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Food & Wine Food & Drink

On the culinary properties of coffee and wine.

Thanks to the impact that coffee and wine have on my taste buds, breakfast turns me into a speed freak. Steak, meanwhile, converts me into a temporary alcoholic — at least until it’s gone.

Put me in front of a greasy or sweet breakfast, and I’m going to drink coffee like it’s oxygen. This is how my body extracts maximum pleasure from the muffin or omelet I’m chewing — by bathing my mouthful in coffee. The coffee’s acidic bitterness makes the flavors of the food stand out and completes the meal. I’ve researched this relationship at many a greasy-spoon diner, where servers endlessly circle to keep your cup full. What the coffee lacks in quality, it makes up for in quantity. That’s important when you’re eating with a beverage condiment, because the last thing you want is for that well to dry up.

Later in the day, there are many foods that essentially command me to drink wine. If I’m chewing a succulent piece of meat, for example, I need to be drinking wine at exactly the same time. Otherwise I get distressed, like an addict in withdrawal.

While there are many foods that go well with wine, only one, meat, will make me drink wine like a dehydration victim would drink Gatorade. When meat and wine are available, it is a scientific fact that I will be stuffed and wasted. And that is pretty much the only time you will see me wasted.

Other than producing buzzes, coffee and wine otherwise seem completely different. But if you look beneath the surface you can see that they are competing for the same niche in the ecosystem of your dining table: the acidic beverage niche.

Acidity serves to enhance the pleasure derived from fatty foods. The fat coats your taste buds and the acid washes that fat away, exposing and stimulating the taste buds and creating fireworks of juxtaposition. If necessary, you may have to adjust fat levels to achieve this balance. I generally do so with mayonnaise.

This principle of creative tension is at the heart of established pairings like wine with cheese, coffee with cream, and 10,000 other flavor combinations.

One thing you rarely see is coffee and wine together. One of them always needs to be there, but having both would be like having two alpha males in the same room. Potentially rough, and at the very least, awkward and uncomfortable. It turns out that another one of my favorite foods — chili pepper, aka chiles — can smooth over this tension.

Like wine and coffee, chiles go exceptionally well with fat, from the jalapeño popper and its elder, the chile relleno, to the requisite squirt of hot sauce upon your big greasy breakfast.

Like coffee and wine, chiles produce their own kind of buzz — an adrenaline rush, to be exact. And like the others, chiles have many proven and suspected medical benefits, including reducing body inflammation and improving lipid levels in the blood. But unlike coffee, wine, or fat, there are few apparent reasons not to indulge one’s chile-tooth to its fullest.

For years, I took it as a given coffee and wine simply don’t mix. It’s an either/or situation. But this assumption was discredited when I bit into a piece of pork belly that had been braised with red wine, coffee, and red chile.

Amazingly, the coffee and wine were able to join forces and forge a common flavor all their own. This union was mediated by the chile, the sharp bitterness and sweetness of which formed a narrow bridge between the normally disparate flavors of wine and coffee. That all this flavor alchemy came together in the context of a succulent piece of pork made the experience all the more mouth-melting.

This revelation went down at the magical, and sadly defunct Casa Vieja in Corrales, New Mexico, where I consumed this dish next to a crackling fire of fragrant desert wood. Since then I’ve endeavored to recreate this recipe, and somewhere along the line I think I actually surpassed the original, stealing tricks from similar recipes I found online.

My current version combines pork and venison, but any meat will work, even chicken. Bones, whether in oxtail, osso buco, or ribs, will improve the result. The tougher the meat, the better. But if using very lean meat, there needs to be some fat, like bacon or olive oil.

The wine and coffee-based broth tastes kind of disharmonious when you first combine the ingredients. But it eventually cooks into something special, a flavor that is deep and darkly delicious and thoroughly unique.

Ari LeVaux

Bitter rivals unite.

