Posts Tagged ‘Malbec’
Friday, April 17th, 2009
by Mike Supple
published: 07 Jul 2008
Don’t let so many choices daunt you.
You got invited to your boss’s house for dinner. Congratulations; you’re probably not going to get fired. Why not continue your good fortune by impressing your boss and taking some pressure off of the dinner? Bringing the right bottle of wine will help create a relaxed setting and show that you care about making a good impression on somebody who obviously already thinks highly of you.
Here’s the problem: your boss may know more about wine than you or, worse yet, just thinks he does. You need to bring a bottle that you can feel confident about, impresses someone who knows about wine, doesn’t ostracize someone who doesn’t know much about wine and doesn’t break the bank. The good news is you’re in luck. A few simple tips will make you look like the genius you already know you are.
- Avoid white wines. Don’t get me wrong, some of the best wines in the world are white. However, whites are very difficult to bring to a dinner. The first reason is because they have to be chilled, and you don’t want to show up somewhere and make your host do extra work just because you’re there. The second is that people tend to have stronger feelings about white wines than red. They either love them or hate them, and you don’t want to get stuck on the wrong side of a Cabernet drinker by brining a big buttery California Chardonnay.
- Avoid names you recognize but have never tried on any wine under $20. If you recognize it from anything other than personal experience it, probably means that it’s a bulk production wine and they spend a lot of money on advertising. This doesn’t inherently mean the wine isn’t worth drinking, it just means that your boss may see it that way.
- Choose a variety you like. If you have a particular favorite variety of wine, choose something from that category (Syrah for example). There are thousands of great wines out there, so half the battle of impressing somebody with your selection is you feeling confident about it. If you like it, don’t be afraid to be assertive; your confidence will catch on and other people will enjoy the bottle.
- Go Southern Hemisphere. When it comes to value, the best wines for your dollar are consistently come from the Southern Hemisphere: Chile, Argentina and Australia all produce great wines for less money (but make sure you stick to rule #2, particularly when buying from Australia).
- Buy medium-bodied wines. Especially if you don’t know what you will be eating, stick with wines that are medium-bodied and will go with a larger variety of foods. This means: Pinot Noir, Malbec, Tempranillo, Chianti (the Sangiovese grape) or Merlot (although thanks to the movie “Sideways” your boss may think Merlot is not good, which is utter crap).
- Buy a book by its cover. Seriously. If a wine label draws your eye, it will draw your boss’s eye too. Don’t go for the garish one with the stripper (yes, this winery actually exists) but something bright and classy will work.
- Read the labels. Take three minutes to read the front and back labels of the bottle you picked up. More wineries are hiring marketing specialists and starting to put helpful information on the bottles, which is a nice bonus for you. This will give you something to say when your boss asks you why you chose this particular bottle other than, “It was $17 and that’s what I had left after I got gas and a Red Bull.” Don’t be the idiot who just memorizes the quote on the back, “The cool morning fog coming off the Sonoma Coast gives the grapes a longer ripening time, bringing out more flavors of blueberry and forest floor.” Instead, note a couple of key phrases and state them your own way. When you give your boss the bottle say, “I like the cooler Sonoma Coast wines and I thought you would enjoy this one.”
I’m listing a few wines below that make great selections, but due to the fact that wines are made in limited quantities, finding a specific bottle at your local shop can be difficult. We’ve paired up with a great site based in Australia that will show you local stores worldwide that carry the wines. To see if there’s one near you just click on the name of the wine. Remember that confidence when presenting your wine is key, so if you follow these tips and pick a wine, feel good about it and enjoy.
2006 Pillar Box Red, Australia - $12
This is a blend of a few different red grapes, mostly Shiraz and Cabernet Sauvignon. Very spicy, rich and jammy, and tastes like a much more expensive bottle. Note: it is in a screw cap.
2006 Don Rodolfo Vina Cornejo Costas Malbec, Argentina - $15
Normally Malbec is a bold and powerful wine, but this one comes from a cooler region that gives it more subtle spices. This makes it better for easy drinking with a variety of foods.
2005 Green Lion Cabernet Sauvignon, California - $19
One of the best values coming out of Napa, hands down. Ready to drink and very high quality. The label was designed by Alan Aldridge who has done album covers for The Rolling Stones, the Beatles, Elton John, Jimmy Hendrix and Pink Floyd.
2005 Domaine Vieux Lazaret Chateauneuf du Pape, France - $25
A blend of several red grapes, mostly Grenache and Syrah. 2005 was a stellar vintage for Chateauneuf du Pape, and this wine is as good as many for twice the price.
