Uncorked at Squaw: Fine Wine Choices for Barbeque and Entertainment Season

It’s barbeque season in Tahoe, and Uncorked wine shop in Squaw Valley is a place to go for some grill-pairing wines. Opened two years ago, this lovely shop has attracted a loyal following who enjoys the constantly changing wine-by-the-glass menu. It’s also become a destination for pre-wedding “Meet and Greet” parties.

Uncorked features hard to find wines, the crème-de-la-crème produced by smaller boutique wineries. And it’s known for a large selection of affordable wines that fit the wallet of recession-strained consumers. In their inventory, sixty percent of their wines originate in California, twenty percent in the Northwest (Washington, Oregon, and they always have Oregon pinots on hand!), and twenty percent are international wines.



In its cozy cellar area, surrounded by racks of wines, you can sit at an intimate table for four, and sample wines (3 tastes for $10) and enjoy a fresh cheese plate too. Or, take your tastes outside at the umbrella-shaded tables on their patio.

Uncorked sponsors winemakers many Fridays and Saturdays, pouring their own wines from 4 to 7 p.m. You can find the complete listing of events on Uncorked’s website, http://www.uncorkedatsquaw.com/. Recently featured were the winemakers of Arbios Cellars and Praxis. Arbios focuses on a single Bordeaux-style red wine, made from 100 percent Cabernet Sauvignon grapes grown in in the Alexander Valley of Sonoma County. Praxis is their second label, priced at about half the limited-product Arbios wines. Both wines emphasize terroir with more than half made from a single vineyard.

Barbeque lovers will find dozens of wines to pair with their grilled delights, but we tasted four that were simply wonderful. The first two, from Ramian Estates, were a recent selection for the Uncorked wine club.

Ramian, Linden Hills vineyard, 2006 Grenache Rouge (Lodi) is a small case production wine, with only 276 cases made. It is light to medium body red, featuring light tannin, and strawberry fruit is dominant on the palate. This Grenache is certainly drinkable with or without food, but Uncorked’s Britton Burnett suggests that it would pair wonderfully with barbeque pork, grilled pork loin, grilled or smoked chicken, and ribs.

A great summer wine, styled after the Grenache wines of Spain, you’ll enjoy the fresh characteristics or this wine from the Linden Hills vineyard, situated in the southern hills of Lodi appellation. This vineyard is the perfect spot for growing Red Grenache. $18 bottle, 14.2 % alcohol. It’s also currently on Uncorked’s wine-by-the-glass menu.

The Ramian, HBV Ranch, 2007 Viognier features an aroma with a perfumy hint of blossoms, honeydew and apricots. This Viognier is creamier on the palate, and should pair nicely with lighter dishes, white fishes like halibut. Or, as the saying goes, “It pairs well with a beach on Lake Tahoe, if you have it”. Only 130 cases of this Viognier were produced. $20 bottle, 14.4 % alcohol.

Thinking of a nice grilled steak? Then think about this Petit Sirah from Twisted Rivers, 2006, Clarksburg. It is a full bodied red, nice tannin structure, nice berry. Duke Heringer, the owner of Twisted Rivers, is a good friend of Uncorked. Aged in French oak for twenty months, only 230 cases were made of this wine. $26 the bottle, 14.5% alcohol.

How about the shrimp on the barbee? You might want to choose the Sancerre Vieilles Vignes 2006 from the eastern part of France’s Loire Valley. This Sancerre is a bit earthy, while still being refreshing, crisp, and citrusy. $28 the bottle, 12.5% alcohol.

Uncorked is open from noon to 8 p.m. every day. Located at 1750 Village East Road, in Olympic Valley, California, you will find them in the Village at Squaw Valley, across from the clothing shop Atlas. Call 530 584 6090 to check on availability of the wines noted in this column, as they are from small wineries and sell quickly!


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© 2009 Barbara Keck

For more information on dining and the wide range of activities around Lake Tahoe, see the online version of The Tahoe Weekly. This article appeared in my column "It's Grape" in June 2009.



Why Costco Rules the Wine Retailing World: One reason is Brian Ellis

In his first three months at the Costco in Castleton, Indiana, Brian Ellis increased wine sales 80%. He did it by simply hanging out in the wine section of this store in the Northeast suburbs of Indianapolis, extending a handshake to anyone who got close to a bottle of wine, having a ready smile, and asking customers his well-honed key question: “What’s the last wine that you drank that you really liked?”

These are great tips for successful wine salesmanship – but there may be only one Brian Ellis. If there are more, Costco is hiring.