Fatty meat cooked in coffee and wine

2 lbs meat

1 cup wine, of a quality you would drink

1 cup of strong coffee (no greasy spoon brew here)

3 bay leaves

1 large onion, chopped

2 cloves garlic, chopped

2 tablespoons mild red chile powder

2 Santa Fe-style dried mild red chiles, seeded and crumbled

2 mild pasilla chiles (or more red chiles), seeded and crumbled

Salt, pepper, and garlic powder

Olive oil

Brown the meat in whole chunks under the broiler. In a pan, sauté the onions, garlic, and bay leaves in oil. When onions are translucent, add chiles. Cook a minute, stirring, then add the coffee and wine. Cook until the volume reduces by half. Season with salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Add the meat. Cover meat with stock or water, and slow cook or braise for four-to-eight hours, until meat is completely tender. Add water, wine, or stock as necessary to replace any evaporated liquid. Season again.

Serve in a bowl with minced onions and a hunk of bread, which will absorb the mysterious broth and deliver it to your mouth, where no further adjustments will be necessary.

This dish won’t give a caffeine high or a wine buzz, but it provides a kick all of its own. It was, after all, the pursuit of a flavor fix along these lines that got me into coffee and wine to begin with.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Homecoming

Last spring, former Memphians Robert and Shirley Turner returned home for an extended stay, and they liked what they saw. “We’d always come back to spend a long weekend or a week or two at a time, but this spring we spent over three months visiting family and friends and absolutely loved it,” Robert says. “Over the last five or 10 years, Memphis’ restaurant quality and interest in fine wines have increased dramatically.”

The Turners are founders of Robert Turner Wines, a boutique winery in Northern California. During their visit to Memphis, the Turners formed a relationship with Kelly English, chef and owner of Restaurant Iris, which, in turn, led to the creation of “Iris Cuvée” Chardonnay, to be sold exclusively at the restaurant.

Robert Turner, a dentist for 37 years with a practice in Palo Alto, California, was bitten by the wine bug decades ago.

“We started visiting wineries and collecting wine in the early ’70s around Northern California,” he says. “I had my picture taken with Robert Mondavi shortly after he opened his winery in 1977 at a Dental Society dinner we hosted there. He poured wine and chatted with all of us. That led to a deeper interest in wine, and, in 1986, I, with a group of five friends, started making wine together. We converted part of a garage into a winery on a property in the Santa Cruz Mountains and called it ‘Rancho Diablo.’ We hired a winemaker as a consultant, and I took classes at UC-Davis in everything from wine chemistry to sparkling-wine production. I still have a bottle of our original 1986 Cabernet!”

In 2004, the Turners founded Robert Turner Wines. As winemaker, Turner handcrafts Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, and a red blend, selling only 500 cases a year. (By way of comparison, some wineries produce as much as 250,000 cases a year.)

“I try to make wines that are varietally correct and express the terroir where the grapes are grown,” Turner says. “I structure the reds to go well with food at an early age without heavy-handed tannins or heavy oak that require years in the cellar to smooth out and yet have good depth of fruit flavors and richness. The Chardonnay is aged only partially in new oak, so the fruit flavors come through, and fermentations are done in stainless steel. All my wines are made with food in mind so as to complement, not overpower, a meal.”

While the Turners don’t own their own vineyards, they source from some of the most highly sought after vineyards in California.

“The two major vineyards where we buy grapes — Dutton Ranch in Russian River Valley and Beckstoffer Vineyard in Rutherford — both practice sustainable, green farming practices, with very rare use of chemicals. This type of viticulture is very important to the long-term future of the vineyards and to the quality of the grapes we buy,” Turner says.

Needless to say, the Turners aren’t making simple plonk. They are painstakingly crafting some of the most sublime and ethereal wines coming out of the Golden State right now, which makes the Iris Cuvée all the more special.

“It was a happy miracle that this unique cuvée came to fruition,” says Chef English. “Mr. and Mrs. Turner came in for dinner a number of times over the spring, and we would talk about food and wine. It just fell into place. We are honored to have this partnership considering how little Turner Wines produces. Most of their production goes to their wine club with the remainder selling to restaurants in San Francisco.”

Tasting the care and love inside the bottle of a wine made by a son of the Bluff City should be very intriguing to Memphis wine lovers.

“Mr. Turner personally blended just a few cases of the Iris Cuvée Chardonnay for us, keeping in mind our style of cuisine,” says Jeff Frisby of Restaurant Iris. “It’s not much wine, but it’s something we are very proud to offer our guests.”

robertturnerwines.com

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Northwest Glory

Even though it is one of the youngest growing regions on the market, Washington state has quickly gained worldwide recognition with their wines, garnering high ratings from Wine Spectator and Wine Enthusiast, as well as spotlights in Food & Wine, Gourmet, and The New York Times. It isn’t just hype — these winemakers can back it up.