2005 Querciabella Chianti Classico, Italy - $25
A solid producer and a great year for Chianti. This wine has really great spicy smells and flavors. And if your boss is into saving the earth, it’s Biodynamic (although it does not say it on the label).
Tags: Argentina, Australia, boss, cabernet, california, Chateauneuf, Chianti, choose, Classico, dinner, france, green, house, italy, Lazaret, lion, Malbec, Napa, Pape, pillar, Querciabella, retail, Rhone, rodolfo, sauvignon, Vieux, wine, with, your
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Monday, February 2nd, 2009
90 / A-
Tasted by Mike Supple - 21 Jan 2009
Inky purple core with a bright fuchsia rim. Dark boysenberry with blackberry notes on the nose, followed by a touch of mint, light toasty oak, nutmeg and cedar spice all surrounded by violets and crushed stone. Dark and thick on the palate with juicy blackberry, blueberry and crème de cassis flavors. Medium (+) acid with medium ripe/fine tannins. A touch of smoke, vanilla and baker’s chocolate join the dark fruit on the finish. Still very young and primary, but with enough fruit and structure to age. Drinks well now, and should go at least another 5 years.
Made from 100% Malbec. Aged for 15 months in new (65%) and second use French oak barrels. 1439 bottles produced.
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Tags: 2007, Argentina, baker, blackberry, blueberry, boysenberry, cassis, cedar, chocolate, fruit, fuchsia, los vencejos, Malbec, Mendoza, mint, nutmeg, oak, red wine, smoke, spice, stone, toast, valle de uco, vanilla, violet, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
88 / B
Tasted by Mike Supple - 13 May 2008
Dark core with a thin purple rim. Chocolate and caramel with light blackberry, flint and a faint earth and spicy herb aromas. Lush fruit on the palate entry with just a hint of spicy herbs. Good balancing acid with a rich, chocolaty finish.
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Tags: 2006, achaval, Argentina, blackberry, caramel, chocolate, earth, ferrer, flint, herb, Malbec, Mendoza, purple, red, red wine, spice, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
91 / A
Tasted by Mike Supple - 16 Oct 2008
Dark ruby core with a lighter pink rim. Sweet blackberry and cherry aromas up front are surrounded by smoke, soy sauce, dried anise and a hint of barbeque ribs. Medium bodied in the mouth with ripe fruit flavors of blueberry, black cherry and raspberry. The tannins are fairly small and ripe, making this an approachable wine that is ready to drink (but with enough oomph to last another 2 - 4 years). Nice lingering finish with a touch of Good & Plenty candy licorice.
Argentina strikes again by bringing one of the best values to the wine world. A blend of 34% Cabernet Sauvignon (for red fruit and structure), 33% Malbec (for spice and acidity) and 33% Syrah (for rich, dark flavors and body). All this fruit and power needs balance to keep the wine from going over the top, and the acid in the Malbec does the trick. We pulled this wine out on set recently while shooting some Supple Wine videos and not a single person could resist. Two cases of this stuff disappeared in a heartbeat!
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Tags: 2005, and, anise, Argentina, barbeque, black, blackberry, blueberry, Bodegas, cabernet, candy, cherry, good, Malbec, Mendoza, pasodoble, pink, plenty, poesia, raspberry, red, red wine, ribs, ruby, sauce, sauvignon, smoke, soy, Syrah, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
89 / A-
Tasted by Mike Supple - 02 Dec 2008
Dark purple core with a fuchsia rim. Alluring, complex and spicy aromas of nutmeg, plum and black cherry around a hint of dark earth. Very easy entry on the palate. Plush and medium bodied with black cherry flavors accented by smoke, wet stone and blackberries. Medium acidity balancing out the rich fruit with a lingering dusty cocoa finish.
Throw a rack of lamb on the grill (yes, buy some lamb at your local grocery store, it’s delicious) and pour a tall glass of this wine. Rich, smooth and easy drinking with a good dose of spice and smoke makes this the perfect companion to grilled meats. A Portobello cheeseburger would stand up very well too, and the acid of the Malbec will cut right through the fat in the gooey swiss cheese that should be melting off it.
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Tags: 2006, Argentina, black, blackberry, broquel, burger, cheese, cherry, cocoa, dust, earth, fuchsia, lamb, Malbec, meat, Mendoza, nutmeg, plum, portobello, purple, red, red wine, smoke, spice, stone, swiss, wet, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
88 / A
Tasted by Mike Supple - 07 Jan 2009
Dark purple core with a bright fuchsia rim. Incredibly young on the nose - very fresh and vibrant. Sweet vanilla and violets surround blackberry, licorice and thick sweet herbal notes with a touch of minerals and flint. Dense on the front palate. Young and bright with lots of acid to balance the solid core of mocha, licorice and blackberries. Medium bodied with a flinty finish.
