Category Archives: Wine

The 2009 Jefferson Cup results

The Jefferson Cup Invitational has celebrated its tenth year as the only competition that honors the best of the best among wineries from all of America’s wine regions. Each year we select great wines from across America; the 2009 competition included wines from twenty-three states. At the end of the second day of this year’s tasting, November 20th, wines from SIX different states had captured top honors. Just as the event’s namesake would have it, democracy reigned at this year’s Jefferson Cup Wine Competition.

The two-day competition culminated with the awarding of FIFTEEN Jefferson Cup Awards. Jefferson Cups were awarded to wines made from both vinifera vines (a European species responsible for most famous wines such as Chardonnay and Cabernet) and non-vinifera vines, which flourish in the more extreme climates in the center portion of the U.S.

These fifteen prestigious Jefferson Cups were awarded this year to six white wines, eight red wines and one dessert wine. While many competitions insist upon selecting a pre-ordained number of sweepstakes winners, our judges are allowed to find the top wines, whether there are only one, two or three, or even NO winners in some categories, as happened this year. Indeed this year, there was no rosé or sparkling wine winner, though a number of those wines won awards. Best of all, there were once again great examples of wine, both from vinifera and non-vinifera grapes. Together with sixty-three other wines nominated for (but not awarded) the Jefferson Cup, these fifteen wines represent some of the most compelling wines made in America.

This year’s Jefferson Cup competition saw some very notable developments and successes. Two wineries, St. James Winery (Missouri) and Imagine Moore (New York) won TWO Jefferson Cups each, the first time this has happened in a single year. And although many expect California to dominate the awards, multiple Jefferson Cups were won by four states: Washington, Missouri, New York and California each won multiple Jefferson Cups for their wineries. And Nebraska and Colorado each have their first Jefferson Cup. Nebraska’s James Arthur Vineyards won the state’s first Jefferson Cup for its Edelweiss, and Boulder Creek won Colorado’s first Jefferson Cup for its Bordeaux-styled blend, VIP Reserve 2006.

As in years past, the West Coast was well represented. Four reds from California won; two Washington State wineries won a cup as well. In another remarkable victory, Mitch Cosentino won a Jefferson Cup again this year; last year he won an astounding three Jefferson Cups. And Missouri had a very successful year: Stone Hill and Augusta Winery each won a Jefferson Cup while St. James Winery won two Cups. Other notable winners included Cakebread Cellars’ beautiful Dancing Bear Ranch Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 and Amavi Cellars Syrah from the famous les Collines Vineyard in Walla Walla Valley.

In the past years, the Jefferson Cup seems to have focused upon Syrah or Cabernet, but this year, there was greater diversity of wines, though vinifera grapes dominated among the red wines. I am very pleased with the way the Jefferson Cup Invitational competition has developed. We had a representation of the best of what every quality wine producing region in the country is offering right now, including improved representation from Washington, Michigan, Virginia and Texas as well as some standout wines from California, New York and Oregon. Michigan and Colorado wines rose to the top of the pack this year and New York State wineries leaped ahead too.

In most other competitions there is ‘open’ seating and California represents 90% of the entries. As a result it usually captures 90% of the honors. I can now foresee a time when that will not happen. What we are doing is following Mr. Jefferson’s example and allowing every quality wine-producing region in America a place at our table. While many may know him from his well-chronicled statesman role, most Americans have no idea just how influential Jefferson was in the way we eat and drink and live today. To call Jefferson ahead of his time where food and wine are concerned is the ultimate understatement. Jefferson was growing grapes that did not really come into vogue in this country until 20 years ago.

Best of all, this year’s Jefferson Cup coincided with our fifth annual fundraiser for Angel Flight, a great charity that gives support for private pilots offering travel to indigent and needy medical emergencies. The Jefferson Cup fundraisers raised more than $90,000 for Angel Flight this year.

