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Wine Wednesday

Tasting Notes: Abeja Heather Hill Cabernet Sauvignon

Ten years on the earth, three years in the bottle. Get it before Joel McHale does.

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Even in a state with serious cabernet cred, this is one exceptional wine. Photo via Abeja.

The wine: Abeja, 2008 Heather Hill, cabernet sauvignon
Price: $55 suggested retail. Appearing on local shelves for $66–$80

Introductions: The 2008 Heather Hills cabernet sauvignon is the first exclusively Walla Walla Valley cabernet from winemaker Abeja. It’s also the first made entirely with grapes from Abeja’s Heather Hill estate vineyard. Sure, fruit from Heather Hill has been making appearances in Abeja’s various Columbia Valley wines for years, but winemaker John Abbott wanted to make a single varietal, single vintage, single vineyard estate wine.

The Heather Hill vineyard was planted in 2001, and since then Abbott has been biding his time, waiting patiently to be assured that the estate vineyard could produce the same exceptional wine year after year. Even he was surprised that it took until 2008. The older Abbott gets, he says, the more he likes his wines to show their place, and this wine expresses some serious Walla Walla Valley terroir.

Tasting Notes: The first thing you’ll notice is the incredible intensity of this wine: It’s inky dark, with a pronounced staining of the glass, which connotes the amount of contact the juice has had with the grape skins. On the nose there’s a slight smokiness, an almost gamey, meaty quality which leads quickly to the pencil lead, violet, rose and sandalwood, all layered over tons of voluptuous, dark fruit.

There’s bramble on the palate, on top of layers of dark cherry and blackberry, and again a bit of smokiness. The toasty notes—which are the result of 100 percent French oak barrels—are not overwhelming, but warm. The tannins are serious, almost reminiscent of an Old World red, but not bracing. Rather they give this cabernet backbone.

In a state that makes some seriously fantastic cabernets, this is one of the exceptional ones. It’s intricate. Elegant. Intense, though not bombastic. It is one beautiful bottle of wine.

Drink This Wine If: You like complex, New World/Washington state reds with serious finesse. The care taken both in the vineyard and in the winery are evident in the wine’s structure and ability to age.

Drink Now vs. Drink Later: While the Heather Hill is memorable now, it is going to age very nicely. Don’t hesitate to put it in your cellar. If you just can’t wait to open that bottle, know that this wine benefits from some breathing space. An hour in the decanter will amply reward your patience. The longer the Heather Hill is open, the more those violets and roses come out, both on the nose and palate, and the more the layered fruit comes forward.

Buy the Bottle/By the Glass: This is a wine that merits getting yourself on the Abeja list, not just to track future releases, but because this is the easiest way to track down this first vintage. Because there were only 270 cases produced in 2008 (190 in 2009), few bottles remain on the shelves. Whole Foods Bellevue has a few, as does Wine World Warehouse. Since this cabernet would pair exceptionally nicely with a big fat juicy steak, you’ll also find it on the John Howie bottle list ($135).

You won’t, however, find it at Pike and Western wine shop because a certain famous actor-comedian and Almost Live! alumnus is apparently a fan. He bought the entire allocation before it could even hit the shelves.

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Tags: Wineries, Wine, Wine Tastings, Washington Wines, Wine Wednesday, Tasting Notes, Abeja

Matters of State

Released Today: A Washington Wine Being Poured in the White House

Get your hands on Treveri Cellars Syrah Brut and drink like a dignitary.

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The State Department’s bubbles of choice. Photo Treveri Cellars via Facebook.

As Eater Seattle noted recently, this will be a festive season indeed for Yakima Valley’s Treveri Cellars. It seems that Jason Larkin, the executive chef for Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, did some tasting recently and enjoyed Treveri’s sparkling wine. So much so that the Yakima winery’s Extra-Brut Chardonnay and Syrah Brut will be poured at holiday events in the White House diplomatic reception rooms. This is reportedly the first time a non-California sparkler will be poured in the White House since the days when our national figureheads sourced their bubbles from France.

Today the winery is releasing the same Syrah Brut being served at the White House, according to Treveri owner Julie Grieb. And if this wine is good enough for America’s diplomatic power players, it’s probably suitable for your own celebrations. Right now you can find it at the winery’s Yakima tasting rooms, and by mid-December at a few retailers closer to home, including Whole Foods, QFC and Wine World in Wallingford. The Extra-Brut Chardonnay is already available in Seattle..

The unofficial release party for the Syrah Brut happens December 2 at Wine World from 6-8pm. The folk from Treveri will be pouring tastes and selling bottles of their bubbly wares.