One of the first 2008 red wines I’ve tasted, and the outlook is very promising for 2008 in Mendoza. (The Southern Hemisphere is 6 months ahead of the Northern, so their wines always come out first.) This is a great little wine that is ready to drink now. Not so complex that you have to think about what you’re doing, but with plenty of smells and flavors to keep you coming back for more. Drink it by itself, with aged cheeses or any red meat, but the ultimate pairing here is some slow-roasted baby back ribs swimming in barbeque sauce.
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Tags: 2008, Argentina, baby, back, barbeque, blackberry, cheese, flint, fuchsia, herb, licorice, maipe, Malbec, meat, Mendoza, mineral, mocha, purple, red, red wine, ribs, sauce, vanilla, violet, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
90 / B+
Tasted by Mike Supple - 02 Jan 2009
Dark, inky purple core with a vibrant rim. Spicy aromas of caramel, licorice, cardamom and nutmeg around rich plum and blackberry with a smoked ham and white pepper punch. Big in the mouth but with great balance. A hint of nickel and minerals come in on the mid-palate supporting toasty red cherry and raspberry, leading to lingering candied violets.
A blend of 95% Syrah and 5% Malbec.
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Tags: 2006, Argentina, blackberry, candy, caramel, cardamom, cherry, consulta, double, du, ham, La, labourde, licorice, luca, Malbec, Mendoza, mineral, nickel, nutmeg, pepper, plum, purple, raspberry, red, red wine, select, smoke, spice, Syrah, toast, uco, valle, valley, violet, white, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
90 / B
Tasted by Mike Supple - 13 May 2008
Dark core with a pink and purple rim. Liquid caramel around a thick dark core of black fruits with a cedar spice aroma. A bit thin on the front palate, but builds in body on the mid-palate with nice acid. Sweet cherry and lots of floral notes. Spicy and silky with great balance. Long finish.
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Tags: 2005, achaval, Argentina, black, caramel, cedar, cherry, ferrer, Finca, floral, fruit, Malbec, Mendoza, mirador, pink, purple, red, red wine, spice, sweet, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
90 / B
Tasted by Mike Supple - 24 Dec 2008
Dark purple core with a fuchsia rim. Lots of purple fruit aromas. A touch of oak over blackberry, plum, grapes [yeah yeah, wine is made of grapes, but this is a fresh juicy grape aroma], and a hint of leather and smoke. Smooth entry onto the palate. Medium bodied with lots of spice. A bit overblown - big fruit flavors, lots of extraction, jammy and full. Good acid on the back. Fans of huge Australian Shiraz will like this quite a bit. For the money though, I have had several other Malbec based blends with better balance.
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Tags: 2006, achaval, Argentina, blackberry, ferrer, fuchsia, grape, leather, Malbec, Mendoza, oak, plum, purple, quimera, red, red wine, smoke, spice, wine
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Sunday, February 1st, 2009
90 / A-
Tasted by Mike Supple - 08 Dec 2008
Thick purple core with ringed by a maroon rim with fuchsia highlights. Very rich aromas leap from the glass, and intensify as the wine sits. Thick fruit - blackberry, blueberry and black cherry - with smoked mint and other herbs are all surrounded by wet clay, violets and lingering wild strawberries. Fairly bold (yet integrated) tannins from the front palate through the lingering finish. Dark fruits flood the palate supported by tannins and acid, expanding on the mid-palate and leading to a long creamy vanilla finish with swirls of roast coffee beans, dark chocolate and ripe black cherries.
A blend of Malbec, Cabernet Sauvignon and a few other reds. Owned by Catherine Pere-Verge, the owner of Chateau Le Gay, one of the best Chateaux in Pomerol, Bordeaux. Using the same wine making team (harvest is 6 months different due to the northern/southern hemisphere thing) this is a very high quality wine made by people with tons of skill for a fraction of the price.
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Tags: 2005, Argentina, bean, black, blackberry, blueberry, cabernet, cherry, chocolate, clay, cofee, cream, fleur, fuchsia, herb, Malbec, maroon, Mendoza, mint, monteviejo, Petite, purple, red, red wine, roast, sauvignon, smoke, strawberry, vanilla, violet, wild, wine
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