The 2009 JEFFERSON CUP winners are:

For White Vinifera Wine:

  • Chateau Ste Michelle Riesling Eroica 2008 Columbia Valley
  • Sheldrake Point Vineyards Gewurztraminer 2008 Finger Lakes

For White Non-Vinifera Wine:

  • Imagine Moore Harmony 2008 Finger Lakes
  • James Arthur Vineyards Edelweiss 2008 Nebraska
  • St. James Winery Friendship School White nv
  • Stone Hill Winery Vignoles 2008 Missouri

For Red Vinifera Wine:

  • Amavi Cellars Syrah 2007 Les Collines Vineyard
  • Boulder Creek VIP Reserve 2006 Colorado
  • Cakebread Cellars Dancing Bear Ranch 2006 Howell Mountain
  • Couples & Co. Cabernet Sauvignon 2006 Napa Valley
  • Michael – David Winery Earthquake Zin 2007 Lodi
  • Rodney Strong Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon Estate 2006 Alexander Valley

For Red Non-Vinifera Wine:

  • Augusta Winery Norton Estate Bottled 2007 Augusta
  • St. James Winery Velvet Red nv American

For Dessert Wine:

  • Imagine Moore Framboise 2009 New York

For more information, go to The Jeffersion Cup Invitational web site.

In a word, how do you describe a wine?

Reprinted from The Kansas City Star, July 21, 2009

Does a rose by any other name smell just as sweet? I recently sat down with some coffee experts to talk about aromas and the words wine and coffee experts use to describe them.

Why do we need words to describe flavors? Most people don’t need to “describe” the flavor of an apple. The experience of eating an apple is so universal that most would describe an apple simply by stating the color: if the apple is green, we expect it to taste tart. If it’s red, we expect it to be a bit sweet.

But when it comes to wine, few people have enough experience to have such ironclad expectations. So the wine industry employs its own nomenclature to describe wines, and sometimes those words seem downright secretive.

The coffee industry has a similar challenge; few coffee drinkers contemplate the flavors of their coffee. Often enough, they’re not awake enough to appreciate anything other than the caffeine content. But the coffee business, like the wine industry, has developed terms to differentiate one coffee from another.

Danny O’Neill, proprietor of the Roasterie, a local coffee producer, keeps a series of charts on the wall of his tasting room. Aromas are separated into categories of spicy, resinous and pyrolytic, among other groupings. Pyrolytic characteristics, in case you were wondering, include malt, roasted and burnt coffee, and pipe tobacco.

But the words of wine can be even more perplexing, if not ridiculous: tannic, barnyard, angular, feminine. Some of these words are mysterious, bizarre or possibly sexist. What does the word “tannic” mean? It means bitter and astringent. Barnyard? Why would I want a wine that smells like a cow patty? Well, some people like a little bit of that, particularly in their French wines. For some people, it makes the wine more complex. For others, it just smells bad.

And words like “feminine” or “masculine” (lots of writers employ those terms) suggest that wines carry gender traits of softness, muscle, aggression, seductiveness, curves and, well, you can see why people find the words of wine to be so vexing.

The wine and coffee industries utilize these words because they are confronted with a difficult challenge: how do you describe flavor? For many industry professionals, it’s a simple matter: the industry can describe wines by describing the flavors and aromas of common foods, plants, flowers, spices and the like.

Sauvignon Blanc, for instance, is a grape that makes a wine with the flavor of melons, lemons and grapefruits and an herbal, even vegetal character, reminiscent of lemongrass, peas and even asparagus. Cabernet Sauvignon has plums and cherries, along with black pepper, cedar box and baking spices. Sure, some of those characteristics come from the barrels in which the wine is aged, but a wine labeled as Cabernet Sauvignon is best described by using those terms.

For many of the younger members of the wine industry, speaking of wine as being “aristocratic” or “seductive” or “withdrawn” or “showing malolactic notes” (as traditional wine writers have done), seems a bit exclusionary, at least insomuch as those terms are far harder to understand than saying that a wine has spice or pepper or, to describe “malolactic” aromas, that a wine smells a bit like melted butter.

But even these words might be debatable. “Buttery” may describe a typical California Chardonnay, but is that a term that many wine drinkers would use? As a teacher in the Master Sommelier and Master of Wine programs, I believe that wine drinkers use such words only because they are prompted to do so, not because such descriptions come naturally.

Still, anyone trying to assess the flavors of a beverage will use terms that reflect the flavors of that beverage, as well as the flavors that are most important to an expert. Danny O’Neill and the other professionals at the Roasterie are most focused on what differentiates one coffee from another: Is it fruity? Nutty? Floral?

