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2010 Tulip Just Cabernet Sauvignon, 2010 Dalton Rose, and 2010 Golan Moscato
We were hanging with friends this weekend and we brought over a few wines and they were so kind to host us for the Shabbos. These are the wines we enjoyed. The wines were all from the 2010 vintage, which was a total accident, but funny. Also, there was a wine that is all new to the kosher world, Tulip Winery. Tulip is a winery that has long been one of Israel’s top wineries. On an aside, the 2010 Dalton Rose had no finish, and was somewhat of a dud. I am not sure if it was the bottle or me, but clearly others like this bottle and I did not have the same wonderful experience. I will try this bottle again soon, so that I can either corroborate or change my tasting notes.
In 2003, the Yitzhaki family fulfilled a special dream of theirs and established a boutique winery that combines top quality wine production, alongside contribution to the community. The family chose to locate the winery on a hillside, in the northern edge of the Carmel Mountain, in a small pastoral village, Kfar Tikva, overlooking the magnificent views of the Jezreel Valley.
Kfar Tikva – “Village of Hope”, is a community settlement for people with special needs, which strives to allow the disabled community to develop and realize their potential. The wonderful combination of the village’s vision and the family’s desire to make wine, resulted in an exciting wine industry model that employs members of the village and provides them with a business platform that integrates them in the labor force, just like any other person.
Tulip Winery produces about 100,000 bottles of wine per year, sold all over Israel, and in several countries around the world.
There was a very long conversation on Rogov’s forum about Tulip going kosher, you can find that here.
Thanks so much to our wonderful friends for hosting us over this past Shabbat, my wines notes follow below:
2010 Tulip Just Cabernet Sauvignon – A-
The nose on the dark garnet colored wine saris off closed but quickly explodes with chocolate, cedar, tobacco, black currant, raspberry, plum, and vanilla. The mouth on this medium to full bodied wine is rich in the mouth with almost mouth coating tannins, nicely integrating tannins, raspberry, black currant, almost tar flavors that remind me of netofa’s blend, and plum. The mid palate flows off the mouth with lovely acid, more tannin, cedar, chocolate, tobacco, and tar. The finish is super long and spicy with lovely acid, chocolate, plum, black currant, and vanilla.
2010 Dalton Rose – Score: B to B+
The nose on this rose colored wine starts off nicely with peach, quince, plum, strawberry, floral notes, and ripe and sweet kiwi. The mouth on this medium bodied wine starts off nicely but ends with a complete dud. The mouth starts with more quince, plum, peach, kiwis, flowers, and strawberry. The mid palate is balanced with nice acid and a bit of orange peel. The finish is a nowhere to be found. There was no real outward sign of impact for this bottle, but I will try another bottle soon.
Golan 2010 Moscato – No Score – Just to say it was nice and pleasant, and a fine Moscato!
Winemakers Dinner with Jeff Morgan, Benyamin Cantz, and John Herzog, and some nice wines
This past week we had the extreme honor of having the company of Jeff Morgan, from Covenant Winery, Benyamin Cantz from Four Gates Winery, and John Herzog, the west coast manager for Royal Wines. The evening was filled with lively conversation around and about food and wine. The varied points of conversation moved about like a weather vane in a hurricane, all of it thoroughly enjoyable and informational, to say the least.
We started the meal off with Kiddush on a glass of 2007 Dalton Viognier Reserve, Wild Yeast. It was as good as I remembered it, from the last time I tasted it at the 2010 Gotham Wine Extravaganza. It was rich and smooth with lovely acidity and bright summer fruits that were wrapped in a bee’s nest of honey, caramel, all gathered from flowers that abound in the area (metaphorically of course). That was followed by some Challah that the Rabbis’ wife made, which was nice, but I did miss my wife’s whole wheat Challah, no slight of course intended.
The courses started with some smoked wild salmon and some smoked farmed salmon, along with black olives, and hummus. The Dalton Viognier easily stood up to the hummus and smoked salmon and was quickly laid to waste (again metaphorically).
