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Cool, Refreshing, Springtime Côtes du Rhône.

Crisp.  As this weekend’s April showers spill into the month of May, we’re reminded that the arrival of warm weather is rarely dry or smooth. If the sweltering days of July and August require a well-chilled rosé, this transition time between spring and summer calls for a refreshing, mid-weight red. For this we usually direct readers to the Pinot Noirs of Burgundy and Alsace, but today we’re suggesting something a bit different.

The Domaine Malmont’s Côtes du Rhône is unique and delicious. The wine owes its distinctiveness to an unusually high percentage of syrah (60%), which contributes dark berry and black pepper notes, and keeps the wine lively and fresh. Where many Côtes du Rhônes are rich and full of baked fruit, Malmont’s is cool and crisp, with pleasant tannins and a long, balanced finish.

 

Olive and Plum.  Malmont is the project of Nicolas Haeni, a young Swiss winemaker who founded the domaine about 5 years ago. His grapes are grown on terraced vineyards in the hills above Séguret, and his wines have already met with wide acclaim from the international wine press. His Côtes du Rhône 2014 is refreshing and dark with notes of olive and plum.

Though it’s not raised in oak, there’s a pleasant note of toastiness in this wine, which makes it an excellent companion for anything from the grill. If you’re not a grill-in-the-rain type, a simple chicken piccata or pasta with sausage will fit nicely. There’ll be plenty of rosé, Chablis, and Muscadet a month or two down the road. While there’s still a chill in the air, consider this crisp, lively red.

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MALMONT Côtes-du-Rhône 2014
Ansonia Retail: $24
case, half-case: $19/bot

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Old-Vine Loire Sauvignon Blanc: Intense and Refreshing

Jardin.  Known as the “Garden of France,” the Loire Valley winds leisurely across nearly two thirds of the country. Though dozens of grape varietals grace its gently rolling hills, none is more famous than Sauvignon Blanc. Planted as far afield as California and New Zealand, Sauvignon Blanc finds its purest expression in the Loire Valley, particularly in the neighboring towns of Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé.

One of our most exciting discoveries last year was the Domaine Frederic Michot, a tiny source in the hills outside Pouilly-Fumé. Michot’s old-vine Pouilly-Fumé shows an extraordinary intensity, a result of vines planted in the 1940s. This Sauvignon Blanc is a perfect wine for the spring and summer — both floral and mouthfilling but beautifully refreshing.

 

Concentrated.  Last month’s Guide Hachette called Michot’s 2014 Pouilly-Fumé “powerful; at once unctuous, fresh, and persistent…remarkable in its intensity and harmony.” We agree, and are happy to report that it’s drinking just as well as it was last fall. The nose shows grapefruit rind, mango, and wild herb honey. The mouth is rich and concentrated, with grapefruit and lime rind freshness.

Grilled shrimp, pan seared scallops, broiled haddock, steamed Maine lobster — these will all form a harmonious and delightful match with this wine. Or if fruits de mer aren’t your thing, try a glass with another invention of the Loire Valley — goat cheese on a crusty piece of French bread.

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MICHOT Pouilly-Fumé Vieilles Vignes 2014
Ansonia Retail: $24
case, half-case: $18/bot

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Grower Champagne: Rare and Exquisite.

Branding.  Mass production Champagne is easy to find in the US. You’re as likely to run into a bottle of Veuve Cliquot at your corner convenience store as on a restaurant wine list. And at around $60 (or $160 in a restaurant), the actual contents of the bottle often disappoint; it’s that orange label you’re paying for more than what’s in the glass.

Just 5% of Champagne exported to the US is “grower champagne,” made by small winemakers who tend and harvest their own grapes and make their own wine. We were thrilled last fall to add a grower champagne to our list at last: the Domaine Bardoux in Montagne de Reims. Bardoux’s small batch Champagnes are elegant, lively and complex — about two thirds the price of Veuve Cliquot, and easily twice as delicious.

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The Real Deal.  Pascal Bardoux is a small-scale, fifth generation vigneron outside Reims, and today’s post is for his Champagne NV Brut called “Traditionnel.” Bardoux’s Champagnes are truly wines, with complexity and intricacy to match the finest bottles of Burgundy or Bordeaux. Traditionnel’s fine bubbles and dry, mouthfilling fruit make for a perfect example of Bardoux’s small batch grower style.