So the descriptors that professionals use to describe flavors, whether in coffee or wine (or beer or whatever), are likely to seem odd to most casual tasters. Professionals are not interested in the flavors that are typical in a coffee or wine. Rather the best way we can differentiate one coffee or wine from another is to describe what is unique to each individual blend, and that unique character is usually something odd, like pipe tobacco or malt in coffee, or barnyard or earthy aromas in wine.

Since tasters are looking for the weird stuff in wine and coffee, we tend to find flavors that most people wouldn’t find, unless they, too, were trying to find them. But most people aren’t looking for weird stuff; they just want their beverage to taste good. That’s the problem with professional tasters: they forget that the most important attribute of any drink is to be tasty.

The coffee industry may have its own private nomenclature, but coffee is accepted as a common man’s drink, despite the arcane terminology coffee roasters might utilize. Wine, on the other hand, intimidates any normal person, with a plethora of terms such as acidity (think lemon, lime or green apple), diacetyl (popcorn butter), Kimmeridgian soils (oyster shells) and all the other myriad notes employed to explain how wines that taste very similar to one another can be different — if you look really closely.

Looking closely is not something most people need to do. For most, if it tastes good, it’s good. There ought to be no other justification required for someone to recommend a wine; but professionals find that further, perhaps confusing, detail is required.

Maybe wine writers should learn from the coffee industry. The coffee business hasn’t addled its consumers with vocabulary, even if the words are odd.

So why does O’Neill keep a chart with descriptors like pyrolytic, floral, musty?

“We stole the idea of these kinds of descriptors from wine people; these are basically the kinds of words wine people use,” he said.

and we’re supposed to feel good about fewer corked wines?

Once each year, I join a group of friends for a tasting called Best of Cellar: sometimes it is, sometimes it isn’t. This year, it had all the hallmarks. Let me start by noting that one of the nine bottles that I brought was 1982 Chateau Margaux. Yeah, it’s called Best of Cellar, right?

Except that we had a few corked wines. How many? Uhm, maybe more than a few. We opened about thirty-six wines (the numbers always get fuzzy at some point) and six of them were corked. And it wasn’t just any six bottles. They were:

1994 Caymus Special Selection Cabernet Sauvignon – corked!
1988 Jaboulet Hermitage La Chapelle – corked!
1988 J.J. Prum Wehlener Sonnenuhr Gold Kapsule Auslese – corked!
1990 Karthausershofberg Eitelsbacher Auslese – corked!
1993 J.J. Prum Wehlener Sonnenuhr Auslese – corked!

and most ignominiously…

1985 double magnum Chateau Lynch Bages – corked!

Six out of thirty-six is something like seventeen percent. Bear in mind that the cork industry is boasting that the incidence of corked wines is down to one or two percent. Lately, I have seen that number, though that may be due to the higher incidence of synthetic corks and screwcaps.

My recent experience not withstanding, the frequency of corked wines is down, I’ll allow that. At my recent United Airlines tastings, I saw only a handful of corked bottles, out of about one thousand bottles that were tasted over the eight days of the taste-off. Indeed, I was more frequently aroused to ire by the glue-like smells of some of the wines that were closed with so-called twintop closures. It turned into a game after a while: I would taste through thirty or forty wines and then call out the bottles that smelled like a twintop closure, without of course looking at the cork. The telltale smell of glue is annoying; I have no idea why vintners still use those corks.

With standard corks, things are better; I believe that. But that’s of little solace to my friends and I who endured hundreds of dollars of spoilage and wasted time and cellar space. Trust me, we ain’t rich, we just drink like we are. The ugly truth is that fifteen and twenty years ago, things were very, very bad. And we are unlucky to have been collecting wine at that time, when cork taint was seemingly everywhere.

I’m not saying you should go out and trash all your 1980’s and early 1990’s wines. There’s a far better than even chance the wines are perfectly sound. But I’m not going to forgive the cork industry anytime soon (sorry, Prince Charles). And every time I have this many corked wines, my anger burns anew.

Does your mama know your Roodeberg?

