Wine Type Information Blog

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Wednesday 02/11/09 - Wine Chateau

A Featured Wine Chateau Article

Restaurant Wine List Review - Wine Taste, Why Keep It a Secret?


We?re your customers. That?s right, we pay your bills ? so listen up. Why can?t we understand your wine list? We know what we like, but your wine list doesn?t give us a clue. Ok, so we?re not wine knowledgeable, don?t hate us because we?d still like some wine that we?ll enjoy. We really like wine, especially with a good meal. But we don?t want to study the stuff so we can understand your wine list and know how a wine will taste.

Count these up: 1) County of Origin, 2) Producer, 3) Vintage date, 4) Appellation, 5) Variety of Grape, 6) Vineyard, and 7) season the grapes were picked (Ice Wine, Late Harvest, etc.). That?s right, seven items of information must be catalogued and understood to give us a chance at knowing what a wine tastes like when reading your traditional wine list. Keep six of these, change the seventh, and all bets are off on how the wine will taste. We get as confused as a blind dog in a meat house.

If you hear a lot of us saying, ?Just give me a glass of your house white,? you have a wine list problem. Hey, we?re not too cheap to buy a bottle of wine; we just don?t want to make a sizeable investment in a bottle we may not like. So why keep us in the dark, trying to decipher your wine list code? Why not tell us how the wine tastes, and we?ll pop for a bottle or two.

Expensive restaurants once solved this problem with a sommelier whose job it was to discern our taste preference, analyze the menu we?ve ordered, and recommend a wine we would enjoy with our meal. There are precious few qualified sommeliers around these days, especially in affordable restaurants. When your wait staff recommends, it?s usually wines they like.

The only thing worse than a traditional wine list is one with ?winese? puffery descriptions.
Example: ?This wine has hints of dark tree fruit, root vegetable, autumn leaves, pears, berries and vanilla, with a strong finish of cigar box.? Amazing! Do you have something that tastes like wine?

In January of 1980, Grey Moss Inn in Grey Forrest, Texas, implemented the ?Customer Friendly Wine List.? Customers could order wines by the way they taste for the first time ever. The wine list was divided into categories:

1) Slightly Sweet, 2) Light, Soft, 3) Light, Crisp, Fruity, 3) Fuller, Rounded, Dry,
4) Elegance, Finesse, 5) Robust, Complex, Full Flavored 6) After Dinner Sweet

Red, white and rose wines all appeared in most categories. Some wines like Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon appeared under as many as three categories. As customers, we knew that by staying within a category we could be experimental ordering wine and still enjoy our selection.

Jill Goolden published the book, The Taste of Wine, around 1990 , and about a decade later Fiona Beckett published Wines by Style. The thesis of these books is to classify wine by how it tastes, rather than the seven criteria above. These books led to a rash of wine lists offering up their contents by taste profile ? but these glimmering lights seem to be flickering out.

If you lack the confidence to develop a wine list for your restaurant that lets us order wines by the way they taste, hire a qualified wine consultant, or work closely with your vendors to achieve your goal. Then watch your wines sales grow from glasses to bottles, as we feel comfortable ordering from your list.

Bill Stephens writes the syndicated column http://www.heyrestaurantguy.com . His 35 year career in food service includes restaurateur, caterer, food and wine columnist for Harte-Hanks, Murdoch and Hearst Newspapers, food and wine magazine journalist, and he consults for restaurants with Bill Stephens Associates http://www.billstephensassociates.com



A Short Wine Chateau Summary

Restaurant Wine List Review - Wine Taste, Why Keep It a Secret?


We?re your customers. That?s right, we pay your bills ? so listen up. Why can?t we understand your wine list? We know what we like, but your wine list...


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Wine Chateau Items For Viewing

Montaudon Brut Champagne


Almost all Champagne is made sparkling in the cellars of Reims, France. Deep below the cities the chalk subsoil has been cut out into vast caves and cellars. Most of these cellars are laid out in broad alleyways, named after the principal cities of the world where Champagne is sold. The only wine with any right to the name Champagne is that made from certain legally specified grapes grown in limited and well-defined sections of the province of France called Champagne. Here the vines are tended and vinified according to a body of strict rules. All this and much more make Champagne what it is. Since 1891, the Montaudon family has been faithful to the ancestral traditions. Every year, during winter, after the still wines are produced from the noble Champagne grape varieties (Chardonnay-Pinot Noir- Pinot Meunier), the blending process begins in the deep cellars...In the shadow of the famous cathedral at the heart of Reims, our Champagnes are created through the heavenly marriage of magnificent "crus" and outstanding years. Enjoy! SW60045 SW60045


Price: 65.95 USD



Wine Chateau in the news

Chateau Le Pin Pomerol 1999

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The Chateau Le Pin Pomerol 1999 is truly one of the most illustrious wines to come out of Bordeaux. Its fullness comes from the downy levels of mocha, black cherry and currant flavors. It’s a favorite of serious wine collectors. Chateau Le Pin Pomerol 1999 is full bodied and as loaded with tannins as it is with fruits. Cost? About $900 a bottle.

The event to kick off the Boston Wine Expo: Jazzed About Win

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Enjoy a night of jazz and fine wines from Chateau Montelena, Silver Oak and more.

Chateau Pech-Latt

Fri, 16 Jan 2009 14:05:25 -0800
Expensive red organic wine with attractive label but still... a waste of money.

Incredible Hotel Made From Salvaged Wine Casks

Wed, 14 Jan 2009 13:56:20 -0800
The De Vrouwe van Stavoren Hotel in the Netherlands salvaged four wine casks from Switzerland and converted them into rooms. Formerly filled with 14,500 liters of Beaujolais wine from the French chateau, each now holds a modest two-person room with standard amenities and even an attached bathroom and sitting room.

Petrus Pomerol 1998 - World’s most famous wine?

Mon, 22 Dec 2008 09:12:46 -0800
Chateau Petrus is probably the world’s most famous and most coveted fine wine. The 1998 Pétrus Pomerol is a deep red colour and has a highly concentrated nose with notes of plum and black truffle. Upon swirling, it releases rich aromas of mocha. This particular Merlot was one of the favorite wines at the White House during the Kennedy years.

All you need to know about Wines

Mon, 22 Dec 2008 00:24:30 -0800
The Indian party scene is now accepting wine as a great way to enjoy an evening. Not many of us know what food goes best with what kind of wine or Wine Punehow is it best stored. Therefore, MetroMela got all this info for you from Chateau Indage, India’s largest and oldest wine company, established in 1982.

All you need to know about wines – Part II

Mon, 22 Dec 2008 00:22:26 -0800
As promised, we have the second guide on the two-part series of Wine Drinking. Hope you liked this one just as much as you did the first one, thanksWine Chateau to expert wine trainer from Chateau Indage, Pune. In this section we give you a lowdown on wine etiquette like tasting, storing and serving.


Liquor Cabinet
Wine Source
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