The blend is 60% Pinot Meunier, 30% Chardonnay and 10% Pinot Noir, showing citrus, apple, and plum. The mouth is dry and full, with notes of raspberry and almond. This is Champagne as it was meant to be — wine first, bubbles second. Champagne is among the easiest wines to pair with food, but our favorite match is triple-cream cheese on fresh bread. Serve this on a summer afternoon, and your guests won’t care how orange the label is.

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BARDOUX Champagne NV
Ansonia Retail: $46
case, half-case: $39/bot

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Mixed Case: Red Bordeaux Sampler

The Other “B.”  Burgundy is at the heart of our portfolio. Most domaines in Burgundy are small and family run, just like Ansonia. But we always like to have a few wines around from the other “B.” Bordeaux presents a larger scale of operation — it’s about 10 times the size of Burgundy — and also a wealth of grapes, styles, and delicious wines.

We’ve collected four reds into this Bordeaux Sampler — two from the left bank, two from the right; all blends of Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Cabernet Sauvignon. Some reds from Bordeaux drink well young, and the Lafont-Menaut, Lehoul, and Montlisse are already lovely. Others age magnificently, and we’ve included a 12 year old Saint-Emilion Grand Cru Classé to show just what proper cellaring and a bit of patience can do.

We serve Burgundy with nearly everything, but if there are pepper-crusted steaks in your future, it’s best to have some Bordeaux around.

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LAFONT Pessac-Leognan 2013
This Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon blend comes from the same owner as the Chateau Carbonnieux. The wine shows dark, briary notes of blackberry and currant, with the Merlot adding dense notes of plum jam.

LÉHOUL Graves 2012
This small property turns out excellent wine each year, but 2012 is the best in recent memory. The Merlot-Cabernet Franc blend shows dark chocolate, and toast; the tannins are round and fine, showing blackcurrant and cedar.

MONTLISSE Saint Emilion Grand Cru 2010
From an exceptional vintage, this 2010 Saint-Emilion Grand Cru has many years in its future. But with conservative oaking and ripe fruits, it’s already delicious. Look for a dense, meaty texture, showing notes of ripe plums, cassis, and cedar.

DESTIEUX Saint-Emilion Grand Cru Classé 2004
Now a dozen years since its harvest, this wine has added the secondary aromas that make older Bordeaux so enticing. The nose shows roasted cherry jam with earth and bay leaf; the mouth is smooth and long and velvety, showing pure softened fruit and a beautifully balanced texture.


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MIXED CASE:

RED BORDEAUX SAMPLER

3x   LAFONT-MENAUT Pessac-Leognan 13:   $25
3x   LÉHOUL Graves rouge 2012:   $28
3x   MONTLISSE St-Emilion Grand Cru 2010:   $38
3x   DESTIEUX St-Emilion Gr. Cru Classé 04:   $64

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Ansonia Retail: $465
mixed case price: $395/case

(free East Coast shipping)   |   save $70

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Everyday Sangiovese: Dark Chocolate and Roses. $15

Across the Alps. The wine regions of France are enormous and diverse. The wide spectrum of vinification styles, climate patterns, and grape varietals provides a staggering range of wines. France offers enough diversity to keep us busy for years, and in some regions we feel as though we haven’t even scratched the surface.

But from time to time we gaze across the borders into the countries beyond. About 350 miles southwest of Mont Blanc (or for the purposes of this post, Monte Bianco) lies a charming Tuscan hilltown that has long enticed us from our Francophillic tendencies. The Fattoria Poggerino is a small, organic winemaker crafting delicious, affordable wines of pure Sangiovese — a small but delicious exception to our French-centric portfolio.

 

Tomato Season.  Poggerino splits the Chianti Classico vines into older and younger parcels, bottling the former as “Chianti Classico” and the latter as “Il Labirinto”. The Classico, which we released last week, is elegant and delicious — but the Labirinto, whose “young” vines are now 35-years old, is a Classico-quality wine that is an astounding bargain for the price.