If you live in South Africa, both you and your mama know all about Roodeberg, a cheerily commercial red blend. Nothing against that wine: it’s pleasant and distinctive, purposefully pitched between stylish Bordeaux claret and earthy South African red. The white has been pleasant in the past, but I have never been as pleased by a Roodeberg as I am by the 2008 white Roodeberg.

In classic KWV fashion, we’re not allowed to know precisely what’s in the wine. The label says nothing; the website talks about 45% Chardonnay (coulda fooled me), 40% Chenin Blanc (that’s easier to believe) and 15% “secret”. But WAIT, there’s more, like they say on the commercials. The website says the wine has aromas of litchi (sic) and rose petals. Hmm, would you suggesting Gewurztraminer, by chance? Moreover, the back label says the wine has “gooseberry”. That would suggest that the culprit is not Gewurztraminer but Sauvignon Blanc. Whodunit? What is this, a Murder She Wrote episode?

Lest I encourage the marketing people to continue such inanity, let me say that I would have spent the last one hundred words praising the wine if I didn’t feel the need to bitch about this typically KWV-ish secrecy. But I guess the folks that brought you green pepper extract in Sauvignon Blanc feel like being a bit coy…Bitchslap!

Okay, that was unfair. I just don’t understand why wine marketers think we’re stupid consumers or treat us as children who don’t deserve to know the details. But again, I’ve lost the thread of why I wanted to write this review. I didn’t intend to complain; I wanted to praise the wine.

And so I will. Sweet citrus, some fresh herbs and lemony warmth make for a pretty, textured and barely smoky wine. The barrel presence is very minimal, indeed, it may be more lees stirring then barrels. It tastes like fun and friendly South African Chenin Blanc with a whisper of Chardonnay and a touch of Gewurztraminer, Viognier, Sauvignon Blanc and Roussanne (well, I told you it was a bit warm). Of course, it’s not comprised of all of those grapes but the wine has complexity, as you might guess from these notes. It has something that is pleasing like fatness so maybe it’s not much of a keeper but who cares? Drink tonight with citrus marinated grilled shrimp. Smile and stop complaining.

something from Colorado

A bottle of Stone Cottage Cellars Gewurztraminer 2005 West Elks is open and lengthening in tooth. Now, there is nothing fair about asking a Colorado (yes, I said Colorado) Gewurztraminer to age more than a year or two. This bottle is a 2005 and I promise you that it was as fresh as a daisy a little more than a year ago.

I’ve saved it a bit too long; it’s no one’s fault but mine. I have a lot of wine that is yelling at me, “Hurry up and drink me!” I’m trying to get to those wines, but like I say, I’ve got a lot of them. Tonight, I just wanted to delve into some Colorado wine since it will be another three or four months before I am able to visit Stone Cottage again and reload on their pretty wines. This one is just a little past its best and that’s not the wine’s fault.

Gewurztraminer is usually light in acidity and acidity is the structural element that steadies most white wines as they mature. The nose is sweet and floral honey; peaches and apricots, there is a dusty mineral note that might well be the West Elks soil and site speaking through the wine. The finish is showing some oxidation: bruised apple, cooked apple, a touch of nut, but I’m really enjoying it nonetheless. Maybe fresh isn’t always that important.

something from South Africa

Graham Beck The Joshua 2003 Barrel Selection – (91% Shiraz and 9% Viognier) – while this is intriguing stuff, South Africa doesn’t offer the fruitiest concoctions of wine; this is no exception. There’s a strong note of spearmint leaf, dried as well as fresh, rubber eraser and other such wild non-fruit characteristics. Add a note of bacon, some sweet toast and coffee notes, and, well, you start to get the idea that this is complex. Then add black plum, black cherry and licorice and it gets even crazier.

The mouth is South African dry: tangy, slightly bitter from green leaves and dried leaves, more spearmint along with vanilla and other sweet barrel notes. Sweet black raspberries meet rubber tires is happening too. But I would gladly drink this again. In fact, I would insist that you do too, at least if you want to see how South Africa has wines of true personality on offer. Honestly, I could smell this wine for hours (actually, I did for days) and not tire of it. (No) pun intended.

www.drinklocalwine.com

THINK GLOBAL, DRINK LOCAL

Locavores, goes the trendy and annoyingly specific term for people who, by eating fresh and local foods, lessen their carbon footprint (another less than poetic description for something really good). Locavores, I must agree with you: eat local, drink local. Food is fresher the closer it’s grown. Most foods that are destined to be shipped a thousand miles away are harvested earlier than those that somebody might eat tonight, and they have less flavor than they ought to have. Ripe is good.

