Monday, April 28, 2014

Wine as a Marinate


Wine makes a great marinate. There is no finer way of installing a wine’s flavour into a dish. Perhaps more importantly, the acid in wine helps tenderize meat. This is especially beneficial for less expensive cuts. It also helps improve texture. The longer the meat marinates, the more tender it will become and more wine flavour it will possess. Utilize only glass or glazed ceramic to marinate in. Never ever use metal as it contains lead and may leach. After use, don’t save the marinate for another time either. Dispose of it immediately. If you want to baste with the same marinate while cooking, mix up a fresh batch. Alternately, you could simply reserve some for this purpose when you make the first batch.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Wine and Memory


Good memory is a real plus in wine appreciation. Remembering and recognizing certain sensory characteristics is crucial to judging wine. Of course making tasting notes helps, but what good is building up a “wine library” of characteristic smells and tastes in the brain if you can’t recall them when desired? A good memory saves time, promotes better results and allows the taster to sample and compare more products. To increase your memory in general, and especially for wine, try shaking your brain cells up a bit. For example, if you’re right-handed, try brushing your teeth with your left hand. Instead of smelling coffee first thing in the morning, take a whiff of vanilla extract. Simple exercises like this should help.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Cork Update


TCA or trichloroanisole is a defect that infects wine corks making the wine under it smell musty/mouldy. It’s the main reason so many producers have switched to other enclosures like plastic/polymer corks and screw caps for wine. Portugal, the largest creator of wine corks, has spent meg-bucks in their production process to rectify this problem. Because of this, less wines today are affected by TCA and as a result, many producers are starting to go back to cork enclosures for their wines. A good thing, if you ask me! Because corks are porous, they provide micro-oxygenation helping a wine better evolve with age. More aesthetic and romantic, there’s nothing quite like the pop of a cork being extracted from a bottle.  

Monday, April 7, 2014

Balance


Balance is the most important aspect of a wine and is key as to whether it works in the mouth or not and detrimental to its aging ability, especially for reds. When one speaks of balance, it is usually the fruit (sweetness) and acid (sourness) that is of concern. If too much acid, the wine will taste sharp and astringent. If not enough, it will come across as cloying or flabby. This fruit/acid balance must exist in a wine upon creation and, if absent, no amount of aging will provide it. Other elements like too much oak, excessive alcohol and even hard, unripe, aggressive tannins can also render a wine unbalanced on another level. When it comes to balance in a wine, it’s all about harmony of components. This is crucial.