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Flemings Steakhouse
wine pairing guide

Posts Tagged ‘extraction’

What Makes Wine, Wine

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Chances are, the last time you enjoyed a glass of red wine, that you gave much thought to why the wine looked, smelled and tasted as it did.  Unless you’re steeped in the biochemistry field, you (and I) are simply searching for that well balanced red that can be enjoyed on its own or with food.  But have you ever given thought to why a red looks, smells, tastes and “feels” the way it does in your mouth?  What is it that makes it the perfect match for food or alternatively, what is it that simply fights with a dish? The answer lies within the field of biochemistry.

If not already, familiarize yourself with the term phenol.  While I have no intention of launching into a detailed discussion about the chemical structure of this group of several hundred compounds, they all have a common structural element, a hydroxyl group (-OH) bonded directly to an aromatic hydrocarbon group.  But oh yes, I promised that I would steer clear of biochemistry.  Anyway, bond more than one phenol together and you get……….polyphenols.

Polyphenols are commonly divided into two sub-categories:  flavinoids and non-flavinoids.  As the name implies, flavinoids contain compounds that contribute color and mouthfeel of the wine such as anthocyanins and tannins while the non-flavinoids include the highly publicized and touted compound Resveratrol and numerous acids.

A PC For the Ages

Monday, June 15th, 2009

I am referring here to the Fifth Growth Bordeaux, Pontet Canet (PC), a wine that has risen to prominence in the international Bordeaux markets over the last 10-12 years. Best of all, it sports the balance and depth of a First Growth while priced at a fraction of the price. An added advantage for those starting or building their Bordeaux collection, is that this wine, with proper storage, offers the aging potential for a good 20 years!

First a little history on the estate. Jean-Francois de Pontet, the royal governor of the Medoc on the left bank of the Gironde, combined several plot of vineyards in the Pauillac region in the 18th century. Many years later, his descendents added still more vineyard land in Canet. Fast forward to the 19th century when the infamous 1855 Bordeaux classification recognized Pontet Canet as a worthy addition to the elite. It wasn’t long before Hermann Cruse, a key Bordeaux shipper, purchased the estate in 1865, infusing large amounts of money into the winemaking facilities and building a highly respectable estate. For the next 110 years, the Cruse family owned the estate, selling it in 1975 to, ironically, another shipper, Alfred Tesseron, whose sons now run the estate.

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