Fresh is best, if you want the best foods. But some foods are different; maybe freshness isn’t everything. With cheeses, stews, soups and wines, among others, a little time can do wondrous things. Since alcohol is a preservative, fresh isn’t necessary to good wine. Drinking local wine shouldn’t matter, right?

Turns out it does.  Supporting local business is good for local economies; supporting local farmers saves land from less scenic and more damaging pursuits. Successful farms rescue land from the bulldozer and from concrete. You know what? I live in Kansas City and I want see a vineyard when I drive out of town.

So wine writer Dave McIntyre sends out a bunch of emails a few weeks ago and asks if I want to be one of a number of journalisti to coordinate our efforts: to Drink Local, and to WRITE local.  At least for a week. Write about the men and women who are making wine around you and then put your stuff on line; meanwhile, everybody else will be doing the same thing, each in his or her own spot.

Well, duh. I like local. I want other people to know about our local wines. So, yeah??

So here we go. Last week I talked about the Missouri State Wine Competition. I’ve been writing about that event for a couple of decades and more. Nobody listens. I mean, nobody reads. Okay, some people do. But half of those reading it think about writing me, as some always do: “Are you kidding me? Missouri wine??”

Yep. But this blog isn’t just about Missouri wine, though I’m eager to tell you about Tony Kooyumjian’s typically delicious Augusta Chambourcin. No. I am compelled to write about wines from this part of the country because there are excellent wines here, where few wines of excellence have ever been created. Those successes make me want to yell out, especially when nobody seems to be listening, that an utterly dedicated winegrower is capable of crafting enjoyable wine, even where no one has done so before.

That’s big stuff to me. Napa Valley? Yeah, we get that. Bordeaux? Uh huh. Burgundy, Champagne, the Mosel or Rheingau? Tuscany, Piedmont, the Yarra Valley and Mendoza? Yeah, you see where I’m going on this.

But northeastern Kansas? Central Nebraska? Iowa?

First, let’s talk Iowa. Last year’s Mid-American Wine Competition (it’s based in Des Moines) saw Iowa’s Fireside Winery win the award for Iowa’s best wine. This year was different: the Iowa wine was the Best White Wine of the Show. We judges voted it best white wine without being aware of its Iowa roots; Snus Hill Vineyard Edelweiss was just damn good. Snus Hill Vineyards has made some pleasant wines before, but this was absolutely at a different level. The grape Edelweiss is very much still a work in progress: some tropical hints on top of a rather pleasant but non-descript wine. At least that’s how it usually tastes to me.

The Snus Hill Edelweiss was far more complete: a bit sweet, very tart, and as layered as a parfait. Don’t get the wrong idea; it’s dry, but it’s more sweet/tart than it is dry, in that it’s more like sweet/TART.

Nebraska has far fewer than Iowa’s fifty or so wineries, but at least three of them have my full attention: Mac’s Creek Winery, Cuthills Winery and James Arthur Vineyards. They all do nice stuff; Cuthills has been creating its own good luck by working with new grapes, indeed, helping to put Brianna on the map as a grape of luscious pineapple and lemon notes.

Kansas has at least two wineries that should matter to you, and they always have something worth drinking on offer. HolyField is the senior of the two and they’ve made some of the best wines in the central U.S. for a decade. Their current Late Harvest Vignoles 2006 is as fat and oozing with apricot character as anybody else’s Vignoles from anywhere. Delicious late harvest wine with the kind of tart finish dessert wines from elsewhere must dream about in their sleep.

Somerset Ridge has a tidy little off-dry wine called OktoberFest. This year, their Late Harvest Traminette is even better: the sort of pretty fruit and crazy floral intensity that any child of Gewurztraminer (hence, the hybrid’s name TRAMINette) should have, in exuberance.