One such winemaker happens to be a Memphian. Ron Bunnell, owner and winemaker of Bunnell Family winery and RiverAerie, was born and raised in Memphis, attended Kingsbury, and studied at the University of Memphis. Initially, Bunnell wasn’t too impressed with Washington. “I got my second master’s from the University of California-Davis in viticulture,” he says. “I had friends from UC-Davis who had moved to Washington to pursue their career, so I had knowledge of what was going on up here as far back as 1982 — not much great red wine and lots of Riesling.

“It wasn’t until I was considering taking the job of head red winemaker for Chateau Ste. Michelle in 1999 that I really started to survey the Columbia Valley wines extensively,” Bunnell continues. “I was impressed by the overall wine quality but even more by the pioneering spirit of the winemakers and growers at the time. It reminded of the California wine industry 20 years prior.”

It’s that pioneering spirit that led some of the now-top wineries to create their own industry. Names such as Andrew Will, McCrea, and L’Ecole No. 41 are now among the top producers in the world. But it wasn’t always so.

“Washington was very different back then — less than half the number of wineries as today,” Bunnell says. “Red winemaking was still developing. There was less than 200 acres of Syrah in the state when I got here, very little Sangiovese in production, only one clone of Merlot, and one clone of Cabernet in production, very few secondary red varieties.”

Today, the excitement is not only palpable but palatable.

“What makes Washington unique is the long day length in the middle of the growing season. We just so happen to be on the same latitude as Bordeaux,” Bunnell says. “We have relatively poor soils, which generally make the best wines. There are enough heat units in the growing season to ripen almost any variety. Another factor is water. We enjoy fairly arid conditions, with only about 12 inches of rainfall per year. That means that we have to employ deficit irrigation to control berry size and plant vigor. All of this translates into a high degree of control and naturally favorable factors to produce world-class wines.”

The future of Washington wine can be seen in the impressive Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon-based blends, and especially their Rhône varietals, such as Syrah.

“I believe that Syrah and other Rhône varieties are potentially the most important black grapes in Washington. My wife Susan and I love working with these varieties and love the wines made from them,” Bunnell says. “In the end, it’s all about following your passion.”

Bunnell has had the pleasure of exploring both sides of his passion. His Bunnell Family Winery focuses on Rhône varietals, such as Grenache and Syrah, while his RiverAerie project allows him to explore the potential of other grape varieties.

“We like to say that RiverAerie is everything else we are interested in,” Bunnell says. “As a winemaking consultant, I come across some excellent grapes and wines. We select small lots of outstanding wines for RiverAerie. The philosophy behind RiverAerie is to showcase the fruit from exceptional vineyards and offer a great value to the customer. I’m very excited about Malbec. I’ve seen some great results in the past few years, and I think its potential in Washington is great.”

When asked about his favorite food and wine pairing, Bunnell had this to say: “I like to quote Piero Antinori, with whom I had the pleasure to work. Piero once said to an interviewer who had asked the same question, ‘We really don’t think about it that much … we just eat what we like and drink what we like.'”

Recommended Wines

Bunnell Family Clifton Hill Vineyard Syrah 2005, $45.99

Bunnell Family “A Pic” Rhône Blend 2005, $30.99

L’Ecole No. 41 “Walla Voila” Chenin Blanc 2007, $17.99

L’Ecole No. 41 Merlot 2005, $35.99

Andrew Will Champoux Vineyard 2005, $60.99

Andrew Will Annie Camard Syrah 2003, $61.99

RiverAerie Riesling 2006, $17.99

RiverAerie Malbec 2006, $19.99

RiverAerie Barbera 2006, $22.99

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Little Italy

Memphians have always followed their own path when it comes to wine. We’ve largely ignored the trends and developed our own palates, and this has worked to our advantage. By pushing the boundaries and finding for ourselves those gems in the wine world, we have essentially created our own identity. That identity has finally been noticed.

Recently, Marc de Grazia Selections brought a group of Italian winemakers to Memphis for a wine tasting for members of the trade. Marc de Grazia and family personally select top-quality wines from across Italy for importing into the U.S. The de Grazias have relationships with some of the most coveted wine-producing families in Italy, such as Paolo Scavino, Pertimali, Cavallotto, and La Spinetta. These names are on the tip of the tongues of Italian wine lovers the world over.