The next course was my sweet and sour brisket, brown Basmati rice, and a fresh green salad. To pair with the meat, I opened two bottles, and I wish I had opened them both earlier. The first was the 2001 Capcanes Peeraj Ha’bib, which I had opened a few hours before, and was thoroughly enjoyable, but was time to drink up, and I think was helped by opening it, to allow it to hit its potential. The second wine I opened was the 2001 Yarden El Rom, which is lovely, but needs time to air out and open. We quickly made waste of these as well, but I wish I had opened the El Rom earlier, to allow it to show its best characteristics. Finally with desert we enjoyed some Tzuba Port that I brought back from Israel.
Jeff of course was super generous and brought over some of his trademark wines, as did Benyamin, but we never got a chance to enjoy them, I hope we can rectify that problem soon!
Again, I want to thank all our guests for making the evening as memorable as it could be, and I hope we get another chance to do it all over again, in the not too distant future. The wine notes are below:
2001 Yarden Cabernet Sauvignon El Rom – Score: A
The notes on this wine have not changed drastically, the tannin is still kicking, the mouth equally as rich, and the heat has dissipated. This is one of the best wines I have tasted from Israel. The wine is still a bit closed, so an hour or two of air time would be of great help!
The nose on this brilliant and deep garnet to black colored wine is filled with heavy layers of blackberry, cassis, raspberry, tobacco, and oak. The mouth on this wine was also a bit slow out of the bottle, but that changed quickly enough. The mouth was complex and multi layered. This is no simple wine, it hits you in waves. The mouth on this full bodied wine is still tannic though the tannins are breaking down and adding even more opulence to this rich and mouth coating wine filled with blackberry, cassis, rich sweet oak. eucalyptus, and almost jam like – but not in a chewy annoying way – more in a rich and cultured manner. The mid palate follows off the first set of layers and is where the structure comes in. The structure is built on tannin, acidity, and lush layers of vegetal flavors. The finish is crazy long and is filled with blackberry, cassis, chocolate, tobacco, rich dirt, slight vegetal notes, and sweet wood. This is really quite a fine wine and one that is not yet peaked at all, though quite enjoyable now as well.
2001 Celler de Capçanes Peraj Ha’abib, Flor de Primavera,Montsant – Score: A-
Drink up – this wine is lovely but is really at its peak or a drop past it!! The score from previous tasting is a bit lower then the first score we gave this wine, and the same as my second tasting, but not because of tannins. The notes are very much in line with my previous tasting. I recommend opening the bottle 1 hour ahead of time, and NO more than that and enjoying it then. This bottle will not last four hours after opening, so drink now and enjoy.
The nose on this deep black colored wine, with a bit of a brown halo, is popping with blackberry, plum, cassis, sweet cedar, herbs, raspberry, licorice, and tobacco. The mouth on this full bodied and mouth coating wine is now smooth and layered with blackberry, plum, black currant, and cassis. The mid palate is packed with lovely tannins, bright acidity, and concentrated black fruit that comes at you in layers. The finish is super long, spicy, and concentrated with cloves, herbs, blackberry, plum, raspberry, chocolate, tobacco, and sweet cedar. The wine lingers long with cedar, plum, tobacco, rich vanilla, and chocolate.
2007 Dalton Viognier, Reserve – Score: A-
The nose on this light gold orange haloed colored wine is expressive with caramel, honeysuckle, butterscotch, toasty oak, flora, melon, lemon, peach, and apricot, with the honey, toast, lemon, and butterscotch showing itself more expressively over time. The mouth on this rich and full bodied wine is oily, layered, and textured with melon, peach, apricot, citrus, and honeysuckle. The mid palate is still rich and balanced with acid, butterscotch, caramel, oak, and spice. The finish is super long and rich with butterscotch, rich honey, caramel, summer fruit, and melon.
Ratatouille, Brown Rice, Fresh Green Salad, and Dalton Zinfandel
This past weekend saw us enjoying some really sick Ratatouille. We spoke about what we wanted to eat for shabbos, and given the fact that the garden is producing tomatoes and some eggplant, my wife came up with ratatouille. Ratatouille is one of those dishes that when done correctly is killer. We are blessed with fresh ripe tomatoes and some small eggplants. We have no fresh zucchini, so we had to buy some of those. I wanted a protein to go with the ratatouille, but the wife did not want meat, so we went with Yves Hot Dogs and Tofurkey Sweet Italian Sausage. We started the whole process by browning the hot dogs and Italian sausages in a hot pan. I then started on the ratatouille. I had a few questions about the ratatouille with Daniel Rogov on his forum. Daniel advised me to make some sausages, and the best I could do were the meatless variety described above. At the same time, I asked Daniel if he had made the ratatouille recipe that was highlighted in the move Ratatouille. The movie’s recipe is not officially defined anywhere, but many have attempted to reproduce it. However, we wanted to make a real stew, so we used the tried and true recipe that we have been using for a couple of years now.
