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Keeping up with industry stories
Three wine-related stories for eager oenophiles this past week. Firstly, British research firm ISWR conducted a study for Vinexpo, the biennial international wine and spirits trade show held in Bordeaux. It states that Canada's wine consumption has grown to 40 million cases and forecasts that our consumption will have grown six times faster than the world average in the span of ten years. We now rank as the world's fifth biggest wine importer by volume. Get the rest of the intriguing facts and figures. Go montrealgazette.com/health/Canada+wine+consumption  or vinexpo.ca@sopexa.com   For a second article of increasing interest, check out BBC News' web site for a report entitled "red alert over fake fraudsters". It details fabled  first growth Chateau Margaux's initiatives in battling fraudulent/counterfeit bottles of their wines often sold at auction houses. Thirdly, reviewer Eric Asimov essays wine descriptions in an article entitled " wine in two words". Go to nytimes.com/2011/02/23/dining.

Cheers B,

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Wine Edginess

Ever had an "edgy" wine ?
That's the term correspondent Kristin Donnelly used in describing "cloudy, oddly hued and more savoury than fruity" wines in Food and Wine's February 2011 issue. They could be producers favouring ancient techniques such as aging wines in beeswax-coated earthenware pots, or amphorae dropped into holes in the ground up to their necks to keep them cool. One wine producer, Frank Cornelissen, whose estate lies near Sicily's Mt. Etna, ages his reds in apoxy-glazed amphorae to avoid tertiary aromas and flavours of toastedness found in oak barrels. Others cited are vinifying "orange" wines; white wines vinified in red wine fashion. The juice sits on the skins for extended periods, thereby adopting golden/orange/pink hues and a degree of tannin. The author writes of the venerable R. Lopez de Heredia Estate in Spain's Rioja even aging its roses in oak up to 10 years. Donnelly admits these "edgy" wines aren't always immediately appealing but says she's taken with the way they evolve as one smells and tastes them.
Worth trying, n'est ce pas ?
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The often overlooked sense when it comes to wine
The eyes do, indeed,  set the table.When a wine is presented to you, your first impression is what you see. It`s the initial pit stop of the sensory choo-choo train, followed by smell [olfactory]. tactile [touch] and taste [gustatory].  Sight is at the bottom of your senses in that it is the least perceptive of the four senses we employ in evaluating wines, notwithstanding the sophistication of the human retina. Its 100 million rods and cones and its layers of neurons perform at least 10 billion calculations per second and every second 10 trillion particles of light pass through the pupils of your eyes.They are received by the rod and cone cells in the layers of the retina, and, stimulated by light, the nerve cells begin transmitting signals to the brain. Some experts suggest the human eye can distinguish 300,000 different colour judgments. In our daily life, however, we encounter a tiny fraction of this potential. Each wine has its own particular colour and a range of colours it will span during its lifetime. For the most part, wine colours originate from two sources: the skins of the grapes and the effect of oxidation. Other influences include climate, the soil, maturity of the fruit, the grape variety, the fermentation process, aging and oak barrel treatment. As the red wine train cugs along, the colours will reveal themselves in the following sequence:  inky, purple [still wearing diapers], violet, red, ruby, garnet, mahogany, brick, orange, amber and brown. White wines, on the hand, become darker as they age:  water-white, green-yellow, pale yellow, lemon, straw, gold, amber and brown [deceased]. What colour is your wine this evening ?
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Are You a Super Taster?

Ever wondered how you rate as a wine taster ?
Here's a do-it-at-home method culled from Jamie Goode's tome, " The Science of Wine ". 

Here's what you will need:  blue food colouring, a piece of paper with a hole punched in it, about 7mm. [about 1/2 inch } in diameter, or use a reinforcer for a ring-binder and a magnifying  glass.

Swab some of the blue-food colouring onto the tip of your tongue. Your tongue will take up the dye, but the fungiform papillae, which are small round structures that house the taste-buds, will stay pink.  Pop the piece of paper on the front portion of your tongue and count how many pink dots are inside the circle with the aid of the magnifying glass. Results :  fewer than 15 papillae; non-taster,  15 to 35 papillae; taster and more than 35; super-taster.


Cheers,
Brian
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New Year's Bubbles

There are few  things  that elicit more arousal in the mouth than the tactile pleasure of bubbles. Sparkling wines bring both effervescence and flavour  to any yuletide gathering. Look no further than our recently released 2009 Vidalescco, a moscato-style offering available at the winery or by ordering on our website.  Modestly priced at $ 19.95,  it can shine as an aperitif to stimulate the appetite or partner with slightly smoky, salty or spicy hors d`oeuvres or complement sorbets or granites to cleanse the palate  midway through an elaborate dinner. Looking for recipe suggestions ?

  • Bacon-wrapped  ginger soy scallops
  • Individual brie and fig strudels
  • Bacon, cheddar and mushroom squares
  • Smokes salmon,  chevre and dill squares
  • Mini shrimp tacos
  • Asiago and leek  gougeres
  • Shrimp and avocado  salsa on pita toasts

Happy New Year to you All!