Blessed with a remarkable sense of smell and a memory for the essence of every wine he’s ever tasted, Brian is a cornerstone of this store. When he joined Costco a few years ago, he managed to imbue all the other Castleton managers and staffers in the store with his enthusiasm about wine.

I feel privileged to have spent 90 minutes with him today. And Costco is probably glad too. I came in determined to buy only two more bottles for my Indianapolis-brother’s wine rack. Six bottles later, I am really happy.

This adventure with Brian at Costco started out when I went to update my membership card and figured out it was easier to do that while visiting Indianapolis than to wait in a line of 80 in San Francisco. Mark, the membership services guy at the counter, showed the usual Midwestern openness and asked what brought me to Indy. I told him briefly about the videotaping I’d done for the Hoosierwinecellar blog and the plan to go to the Indy International Wine Competition event. Mark brightened, and said, “Oh, too bad Brian is not here today. You really ought to meet him.” Mark explained that Brian was a wine steward at the store. Wine steward –AT COSCTO? Business card at the ready, I asked Mark to please have Brian call me.

We met at that fine dining establishment, the white formica tables in front of the “Polish Sausage and Soft Drink, $1.50” sign. Trained as an electrician, Brian said he switched careers after an accident on the job many years ago. Deciding what to do was easy, since he discovered fine wine in the late 1970’s. He’s been drinking and learning about wine, and collecting it too, for almost 25 years now. Brian’s first wine industry job was as a wine salesman for Midwest Wines, a promoter. He did an event at the Castleton Costco, and sold so much wine during the event that the store manager asked him to consult with them. After doing that for a few years, he signed on full time in 2008.

Brian has two secret weapons: his outgoing personality, and his wine memory. “All I have to do is taste a wine once, and I can remember it,” he says. His eyes got that distant sensory-experience look, as he recalled the 76’ legendary German Rieslings of his early wine loving years.

In his spare time, Brian does educational tastings for civic and professional groups. He has a few first-principles he imparts to beginners: “You need to know European wines before you know any others. Start with French wines, then learn Italian wines, then Spanish.” “Pinot is such a difficult grape to grow; of course it is expensive. But when it is good, it is the best. When it is bad, it is the worst.”

He does some home winemaking in order to keep learning about the process. Along the way, he found this out: “Most winemakers decide in advance what the wine will be like. Then they just help nature along.” Brian tries to make truly classic vinifera style wines using what Indiana has most of: fruit. His best so far is a cherry/plum blend where he said the fruit simply transcended itself. He thinks that adding sugar to a wine after the fermentation is done is cheating, and he won’t do it at home and he won’t recommend a commercial wine where that’s been done.

Recommending wines to customers at Costco has its limitations. Those limitations have to do with the constraint on numbers of wines that the regional buyers supply to the stores. But after a few years of steadily nudging the office in Chicago to stop tilting toward California wines so much, Brian has been able to secure a good selection of European, South American and Australia/New Zealand wines, even the occasional South African wine. No customer of Brian’s ever walks away disappointed!

Brian sees his main job at Costco as that of educating customers. “Trust is the currency I have with my loyal customers,” he says. Those customers have his personal e-mail and cellphone number, and ask him for advice frequently – most often around the holidays, he notes. “True wine people are always looking for something different. I try to move the customer who is used to buying by brand name to a more experimental outlook.”

It’s easy to experiment with wines from Costco. I’d bought a Cline 2007 Ancient Vines Zinfandel there for $11.99. Just for curiosity’s sake, I’d done an internet search on this wine on http://www.wine-searcher.com/, and the best price I saw was $12.80. The median price was around $14.00. “Costco negotiates prices,” explained Brian. “That, of course, plays a huge role in what’s distributed to the stores. But the good news is that it is corporate policy to sell wine at only a few margin points of profit. Customers benefit tremendously.”

What’s the worst thing about working at Costco, I asked.
“Walking through the detergent section,” Brian replied.

He then tapped his nose...











HE MADE ME BUY THEM, HONESTLY HE DID….!

I have these wine conversations with my brother the doctor every evening when I visit him. I cook; it’s my way of repaying his hospitality since his busy physician’s schedule in Indianapolis doesn’t give him much time to visit me in California. I’m not a great chef, but he’s grateful for a hot meal at the end of his 11 hour days.
He’s been pleased to see a glass of wine at his place on the dinner table, and he usually says the same thing as he sits down: “I hope you didn’t pay more than $7 a bottle for this, it all tastes the same to me.” This week, thanks to Brian’s help, he’s learned differently. I think. As my sibling, he’d never confess it, if so.