Memphis, a so-called secondary market, was one of the few cities that Marc de Grazia brought his trade tasting to. Walking through Delta Wholesale’s warehouse, tasting incredible wine and speaking with winemakers, such as Giuseppe Cavallotto, was surreal. Cavallotto expressed the care, passion, and love it takes to tend to the vines and craft the wine. Cavallotto stressed that he makes wine in the traditional fashion without the influence of too many modern techniques or technologies. “We make wine the way it has been made for centuries in Piemonte,” he said.

“We have been distributing Marc de Grazia [wines] for over 12 years now,” said Bill Lucchesi of Delta Wholesale. Delta distributes Marc de Grazia selections for importer Vin Divino locally. “We have always attended their shows in Verona, Italy, and in Chicago. We have discussed doing a trade event here with the wine makers for the past three to four years.”

Italian wines are not easy to understand. Italy has roughly 1,000 different grapes being grown for wine across the entire country. Most wine drinkers are all too comfortable with Cabernet, Merlot, and Pinot Noir. But the thirst for Italian wine has grown in Memphis to such a degree that the suppliers are taking notice.

“We never were able to hold such a tasting event [before] because we needed to get Memphis to understand Italian wines,” Lucchesi said. “After several years of promoting Italian wines and seeing the growth explode, we knew we were ready for a big tasting.”

What Italy offers in wine runs the gamut of price and quality. “Over the past several years, Italy has been producing more and more affordable and approachable wines,” Lucchesi said. “It’s not just Chianti and Barolos anymore.”

What the winemakers poured at Delta’s warehouse was a beautiful cross-section of what the entire country is capable of. There were crisp whites from the Frascati region, sensual red Brunello di Montalcino, and uniquely expressive Nerello Mascalese produced from 100-year-old vines.

“I think this has had a tremendous impact in Memphis,” Lucchesi said. “It’s not just Italian restaurants selling Italian wines anymore. Wine consumers need the restaurants and wine retail stores to help them with their selections, and I see every day less consumer intimidation.”

It’s true that currently many restaurants across the city have Italian wines on their lists, much more so than in even the recent past. Retail shops are giving more space to Italian selections, but not all yet understand these wines, so choose wisely and ask questions.

“We are a bit tired of going to New York, Tokyo, etc.,” explained Iano de Grazia, co-directed of Marc de Grazia Selections. “We saw Memphis as an adventure and opportunity. Our group of winemakers didn’t really remember Seattle or New York on this trip, but everyone remembers Memphis.”

Recommended Wines

Cavallotto Dolcetto d’Alba 2006 Piedmont, $22.99

Le Terrazze Rosso Conero 2005 Marche, $23.99

Piazzano Rio Camerata 2005 Chianti, $17.99

Tavignano Verdicchio 2006, $16.99

Paolo Scavino Rosso da Tavola 2006 Piedmont, $22.99

Ciacci Piccolomini Poggio della Fonte 2005, $15.99

Costantini Massarossa Frascati 2006, $16.99

Grimaldi Barbera d’Alba 2004, $26.99

Paolo Scavino Barolo 2003, $67.99

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

The New French

French wine is no longer just for trophy wine collectors and snobs, thankfully. To compete in the global market, both new and established importers are seeking out more unique, interesting, and value-driven wines from all over France. Many of the wines are coming from regions and appellations that are just establishing themselves.

Jean-Philippe Bourgeois, of the importer Bourgeois Family Selections, is practicing the “New French.” “As more wine enters the market and the business of wine develops, people have become more aware and knowledgeable and have learned to appreciate finer wines and values,” Bourgeois explains. “They have become more educated, and thus their palate has become more sophisticated and eager for new sensations.”

Bourgeois is a French native who operates his business out of North Carolina.

“Passion and family is what pushed me into the wine business,” Bourgeois says, echoing a traditional way of thinking that has been held in France for years … with an environmentally friendly twist: “We really had no direct intent to go solely green when we set out to source the wines. We simply chose the best wines that truly excelled at their terroir and expression of the fruit. They just so happened to be organic, biodynamic, or sustainable-farmed.

