Monday, July 26, 2010

The HoseMaster's Honest Guide to Grapes Volume 7


Volume Seven takes us back to the world of white wine grapes. If white wine had never existed, would anyone really care? Sort of like white soul singers. Who'd miss them? If every variety of vitis vinifera were red what would we be missing? Why I simply can't imagine my life without those two bottles of Riesling I drink a year. And who wouldn't miss Chardonnay? We need a grape to badmouth like we need Barry Bonds or Glenn Beck or Mel Gibson (who, ironically, only drinks white, really white, wine). Chardonnay is the Tonya Harding of grapes--pretty good on ice but liable to try and hurt you with wood, and incredibly fun to hate. But there are plenty of red grapes to despise--we'll always have Merlot. And let us not forget Gruner Veltliner, the pride of Austria, along with Arnold Schwarzenegger. What would life be without Gruner? Well, just like Arnold, I can't wait to find out. Yet we do live in a world of both red and white varietal grapes. So let's just get this over with.


ALBARINO

Albarino belongs in the category of aromatic grapes along with Gewurztraminer, Muscat,
Viognier and Jessica Alba, for whom it is named and who, as an actress, really stinks. Albarino has just recently come to the attention of consumers from its Spanish home of Rias Baixas (pronounced "wrinkled bike ass") where it has been quietly producing plonk since the 12th Century, much like Fred Franzia. Albarino is believed to pair nicely with food, only no one has discovered what food yet. I like it with a traditional Spanish dish like Raquel Welch (who took her stage name from the famous grape juice because she can turn your tongue purple). Aside from Spain and Portugal (where it goes by the name Alvarinho so that consumers know not to buy it in Portuguese), there has been some interest in the variety in California and Australia. However, recently it was discovered that most of the Albarino planted in Australia is actually the Jura grape Savagnin, so they wrote it a Dear Jaune letter and ripped it out. There are a few acres of Albarino in California so it will be interesting to find out what variety it really is. Best guess is it's actually the variety named for Stevie Nicks--Hi Ho Stevierino.

Interesting facts about Albarino:

The hybrid grape created by crossing Cortese with Albarino is Albacore, which produces wines your grandmother might enjoy with cat food.


Albarino's large number of pips can cause bitterness especially when it's made from sour grapes.


Albarino was the darling of sommeliers before Gruner Veltliner, making it the equivalent of Natalie Wood. Dead in the water.


Other names for Albarino:

Battlestar Galicia
Peaches and Herb
Spain Killer


ARNEIS

There was a time (this was before the majesty that is wine blogs) Arneis was referred to as Barolo Bianco because it was often blended with Nebbiolo to make Barolo more palatable. Now they just use new oak. Arneis was on the verge of extinction in the 1970's, much like bras, when it was rescued by a couple of Piedmont producers, most notably Bruno Giacosa, ironically, a famous producer of Brabaresco, a famous jug wine. An upsurge of interest in the wines of the Piedmont fueled more plantings of Arneis, and now the variety has achieved a certain amount of notoriety, and its wines of uncommon mediocrity are no longer strangers to wine shelves. Several producers make Arneis in the passito style during which the grapes are allowed to dry on mats, which concentrates the sugars and really makes your feet sticky when you wipe them. If I were you I'd passito on most of them. A few acres of Arneis also exist in California, where some jackass is likely to plant any old grape and try to sell it to his wine club at a hefty profit to help finance his unprofitable obsession with Syrah (see HHGG, Volume 4). In aerosol form, Arneisal Spray, it can effectively combat allergies to thin, insipid white wine.

Interesting facts about Arneis:

"Arneis" means "little rascal" in Piedmontese dialect, which explains why it smells like Alfalfa.

A famous song was written for Arneis after it was no longer being used for Barolo and was being pulled out by winemakers. There have been many versions of the classic, "So Langhe, It's Been Good to Know Ya."


Fans of the grape are known as "Arneis Army" and hold an annual tasting at Chateau Palmer.


Other names for Arneis:


Desi (oh, you knew it was coming)
Almond Joyless
Ixnay



TREBBIANO

Drinking Trebbiano is like spending a day reading wine blogs--about as dull as it can get and you're grateful when you wake up the next day and don't remember a thing. It's painfully and horribly thin, like Taylor Swift in a bathing suit, and often just as flat. Trebbiano is one of the most widely planted white grapes in the world and is included in a startling number of Italian white wines, mostly because Italians don't drink white wine themselves and don't mind ruining the meals of foreigners. There was even a time (again, long before the Golden Age of Wine Writing that is Wine Blogs) when Trebbiano was allowed in Chianti Classico and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, which is more than you can say for James Suckling now. But Trebbiano is a very important grape under its alias Ugni Blanc. Ugni Blanc is the grape from which Cognac and Armagnac are distilled, perhaps brought to Cognac during the Papal retreat to Avignon, probably in distill of the Knight. Trebbiano is also important in the production of Mexican Brandy, a product that rivals the finest French tequilas. And Trebbiano is also used to make balsamic vinegar. So, basically, it's a wine grape at its best when not made into wine. Like Gruner Veltliner.