The Labirinto 2014 is delicious — the nose is very ripe and juicy, with plum and sweet cherry notes. The mouth is young, earthy, and vibrant, with sturdy tannins under a smooth patina of fruit jam. This is lively and pleasantly drinkable on its own, but like most wines, it’s best enjoyed with the other fruits of its home terroir. Try a homemade pizza (good recipe for the dough here) or a pasta with a tomato based sauce.

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POGGERINO Labirinto 2014
Ansonia Retail: $19
case, half-case: $15/bot

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Pure Syrah, Wild Yeasts, and the Ancient Art of Winemaking.

Earth Day.  Winemaking began in the Languedoc around 125 BC, and over the last two millennia, little has changed in its basic chemistry. Though the past century has seen the advent of new chemicals and measurements, winemaking is still the combination of grapes, yeast, and time.

The winemakers at the Mas Foulaquier return to this simple alchemy. Their pesticide-free vineyards are archetypes of polyculture, with wildflowers and insects at home amid the rows of vines. And it’s from these vibrant vineyards that the winemakers obtain both elements of the winemaking process — untreated grapes from the vines, and wild yeasts from the skins and ambient air.

This is winemaking in its purest, most original form, and the results are wines of remarkable complexity and grace.

 

Natural Syrah.  The winemakers at Foulaquier aren’t just back-to-the-land hippie types (though they’re not not that) — they are master viticulturalists and winemakers. Winemaking without vineyard treatment or controlled yeast strains is not easy, but Foulaquier’s wines may be the finest and most consistent biodynamic wines we import.

Today we’re releasing the 2013 “Les Calades,” a syrah-based wine of a beautiful dark, inky hue. In the nose this wine could almost be mistaken for a Northern Rhône Syrah, showing the grape’s signature clove, blackberry, and dark chocolate. But in the mouth this is unmistakably Foulaquier — a symphony of cool, earthy, jammy notes that is at once mouthfilling and carefully balanced.

This wine perfectly captures the northern Languedoc’s ruggedly beautiful landscape, a blend of silky elegance and rustic earthiness. Wherever you are, open this outside if you can — take a sip, close your eyes, and reconnect with the natural world.

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FOULAQUIER Calades 2013
Ansonia Retail: $32
case, half-case: $25/bot

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A New “Reference Point” in Gevrey-Chambertin.

Seventh Century.  Gevrey-Chambertin has long been considered Burgundian royalty. The vineyards surrounding the town, first planted around 640 AD, are known for their clay-rich soils, which produce wines of unusual intensity and muscle. Last summer we discovered a new source in the village, the Domaine Gérard Quivy.

Last month’s Guide Hachette, the premier French language wine guide, describes Quivy as “undoubtedly one of the reference points in the appellation.” This helps confirm what our noses told us last summer — Quivy is an uncommon and exceptional find. We’ve released two of his delicious village wines (En Champs, Journaux), and today we’re pleased to release his premier cru.

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Seductive.  Quivy’s Gevrey Chambertin 1er cru comes from the “Corbeaux” vineyard, perched on the slope west of the town center. Quivy’s 1er cru vines were planted in the 1950s, and today produce wines with remarkable depth and intensity. We had flagged the 2013 Corbeaux for long term aging, but on the advice of a customer opened a bottle last night and were pleasantly shocked at its drinkability.

The Corbeaux today is seductive and remarkably elegant. The classically Burgundian nose shows dark cassis fruits, with woodsy notes of blackberry and black pepper. The mouth is deep and silky, showing intense old-vine fruit, roasted cherries, and cinnamon. The tannins are smooth, intense, and deeply concentrated — an exceptionally fine and elegant red Burgundy.

Premier Cru Gevrey-Chambertin is rarely destined for weeknight drinking, and this is hardly an everyday-priced wine. But for true Pinotfiles who recognize Burgundy as the height of elegance and grace, we can’t recommend this enough.

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QUIVY Gevrey-Chambertin 1er cru “Corbeaux” 2013
Ansonia Retail: $92
quarter-case: $76/bot

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Vibrant New 2014 White Burgundy. $24

Zeal.  Nicolas Maillet is an unusually passionate winemaker. He discusses the finer points of rootstock selection and fermentation chemistry with the same intensity most reserve for Les Bleus (the national soccer team). Even more impressive is how Maillet manages to breathe this energy into his wines, which shimmer with complexity and life.

