Wine News Review

Author: vinothekid

  • Two Buck Chuck’s Italian cousin

    People at work are starting to notice that I’ve begun writing a wine blog (who knows what effect my handing out cards has to do with it?).

    As a result, I’m getting hot wine tips from various co-workers—like the one who excitedly passed me a Trader Joe’s flyer touting one of the store’s insanely cheap but often surprisingly stupendous-for-the-price wines. This one being the D’Aquino Pinot Grigio delle Venezie 2006.

    For some reason, I’d missed that one in the past. So I thanked the co-worker for the hot wine tip and stopped at TJ’s after work to scout out whether the local shop had a bottle in stock.

    Silly me. There was a display about eight feet high of it.

    They say you can’t judge a book by its cover. But I always—always!—look a bottle over like it’s a legal document.

    Hmmm.

    Nice shape.

    Nice color.

    ($3.99)

    I’m sold.

    There have been recent reports about another one of TJ’s insanely cheap but often surprisingly stupendous-for-the-price wines. Namely, the legendary Charles Shaw Chardonnay, aka “Two Buck Chuck,” which sells at the insanely cheap price of $1.99 to $3.49 per bottle, depending on the region.

    Turns out, as ABC News reported last month, Two Buck Chuck took the top prize in a prestigious California tasting competition, trouncing 350 other Chardonnays—in California!!

    “The characteristics that we look for in our gold medal winner … a nice creamy butter, fruity … it was a delight to taste,” declared 2007 California State Fair Commercial Wine Competition judge Michael Williams.

    How legendary is that?!

    In fact, a Wine News Review reader yesterday happened to mention it in a comment, ruminating over how it might compare with the “good wines at great prices” sold by an importer spotlighted by uber wine expert Robert Parker in a recent Business Week article.

    Gaetano D'Aquino inspects his vines.Gaetano D’Aquino inspects his vines.

    The D’Aquino may not be as famous as Two Buck Chuck. But it has a long and cherished history, at least in TJ’s bottom line. The chain says it sells more than 120,000 cases of it in 280 stores every year, which is about as strong a public vote of confidence as any wine might wish for.

    The D’Aquino has been on TJ’s shelves for nearly 30 years, from the time when the chain had only 18 stores and Pinot Grigio was not the household name it is today.

    Dinner that night also came from TJ’s aisles: Lemon Pepper Pappardelle Pasta with capers and canned Yellowfin tuna, which deliciously complimented the Pinot Grigio’s distinct citrus flavor.

    The wine had a lively aroma, was refreshingly light on the palate with a crisp medium dryness. It might not beat out 350 other wines, but it was definitely a winner.

    As a reality check, I paid a visit to the online wine community at cork’d and found the wine garnered an 82 score from a reviewer there—not a bad rating but probably an underestimation by several points.

    Moral of the story, it pays to tell co-workers you’re into wines.

  • Web sips: Wine headlines, 8/28/07

    Handpicked stories from across the Web…

    The Economical Oenophile
    Expert Robert Parker touts “perhaps the top U.S. importer of wines priced under $10 a bottle.”

    Iraqi Past Ferments in An Unlikely N.Y. Winery
    True wine lover: Story of a man who turned his townhouse into a vertical winery.

    Grape genome unpicked
    Scientists say vintage sequence could lead to new wine flavors.

    So long, summer sippers
    Looks like we’re heading toward the season for some “serious pinot.”

    Caps off to a great value wine
    A wine expert’s ode to a “a classy $10 white in a funky bottle.”

    How could one collector find so much rare fine wine?
    On the trail of mind-bogglingly expensive bottles.

    Thirsty for more wine news? Follow up this serving of new and notable headlines by digging into continuously updated feeds from national and international news outlets: The focus is on red and white wine bargains.

     

  • The Web’s latest wine buzz

    Tune in to what top wine bloggers and experts are decanting into cyberspace with this handpicked weekly review that highlights their latest and greatest. You can also dig into specific things these folks and other wine experts are writing about with WNR’s All-In-One Wine Search tool (motto: "avoid info-overload—just gimme the wine").


     

    Italy takes a spotlight in the wine blogosphere, where, to begin with, Wine Spectator’s Joe Cook informs us that the “jury is still out” on the quality of the wines, just as the harvest is getting started. The basic problem is that although the growing season has seen mostly excellent weather, “cool, wet condition” have set in, Cook reports. But, ah! – the Italian optimism knows no clouds: Not only are vintners cheery (as long as the weather clears quickly) but it might even be an “extraordinary vintage if you took care of your vineyard and cut back on grape yields," said Riccardo Cotarella, one of Italy’s leading enologists quoted by Cook.