Which brings us to Missouri. There are over fifty wineries making wine in the state; about twelve of them are consistently on their game. The rest are more or less capable of surprising you in any vintage, though they don’t often make solid wine. And among the very best, nobody has been able to touch Stone Hill for years.

Then a few short years ago, Tony Kooyumjian started winning more than anyone else. He makes wines both at Augusta and Montelle wineries; maybe somebody might think that gives him too many opportunities. Yeah, but it would appear he knows how to make the most of his opportunities.

And while he has won awards for every grape he fashions into wine, I’ve come to rely on his Chambourcin to prove to my friends who don’t get it about wines from this part of the country. The raspberry nose, the red fruits mouth and the tangy finish, well, pretty much everybody gets it when they taste one of those wines.

It’s time for your Missouri wine update

I’ve been trying to figure out when I first started judging at the Missouri State Fair Competition; I think it’s been twenty-five years since my first competition. Maybe it’s been longer, but the interminable feeling as one fatally flawed wine after another passed my lips is long gone. Sitting down to several hundred wines at the 2008 Missouri State Wine Competition, there’s no feeling of grim trepidation.

Instead I’m excited, if worried. 2007 was the annus horribilis, as the British Queen once said of another vintage. The vintage was unkind to Missouri’s favorite grape, Norton, most of which was wiped out by the so-called “Easter Massacre”. On April 5th, Easter Day, the temperature plunged into the low twenties (and even lower in many areas) where it stayed for five or more days.

By itself, these frigid temperatures wouldn’t have done a great deal of damage. But the preceding three weeks had been unseasonably warm and sunny and most vines had wakened up, believing spring was at hand. The sap had risen up into the wood and when that sap froze, vines literally exploded. The result was the loss of three quarters or more of many of Missouri’s crops, not least of which included most of the state’s wine grapes.

The initial report was that 95% of Missouri’s Norton crop was gone. Other grapes suffered to similar degrees (pun intended). So for the 2008 Missouri State Wine Competition, I wasn’t sure there would be many 2007 vintage wines to taste. And a weather disaster like the Easter Massacre was bound to leave a lasting impact on the wines fashioned from those grapes and vines that survived. Would there be balanced wines?

The short answer is yes. Among the white wines, there were a number of lovely dry 2007 Vignoles, the finest of which was from the oft-awarded Montelle Winery. Their 2007 Dry Vignoles was judged to be the best wine of the entire show, and was handed the Governor’s Cup, giving Montelle’s winemaker, Tony Kooyumjian, the Governor’s Cup four out of the last five years. A remarkable achievement.

Most of the wines in the flights of Vidal Blanc and Vignoles contained attractive 2007’s. The entire Seyval Blanc flight was far more encouraging than last year’s group; the 2007 vintage clearly had some benefits for Seyval Blanc.

Tony Kooyumjian’s Semi-dry Seyval Blanc, which he produces at Augusta Winery, was every bit as good as his superlative Dry Vignoles. Between Augusta and Montelle Wineries, Tony managed to bring home six of the ten “Best of Class” awards. His other Best of Class winners included Augusta River Valley Red, Montelle River Country Red, and two absolute beauties: Augusta 2007 Icewine and Montelle Peach Brandy. I would put those last two up against competitive products from anywhere and they would match or even beat the competition.

The sad truth is that most people reading that last statement don’t believe that I’m serious. Of course, they haven’t really tried most Missouri wines. And despite probably tasting only a few inexpensive Missouri wines, most tasters think they know the quality of Missouri wine. It’s like tasting some California box wines and saying that you can extrapolate from those how Phelps Insignia tastes.

It shouldn’t be, but it might be a surprise to some people to know that the Missouri wine industry has a pretty strong reputation outside of the state. At least within the wine industry, there is a strong sense that there are a lot of smart people working here. Even many California winemakers have heard good things about Norton, Missouri’s state grape, even if they’ve never actually tasted one.

At the 2008 competition, there were other surprises, if smaller and less momentous. For one, there seemed to be fewer Chardonels than last year; that was welcome news. I hate to badmouth a grape and its entire output, so I won’t. But far too much Chardonel is boring or worse.

