

By David White

napoleonOne of the hottest winemakers in France is Jerome Bressy, the proprietor of Domaine Gourt de Mautens the Southern Rhone village of Rasteau.

Over the past decade, he’s developed quite a reputation. American wine critic Robert Parker has called his winery “sensational,” and France’s two leading wine commentators, Michel Bettane and Thierry Desseauve, have said Bressy deserves recognition as one of the Rhone’s great winemakers. This past year, Bettane and Desseauve honored Bressy for producing both the “Best White” and the “Best Rosé” in the Southern Rhone.

But next year, thanks to a recent decision by French regulators, Bressy may find it difficult to market his wines.

The reason? In France, strict laws dictate winegrowing and winemaking — and Bressy violated the rules. Even though the basis for many of these rules make sense, Bressy’s tale helps explain why adventurous winemakers feel more welcome in America.

French wine laws trace back to 1935. At the time, globalization threatened the dominance of French wines, so lawmakers created a system to guarantee both quality and geographic typicity. Some laws codified tradition — like what grapes could be grown where — and others detailed total minutiae, like vine density.

Because of these laws, consumers know what to expect from French wine. Red Burgundy is Pinot Noir; white Burgundy is Chardonnay; Sancerre is Sauvignon Blanc; and so on.

Jerome Bressy’s “offense” is hardly offensive.

A student of history, Bressy has spent the last few years reintroducing traditional grapes to his vineyard. So today, about 23 percent of Bressy’s estate is planted with obscure grapes like Vaccarese, Counoise, Muscardin, which are interspersed with the more common Grenache, Mourvedre, and Syrah. By French law, these minor varieties can only comprise only 15 percent of a red wine labeled from Rasteau.

So to label his wines as the market expects, Bressy has no choice but to rip up some of his vines or alter his blend. This despite the fact that his bottlings are historically accurate — and that France’s wine laws were designed, in part, to codify tradition.

At worst, Bressy seems guilty of “creative eccentricity.” That’s how VinConnect, a U.S. company that enables consumers to order wines directly from Gourt de Mautens, has described the winemaker. But he’s hardly a revolutionary — Bressy’s transgression is rooted in respect for his vineyard and its history.

It’s no wonder why wine writer Alder Yarrow once criticized French regulators for being “ignorant, stubborn, and backwards.”

Needless to say, true revolutionaries find it difficult to make wine in France. They turn to the new world, where experimentation and innovation is embraced.

Consider Syrah. Today, some of California’s most exciting Syrah comes from incredibly cool climates historically associated with Pinot Noir. Producers like Wind Gap and Arnot-Roberts, both based in Sonoma County, craft stunning Syrah from vineyards where grapes struggle to ripen.

If a winemaker in France wanted to experiment with Syrah in the cool climate of Burgundy, it’d be nearly impossible to sell his wines, as it’d be illegal to note where the grapes originated.

In the United States, winemakers aren’t limited by such strict laws. Indeed, the teams at Wind Gap and Arnot-Roberts are constantly on the lookout for esoteric grapes with potential in California’s vast and varied climate. Arnot-Roberts, for example, crafts a delicious rosé from Touriga Nacional, a Portuguese variety. Wind Gap makes a highly regarded white using Trousseau Gris, a variety that’s even rare in its ancestral home of eastern France.

Elsewhere in Sonoma, 31-year-old Morgan Twain-Peterson of Bedrock Wine Company is making distinctly American wines that would make Jerome Bressy smile. Twain-Peterson is best known for using some of California’s oldest vines to make traditional California field blends.

In Napa Valley, a group of renegade winemakers is eschewing Cabernet Sauvignon in favor of intensely floral, crisp whites inspired by the wines of northeastern Italy. One label worth finding is Massican, whose owner, Dan Petroski, studied winemaking in Sicily. Another is Arbe Garbe, owned by an Italian named Enrico Bertoz who moved to California in 1998.

Across the United States, examples like these abound. The wine world benefits tremendously from these vintners — those who innovate new wines and preserve something special. In many ways, America is home to more winemakers like Jerome Bressy than France. That’s worth celebrating.

David White, a wine writer, is the founder and editor of Terroirist.com. His columns are housed at Wines.com, the fastest growing wine portal on the Internet.

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