Interesting facts about Trebbiano:


Trebbiano is a very prolific grape producing upwards of eight tons an acre, like the set of Biggest Loser.


In Portugal the grape is known as Thalia. Ironically, the singer Thalia is the Mexican Brandy.

Trebbiano is a favorite among very dull sommeliers. Are there any other kind?


Other names for Trebbiano:

Bolla Soup (Soave)
Urethra Blanc
Dropping Acid





22 comments:

  1. Arthur Esteban Franciso Maria Conchita Alonzo Conception de Corazon de Jesus de la Vina Przebinda, MD, PhD, PDQ, ret.July 26, 2010 at 9:17 AM

    Lookitya gettin' all social media 'n shiz...

    Is there a grape you DO like?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Does that mean you don't want K to bring her ipod and sing some Taylor Swift for you next month?

    ReplyDelete
  3. But why are you so fucking serious all the time? It's like you drank the Natural Wine Kool-Aid or something.

    --Strappo

    ReplyDelete
  4. Nearly lost my shit on, "distill of the Knight"

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  5. aw, i like blanc plonk as long as it's 11% or lower. or higher.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hey Gang,

    Gee, it's awfully quiet around here.

    OK, we're all sick of the Guide to Grapes. I know, I know, I'm supposed to make fun of bloggers.

    Arthur, I love all grapes unconditionally, except Gruner.

    K, Taylor Swift? Creepy. But I'm not eight years old. By the calendar, anyway.

    Strappo, death and white wine tend to make me depressed.

    No, I love white wine, always have. And I love stupid jokes, always have. Writing blogs--not so much.

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  7. The top two:

    "Hi Ho Stevierino" and "in distill of the Knight."

    Priceless.

    But please: "and now the wine has achieved a certain amount of notoriety..."

    Not unless the wines are well known for criminal activity.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thomas,

    You got me. An inappropriate usage of "notoriety." Mea culpa.

    Hey, I'm no Jay McInerny.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Gosh, but my favorite was the Tonya Harding. The kind of joke that's obvious only in hindsight, but that I could never have come up with myself. And I still think it's funny. That's why we pay comedians, right? How much do we pay you, again, HMW?

    And I like Chardonnay! I guess this is as good a time as any to say haphydr (my word o' the day).

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  10. Trebbiano. Love the line. Best when not made into wine.

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  11. Ron,

    Keep misusing words and you'll surpass Jay's talent for saying nothing...

    ReplyDelete
  12. I think I liked "Dead in the Water." the best.

    You're so quotable and marvelous, Hosey, truly a great American quipster.

    I wish I were as talented as you are.

    --Former Lurker

    ReplyDelete
  13. I'm a fan of white Port with tonic and lemon and ice on the veranda of our house in the Douro.
    I have the port, the tonic, the lemon but neither a veranda nor ice.
    Can someone help me with this?
    If not, we will return to regular programming.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Hi Ron

    Breaded and fried a pork chop, popped the cork on a Gruner, and thought of you.....

    :)

    ReplyDelete
  15. Arthur,
    I always think of Ron when I am pounding my pork but rarely while breading it...

    ReplyDelete
  16. Love, love, lurve the Guide to Grapes, though you know how much your blogger bashing appeals to me as well. And not to be nit-picky, and I'm not one of Tonya's PR agents or a member of her fan club, but if you remember, she never did the actual knee-bashing. There's also a few acres of Arneis in Oregon, growers supporting their Pinot habit I suppose.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Arthur,

    Honestly, you should have breaded and fried the Gruner and given it to the pig.

    My Gorgeous Samantha,

    That's the nicest thing anyone has said to me in months. You pound, I'll pull, it'll be porktastic.

    Tamara Darling,

    I've missed you! Don't be gone so long, I tend to pout.

    Hey, join the nit-picky parade. No, Tonya didn't wield the wood, but she encouraged it. But, really, I didn't care then, and now I don't Kerrigan.

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  18. Please don't pout, really. Let me do it for you (I've been told my lips were made for it, pouting that is). I haven't really been gone, just a bit quiet. Surprised you noticed :) No parades for me thanks.

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  19. Tamara,

    Of course I noticed. I was afraid I scared you off when I ranted and raved at you a few posts ago. Don't mind me, I just occasionally forget to take my meds. Aren't Xanax suppositories?

    ReplyDelete
  20. Ron, these are truly the absolute worst puns (as a group) ever to abuse the English language. But I must add my own favorite to the mix: "Fans of the grape are known as "Arneis Army" and hold an annual tasting at Chateau Palmer."

    What brazen mix of drugs, alcohol, loneliness and genetic malfeasance can possibly have given rise to such punditry? I can only aspire...

    Honored, as always, to be in your prescience...

    ReplyDelete
  21. I honestly love these posts, they get me every time! Please never, ever stop doing these! LOVE IT!!

    ReplyDelete
  22. Dearest Ceci,

    Thank you. Eventually I'll run out of grapes and have to stop. I only have about 5900 to go, so we're getting close. Don't despair, I have a hilarious series on rootstock lined up right behind it.

    Say, why the hell aren't you here more often? No lame excuses.

    ReplyDelete