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The Soft Bulletin

Jones Soda to Merge

The local soft-drink company has signed a letter of intent with Los Angeles-based Reed’s Natural Soda.

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Can’t say this comes as a surprise. Struggling Seattle soda company Jones has signed a letter of intent to merge with Reed’s Natural Soda, a Los Angeles-based organic soft drink company.

According to MSN.Com:

“The non-binding provisions of the LOI contemplate a merger transaction in which Reed’s would acquire Jones Soda for a combination of cash and Reed’s common stock.”

Alaska Airlines recently dropped Jones Soda, which it was serving on flights, in favor of Coca-Cola.

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Tags: South Lake Union, Locally Made, Soda

Oeno Files

A Stupid Question for a Sommelier

Seastar’s sommelier tells us when we can (and can’t) send the bottle back.

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Yashar Shayan says you can send a bottle back if you don’t like it, but he himself employs a wait-and-see approach.

The questions in this new series aren’t really stupid. But the whole wine thing can be so (unnecessarily) intimidating. Good thing for you I have no shame.

This week’s expert is Yashar Shayan, a sommelier at Seastar Restaurant and Raw Bar (Bellevue, South Lake Union). Shayan says he loves the way wine allows you to “experience the world’s cultures and history one glass at a time.” Another reason he became a sommelier: “I thought it would make me look cool.”

When he’s not at Seastar, Yashar helps out in the cellar at Woodinville winery Efeste.

Here, a stupid question for Yashar Shayan.

When I order a bottle of wine, can I send it back if I don’t like it, or only if it’s bad? Also, how can I tell if it has gone bad?

Many restaurants will take the wine back simply because you don’t like it. We won’t force you to pay for, and drink, a wine that you don’t like, because we like our guests to enjoy their dining experience.

Personally though, when I have wine, I don’t really analyze it on that first taste. I don’t look at color and legs, or consider things like complexity. When I get the first pour, I smell it and make sure it’s drinkable, meaning it doesn’t have any off smells or serious faults like TCA (a compound present when a wine is “corked,” more on that below) and oxidation. From there, I’ll take my time and examine the wine over the entire course of the meal, see how it opens up and how it interacts with various foods. I’m almost always surprised how a wine that may not have really grabbed me at the beginning has me wanting more by the end.

The main reasons a sommelier pours you that small taste of a bottle before serving it are: 1. TCA (I think we should stop calling it “corked” and figure out a new, more accurate name for it) and 2. oxidation. Corked wines, which smell like moldy newspapers or damp basements, get that way when chlorine (specifically a group of chemical compounds known as Chlorophenols) interacts with fungi found in nature to produce the compound 2,4,6-trichloroanisole, or TCA for short. Though the cork is the most common carrier of TCA, it can lurk on a variety of surfaces porous enough to grow fungus. I’ve had shoes with “corked” soles, I’ve eaten carrots and scallions that were tainted with TCA (or something like it), and even been served corked water at restaurants. This means that wines using cork alternatives—yes, even screwcaps—can be tainted if they pick it up from a bad barrel or another source before bottling, but that’s far less common.

An oxidized wine is exactly what it sounds like, a wine that’s gone bad due to overexposure to oxygen. To me, oxidized wine smells like vinegar or an apple that was peeled and left on the counter for a day or so. That vinegar smell is caused by acetic acid, which you’ve smelled in your bottle of vinegar at home. The old apple smell I typically associate with Acetaldehyde. If you find your wine is oxidized when it’s freshly opened, it could mean that the cork was bad in the sense that it didn’t seal perfectly. Screwcaps can also fail here if they were damaged or crushed during assembly or shipping. I have opened several bottles of the same wine and found they all seemed bad, which led me to think they were oxidized before being bottled.

Neither TCA nor oxidation is dangerous. In fact, there’s generally nothing in a bottle of wine—good or bad—that’s harmful to humans. Still, you should always send back a bottle if you think it is off.

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MORE STUPID QUESTIONS!
Dawn Smith explains what to do when a sommelier hands you a cork.

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Tags: Bellevue, South Lake Union, Wineries, Booze 101, Wine, Sommelier stuff, A Stupid Question for a Sommelier

Drink of the Week

Drink of the Week: Peach Smash Good at MistralKitchen

The decor is chilly, but the drinks will warm you right up.

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If you’ve been to MistralKitchen—and experienced all its sharp and modern Kundigian angles —it might surprise you that the restaurant serves up such a sweet little slurpee of a drink as the one pictured here. But it would seem, my friends, that this tin man has a heart. If the Peach Smash Good doesn’t convince you, consider the restaurant’s Bergamot Blazer, a cocktail that comes in a pretty tea cup with a little cookie for dipping.

The Peach Smash Good is Sailor Jerry spiced rum, Drambuie, white peach puree, fresh squeezed lemon, and fresh thyme. Unfortunately for the bartender on duty last night, the stock of thyme stalks had been depleted by Chef William Belickis’s father who, on the previous evening, had smuggled it into a Bolognese he made for the restaurant’s staff. How do I know this? Belickis’s mom was sitting next to me at the bar, visiting with a friend or relative over snacks and wine. The friend/relation was overheard to declare Belickis’s foie gras the best she ever tasted. I half expected her to tussle his hair after she said it.

When he had the chance, the bartender went to some storeroom and brought me back my thyme; it was lovely to stick my nose up close to the julep cup and get a big whiff of it before I sipped.

At the top of the cocktail menu at MistralKitchen (all drinks are $11) you’ll find the following line: “Cocktails are listed in order of similarity to dreamy fluffy clouds transitioning to bitter angry poets.” The Bee’s Knees is listed first, and is thus presumably the fluffiest cloud. It is a tasty little number featuring Old Tom Gin, lemon, honey syrup, egg white, and bitters. But I also enjoyed the angriest poet, the so-called Bitter Handshake (Fernet Branca, blood orange reduction, a housemade wild turkey rye syrup, and orange zest). The handshake is chilled with one of bar manager Andrew Bohrer’s signature spheres—basically a baseball of ice in your glass.

I found it to be a funny experience, drinking such gussied-up olde-timey drinks in such a relentlessly modern setting. Funny, but not at all unpleasant.

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Tags: South Lake Union, Cocktails

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