Ratatouille:
Olive Oil
2 lb of sliced onions
6 Garlic cloves
Salt and pepper
2-3 peppers
3 lb of fresh and ripe tomatoes
Tomato paste (if tomatoes are not fresh and ripe enough)
Basil, Thyme, Parsley
2 eggplants
2 zucchini
- Coat a large dutch oven with olive oil
- Heat the pot until the oil shimmers
- Add sliced onions and garlic
- Cover the onions with salt and pepper (to help the onions release their water and brown)
- Sauté the onions until nicely browned
- Wash and slice bell peppers into long strips and add to the pot until a bit tender
- Wash and cut the tomatoes into big chunks (no peeling) and add to the pot
- Add the spices and tomato sauce if tomatoes lack flavor
- Wash and cube eggplants and zucchini and add
- Stir frequently until all vegetables are cooked
- Keep a close eye on the stew at this point as the sugars are being released from the tomatoes and vegetables and can cause the food to stick to the bottom of the pot and burn. So continuous vigilance and stirring will stave off disaster.
In the discussion with Daniel, he recommended a few wines, and I was interested in drinking a Zinfandel, as the previous week’s meal had a failed Zinfandel, and I wanted to clean the slate on that matter. I had a bottle of 2005 Dalton Zinfandel lying around that was in the drink up category (according to Rogov’s Guide to Israeli Wines 2009 edition). It does not take too much prodding to convince me to enjoy a Dalton wine, so I opened the wine early on, and tasted it before going to synagogue. When I left it was a bit tight, when I came back for the meal, the wine was just ready and maybe a bit too far. The ripe fruit had started to oxidize as if it was over the hill. The wine itself is still young with tight and not integrated tannins. However, the fruit is dying off and is ready to drink. Please do NOT keep this wine a second more. Further, there is NO need to decant this wine. Just open the bottle let it sit for a few minutes to acclimate, and then drink up. In a funny way, I would almost recommend buying a bottle if you did not have one to see how an Israeli Zinfandel tastes. The fruit is super ripe and rich. The tannins are still tight and the oak has made this wine super extracted, while still keeping to the classic Zinfandel style. Definitely an interesting wine, and worth trying right away, or getting next year’s vintage, which is described as a nice wine as well.
The Ratatouille, sausages, rice, and salad were an awesome pairing. The wine was a bit over the top for the ratatouille by itself, but was great with the ratatouille and sausages. The wine notes follow below:
2005 Dalton Estate Zinfandel – Score: B+ – A-
The nose on this dark garnet to black colored wine is hot initially, with a deep brooding nose – almost perfumed, with ripe blackberry, raspberry, dark plum, date, oak, and cloves. The mouth on this medium to full bodied wine is rich with spicy oak, black plum, blackberry, raspberry, and heavy extracted flavors. The wine is oaky and extracted, while heavy, fruity, and mouth coating. The mid palate is packed with acidity and chocolate. The finish is long and extra spicy, with chocolate, pepper, spicy oak, and a touch of vanilla and ripe fruit. Drink up and do not look back.
Dalton Estate Cabernet Sauvignon and Spaghetti Bolognese
This past weekend saw me coming back to planet earth from my trip to Israel. This weekend, I was finally able to actually sleep through the night. What is so funny, is that the trip to Israel, and the return trip from it, showed no ill effects of jet lag. However, after having been home for a few days, the whole thing came crashing down on me like a ton of bricks. I could not stay awake, even with the aid of cups of caffeine. Finally, as this weekend ebbs away, I am once again my loud and gregarious self, and blessedly not sleep deprived.