“Organic wines contribute to less pollution on the earth and in your body,” Bourgeois continues. “They promote a better balance within all living organisms and a respect for nature’s cycles and future generations.”

The wines Bourgeois imports taste alive and vibrant, as if some natural cycle of energy is continuing within them. His traditional yet forward-thinking mindset played a major part when Bourgeois was sourcing wines for his portfolio. He made a committed effort to only pursue small family estates.

“True biodynamic farming cannot be achieved by large estates. You have to be small,” Bourgeois says. “It is a choice of work, but [it’s one of] philosophy above all. Winemakers [when working within small family estates] have more time and attention for the vines and grapes.”

One of the most interesting wines in the portfolio is the Domaine du Crampilh “Cuvée L’Originel” from the Madiran region. The Madiran is located southwest of Bordeaux. Winemakers there specialize in the little-known grape Tannat. The Crampilh sticks to tradition with wild aromas of herb, smoke, and a meaty, chewy quality on the palate. The fullness on the nose and the palate is not at the expense of the beauty, balance, and grace of the wine. It just goes to show that the French can give you power and elegance at the same time.

Bourgeois and his wife Stephanie work the market themselves, making personal visits to Memphis to oversee wine dinners, meet with retail shops and restaurants, and interact with the public. This interaction further dissipates the long-held thought that French wine is only for the elite. Bourgeois has an energy and passion that is palpable. He lets the wines speak for themselves, and they speak volumes.

Recommended Wines

Clos Teddi Patrimonio Blanc Tradition 2006, Corsica. $22.99

Chateau Capion “1C” Rouge 2005, Languedoc. $17.99

Domaine des Florets 2006, Gigondas, Rhône Valley. $30.99

Domaine de Chateumar Cuvée Bastien 2006, Côtes du Rhône. $15.99

Domaine de la Berthete “Sensation” 2006, Côtes du Rhône. $12.99

Domaine du Crampilh “Cuvée L’Originel, Madiran. $18.99

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

The Best Wines for the Holidays

With the holiday season comes not only “Jingle Bells” but also a chorus of corks popping. There are a bevy of choices when it comes to this style of wine — traditional and modern and sometimes even a little of both. Yes, bubbly can be expensive, but when chosen wisely, it is worth every single penny. Whether it’s dry, sweet, or in between, there are quality offerings in every category and some that do more than surprise.

Gosset was founded in France’s Ay region of Champagne by Pierre Gosset in 1584. He immediately established the level of quality and maniacal attention to detail that is still carried out in the winery today …

Read the rest of Michael Hughes holiday libation story from the Flyer here.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Wines To Warm Up To

It’s nearly winter and time for palates to adjust from lighter dishes and wines to something more substantial. And while full-bodied reds and rich dessert wines are delicious year-round, they are even more enjoyable when there’s a chill in the air.

One of the most versatile and food-friendly red grapes is Syrah. The earthy flavors of a bubbling pot of diced lamb, carrots, sweet potatoes, tomato, red wine, rosemary, and Yukon gold potatoes are a perfect match for a well-made Syrah. In the U.S., quite a few regions produce top-quality wines with this grape, which is native to the Rhône Valley of France. Washington State winemakers are creating wines reminiscent of those from the northern Rhône. Earthy flavors are prominent, along with hints of spice, smoke, and bacon. Many winemakers in the Central Coast area of California are also producing impressive Syrahs. In addition to aromas of dried meat, their wines are typically laden with blueberry, blackberry, and plum.

Malbec is another grape that matches wonderfully with winter dishes. Its traditional home is the Cahors region of southwest France. It’s also used in Bordeaux but merely as a blending grape to add certain flavor, texture, and color dimensions to their wines. Likewise, in Northern California vintners harvest the Malbec grape for the purpose of blending into Cabernet Sauvignon-dominated wines. However, in Argentina this hearty berry is the star.

Nicolas Catena is a perfect example of the ingenuity and forward-thinking occurring in Argentina’s wine world. He brought this humble grape to the world-renowned level that it enjoys today. The Malbec typically produces a full-bodied, bold, spicy wine with hints of mocha, black licorice, blackberry, and earth. What Catena does so well is offer different expressions of Malbec at different price points for different occasions. If it’s a Tuesday-night red wine to sip on while reading a book, he has the Alamos brand. To pair with a rib-eye on a Friday night, choose the Catena Malbec. For a special occasion, the Catena Alta Malbec is the choice. The berries that go into this Alta Malbec are hand-selected from vineyards as high as 3,800 feet above sea level in the Andes. The stress of growing at such an altitude forces the grapes to work hard, thus producing concentrated berries with flavors and textures that are haunting.

