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Flemings Steakhouse
wine pairing guide

Posts Tagged ‘Mendoza’

A Worldwide Tour: Oregon, the Loire, Tuscany and Mendoza

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Just so happens that our four wines are from four different countries, making this a truly international Best of the Best. 

Siro Pacenti Brunello di Montalcino, 2000:

Every time I pull out a bottle of this wine, I’m reminded how fabulous a Tuscan Sangiovese can be.  With a perfectly balanced 14% alcohol and lovely fruits of blackberry accented with notes of tobacco smoke and tar, this wine is big yet elegantly smooth, all due to its velvety sweet tannins.  We matched this with pasta and home crafted Bolognese sauce and it was outstanding.  Try pairing also cheeses such as Asiago, Pecorino and Parmesan, game, lamb and grilled, braised, stewed or roasted meats.  It’s a winner with grilled steaks!  Runs around $80 and is ready to enjoy now.   It’s challenging to locate the ’00 but the ’01 and ’04 are definitely worth seeking out although they may run you a little more.

Labor Day Best

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

All of these wines found their way to a spontaneous get together over Labor Day weekend introduced by large shrimp with a horseradish, cilantro and lime cocktail sauce and traditional stone ground and blue chips with fresh guacamole and salsa.  The main dish consisted of grilled citrus marinated carne asada from Dickman’s, Spanish rice and a southwest salad.  The dessert ranged from homemade peach tort, carrot cake and brownies.  We had it all but the Port….next time……..

August Kesseler Rheingau Riesling 2007:

Another Reminder of Why I Love Argentina

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

OK………I admit it………I love Malbecs.  There, I said it.  Yes…I prefer Malbecs to California Cabernets.  I love the blueberry and boysenberry fruits enveloped by soft tannins and minerality.  It’s hard not to pair it with grilled beef.  And best of all, they are so darned affordable!  You can pick up a tasty, quality Malbec these days for under $20 at nearly any spirit store.  Of course if you want to go hog wild, you can ascend the price scale and hit triple digits for the top of the top.  But for most of us, that’s not is our budget.  You can learn more about these wonderful wines in the Wine Education article by Chris Horton (Great Wines Taste Great...). 

The other night, my wife and I discovered still another reason to love the wines that this country produces.  We prepared some AJ’s Chilean sea bass seasoned with dried fish spice (salt, garlic, ginger), oven baked it and finished it off with a Chardonnay mustard.  The combination of the spices, mustard and natural fish oils yielded a rich and rounded flavorful taste, the mustard really bringing the dish to life.  Then I went on the hunt for a full bodied white.  I do have some Loire Chenin Blanc that I love and would have been a fine choice except for my stumbling upon one lonely bottle of Chardonnay.  Now I have to admit, I’m not a huge fan of the rich, oaky and vanilla-toast stained whites.  I much prefer to taste the true expression of the grape and its wine.  But when I looked at the producer, I suspected that I had found the match.  It was a Catena Mendoza 2007 Chardonnay.  I forgot that sometime back, I wanted to try his Chardonnay so I picked up a bottle and threw it into the cellar. 

Lotus Garden
Callaghan Vineyards
Temco
Dos Cabezas Wineworks

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