Brian’s choices under $30 (available at Costco in Castleton IN, mid-June 2009)

Chateau Olivier 2005 Grand Cru Classe de Graves, Pessac-Leognan, France $26.99

Pio Cesare 2006 Barbera d’Alba, Italy $15.79

Santa Rita 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon, Special Reserve, Medalla Real, single estate D.O. Maipo Valley-Chile $14.99

Luigi Bosca 2006 Malbec, Reserva – Lujan de Cuyo, Mendoza- Argentina $12.99

Etim Seleccion 2006 Montsant, Spain $9.99

Bodega Tamari 2008 Torrontes, Reserva, Mendoza-Argentina $9.99



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How to taste—and judge-- 3000 wines in 16 hours

I was wrong. Make that 3064 wines. From all over the world! The tasting and judging action at the Indy International Wine Competition surely qualifies for Seinfeld’s Feats of Strength category. There are many unsung heros in the wine judging world, and many untold stories, and more than a few rude comments about our favorite elixir. But as a “guest judge”, let me give you a guided tour to what’s behind the curtain.

When you enter this hangar-like Blue Ribbon Pavillion at the Indiana State Fairgrounds, there is a barrier reef that you must navigate. The long long table contains gatekeepers who make sure you are who you say you are. Once you verify that you are in fact judge-worthy (wine writers and bloggers are judge-worthy), then Jeanette Merritt, the marketing specialist for the Indiana Wine Grape Council/Purdue University, leads you to the lab coat rack. A lab coat! Not since I toured the re-industrialized brewery at Kirin in Yokohama have I had a chance to wear a lab coat!

But it’s a good thing. So many wines. So many colors. So much spitting. A lab coat is a good thing.



Unlike the judges, I was allowed in the staging area, which I like to think of as a war room for a wine competition. There, arrayed on dozens of tables, were the 3064 wines. Two bottles of each. Each labeled as to whether they are amateur or commercial wines, noting residual sugar content, year of vintage, and whether or not they contain significant amounts of Indiana juice (those wines are eligible for a special set of awards… after all, this is INDIANA and taxpayers here support the wine industry via taxes on each bottle.)


The advance preparation of the flights, based on organizing wine by varietal and a number of other factors, takes weeks. Wines have been arriving at Purdue for months. They’ve been catalogued and entered into a program designed by Phil Rawles, a professor in the Department of Computer and Information Technology at Purdue. At the end of this competition, the program takes in the information from the judging sheets and determines the award-winning wines and the overall best-of-show.


Back out at the front of the hall, 16 panels of judges each are presented with flight after flight of wines, each wine in a glass that has only a number hand-written in marker on the base. The head judge at my table was Steve Somermeyer, assistant winemaker at Chateau Thomas Winery (Plainfield, IN – near Indy). Although each judge’s opinion is considered equal in determining the final score for a wine, Steve can call for a further consideration of a scoring. Of the 32 wines that I tasted (12 Sangiovese, 13 Nortons, 7 Cabernets – some of which were vineyard designates) , only 3 wines were re-considered.


My fellow judges were (left to right) Mark Wenzel, winemaker at August Hill Winery; Marie Silberstein, formerly of Olinger Distributing and now an industry consultant, Michel Pascal, co-owner of Carroll Company Distributors; and Samantha Kollar, from the Southern California office of Vinquiry. Head judge Steve is seated. I'm in the lab coat on the right...



The judging sheet guided us to consider the following attributes of each wine: clarity, color, aroma, taste, aftertaste. The competition used to award points for cellarability, but doesn’t do that any longer. We were told the vintage of each wine, but nothing else. After each attribute was considered, a numerical score was tallied, and the results could be “No Medal” “Bronze” “Silver” and “Gold”. (At first this seemed overly generous to me, but an amazing number of No Medals are awarded, so consumers can in fact rely on the guidance suggested by the awards.) At the end of each flight, each judge is polled for their opinion, and the average score is used to determine the award. Or the no-award.

The remarks are honest and free-flowing. Here are some that caught my ear:
“I liked the freshness of it.”
“This is a wine that has been fixed – sugar was obviously added to overcome deeper flaws.”
“The issue with this wine is the vintage; it’s not yet finished.”
“It’s gone – there is no aroma – there are only tannins left.”
“A seriously flawed wine – smells like fingernail polish.”
“This wine has no flaws. Practically perfect for the varietal.”
“When I say a-hint-of-barnyard in the aroma, I mean that odor of straw and earth. It’s like the aromas that reach out to you when you walk through a farm.”
“If I had any criticism at all, it would be that it is over-oaked.”
“It has a bit of SO2 but not objectionable.”
“It’s really tight. It will be good in a few years.”


