Archive for January, 2004

Friday Flights! Awesome Aussies!

G’Day Friends and Wine Lovers!

This week we’re travelling “Down Under,” and no, that doesn’t mean Eugene, Oregon. . .which in its own defense by the map IS “Down” and “Under” from Portland where Carpe Vinum is located. No, we’re travelling farther “Down” and farther “Under” to the land. . .um.. .”Down Under”. . .Australia!

Australia in an odd place where beavers lay eggs like ducks (insert joke about Oregon collegiate sports teams here) and bears are small, cute, fuzzy, nastier than you might think, and smell like Halls Cough Drops. It’s a place where people throw shrimps on Barbie, as referred to by the lawsuit Barbie vs. The People Who Constantly Throw Shrimp On Her For A Laugh, against her staunchly vegetarian views. It’s a place where Vegemite is. . .uh, what the heck is Vegemite, anyway? Whatever it is, I’m sure there’s one of the great Australian wines that might go well with it. Like one, or all seven, that I am serving here on Friday!

To see the leaps and bounds (like a kangaroo, hee hee. . .sorry.) that Australian wines have taken, I have reprinted (without permission) at the end of this email, what Monty Python’s views of Australian Wines were about 32 years ago. Enjoy!

So Friday, January 30th, between 4:30 and 9:00 PM it’s:

Australian Reds!
Bulletin Place 2001 Cabernet Sauvignon
Redbank 2001 Shiraz/Cab
Yalumba 2001 Bush Vine Grenache
Frankland 2001 Shiraz, Rivermist Vineyards
Peter Lehman 1999 Seven Surveys (Grenache/Shiraz/Mourvedre)

And the Extra 2:
Ninth Island 2003 Pinot Noir
Fox Creek 2000 JSM (Shiraz, Cab Franc, Cab Sauv)

A good deal at $10 for the first 5, and $6 for the Extra 2 Premium Pours.
Hope to see you here!
Seize the Wine!

Next week is Portugese Reds!

M

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Monty Python’s Flying Circus -
“Australian Table Wines”
[ from the album Monty Python's Previous Record, 1972 ]
The Players:
Eric Idle - Wine Expert;
The Scene:
Soft introduction music plays …..

WINE EXPERT:
A lot of people in this country pooh-pooh Australian table wines. This is a pity as many fine Australian wines appeal not only to the Australian palate but also to the cognoscenti of Great Britain.

Black Stump Bordeaux is rightly praised as a peppermint flavoured Burgundy, whilst a good Sydney Syrup can rank with any of the world’s best sugary wines.

Château Blue, too, has won many prizes; not least for its taste, and its lingering afterburn.

Old Smokey 1968 has been compared favourably to a Welsh claret, whilst the Australian Wino Society thoroughly recommends a 1970 Coq du Rod Laver, which, believe me, has a kick on it like a mule: 8 bottles of this and you’re really finished. At the opening of the Sydney Bridge Club, they were fishing them out of the main sewers every half an hour.

Of the sparkling wines, the most famous is Perth Pink. This is a bottle with a message in, and the message is ‘beware’. This is not a wine for drinking, this is a wine for laying down and avoiding.

Another good fighting wine is Melbourne Old-and-Yellow, which is particularly heavy and should be used only for hand-to-hand combat.

Quite the reverse is true of Château Chunder, which is an appellation contrôlée, specially grown for those keen on regurgitation; a fine wine which really opens up the sluices at both ends.

Real emetic fans will also go for a Hobart Muddy, and a prize winning Cuivre Reserve Château Bottled Nuit San Wogga Wogga, which has a bouquet like an aborigine’s armpit.
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Friday Flights! Petite Syrah!

Hello Friends and Wine Lovers!

This week we have the wonderful Petite Syrah grape as the vareietal for the Friday Flights. Don’t get this confused with Syrah or Shiraz, since that is apparently the job of the winemakers and botanists and scientists (oh my!).