Dessert wines can add another layer of warmth and comfort to a meal. However, many wine drinkers still don’t experiment with them the way they do with reds and whites. These wines are written off by many as merely sweet. Much as the right red wine can combine with a piece of meat to create amazing flavors, a luscious dessert wine can pair beautifully with a gorgeous dessert or cheese.

One of the best pairings is Vin Santo, or “Ice Wine,” and Cabrales (a blue-veined cheese from Spain, available locally at Mantia’s). Vin Santo is a dessert wine produced in the Chianti region of Tuscany. The grapes are hung in drying rooms to concentrate into rich nectar, leaving very little juice behind to ferment into wine. The lively acidity prevents the wine from being too sweet.

There are other unbelievable dessert wines being produced around the world. But be forewarned: They can be expensive due to their labor-intensive production and limited amounts. That doesn’t mean there aren’t values available to begin a journey into dessert wines.

Recommended Wines

Chateau Ste. Michelle 2003, Columbia Valley, Washington $15.99

Ventana Syrah 2003, Monterey County, California $21.99

Cusumano Syrah 2005, Sicily, Italy $16.99

Clos la Coutale 2005, Cahors, France $18.99

Alamos Malbec 2005, Mendoza, Argentina $11.99

Catena Malbec 2005, Mendoza, Argentina $24.99

Catena “Alta” Malbec 2003, Mendoza, Argentina $55.99

Jackson Triggs Ice Wine 2005, Ontario, Canada $20.99

Rudolf Muller, Eiswein, Germany $19.99

Alois Kracher Cuvée Beerenauslese 2005, Austria $33.99

Felsina Vin Santo 1999 Chianti, Classico, Italy $35.99

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Head over heels for wines from Down Under

In 1997, Dan Philips, founder of Grateful Palate Imports, tasted his first Shiraz in Melbourne, Australia.

“It was like stumbling onto some kind of undiscovered winemaking utopia,” Philips says. “It was like Ponce de Leon discovering the Fountain of Youth.”

According to Philips, he finally found what he had been looking for “as a wine-obsessed teenager growing up in San Francisco.” It is that very first taste that drives his passion for Australian wine of all kinds. He spends much of the year in Australia visiting wineries in order to find the best wines to import to the United States.

What struck him about that Shiraz was the red’s brashness, a trait that is shared by Philips and drives his staunch defense of Australia’s wine industry. For those wine drinkers who view Australia as nothing more than a giant bucket of mediocre grape juice, Philips has a response.

“I hope you have lots of money so you can afford very expensive psychoanalysis and figure out your very deep problems or can afford to have a tongue implant,” he kids. The way he sees it, detractors of Australian wine probably “think Wilco is a bad band, Michael Stipe can’t sing, a monkey could paint Mark Rothko paintings, and barbecue is not haute cuisine.”

Even here in Memphis, we don’t view barbecue as haute cuisine. We view it as simply good food. We know what we like, and barbecue never fails to deliver. Many Australian wines are the same. They give wine drinkers what they want: simplicity, loads of flavor, and the total lack of needing to be overanalyzed.

“Australian winemakers are extremely wine-literate,” Philips says. “They’ve traveled the world and seen it all. But even with all this influence, they remain proudly Australian and want to make Australian wines. They, or at least the ones I’ve met and work with, don’t try to make Bordeaux rip-offs.”

The wine critic Robert Parker, founder of The Wine Advocate, has gone so far as to call Philips’ palate “brilliant,” a statement he has backed up by lavishing several 90-plus point ratings on the wines Grateful Palate represents. It is no secret that high scores drive sales in the wine business. These high ratings from Parker’s Wine Advocate and from Wine Spectator have aided the growth of Grateful Palate Imports in Memphis and across the country. But the growth is sustained by consumers returning to the wines over and over again.