Brian
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Words of Wisdom

From my standpoint, and, perhaps it`s a logical extension of being engaged in vino, wine and food are the most inevitable and accessible of pleasures. Permit me to say that they are a necessary component of life. Slightly overzealous ? .....no. I enjoy quoting an Italian proverb that seemingly sums it up: " one barrel of wine can work more miracles than a church full of saints."  Kindly perish the thought should you harbour any suspicions that I may have a glass in hand as I write this. Any sayings or platitudes to back me up ?

Cheers,
Brian
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Wine Prep for the Holidays

Please consider two factors as you shop for wine to host your guests or savor in the company of your spouse or partner this yule tide season. Dare to be adventurous. As consumers, we tend not to stray outside what is familiar to us. Try seeking out less well-known wine/viticultural regions within the same price range. One helpful guide to ease the initial transition is to taste a varietal you particularly enjoy from a region previously unexplored. For example, a sauvignon blanc from Niagara instead of a Chilean sauvignon. Secondly, steer away from the "only for special occasion" syndrome. Yes, there's a time and place for every wine but treating it as dressing the dinner table with your best china or silverware is missing the point. That special occasion is now. Don't hoard. Only 4 %  of global wine production is meant for cellaring.


My pairing suggestions today are for our
Huff Estates 2008 South Bay Chardonnay;

- chipotle and maple pork tenderloin
- lemon tarragon veal stew with greens of spinach,sorrel and romaine
creamed mushrooms on toast


ENJOY!

Brian
 
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Holiday Recipes
This is the first of many of my suggested Holiday recipes and wine pairings! Please check in every few days to see the next offering. Hope you enjoy :)

- Brian Hanna


Veal Sacloppini with Lemon & Capers

Ingredients

·       4 scaloppini (1/4 ? 1/2 inch thick)

·       2 T olive oil

·       2 T butter

·       3-4 T flour

·       1 lemon

·       2 T capers, rinsed of brine

·       2/3 ? 1 cup chicken broth

·       optional: 1/3 cup white wine

·       optional: 1 T butter

·       KS&CP (kosher salt & course pepper)

 

Instructions:

Lightly coat scallopini by dipping into and shaking off flour. Heat skillet over medium high, pouring in 2 T oil and 2 T butter. When almost smoking, add scallopini (two rounds is fine, as they won?t all fit at once, add more oil and butter if needed). Cook one minute per side until browned, place under foil on plate to keep warm. When finished cooking veal, using same pan, pour in broth and wine and simmer until reduced by half (about 15 minutes). Off heat, stir in juice from half a lemon (slice other half into wedges to serve on dinner plate), the capers, 1 T of butter if using and KS&CP to taste. Pour over veal and serve.



Perfect Huff wine to pair with this - 2009 Pinot Gris
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Brian's First Blog!
Hello Huff Readers!

My name is Brian Hanna and I am the in-house sommelier here at Huff Estates. If you have visited us here at the tasting bar or done a tour of our facility then there is a good chance that we have met. With the launch of our new site I am happy to say that this blog is a good way for me to keep in touch with all of you and I hope to hear back from many of you. This is my first blogging experience so I am going to keep it brief and look forward to your feedback!

If you were asked to name the five most memorable wines you have ever tasted, there would probably not be much in common among them. It could be that lively, crisp white you had in the hot tub or that seductive Cabernet at the chalet during last winter's ski vacation or perhaps that bright, jazzy tantalizingly tart Huff Estates rose you discovered at our tasting bar, but I'm willing to bet that in each instance, the surroundings, those around you, and the mood counted more than the quality of the wine itself. Wine is the common denominator that binds us and, to my mind, it is meant to be enjoyed daily as part of a healthy lifestyle.

Give us your thoughts on the sublime harmony or discordance of wine and food pairing that you would enjoy passing on to our fellow Huff readers. Describe your awakening wine experiences whether with friends, on vacation or even hosting themed dinners.

Santé,

Brian Hanna
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Administrator 2 years ago
Poor Comment Good Comment
Congrats on your first blog Brian! One of my most memorable wine moments was a winemaker's lunch in Adelaide Australia where 5 winemakers pulled out there own favourites from their respective libraries....simply fantastic!Jason
2 years ago
Poor Comment Good Comment
Hi Brian, one of my most memorable sippers was in the private tasting room at Mumm's with some of my best friends and colleagues sipping vintage Champagnes along with the winemaker!!
2 years ago
Poor Comment Good Comment
It was a small intimate dinner party, 3 couples all very good friends. The dinner was roast beef with pommes roti and the wine a Clos Eglise. Not much of a wine connaiseur but the atmosphere, the company, the food and wine all combined to make a memorable evening.
Administrator 2 years ago
Poor Comment Good Comment
The wine pairing you matched with the beef was perfect! A night to remember indeedBrian
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