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Tags: Wineries, Sparkling Wine , Washington Wines, Treveri Cellars

Imbibing Agenda

Upcoming Drinking Events: Wiener Blessing at Bottleneck, $2 Frites, RN74’s First Wine Happening

Seattle comes out for pride events, wine dinners, and discounted French fries.

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Animale pairs up with Emmer and Rye on Wednesday, June 29.

This weekend is pride weekend—always a cause for celebration.

And we begin our imbibing agenda with a Pride-related event that has become a sacred Seattle tradition: On Friday, June 24 it’s the fifth annual Gay Pride Hot Dog Blessing at The BottleNeck Lounge. This year Jason Stratton, chef at Spinasse and Artusi, will be blessing the wieners. Doors open at 8; ceremony at 10.

On Monday, June 27, RN74 Seattle hosts its first scheduled wine happening—an intro to Burgundy. Eater has more info.

A second noteworthy pride-related event: the Lobby Bar on Capitol Hill is hosting a happy hour for the Victory Fund on Wednesday, June 29. San Francisco mayoral candidate Bevan Dufty is the special guest; there is a suggested donation of $25.

Also on Wednesday, June 29: it’s Bastille’s second anniversary party in Ballard. The festivities take place in the back bar and on the patio, where you can partake in $2 frites and $2 Stella Artois. (Fine print: that offer is limited to one fry cone and/or beer per person). This deal lasts from 4:30 to 6pm.

And here’s one last Wednesday evening consideration: Emmer and Rye on Queen Anne is hosting Animale winery that night. The restaurant has created a pairing menu to accompany the Ballard-made wines, and it includes the magic words “spot prawns.” That costs $70 and starts at 6:30.

One more thing before we part ways: Rover’s is running a special deal right now I thought mention-worthy. Through June, subscribers to its newsletter are eligible for a free wine pairing (a $55 value) with a five-course meal. The dinner costs $99; the offer is available Sunday through Friday. So, like, tonight.

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Tags: Wineries, Drinking Events, Wine and Food Pairings, Pride Fest, Seattle Drinking Scene

Oeno Files

Road Trip: Spring Barrel Tasting in Yakima

You live in wine country, people. Go drink some!

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Spring Barrel Tasting in Yakima begins April 15.

Photo courtesy: oxfordsuitesyakima.com

Do you sometimes forget you live in wine country? Serious wine people—bless their hearts—like to marvel over the fact that some people have never even been to Walla Walla! But the rest of us, distracted by the many treats of urban life (Gourmet pork rinds! Shiny boots! Professional soccer!), sometimes lose sight entirely of our premier grape-growing regions.

Here’s one awesome way to remember: take a road trip to Yakima April 15 through 17 for Spring Barrel Tasting. For one thing, the sun (remember that guy?) is far more likely to shine over there than out here. For another, there will definitely be wine. Lots of it. Fifty wineries worth. A $45 ticket buys you access to all kinds of different tastings.

Here are some suggestions from our travel department on where to eat, drink and sleep while you’re there.

Now go on, get out of here.

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Tags: Wineries, Wine, Wine Tastings, Yakima, Washington Wine Regions

Oeno Files

L’Ecole Nº 41’s New Labels: More Appropriate, Less Distinctive

Goodbye kiddie schoolhouse, we loved you well.

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New labels for L’Ecole

Here’s a question that somebody asked me this weekend at Taste Washington: What do you think of L’Ecole Nº 41’s new labels?

The reason that’s not a totally preposterous question, the reason people are even discussing a wine label, I mean, without falling asleep standing up, is that L’Ecole’s labels have always stood out—way out—from all the others. Why? Because they featured a colorful kid’s watercolor painting. That artwork, created 27 years ago when the winery was just one-year-old, depicted the schoolhouse where the Walla Walla winery is housed. The artist was a child in winemaker Marty Clubb’s family. That child is now an adult, of course. So don’t worry about his feelings. Chances are he’s too busy paying taxes and flossing to care that his picture is going out of print. And let’s face it, he had a good run.

In the almost three-intervening decades since the painting came into this world, L’Ecole has evolved into one of Washington’s finest wineries, and Washington has evolved into one of the world’s finest wine-growing destinations. Times have changed. And while the label was distinctive, it also belied the sophistication of the wine inside the bottles. If you’ve ever served some L’Ecole (the Seven Hills Merlot rules the universe) to people who were unfamiliar with its awesomeness, you may have noted how unenthused they seemed when confronted with that label—cute, but something more befitting a Montessori school brochure then a fine bottle of wine.