So, with a bit of energy in my soul, I decided it was time to get some warm comfort food into my body. We spoke about it, and came up with Spaghetti Bolognese (san fromage). The Vegan version though was killer, if I can say so myself. The base was the usual mixture of onions, carrots, celery. But I added in a few ingredients that I am sure would make a Bolognian roll in his grave. I started by adding in some diced parsnip, and then throwing in some sliced sweet peppers for taste. Of course I then added in a couple of cups of red wine. Once the base was nicely reduced to a thick and bubbling cauldron of goodness, I threw in some soy meat and we were left with one of the best tasting pasta sauces I have made. We paired the Bolognese sauce with some whole wheat spaghetti, which has finally become quite edible. Before the recent improvements in whole wheat pastas, they were brittle, grainy tasting, and downright nasty. Now they are almost as good as their nutrient deficient siblings, with all the goodness they can possibly have (remember folks this is still pasta we are talking about, a pig is a pig even in with its husk on).
As a wine pairing I took out a bottle of Dalton Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2006. The wine was a real pleasure for a few reasons. The most important one being, that the wine was not yet another Cabernet Sauvignon. Not another over the top, over oaked, over extracted (though this had some nice extraction characteristics about it), and over fruity, bottle of wine. The wine is not so complex, as it is unique, a real nice change of pace for a Cabernet Sauvignon, and one that I would gladly buy again.
The wine tasting notes follow below:
Dalton Estate Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 – Score: B+
The nose on this royal garnet colored wine is filled with black currants, cranberry, anise, mint, and spice. The mouth on this medium bodied wine has flavors of cranberry, currants, and mint. The mid palate is packed with acidity, integrated tannins, and spice. The finish is medium long with tart cherries almost bordering on cherry heering (a cherry liquor), almost bracing acidity, and a nice amount of vanilla and nice extracted spice. The wine is not so complex, as it is unique, and really, a nice change of pace from the common over the top Cabernet.
As we gave our tickets to the attendant (previously bought at the Nahalat Shiva Avi Ben store for 60 NIS) and slowly walked our way to the sculpture garden in the back, we could already take in the night’s air. It was filled with the smell of olive trees, pine trees, open wine bottles, and the initial sense of excitement. As we got closer to the open air arena, that hosts the 33 wineries that were presenting their wares for the evening, we were greeted by a table of glasses. The glass was ours to use during the evening, one that would be our ever present partner to the evening’s soiree, and one that we could take home after the long evening. I paused at the opening to the garden, and took in the spectacle that was in front of me. Beyond the dim lights, the 33 wineries that rimmed the garden and the center as well, essentially creating a pair of concentric circles, what was evident was the lightness of the evening. This was not going to be a wine snob event, or an event that would require heavy wine talk. Instead it was a casual affair, accentuated by the dress code of many of the attendees – shorts, tee shirt, and flip flops. But even more evident was the electricity, the life, the joy (even if alcohol fueled), that powered the evening and lit up the night’s sky. It was almost ethereal yet real, and one of the most exciting aspects of the evening.
Once we were finished taking in the scene/madness that was swirling before us, we moved our way to the booth of one of Israel’s most exciting wineries –
We next visited the booth of
We were off again, and moving towards a booth with a large sign, the Tishbi Winery Booth. It was mostly a waste of a trip, this time around, except to prime the pump for a return trip later in the evening, to taste their wonderful desert wine, when my evening of tasting was done, and my evening of drinking began, but we are jumping the gun! I digress again! After the awful and overripe 2006 Tishbi Shiraz tasting, we ran into a bunch of acquaintances from
Once I had my chance to talk with the Yarden crowd and enjoy my wine, I found my way over to the booth of
My take away overall was that the festival was well run, while most of the wine purveyors were pushing some light weight wares that met the interest of the majority of the festival customers. There is nothing wrong with that, the average wine consumer likes their wine smooth and easy to drink. Given that trend, the wineries were pouring wines that met the consumer’s interests. The wineries that I highlighted were pouring wines that were quite enjoyable and highly unexpected (Galil and Yarden). Finally, ignoring the wines for a second, the festival’s attendees were all very amiable, courteous, and joyous. Yes they were imbibing alcohol, but alcohol can bring out the worst in people, and that was NOWHERE to be seen, and I stayed to the closing on Tuesday night. There is a lovely saying in Jewish Lore that goes something like this; When alcohol enters the person’s true self comes out. That was more than evident Tuesday night, under the full moon’s sky, the beauty that is Israel, was open for all to see and enjoy.