Maillet’s tiny hometown is tucked amid the rolling green hills of southern Burgundy. His wines are classic Maconnais — cool, round chardonnay, with excellent balance and no oak. The notes in these wines almost sing from the glass, a chorus of lively, joyful aromas. Maillet’s wines owe their remarkable complexity and purity to his commitment to careful organic viticulture. We drink them year round, but perhaps no season that suits them better than spring.

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Printemps.  The 2014 Macon-Igé is as good as any Maillet has produced, from a vintage that has white Burgundy enthusiasts rejoicing. Maillet’s cool, months-long fermentation perfectly preserves the fruit in the Macon-Igé, which shows notes notes of tangerine, apricot, and green tea in the nose. The mouth is rich and vibrant, with mouthfilling notes of baked lemon and white flowers, balanced by excellent freshness and a hint of minerality.


With no oak to overshadow the gorgeous fruit, this is Maconnais at its best — pure and unadulterated chardonnay. Last night we enjoyed a bottle on our back porch, alongside spring asparagus and grilled swordfish. There’s enough freshness to make this an excellent food wine, and the pairing was delicious; but it took some effort not to drink it all as the grill warmed up.

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MAILLET Macon-Igé 2014
Ansonia Retail: $28
case, half-case: $24/bot

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Crisp, Refreshing Provencal Rosé. $14.95

Printemps.  Warm weather has arrived on the east coast at last. Baseball is back, the marathon is tomorrow, and we’re dusting off those patio chairs to soak in some sun. And in the glass, it’s finally rosé season again. We’re usually not too beholden to seasonal drinking patterns, but there’s nothing quite like a glass of cool rosé with the warm sun on your back.

While readers wait for the 2015 Goubert Rosé to arrive with Futures next month, we’re happy to report that the 2014 is still drinking beautifully, perhaps even better than last summer. There’s still plenty of freshness, and it has added beautiful notes of wild honey and thyme. We’ve reserved a few cases of the 2014 to pour at a festival in a few weeks, but the rest is up for grabs.

 

Soleil.  Rosé de Flo is the newest project from the Domaine les Goubert, long our favorite source for Gigondas. It’s a project of the family’s thirtysomething daughter Florence, who is now handling much of the winemaking at Goubert. The 2014 is a blend of grenache, mourvèdre, and an unusual local grape called brun argenté. In the glass it’s a beautiful darker-than-usual pink-purple, with notes of wild strawberry jam and faint lavender.

Because it’s grown further south, there’s more material in the mouth — it’s just a tad fuller than a rosé from Alsace or the Loire. But the mouth is dry and beautifully balanced, showing raspberries and lemon rind.

Bone dry, with 13% alcohol and a delicate acidity, this wine is dangerously easy to drink. Open one with a salad or tapenade and you’ll be transported to Provence. Open one on a sweltering afternoon later this summer, and you’ll watch it disappear with impressive haste.

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GOUBERT Rosé de Flo 2014
Ansonia Retail: $18
case, half-case: $14.95/bot

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White Bordeaux: France’s Other Sauvignon Blanc. $22

Undervalued.  If the Loire Valley is the world’s favorite choice for French Sauvignon blanc, Bordeaux is the underdog. Most Loire examples come from the neighboring towns of Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé, where the grape shows exuberant fruit and steely gunflint. But Sauvignon blanc (known as simply “Sauvignon” in France) also thrives in Bordeaux, a region whose famous reds often overshadow its undervalued whites.

In Bordeaux, Sauvignon tends more towards grapefruit zest than pulp, showing less fruit and more skin. It’s perhaps a more dignified, less extravagant take on Sauvignon than that of Sancerre — think Chablis rather than Chassagne. For a glass on its own, we might choose Sancerre; but when served with food, the better choice is often white Bordeaux.

Zest.  Once owned by the enlightenment philosopher Montesquieu, the Chateau Lafont Menaut is named for a centuries old fountain (font) and the local river Menaut from which it draws water. Vines have grown here for over 300 years, and today are cultivated by winemaker Philibert Perrin of Chateau Carbonnieux.

Lafont Menaut blanc 2014 is pure Sauvignon raised in oak barrels (another difference from Sancerre). The oak adds a subtle hint of muted spice and helps round out the mouth, but it’s the lively fruit that drives this wine. Grapefruit is still the dominant note here, but it’s blended with notes of honey, straw, and pear.