They return to the 2005 Marquis Philips Cabernet Sauvignon for the “big, thick, juicy, fresh, exuberant blackberry and cassis fruit intermixed with striking vanillin and pain grille characteristics,” as described by Parker. They also return for the value that many of the wines offer. The Pillar Box Red blend (rated 91 points by Parker) sells for approximately $12.

Philips, for one, isn’t bothered by wine drinkers who don’t care for what Australia has to offer. “Thanks for liking bad wine,” he says. “It leaves more for those of us who don’t dream about meeting Larry Craig in the men’s room to drink. Have you ever had a bottle of Chateau Hypocrite? You’d love it in magnum.”

Marquis Philips “Holly’s Blend” 2006, Southeastern Australia, $12.99

Evil Cabernet Sauvignon 2005, Southeastern Australia, $12.99

McLean’s Farm Shiraz-Cabernet 2004, South Australia, $17.99

Hare’s Chase Red Blend 2005, Barossa Valley, $17.99

Marquis Philips Shiraz 2005, Southeastern Australia, $19.99

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

A Café Makeover

Café de France, inside Palladio Antiques & Art, closed in June. In its place is Café Palladio, which opened in early September. And while the address is the same, the café itself has gotten a facelift.

“We raised the floor so that all tables are on the same level, and we updated the furniture,” says Rebekah Vaughn, the café’s manager. “We’re using white tablecloths for a brighter, more contemporary look.”

Former Café de France regulars won’t be disappointed. Even though most baked goods aren’t made in-house anymore, the menu still offers great lunch fare. Sandwiches such as “Chunkie-Chicken Salad,” “Southern Fried Green Tomato,” and “Dixie Delight” (a vegetarian option) come with a choice of potato, fruit, pasta, or side salad. Large salads include grilled chicken Caesar, Greek chicken salad, and pear and walnut salad, among others. Desserts are plentiful too: Homemade brownies, coconut cake, and layer cake (caramel, red velvet, strawberry, chocolate) come from Sugaree’s Bakery in New Albany, Mississippi, and there are locally made sweets, such as Ms. Katz Cobblers, based on availability.

Café Palladio is open for lunch Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Café Palladio, 2169 Central (278-0129)

This year’s Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany, was another record year for the world-famous event. From September 22nd to October 7th, visitors drank 6.7 million mass, the standard one-quart beer served from tap in humongous steins. The Wiesn, the locals’ name for the fest, drew 6.2 million visitors. On one Saturday, thirsty guests were turned away from the beer tents just a few minutes after opening at 9 a.m. because they were already at maximum capacity.

If you didn’t make it to Munich this year, try local brew pubs and restaurants for a little Oktoberfest spirit.

The Flying Saucer (130 Peabody Place, 523-7468) offers Spaten Oktober, Paulaner Oktober, Sam Adams October, and Dogfish Head Pumpkin Ale on tap. Buffalo Bill’s Wild Pumpkin and Schlafly Pumpkin beer in bottles should arrive any day now. In honor of Oktoberfest, the pub holds a monk’s blessing of the kegs every Friday at 5 p.m. during October.

At Boscos Squared (2120 Madison, 432-2222), you can enjoy Boscos Oktoberfest on tap for a limited time. It’s Boscos’ version of the full-flavored, full-bodied, golden German beer.

Tuesday on the Terrace at the Memphis Botanic Garden (750 Cherry, 576-4131) on October 30th is also Oktoberfest-themed. Instead of beer, guests can enjoy German and Alsatian wines and German food. The event is from 6 to 8 p.m. Reservations are suggested. Cost for the event is $25 per person.

The coming weeks offer plenty of opportunities for those who want to eat good and do good too. October 23rd is the date for the Great Chefs Tasting, the annual tasting and silent auction benefiting United Cerebral Palsy. Participating restaurants include Grill 83, Memphis Pizza Café, Circa, Folks Folly, Café 61, Central BBQ, Soul Fish, Celtic Crossing, and many others. Tickets for the event, which is being held at the Pink Palace Museum, are $40 in advance and $45 at the door. For tickets, call 320-6362.

On November 2nd, you can raise your wine glass to support the National Kidney Foundation of West Tennessee during this year’s Sip Around the World. The event at the Memphis Botanic Garden offers fine wines, hors d’oeuvres, and live and silent auctions. Tickets are $65 in advance and $75 at the door. The event starts at 7 p.m. For tickets, call 683-6185 or visit www.nkfwtn.org.