We know that winemakers, at least in the U.S. produce Petite Syrah under its own varietal name, yet my own “trustworthy” wine encyclopedia states that Petite Syrah is just a synonym for Syrah. I had also heard from a former coworker that it meant “Little Sarah” in French. (Which is only half right. . .”petite” being “small” in French. This guy also pronounced Viognier as though it were Klingon). After reading some new reports, I saw that the vineyards of the world are not set in black-and-white (or red and white and rose’ and sparkling), and that some winemakers were actually unaware what was really growing in their vineyards.

Some say Petite Syrah is actually the almost-extinct French grape Durif, and scientists say it is the hybrid of Syrah and Peloursin, and some winemakers found that it’s all three growing side-by-side, bottled together. There have also been Petite Syrah vineyards mislabeled as Syrah. And in the past there have been nurseries that have sold “Petite Syrah” vines that could have been Durif, Zinfandel, “true” Syrah, Alicante Bouschet, Valdeguie, Gamay, Mondeuse, or others.

So what’s in the glass? Um. . .Squashed Grapes. . .?

Yes, it’s all just tasty juice, anyway. We can at least pretend these guys know what they’re doing, and hopefully they’ll get their story straight by the next Petite Syrah tasting.

So Friday, January 23rd, between 4:30 and 9:00 PM it’s:

Petite Syrah - By Any Other Name, It’s Just Tasty Juice!:
L.A. Cetto 1999 Petite Syrah, Valle de Guadalupe, Mexico
Parduci 2000 Petite Syrah, California
Jewel 2001 Petite Syrah, California
Hidden Cellars 1998 Petite Syrah, Mendocino County, California
David Bruce 2002 Petite Syrah, Central Coast, California

And the Extra 2:
Foppiano 2001 Petite Syrah, Russian River Valley, California
Markham 1999 Petite Syrah, Napa Valley, California

Considering that Petite Syrah is almost exclusively grown in California, this also counts as a tour of California through 5 separate vintages! Pretty exciting stuff, hey?

A good deal at $10 for the first 5, and $6 for the Extra 2 Premium Pours.
Hope to see you here!
Seize the Wine!
M

Next week is Australian Reds!

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Friday Flights! Best of. . .!

Happy Two-Weeks-Into-The-New-Year to all our friends and Wine Lovers!

Welcome to the triumphant return of Carpe Vinum’s Friday Flights program. It’s been a long time, and we’re finally prepared to kick these things off again. With any luck, we’ll witness the trumphant return of my organizational skills, which are busy thawing out after last week’s snow-and-freeze slip-n-slide debacle, and untangling after all the nuptual hubbub.

So in a salute to 6 whole months in business, we are presenting the theme of this week’s tasting:

The Carpe Vinum Best of (the Second Half of) 2003!

These are a handful of the winners of past tastings, bestsellers, and personal favorites.
In lieu of anything else interesting to say, and in attempting to figure out my first year’s taxes, here’s the lineup for this week, in categories!

So Friday, January 16th, between 4:30 and 9:00 PM it’s:

The Carpe Vinum Best of (the Second Half of) 2003!

**Best Inexpensive Goat-Themed Wine**
Charles Back 2002 Goats Do Roam, Paarl, South Africa
**Best Spanish Red**
Marcelino Diaz 2000 Puerta Palma, Ribera Del Guadiana, Spain
**Best Cotes du Rhone**
Chateau du Trignon 2001 Cotes du Rhone, France
**Best Bordeaux-Style Blend**
Cuneo 2000 Bordeaux-Style, Oregon
**Best Italian Red**
Firriato 2001 Chiaramonte Nero d’Avola, Sicily, Italy

And the Extra 2:
**Best Oregon Syrah**
Mystic 2000 Syrah, Columbia Valley, Oregon
**Best. . .Well, Perhaps Just the Best**
Owen Roe 2002 Abbot’s Table, Oregon/Washington

A good deal at $10 for the first 5, and $6 for the Extra 2 Premium Pours.
Hope to see you here!
Seize the Wine!
M

Next week is Petite Syrah!

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