Daily Archives: July 18, 2010

Lemon & Red Pepper Flakes Roasted Chicken, Brown Rice, and Four Gates Chardonnay

Dinner for the shabbos of June 25th, 2010 was meant to be a quick and simple dinner that had minimal leftovers as we were leaving for Australia early the following week.  As usual when we need a quick dinner and little fuss, we went with the usual Lemon/Red Pepper Flakes Roasted Chicken.  We also went with plain brown rice, a fresh green salad, and were good to go.

To match I went to an old standby – 2004 Four Gates Chardonnay.  I have had two different outcomes with this wine, in the past, one which was oaky and fruity, and one which was toasty and oaky.  Well this time, the bottle was toasty and oaky, which was so good, that it reminded me of the 2007 Castel ‘C’ Chardonnay – super oaky, toasty, and fruity.  The wine was awesome, and I want to let the rest of my bottles lie and see how they turn out.

The wine note follows below:

2004 Four Gates Chardonnay – Score: A-
The nose on this electric light gold to gold colored wine is filled with heavy and luscious toasted oak, a whiff of burnt oak, lemon, melon, peach, toasted almond, spice, Crème brûlée, and butterscotch.  The mouth on this full bodied wine is spicy with Crème brûlée, layers of concentrated toasty oak, along with butterscotch, melon, and a hint of almonds.  The mid palate is packed with more oak, lemon, and bright acidity.  The finish is long and spicy, with tasty oak, butterscotch, and lemon.  The oak calms down a bit with time, but the flavors are still there with tight concentration and brightness.

Smoked Salmon, Bison Vegetable Stew, Spinach Kugel, Roasted Vegetables, Quinoa, and some great wines

On June 18, 2010 it was finally party time again, but in a more calm and controlled manner.  My nephew and his friend were back from their trips, so it was time to get party!  I invited Benyo, and he brought along his friend who I have heard of many times, from Benyo and his sister.  So it was the six of us, and we had a ball.  We made a classic vegetable stew with bison meat, my wife made a lovely spinach kugel (parve soufflé), and we once again bought some awesome roasted vegetables.  The farmer’s market was almost closing so we had to motor through it, and only found some fennel, yellow & red beets, and squash.  We cubed the vegetables and roasted them in the oven after covering them with garlic and olive oil.

Benyo brought some bottles over and I opened a couple of mine.  We started with Benyo’s yet to be released wine, so sorry no notes.  We followed that with another bottle of the 1996 Sulfite Free Chardonnay.  This bottle was not as good, but it was still nice.  It was a bit musty to start, but over time the musty smell dissipated, and it came close to the home run we had at Benyo’s house.

We then opened a bottle 2003 Carmel Kayumi Cabernet Sauvignon.  I must say, it may still not be at its peak.  That said, the bottle we had was wonderful and will last at least another year.  However, given that I have had too many of my wines that were past their time, I am more than happy to consume the wine a bit early.

We finished the meal with a bottle of Brobdignagian Wines Grenache, from Santa Barbara California.  This is a wine made by Jonathan Hajdu, who is the associate winemaker at Covenant Wines.  This is not a Covenant wine, but rather a wine made by Jonathan on the side; he is still the associate wine maker at Covenant, and doing a great job of it.

The wine notes speak for themselves.  We also “opened” a bottle of wine for Saturday day.  The real story was that I put the bottle in the freezer to cool down, and I forgot about it!  AHHH!!  Well, the cork popped, so I was “forced” to try it out, and it was pretty nice.

The wine notes follow below:
2007 Brobdignagian Wines Grenache Santa Barbara County - Score: A- to A
The name comes from the colossal, gigantic, extremely tall, and giant creatures discovered by Gulliver in his travels on the Northwest coast of California and is used today (although not by anyone I know) to describe anything of colossal size. That said, the wine does in many ways follow the moniker. The wine has a 16.3% alcohol, is massive in the mouth, and in the bottle! The bottle (empty) is one of the heaviest I have ever seen, quite extreme. The name of the winery, though unpronounceable by me, is one you already know by association. The wine is made by Jonathan Hajdu, the associate wine maker for Covenant Wines, owned and operated by Jeff Morgan. Jonathan also makes a Syrah, which I hope to get to taste soon.

The nose on this massive wine is almost unapproachable out of the bottle. It is closed, with just hints of what is to come. After 30 minutes of sitting in the glass, the wine’s nose pulls the wool out from under its eyes and exposes a world of joy, starting with expressive oak, cedar, tobacco, concentrated dried red fruit, raspberry, and spice. The mouth on this currant colored wine is super concentrated, almost laser focused, and layered with dried cranberry, raspberry, and plum. The attack is what makes this wine; it is clean lined with heft and power, yet focused on delivering not a single but many blows of dried fruit and oak. The mid palate flows from the mouth with acidity to balance the beast, along with nice tannins, cedar oak, and tobacco. The finish is super long and concentrated with more oak, red dried fruit, tobacco, and spice. This is quite a wine and one that should be enjoyed first from the glass, and then with food.