The new labels are much more fancy. They look like the ones that L’Ecole uses for its Apogee and Perigee blends. They won’t stand out as much on a shelf—my eyes are totally trained to look for that kiddie schoolhouse when I go to any wine store for the first time—but they do match the wines better. We’ll start seeing them on store shelves in May.

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Tags: Wineries, Wine, Washington Wines

The Sauced Gulpable Gift Guide 2010

The Gulpable Gift Guide #3: Local Wine

Drink your way through holiday shopping this weekend in Woodinville.

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The gift of wine Stock up on local bottles this weekend in Woodinville.

This December 4 and 5, a bunch of Woodinville Wineries are participating in the St Nicholas Day Open House—your opportunity to do all your holiday shopping while drinking, and to do so far away from the fluorescent lights and cell phone-accessory kiosks of the dreaded shopping mall.

You pay $50 for a two-day pass, $40 for Saturday only. (Sunday only passes already sold out). You go to Efeste (where you should really spring for a bottle or two, love those wines) to pick up your wine glass. You take this glass all around Woodinville and taste the local wines. You pick out your favorites and give them to people as gifts.

Check out all the participating wineries and buy tickets here. And if you’re the sort who likes to do some homework before embarking on these such endeavors, you might consult our list of the best 100 Washington wines.

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Tags: Wineries, Wine, Wine Tastings, Woodinville, The Sauced Gulpable Gift Guide

Ferry Call: A Wine Weekend on Bainbridge

Next weekend, do the whole island thing with a wine buzz.

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Behold, your designated driver.

There are seven wineries on Bainbridge Island, did you know this? There’s also a distillery called Bainbridge Island Distillery, but this isn’t about that. This is about wine, and how the weekend after next, October 1-3, the island is celebrating its wine with a series of events knows as Bainbridge Island Wine Weekend.

On Friday there’s a free concert and street party. The all you can eat oysters—Port Madison petites—are at Pegasus coffee house, and cost $50. These you slurp with melon de Bourgogne from Perennial Vintners. (Melon de bourgogne is the grape used to make muscadet, the classic oyster-pairing wine.)

Saturday is the day for a farmers market tour with a local chef and a roving restaurant graze. Sunday is the big general tasting day—it’s $35 for general admission. Get all the details here.

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Tags: Wineries, Oysters, Wine and Food Pairings, Bainbridge Island

How Would Privatization Effect Small Washington Wineries?

In a new TV ad, a Woodinville winemaker says I-1100 and I-1105 hurt the small grape guys. Some of his colleagues disagree.

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Here’s a TV ad urging voters to vote no on initiatives 1100 and and 1105 this November. The spokesperson is Darby English of Darby Winery based in Woodinville; the sponsor is the Protect Our Communities Coalition, a privatization opposition group whose members include state firefighters, King County Executive Dow Constantine, the Washington Association of Churches, and the Washington Beer and Wine Wholesalers Association.

As the burly young English strolls through the vineyards, he tells us that the privatization initiatives make it “more difficult for small wineries like mine to compete” and that they “allow big retail to push our products off the shelf.”

Some colleagues beg to differ. The Family Wineries of Washington is a group of independent state wineries that has come out in support of I-1100. “Small wineries and retailers have never competed toe to toe with the big wine companies” argues the awesomely named Paul Beveridge, winemaker at Wildridge Winery and president of Family Wineries of Washington. “We are in a different market. We provide quality, rarity, convenience and selection–that’s how small wineries and retailers compete. We sell our story and our uniqueness. The freedom of commerce established by 1100 will provide a truly level playing field for small Washington wineries to innovate and market their products in new ways.”

Should I-1100 pass, the state will lift the ban on volume discounts, which has many small winemakers, craft distillers, and microbrewers scared that they will feel pressure to lower prices below profitability to stay competitive. John Morgan is the winemaker/owner at Lost River Winery in Mazama (and secretary of Family Wineries). He calls this argument a red herring.

“People suggest to me frequently that if my Merlot, which is priced at $22, (and should be priced at $28), were priced at $19.99 it would sell great. Yes, it would. And I would never make a dime. This is what I tell such vendors and guess what? They get it and they keep selling my wine. If someone suggested I discount my wine by volume, the answer (and the situation) would be no different.”

As far as shelf space is concerned, Darby English is very likely correct when he says that beer and wine retailers will have less room for beer and wine once they start stocking liquor as well. It’s up to craft beer and winemakers to weigh this likelihood against greater control over their own sales, marketing, and distribution. The Washington Wine Institute, the main lobbying group for the state wine industry, has published a number of documents detailing how privatization might effect state wineries. You can find those here.

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Tags: Wineries, Woodinville, Liquor Laws, Liquor Privatization

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

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