This wine is a springtime evening in a glass — perfect for the fish in beurre blanc we enjoyed it with last night. In the past we’ve paired this with moules marinieres to great success — it’s even sturdy enough to stand up to Moules Chorizo, a delicious dish from a few kilometers to the south over the Pyrenees. With warmer weather and grilling season on the way, you’ll want this versatile, food-friendly underdog in your corner.

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LAFONT-MENAUT Pessac-Leognan blanc 14
Ansonia Retail: $26
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Notes from Harpswell 6: Breadmaking

It was perhaps inevitable that breadmaking would join our list of minor obsessions. Bread and wine have far more in common than the ecclesiastical: both are the product of fermentation; both mix art and science; and both reward success with sensory delight.

Philadelphia’s Metropolitan Bakery is on a surprisingly short list of things we miss about trading life in the city for life on the coast. That’s not to say that no good bread is to be had here; in fact Portland’s Standard Baking Company makes bread of comparable quality, and our local shop in Brunswick brings in Standard’s bread every day. But Metropolitan’s baguettes combine a crunchy crust with a savory crumb in a way that is unexcelled in our experience (which includes a very large number of French baguettes). We asked once about the yeast they use, and were told that all of their breads use sourdough, but at varied stages of ripeness. This fact lay filed away until recently, when inspiration arrived in the form of a yen to try our hand at the ancient culinary exercise of breadmaking.

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Our adventure relies heavily on Tartine Bread, a book by Chad Robertson. He’s a San Francisco baker whose obsession with bread led him through successive apprenticeships in the Berkshires, Provence and the Savoie before his return to the States to open a bakery in Point Reyes. His style relies on traditional French bread making techniques, all of which use a wild yeast leaven (sourdough). This yeast doesn’t come from the store; it comes from the air, from your hands, from the place you live.

We’re lovers of terroir, so this sounded great. Our Harpswell starter began with equal parts wheat and white flour mixed with local water by the fledgling breadmaker’s own hands. After about three days’ gestation we were the proud owners of a living thing with a yeasty, boozy smell wafting up from the surface. Now we feed it every day, discarding most of what’s there and offering the beast more flour and water.

As the yeasts do their work, they generate lactic and acetic acid. Acetic acid gives sourdough its sourness, and it arrives later in the fermentation process than the lactic. This permits the baker to manipulate flavor by using younger leaven, extending the rise of the dough, or both.

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The ingredients of sourdough bread are simple — flour, water, salt, and yeast. The character of the bread comes from the way it is made to rise and the way it is baked. The key to the Tartine loaf is a long, slow rise. To have a loaf just out of the oven for dinner, we start the leaven (flour and water plus starter) around bedtime the evening before. The starter yeast populates the leaven overnight if the temperature is about 65 degrees, and by morning a spoonful of the leaven will float in water.

You who have visited our house will recall that rooms as warm as 65 degrees are few and far between, and that the 80 degrees or so needed for the next phase — dough rising leisurely over about 8 hours — is nowhere to be found. Our solution is much like the one used by our colonial forebears: a wooden box (they called it a dough tray) where the dough can rise unaffected by the ambient temperature of the room. Being wine merchants, we cobbled ours together from two wooden wine cases (from our favorite Burgundy producer, of course). At first we put a pot of hot water in a corner of the box to raise the temperature; but this is a world where Amazon will have anything at your door in 48 hours, so we soon replaced the water with a light bulb for heat and a digital temperature control made somewhere in China. Now we can punch up whatever temperature we want and go off for a hike or a nap without worrying whether the proof box is too hot or too cold.

A good crust is essential to any loaf of bread, and it is here that many home bread makers come a cropper. Commercial bakers inject steam into their ovens in the early part of the baking process and that steam creates the leathery skin than eventually browns into crust. The bakers at Tartine solved this problem for us with a Dutch oven — all you need is a deep skillet and matching lid as the baking vessel (at Tartine’s suggestion we use the Lodge cast iron Combo Cooker). The lid stays on for half the cooking process, trapping the steam coming from the loaf as it bakes inside. We were skeptical, but in fact the technique produces a crunchy crust that is all we could ask for.