2003 Carmel Cabernet Sauvignon Kayoumi (Israel) – Score: A- to A
The nose on this expressive yet refined royal blue to purple colored wine is exploding with heaps of tobacco leaf, rich ripe black plum, blackberry, crushed herbs, smoked meat, and spicy oak. The mouth on this big and refined wine is layered, complex, and somewhat concentrated all at the same time. The mouth is coating and full with mostly integrated tannins that give the mouth a soft and refined feel while still having heft. Black plum and blackberry are all buoyed by core acidity and spicy oak that borders on cedar, black plum, spice, tobacco, smoked meats, and soft caressing tannins. The mid palate flows balanced and full from the mouth with more core acidity, cedar oak, and tobacco. The finish is super long, luscious, and fantastic, with black plum and blackberry fruit, along with oak, spice, tobacco, and smoked meats that linger long after the wine is gone.

2009 Backsberg Estate Chardonnay (Paarl) - Score: B++
I threw this bottle into the freezer by accident, so I was stuck drinking this one during the week. The nose on this light straw colored wine explodes with ripe melon, kiwi, tart green apple, crème, and orange peel. The mouth on this medium bodied wine is tart up front with green apple and ripe melon, kiwi, and pear coming along for the ride. The mid palate is packed with bracing acidity and spicy notes. The finish is long with spice, orange peel, and ripe summer fruit that linger. A nice quaffing wine for sure, but also one that will stand up to light dishes, white meat, and soft cheese.

Pan Seared Pepper Encrusted Salmon, Mango Madness Sauce, Roasted Vegetables, and Casa Da Corca Douro

On June 11, 2010 my wife and I sat down to a quiet shabbos dinner that involved some wonderful pan seared salmon.  The fish recipe was exactly the same as I did when I was in Chicago with my Brother’s family.  However, my wife felt there was too much pepper on the fish, so next time I think we will try to use some other corn(s) that give us the coating without the heat.

To temper the heat of the pepper I once again created a sweet sauce, but not like last time’s recipe, as my wife is not a huge fan of cooked peppers.  This time we again started with browned red onions, but instead of filling up the sauce with sweet peppers, we used wonderful mangos!  Yep, we bought a pair of really ripe mangos and cubed them into the pan, followed by garlic.  Instead of cubed fig, we used cubed dates, which worked fine.  Finished the sauce with some white zinfandel and agave.

Mango Madness Sauce
2 or 3 sweet onions
2 ripe mangos
Few cloves of crushed garlic
7 or 8 dates cubed
375 ml of light white or rose wine
2 tbsp of agave nectar

On the previous Sunday we went to local farmer’s market in Los Gatos, and we picked up some lovely fresh yellow and red beets, along with some early yellow and green squash.  We roasted these in the oven along with a bit of garlic and olive oil, and waited till the vegetables caramelized, and we were good to go.  We had some green salad as well.

To pair with these dishes, I went into the cellar to look for something with body, while not being over the top.  I chose a wonderful wine that comes from Portugal; Casa Da Corca Douro.  The funny thing about wines from Portugal is that it all started with the release of the 2003 Terras de Belmonte (Land of Belmonte) that was by the then imported by the Abarbanel Wine Company.  Since that time, Abarbanel has gone out of business, which is a true shame, as they were a solid company with great wines, and a good competition to Royal Wines.  I have nothing against Royal Wines, but every business that is consumer based, needs competition.  Since then, Royal Wines started importing the Casa Da Corca, a still red wine, along with two Port wines.  I found some wonderful articles around the city of Belmonte, but the best one may well be this one.  Even the country is getting behind it, by advertising the fact that kosher wine is back in Portugal.  Portugal has so much more to offer than just Port, and I am happy to see that there is fine kosher wine being made there.  That said, the other two wines produced in Portugal are not being imported to the US, maybe because there is no appetite for them, or maybe because the product is inferior, or maybe because it is too hard to produce, given that there is no fulltime Rabbi in Portugal, that can manage the process.  Either way, I hope we will see more coming from this region in the future.

The wine note follows below:

2006 Casa Da Corca Douro (Portugal, Douro) - Score: B+
This incarnation started very slow out of the bottle. From the start the wine was way too hot and closed. Once it received its first bit of air, it had its unbalanced yet enjoyable stage. The nose on this dark ruby colored wine was busy with bright fruit, soft yet over tannic mouth, with black plum, raspberry, and dark cherry. The mid palate is slightly off kilter with bracing acidity, tannin, spicy oak, and coffee. The finish is mineral and spicy, with the spice and oak dominating the after finish, along with mineral notes, raspberry, and plum.
In its second life – after many more hours of air, the wine truly showed its best side, with the mouth turning super plush with date, spicy oak, mounds of vanilla, and cranberry. The mouth’s tannic and unbalanced structure totally changed, to the point of truly changing the wine into a very enjoyable and successful bottle. The mid palate is far more balanced with acid, oak, integrated tannin, date, and coffee. The finish is long with plush tannin, oak, and coffee. Quite a nice wine and one worthy of drinking after at least a few hours of air. I would recommend tasting the bottle three times. Once at opening, once during the meal, and once at the very end of the meal.
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