Tuesday, April 7, 2009

A Guest Blogger, Randy Kemner of The Wine Country



So for months now I have been riding the owner of The Wine Country, and one of my most beloved men, Randy Kemner to start blogging. His voice is one that has been enjoyed by the over 10,000.00 people nationally that read our newsletter, they love to read his stories, rants and slightly inappropriate jabs….so he has a huge following, blogging makes perfect sense to me but as of right now he swears there are not enough hours in a day. I quit bugging him about it but last night I sent him off an email asking if he would be willing to write something for my blog. You can imagine how thrilled I was this morning when I opened his responding email to find an attachment!


Thank you so much Randy for taking the time and to everyone else, please enjoy this piece from one of my favorite people in the world.


Wine. Food. But Not Wine and Food

By Randy Kemner, Proprietor

The Wine Country, Signal Hill, California

www.thewinecountry.com

Wine, period. Food, period.

Let’s stop pretending we’re really into wine and food in America, as in wine and food harmonizing with each other. Big alcohol in wine, while fine for cocktail parties and blind tastings, barrels over every nuanced flavor on your plate. Yet the country’s wine critics lavish praise on such wines, and subsequently these monsters find themselves on restaurant wine-lists and wine collector wish-lists.

This isn’t really news—exaggerated winemaking has been going on for some time. And even if hip sommeliers in hip restaurants have love affairs with food-friendly dry German Rieslings, Galicia Albariños and Loire Cabernet Francs, it’s still the high-priced show wine that captures the imagination and the desire among most American and Pacific Rim wine enthusiasts.



So if we know, and the sommelier knows most of his Chardonnays, Cabernets, Merlots, Pinot Noirs and Syrahs are too alcoholic and sexed up for most of the food on his restaurant’s menu, why do these wines dominate his wine list?

The only answer is: most of us who love wine for what it is and love food for what it is, demonstrably care less about the totality of an integrated food and wine experience.

And that, in my view, limits wine drinkers from exploring all the breadth and additional pleasures that wine has to offer.

Fine wine, by implication, is all about balance and nuance, not power. A thick-as-sludge superwine often impresses for its size, expense and rarity, and truthfully, can make for an enjoyable drink. But in the long run, these wines soon become tiresome and tedious, not to mention the ill-effects inflicted on us the morning after.

Finding the right wine for a dish has two main objectives: either providing harmony or a complimentary contrast.



Harmony in matching wine and food is where a wine seems to fold in seamlessly with the food, like turkey gravy and Chardonnay do with roast turkey.

A complimentary contrast is where the flavor of the wine is very different than the flavor of the dish, yet it offers fruit or sweetness that completes it, like cranberry sauce and Beaujolais do with roast turkey.

Sometimes it takes food to peel away the acid shell that closes in certain wines to reveal the fruit inside, as with Chianti and Loire Valley red wines. Sipping these wines alone misses their raison d’être. It is by design that they are made that way.

Knowing when to drink a wine, and more important, knowing how to drink a wine takes experience and experimentation to master. It’s also realistic to throw in a good measure of adventurousness and serendipity to discover a wine and food experience that you remember for a long time
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Getting the most out of a particular wine is of importance to me. That’s why we impress upon our clients the advantages of using a good wine glass, the flavor and aroma enhancements brought about by decanting and the importance of temperature-controlled storage for their wine. All of it—everyday and special occasion wine—tastes better when we do these three things.




It Boils Down to Respect

It really boils down to respect. Respect of the land, respect of the winery’s field workers, respect of the vintner’s art, his estate and his culture.

And respect of the wine itself.

Why should one care about a Grand Cru Burgundy, other than the fact that it is supposed to be the greatest Pinot Noir in the world? Does a restaurant who offers a too-young Grand Cru Burgundy on its wine list even know why it is a Grand Cru, or care that it got its exalted status in a distant age, long after the vineyard’s ability to produce long-lasting great wines had been established? Or that the primary fruit in the glass today isn’t even a hint of what will make it great over time?

Or is the sommelier just selling empty prestige?

I know this might sound snobby to some, but the world’s major wine media’s focus on wine as an entity separate from its surroundings is really robbing wine enthusiasts of some truly transcendent wine and food experiences.

Yet through all of this, there has to be common sense applied to the art of wine and food.



Diminishing the Vintner’s Art

In some circles the phrase “wine and food pairing” has become parody, with some wine shops offering classes on dark chocolate and Cabernet pairing (does Rutherford or Oakville Cab express itself better with Madagascar 64% or Guiana 70%?).

Taking this mania to the extreme, one Southern California wine shop recently drew over a hundred people to a wine pairing with Slim Jims, cheese puffs and Hostess Ding Dongs, proving there is always a market for silliness. Next they’ll be throwing a wet tee shirt contest while finding the perfect wine to complement hot fudge sundaes.

I’m all for mindless fun, but at some point it’s time to think a minute about what’s really going on here. If chocolate and rich red wine taste good together, enjoy them. But if you truly love wine, for God’s sake, why would you subject the vintner’s art to such diminution?

If you have a nuanced, complex, special red wine, ask yourself if chocolate brings out its best qualities, or have you just killed and buried them? Would a simpler wine have done the trick equally well?

More directly, are you respecting your wine?

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