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We have been shocked by just how good the Tartine bread can be. There is little quite like the aroma of a fresh loaf coming out of the oven or the crunch of warm crust as you bite into it. Homemade bread provides a great excuse to buy and use first class butter and excellent olive oil. And of course, it provides a delicious accompaniment for a glass of wine. Breadmaking on Lombos Hole is a work in progress, and we have yet to venture into the world of baguettes. But like opening a bottle of wine at just the right moment with just the right dish, tucking into a well-browned loaf from our own oven is enormously satisfying. And as in the world of wine, there’s always more to try and more to learn.

MW

More from the April 2016 Issue of the Ansonia Notebook.

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New Sangiovese: Chocolate, Cherries, and Balance.

Pure Chianti.  Perched on a charming Tuscan hillside, the Fattoria Poggerino is certainly one of the most attractive domaines in our portfolio. Lucky for us, the wine is just as beautiful as its source — Poggerino often appears in the international wine press as a source for classic, affordable Chianti. Their careful organic viticulture results in wines of unusual purity, and they seem to get better each year.

Though our portfolio focuses heavily on France, we love having a Chianti in the lineup. The quality of Chianti has improved in the last 30 years as much as any wine in the world, trading the straw- and wax-covered fiasco bottle for wines of class and refinement. Today the best Chiantis are, like Poggerino’s, pure sangiovese. This dark inky grape named for the “Blood of Jove” can nonetheless produce wines of elegance and finesse in the hands of a skilled winemaker.

 

Roses and smoke.  Poggerino’s 2012 Chianti Classico is among the best we can remember. Jancis Robinson called the 2012 “mouthfilling yet poised,” and “savory yet perfumed,” with “wonderful balance.” We found their signature roasted cherries and smoke in the nose, with chocolate, beef, and rose petals in the mouth. The mouthfeel is sturdy and dense, with young but juicy tannins and lots of energy.

The exceptional balance that Jancis Robinson highlighted makes this wine an easy food pairing task. We reach for Poggerino when there’s anything with tomatoes — pizza, pasta sauce, even a caprese salad — but the food matches go far beyond pomodori. Pepper crusted steak, duck breast, and even grilled summer vegetables will match nicely.

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POGGERINO Chianti Classico 2012
Ansonia Retail: $24
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Depot Journal: Organics and Biodynamics

The topic of organic and biodynamic winemaking frequently comes up in conversation at the Depot, and I thought I’d take this opportunity to explore it in more detail.

The modern era of organic winemaking dates to the 1970s when winemakers began to realize that over-fertilization of vineyards was resulting in excessive crop production and poor quality. The excessive use of herbicides and pesticides contributed to a monoculture, making vines more vulnerable to disease and insect infestation.

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Organic winemaking grew out of a rejection of these industrial and interventionist practices. Today organic winemakers limit the use of synthetic materials in winemaking, choosing instead to use ambient yeast from the vineyard, and homegrown compost as fertilizer. Many vignerons allow grasses and other plants to grow between the rows of vines promoting robust and fertile soils.

I like to think of biodynamic winemaking as organic winemaking on steroids. It embraces all of the tenants of organic practices, and adds a celestial component. Based on the teachings of Rudolph Steiner, biodynamic growers consider lunar and astrological influences when planting, and focus on soil preparation techniques that feed nutrients to the soil. One often highlighted (and ridiculed) example is ‘Preparation #500,’ which directs the vintner to place cow manure in a cow horn, bury it in the fall, and then redistribute the manure in the spring. While adherence to the letter of these preparations is varied, the results of biodynamic viticulture are often quite impressive. The improved vineyard health and resulting vibrant wines are proof enough for many.

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Many winemakers today fall under a nebulous “natural wine” umbrella, adhering to the general principles of organics and biodynamics, if not all of the specific techniques. These vignerons make wine with as little intrusion or intervention as possible. They avoid cultured yeasts and limit the use of sulfur dioxide, which for centuries has been added to wine to prevent oxidation and bacterial growth. In many ways these techniques mimic the way wine was made 1000 years ago, and these wines often trade stability and consistency for purity and complexity.