    Meanwhile, at Wine Enthusiast, Monica Larner gushes that the Montalcino-based Castello Banfi wine estate and castle inaugurated a much-anticipated boutique hotel, “bringing it closer to its goal of creating the ultimate Tuscan wine destination.” It’s not just the wine, it’s the view, too: “Because of the castle’s high elevation, most rooms benefit from long views over iconic Tuscan landscapes of rolling hills and cypress trees.” The photo alone is worth a visit to this page.

    But other bloggers are always ready to remind us that the culture of wine does not end at the Italian border. Remember California’s Napa Valley?

    Jeff Lefevere at Good Grape recounts a day of wine tasting in Napa, where at one site he “could feel my wallet separate from my back pocket.” The stop at Mondavi was “akin to a Catholic going to the Vatican” (“I mean, you kind of have to go, don’t you?”), but pleasant enough. But the tasting at the V. Sattui Winery turned into a love affair.

    Napa’s Patz & Hall wineryIt’s not just the wine: Napa’s Patz & Hall winery tasting room rocks.

    At Wine Review Online, Robert Whitley confides that tasting wine on some days just seems “a bit too much like work.” (Poor guy!) But then other days are “pure, unabashed joy.” Figured out the reason? “It’s the wine, silly!” The object of Whitley’s affection is Napa’s Patz & Hall winery, whose wines are “among the best…of their type made in California.” Even the tasting room rocks.For some reason, glasses (the kind you drink out of) also made a mark in the wine sector of cyberspace.

    Saint Vini at The Zinquisition opines on the perennial fuss over the wine prices being charged by restaurants, with the added twist of the markup if you buy it by the glass (btg). Vini does the math and parses the rationale. But don’t get him started on corkage fees!

    Donald A. Dibbern, Jr., at the Wine Lovers Page, sets his sights on glasses, too. You know you’ve found a wine lover when he says that “the event we all have been waiting for has at last occurred” – and that would be glass maker Riedel’s introduction of its twelfth different Pinot Noir wineglass shape. All kidding aside, an astute review of why wineglasses have different shapes, and why you should care.

    And thus ends this week’s virtual tour of the wine blogosphere. I’m going to go look at that castle in Tuscany again.

  • Weekend wine picks—experts’ picks: From Sauvignon Blanc to Merlot

    Comparing the faves: A survey of selections made over the past week by respected wine experts. Whenever there’s an option, I highlight their more-affordable picks, focusing on possible choices for weekend purchases. Check out their websites for background and other picks:

    2005 Babich Black Label Sauvignon Blanc Marlborough, South Island, New Zealand:
    Natalie MacLean touts the “grassy herbal aroma.” $14

    2003 Copain Wines Saisons des Vins Syrah l’Hiver:
    Robert Parker calls this Copain’s “finest value.” $20

    Dom Gayda, L’Archet Maccabeo 2005 Vin de Pays d’Oc:
    Jancis Robinson says it’s “much more serious than the price suggests.” £8.49

    2005 Veramonte Merlot, Casablanca Valley, Chile:
    Jerry Shriver says that the price “is about the only thing that’s subtle about this luscious wine.” About $9

    Nothing tempting? Or just not available at the local wine shop?

    Dig into some perennial standbys at SFGate.com’s Top 100 Wines of 2006, the Top 100 of 2006 list (PDF download) from Wine Spectator and the list of 50 Wines You Can Always Trust from Food & Wine.

    Attracted to a bottle that’s advertised in the local paper or sitting on the local wine store shelf?

    Do a little background research with Wine Enthusiast’s free, searchable Wine Buying Guide—either with a specific name or by types and price. For a little extra info, try Robert Parker’s handy Vintage Chart. Or see what the online wine community says about it with the search tools at cork’d, snooth or Wine Log.

    Once you’ve selected the wine, you naturally want to decide what to eat with it. For some savvy guidance, try Natalie MacLean’s Wine & Food Matcher, which boasts a database of 360,000 wine-food pairings.

    Feel free to share your experiences. And last but not least, enjoy!

     

  • Web sips: Wine headlines, 8/23/07

    Handpicked stories from across the Web…

    Great Wine Bargains: Big, Burly Reds
    His kids and their spouses have taught him about “a new kind of hunt—the hunt for great wine bargains.”

    How to lose the booze
    Exploring the trend for relatively low-alcohol wines, with examples.

    Chinese wine consumers at mercy of dodgy producers
    Unscrupulous wine producers mislabel bottles, adulterate wines, pass them off as genuine to unwary consumers, decanter.com says.

    Fortify Yourself: Learning the Basics of Port
    Spotlights three styles and the “complexity and dimension” of those aged in cask or bottle.