From November 5th through 12th, you can help “Feed the Need” by adding a donation to the Memphis Food Bank to your restaurant bill. The Food Bank serves more than 300 agencies in the Mid-South and helps prevent hunger by delivering food to the needy and through services such as the Kids Café and the Food for Kids BackPack and the Prepared and Perishable Meals Recovery programs.

For more information and a list of participating restaurants, call 527-0841 or visit www.memphisfoodbank.org.

Categories
Food & Wine Food & Drink

The Wines That Bind Us.

Far from today’s romance-infused experience, weddings, up through the Middle Ages, were about politics and survival. Families united in economics and power, love be damned. But in this modern age, amorous couples, after the maudlin ceremony and the raucous party, fend for themselves after exchanging vows. This month, I will be entering into this social and legal rite, binding myself to a man for, hopefully, life.

Organizing the wedding ritual, we’ve rejected many silly traditions like the ridiculous garter toss and deflected numerous parental supplications, but to be honest, the hardest thing hasn’t been juggling the guest list or the family — it’s been choosing the wines. Many curious folk have inquired what this wine critic will serve at her own wedding, and, naturally, the pressure to deliver is quite palpable. Then that minor issue of budget hangs in the air. I’m, ahem, an older bride, so my parents aren’t exactly shelling out like I’m a 22-year-old. Satisfying the wallet and the palate has been a soul search.

The bubbly is perhaps the most important decision. In celebration, people will be swilling it all night, and serving a better one helps avoid hangovers. Caterers and halls normally offer limited (and quite average) wine selections, so inquire about outside purchasing like I did. Buying in bulk without a huge markup offers a significant cost savings. Although you might incur a dreaded “corkage fee,” weigh the cost difference as well as the enjoyment factor. Don’t bitch about this. Corkage fees (ranging from $3 to $20 per bottle) cover the overhead costs a caterer incurs for the wine service. But fees are, however, highly negotiable.

If budget wasn’t an issue for me, I’d pour Schramsberg Vineyards, a fantastic Sonoma Valley sparkling wine house. But at about $35 a bottle, this 38-year-old balked. I finally decided on Domaine Carneros Brut, the delicious California outpost of France’s Taittinger, which hurts less at $20 — before retail markup. If you need something even less expensive, there are excellent alternatives around $10 — Italian Prosecco (Mionetto) or Spanish Cava (Segura Viudas Aria).

Since my betrothed and I are both wine geeks, our reception is a three-course wine dinner. A hefty food base cushions the evening’s drinking agenda. And we love to eat, as do our friends and family. On the menu is lemony and dry Altanuta 2006 Pinot Grigio ($17), fruity yet robust Bonny Doon 2004 Syrah le Pousseur ($15), minerally and soft Joseph Drouhin 2005 Chablis Domaine de Vaudon ($22), earthy and bold Marchesi di Barolo 2003 Barolo ($45 — our splurge wine — second mortgage?), and a slightly sweet and fizzy Beni di Batasiolo 2005 Moscato d’Asti ($14) for the wedding cake.

For the infamous cake toast, serve a sweeter sparkling wine rather than a dry brut. The sugary smack of the cake will turn a brut pungent and flat. Look for bubblies that say “Extra Dry” or “Demi Sec” on the label. Ideal choices (if budget isn’t an issue): Iron Horse Wedding Cuvée ($34), Moët et Chandon White Star ($30), or Banfi Rosa Regale ($17).

Sit-downs for more normal couples can be much simpler. Two wines: one white, one red. Choose a lighter, more acidic Sauvignon Blanc over Chardonnay, since it generally melds better with food. For reds, the widely appealing and lighter Merlot fits both lightweight Aunt Mae and alcoholic Uncle John. Same goes for stand-up receptions and buffets, but add more variety — at least two reds and two whites.

When determining how much to buy, remember there are about five glasses in each wine bottle and about six in a sparkling. With dinner, count on one glass of wine per person, per hour (but this certainly depends on the crowd’s party-heartiness). During a reception, calculate two glasses if it’s wine and beer only, one less if you’re serving other alcoholic beverages. However, these estimates depend on how much activity you have going on — bored people will probably drink more to dull the pain. And you really don’t want to have that kind of wedding.