Add to the good news that those who are making Chardonel are less frequently smothering it in oak in the vain hope that the lightweight grape can grow wings and fly away as a fully formed Chardonnay, one of its parents. As they say, you can put lipstick on the pig but…

The other top winners were Stone Hill’s Golden Spumante and their 2007 Vignoles, made in a delicious, sweeter style. Not surprisingly, Stone Hill took home the award for the best fortified wine as well, with their 2005 Port, fashioned from the Norton grape. Blumenhof Winery had an absolutely stellar Cynthiana (that’s Norton, as well) from the 2006 vintage; that wine deserves your attention as well.

It’s exciting that Blumenhof is back in the winner’s column; their wines can be first-rate and they don’t show up in the press as often as they deserve. Best of all, their victory in the Norton competition reflects a sea change in Missouri wine. No longer is the winner for top Norton a predictable battle between the heavyweights in the state; these days more and more wineries are making great Norton.

I am an umami’s boy

There are some politicians to whom the term “cipher” has been applied: they represent ill-defined figures upon whom a desperate public can project their desires. The notion of umami may be as poorly defined, at least in the culinary world.

While food science has long ago determined that umami is a form of glutamate attached to one or two proteins (know as IMP or GMP), umami has become variously known as “the smell of protein”, “the flavor of protein”, “the flavor of chicken soup”, of “the flavor of deliciousness.” Moreover, I have heard wine and culinary professionals insist that any rich flavor must a priori be umami-rich.
And umami’s existence, though identified in 1919 and a prominent component of flavored foods for half a century, is still in dispute by some recalcitrants. But like the little boy covering his face in fright, denying umami’s existence doesn’t make it go away.

In brief, umami is found in a variety of foods; that is in little dispute. It can be found in varying amounts in tomatoes, green beans, bivalves, shellfish, seaweed, mushrooms, many aged cheeses and in cooked meats, especially those that have been subjected to slow and long cooking.

What is still contentious is determining umami’s impact on other flavors (particularly sweetness and saltiness) and its impact upon wine. For instance, high amounts of umami can interact in somewhat unpleasant ways with high tannin wines, at least for many. But like all food experiences, the negative response to umami and tannin interaction is not universal. Many find the duo of tannin and umami gives a metallic taste, some find it only somewhat unpleasant and a significant percentage of people may have very little response at all.

This isn’t umami’s fault. There are no universal food or drink experiences, and therefore there are no universal experiences of food and drink in combination. You may like Brussels sprouts; I may find them annoying. I might enjoy liver and onions; you might be repulsed.

Certainly the combination of oysters and tannic red wine seems intuitively wrong. The high umami content of oysters is the culprit, and its kerwang effect on tannin explains the problem. But it’s important to accept that some people don’t find the two to be a bad match, though most people wouldn’t put them together.

And another complicating factor arises; salt can buffer tannin. Most chefs have noticed that salt buffers bitterness (chefs put salt on eggplant, don’t they?); yet the saltiness of oysters is not enough to overcome the umami effect on red wine.

Conversely, aged and/or well-cooked meats have plenty of umami, but you don’t hear anybody complaining about the metallic effect of cooked meats on red wines. Here again, there are other elements (including fats, proteins and salt) that provide plenty of counter-balance for red wine’s tannins. And most find it a happy match.

Finally, there is the age old pairing of blue cheese (rife with umami) with Port, a powerfully tannic wine. My palate finds a younger Port to be less enjoyable with blue cheese; maybe there’s too much tannin in the younger red to handle the cheese’s umami, despite the intense saltiness of most blue cheeses (remember salt buffers tannins).

But Port is also sweet. And that seems to be the missing piece. A dry red wine is unpleasant with blue cheese; a powerful and sweet wine is fine.

If this seems head-spinningly complicated, well, that’s hardly my fault. Foods and wines are comprised of hundreds if not thousands of myriad elements. But if there is a simplifying rule, it may be this: if both the food and the wine have a balance among the primary flavors of salt, sweet, bitter, sour and umami, they are likely to go well with just about any other well-balanced food or wine.

If not, then the food or the wine should not overwhelm its partner in any particular flavor category.

If all this makes you long for beer and chips, fret not. The business of food and wine matching is only complicated if you try to explain it. If you’re simply trying to enjoy it, then drink and eat whatever you damn well please.