There is considerable debate in the wine world about the impact of this range of techniques. While no one questions the benefits to vineyard health, the jury is out for many on the contents of the glass. Having enjoyed excellent wines from both natural and traditional sources, I prefer to avoid passing judgment. In the meantime I’ll continue to seek wine made from quality grapes in the hands of a skilled winemaker.

Isaiah Wyner

More from the April 2016 Issue of the Ansonia Notebook.

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2014 Puligny-Montrachet: Rich, Elegant, and Rare.

“Puligny-Montrachet is where Burgundian Chardonnay is at its most complete,” writes Clive Coates MW. The tiny town, covering over less than one square mile, has made highly sought-after wine for nearly a thousand years. Today most consider it, as Coates puts it, “the greatest white wine commune on earth.”

What makes this tiny corner of Burgundy so special? On the ground, it’s a combination of soil content (limestone, clay, and other minerals), slope, and exposition. In the glass, Puligny is a white Burgundy with added structure, more tension, and a beautiful, angular elegance. Or as Jay McInerney puts it, Puligny is “the Grace Kelly of wines.”

 

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Winemaker Gérard Thomas owns a tiny sliver of land in Puligny-Montrachet — just over a hectare, or about half of a Manhattan city block. Thomas’s Puligny 1er cru has the richness and concentration of neighboring Meursault and Chassagne, but adds a sort of lively raciness only found in Puligny. This is brisk, energetic wine backed up by a rich and tension-filled core.

Master of Wine Jasper Morris enthusiastically describes 2014 white Burgundies as “fleshy” (an expression that’s far easier to pull off if you’re British). We know what he means, though: there’s something texturally pleasant about these wines, making them easier to enjoy young than other vintages. Thomas’s 2014 Puligny 1er cru is beautiful today, showing with hazelnut and lemon in the nose, and golden apple and almond in the mouth.

Serve this with a chicken roasted with rosemary and garlic; drink for another 3-5 years.

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THOMAS Puligny-Montrachet 1er cru 2014
Ansonia Retail: $56
quarter-case: $48/bot

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AVAILABLE IN   3-   6-   AND 12-  BOTTLE LOTS

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Email Tom to place an order.

or call Tom: (617) 249-3657

 

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Violets and Silk: “Utterly Delicious” Chambolle-Musigny

Chambolle-Musigny is the essence of Burgundian grace. The wines of the town embody the elegant, silky side of Pinot Noir, a continent away from New World, warm climate versions. Though it’s a village of 320 inhabitants on less than 500 acres, this tiny town produces some of the most ethereal and sought-after red wine in the world.

We’re always on the lookout for everyday red Burgundy, but some wines are not meant for weeknights. Michel Gros’s Chambolle-Musigny comes mostly from “les Argilières,” the only village-level plot bordering the great Grand Cru “le Musigny.” Gros is best known the wines from his hometown Vosne-Romanée, but one sip of this beautifully textured, effortless wine and you’ll wonder how any of his others could surpass it.

 

A few years ago Clive Coates MW named the Domaine Michel Gros in the top 17 domaines in all of Burgundy — a list that included Romanée-Conti, Leroy, and Comtes-Lafon — highlighting the “nobility and elegance” of his wines. Gros’s wines range from a perennially sold-out Bourgogne to a masterful, cellar-worthy Grand Cru Clos Vougeot. Today’s Chambolle-Musigny strikes a balance between everyday-bottle and anniversary-bottle; and now nearly five years on from the harvest it is just beginning to show off its impressive breeding.

Gros’s 2011 Chambolle is just entering the beginning of its drinking window, and should age well for another five or seven years. Allen Meadows called Gros’s 2011 Chambolle “highly refined” and “utterly delicious;” we suggest decanting for an hour before serving. The wine shows intense wild cherry aromas, with notes of earth and toast; the mouth is long and elegant, showing silky tannins, violets, and enormous depth.

This is the marriage of a master winemaker and superb terroir — a wine to slow down with on a Sunday afternoon. Sear a pair of duck breasts (Bell & Evans’s are delicious and widely available), pour a glass of this, and really enjoy a day off. It’s what the French would do.

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GROS Chambolle-Musigny 2011
Ansonia Retail: $72
quarter-case: $64/bot

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AVAILABLE IN   3-   6-   AND 12-  BOTTLE LOTS

_

 

Email Tom to place an order.

or call Tom: (617) 249-3657

 

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