As interesting as this all was, it is important to give a tip of the hat to the unsung heros.


Those are the folks in the “Pit Cru” who poured all the wines to be tasted, and those others who washed over 15,000 dirty wine glasses. Without them, no awards. None at all.
















The Indy International Wine Competition began in 1973. The 2009 competition judged wines from 42 states and 10 countries. 82 wine experts – winemakers, wine journalists, wine educators, wine marketers, and knowledgeable wine consumers -- each judged approximately 120 wines per day. In a few days, we’ll know the results. I’ll post a link and there will also be a guest-blog by a head judge that’s a what-to-buy guide. Stay tuned!





© 2009 Barbara Keck

Tahoe City's Fat Cat Cafe serves up Wine, Food, Music

The story of the Fat Cat Café starts with Carolyn Nunn, owner, driving through Tahoe City and saying to herself, “There is no place for locals and visitors to pick up good fresh food quickly, and at the same time find reasonably priced good wine.”

Thus was born this casual wine bar with an orientation toward serving up not only good food and wine but also good local music. Located at 599 North Lake Blvd in Tahoe City, there’s live music every Friday night, but a unique event is the Tuesday night “Open Mike Night” which showcases local musicians. When I went on a Tuesday to hear a local jazz band play, the place was packed, but everyone at the bar scooted a bit closer together, with a welcoming and instant familiarity.

The wine list is a big attraction, featuring a broad selection of affordable wines, with small plates that pair wonderfully.

Carolyn (photo, far left) selects all of the wine herself. She personally visits local wineries in and around Tahoe. The wine list focus is mainly California, but she is also passionate about Italian wines. These choices fit with her personal philosophy: “You shouldn’t have to spend a fortune to go out and have a nice dinner, glass or wine or cocktail.”

Recently redecorated to accommodate more guests and a robust kitchen, you’ll enjoy going to the Fat Cat to pair these (and more) wines with these (and more) small plates.

A 2007 Sonata from Nevada City Winery is a blend of Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay (68% and 32% respectively) that play off of and balance each other in perfect harmony. Only 330 cases of this wine were produced. On the palate, the wine shows a bit of citrus with fruit overtones but not too sweet. For a fruit-forward wine, it is crisp and dry. 14.2% alcohol. $7 glass/$20 bottle at the café.

Carolyn paired the Sonata with Thai lettuce wraps, featuring chicken, tofu and pine nuts sautéed in spicy Asian sauces. This small plate dish can also be made with tofu only, for the vegetarian crowd.

The 2007 Chardonnay from McManis Family Vineyards located in Ripon in California’s northern interior is light, fruity, not too oakey and not too buttery, with abundant aromas of pear, mango and tropical fruit. Grapes for this wine came from McManis’s River Junction vineyards at the confluence of the San Joaquin and Stanislaus Rivers. 13.5% alcohol. Paired with a plate of roasted shrimp that are a bit spicy with lots of garlic and red chili flakes – perfect! The wine is $7/glass, $19/bottle at the café.

The Italian 2007 Vallevo Montepulciano d’Abruzzo is a straightforward dry red wine with a smoky, blackberry taste and sweet medium tannins. Made entirely of the Montepulciano grape from the region of Abruzzo. !3.5% alcohol. $6 glass/$17 bottle. It was well paired with the café’s pasta pomodoro, and would go well with the café’s entrée sized meat sausage lasagna, “a lasagna that every guy in Tahoe City is hooked on,” says Carolyn.

Another good red wine is the Lang & Reed 2007 Cabernet Franc. The winery is located in St. Helena, CA, and grapes for this 100% Cabernet Franc are sourced entirely from California’s north coast. I found it to have a fantastic nose, and would give it my highest personal ranking, which is “Yummy!” A bit of pepper on the mid palate, a fresh-herb taste mingled with black cherry. Silky tannins add to the rich taste; it is eminently drinkable! $12/glass, $35/bottle. It paired beautifully with the dinner special at the Fat Cat Café, which was a beef filet.

The newly renovated Fat Cat Café offers a fantastic selection of wines by the glass. The kitchen features an excellent assortment of small plate offerings including sliders, sweet potato fries, homemade soups and many other tasty menu items. Located at 599 North Lake Blvd in Tahoe City, it is open daily 11AM- 10PM. Phone 530-583-3355, but reservations not required.
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© 2009 Barbara Keck

For more information on dining and the wide range of activities around Lake Tahoe, see the online version of The Tahoe Weekly. This article appeared in my column "It's Grape" in June 2009.