Help Me Choose a Two Reds from this Wine List

Hi everyone,

Please help me choose two bottles of wine from this list. The food is Vietnamese fusion, but we've yet to decide on entrees. TIA.

canada

2002 Reif Estate Black Oak (Niagara, Ontario) $35 2002 Malivoire Gamay (Beamsville Bench, Ontario) $35 2002 Henry of Pelham "Meritage" (Niagara) $40 2001 Mission Hill, Pinot Noir, Bin 99 (Okanagan Valley, B.C) $40

united states

2002 Castle Rock Pinot Noir (Napa Valley, California) 50 2002 Mcmanis, Syrah (California) 60 2001 Noceto Sangiovese (Shenandoah Valley California) 70 2000 Rutherford Hill, Merlot (Napa, California) 88

australia

2001 Oxford Landing, Shiraz (Yalumba) 42 2000 Frankland Estate "Olmos Reward" (Western Australia) 85

south africa

2001 Delheim Merlot (Stellenbosch South Africa) 58

burgundy

2001 Nicole Chanrion Cote-de-Brouilly (Beaujolais) 70

rhone

2001 Domaine du joncier, Lirac Rouge 55 2001 Plan Pegau Domaine du Pegau 55 2000 Domaine de Durban Beaumes-de-Venise Rouge 60 2000 Domaine La Roquette, Chateau Neuf De Pape 125

languedoc

2001 Chartreuse de Mougeres (Vin de Pays de Caux) 35 2001 Chateau St. Martin De La Garrigue (Languedoc) 50 2003 Vignoble Boudinaud (Vins de Pays d'Oc) 55 2001 Chateau Aiguilloux (Corbieres) 58

italy & spain

1999 Primitivo Salento Ettamiano, Cantine Due Palme (Puglia) 42 2000 Casa Antonete Crianza (La Mancha, Spain) 50 2001 Beronia Crianza (Rioja, Spain) 55 2000 Prunatelli Chianti Rufino (Garanitta, Italy) 60 2001 Altesimo Rosso Di Altesimo (Tuscany) 65 2000 Pacina, Chianti Colli Senesi (Tuscany) 70 2001 Rosso Piceno "Le Torri" 75 1998 Ascheri, Barolo 110 1997 Galli "Le Ragose" Amarone della Valpolicella (Veneto) 130
Reply to
jytylr
Loading thread data ...

I left the list so others could see it in the response.

The first question is why you want a red with Vietnamese fusion cuisine. The perfect match will be a sweet German riesling. If one insists on something diferent then a demi-sec Loire chenin blanc or even a gruner veltliner would work. But clearly the top choices are all white.

If you really want a red than look for one that is lighter and softer. A high alcohol high tennin red will be a disaster. A rose or lighter styled pinot noir, Loire cab franc or beaujolais would work but not well.

The closest I see are the Okanagon Pinot and the Beaujolais.

Enjoy your meal!

John

snipped-for-privacy@gmail.com wrote in news:1158173778.939791.195550 @b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com:

Reply to
John Gunn

It is difficult to conceive of what kind of mind would conjoin European wines with "Vietnamese fusion", wheatever that may be. The project is hopelessly ill-conceived.

Reply to
UC

Oh, sorry, I wasn't clear on "Vietnamese-fusion". It's actually Vietnamese-French fusion, heavy on the French. Think Jean Georges Vongerichten, but with Vietnamese instead of Thai. The cuisine is extraordinary, really one of the best restaurants in Seattle.

Here's the full wine list, not just reds (which I posted):

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Thanks again.

UC wrote:

Reply to
jytylr

snipped-for-privacy@gmail.com wrote in news:1158173778.939791.195550 @b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com:

Amazing. The one from La Mancha is probably 3 euros in a supermarket in Spain. And the Beronia is about 6 in most hypermarkets.

They are both as low end as Spanish wine can be. If I had to decide between both of them I would go for beer. Specially with asiatic food.

S.

Reply to
Santiago

Reply to
jytylr

Thanks, John. Have a look at the whites and tell me what you think:

formatting link

John Gunn wrote:

Reply to
jytylr

NO!!! The Ox is a $8AUD quaffing wine. 42 US ?.. how do they get away with it ?

hooroo....

Reply to
Matt S

snipped-for-privacy@gmail.com wrote in news:1158190212.841867.216890 @e3g2000cwe.googlegroups.com:

There are some pretty impressive mark-ups on this list. What is the corkage policy? I had thought Seattle was pretty corkage friendly. Perhaps it makes sense to take your own given high mark-ups and few wines that seem a good fit to the menu?

I think my clear choice would be this:

01 Reinhold Haart, Riesling Kabinett (Mosel, Germany) 60

Next I'd look at the following dependign upon what you order.

98 Pierre Sparr Schoenenbourg, Riesling (Grand Cru) 85

01 Kurt Angerer "Lengenfelder Donatus", Riesling (Kamptal, Austria)

65

01 Studert-Prum, Riesling Auslese (Mosel, Germany)

75

01 Nicole Chanrion Cote-de-Brouilly (Beaujolais)

70

I hope this helps. Remember, the advice is what you paid for it.

John

Reply to
John Gunn

Jeesh, the bulk of these are close to 600% markup!! I'm a distributer, and i represent some of these wines on the east coast... The McManis is on sale this month for $9.99 _retail_... Castle Rock is about the same.

Seriously, check out the corkage policy.

Buyer Beware.

KMS

snipped-for-privacy@gmail.com wrote:

Reply to
keith

Easy answer. Many people simply do not like sweet wines nor white wines.

Not sure whats meant by Vietnamese Fusion. I've only heard of 'Fusion' referring to a blending of differing cuisines in one dish such as Italian-Vietnamese Fusion.

When I eat lighter foods I prefer a light styled Sangiovese or Pinot Noir.

Reply to
miles

Most places I've been to in Nevada and California are $10 or sometimes free. Is this typical in other states? Here in Arizona it is illegal to bring your own wine to the majority of restaurants. The exception is if the restaurant can only seat 30 people or less and has no liquor license. The few restaurants I can bring my own bottle to in AZ do not charge corkage.

Reply to
miles

miles wrote in news:eu2Og.4088$AP2.3637@fed1read10:

That is perfectly reasonable. One always has to follow their tastes.

But the orignal poster seemed interested in feedback on what wines were the best match with the food. If you approach the question by first eliminating half the wines in the world you are saying the match with the food is not the primary goal. There is nothing wrong with that. It just means the goal is diferent. Personally, I prefer a wine that matches with the food to one I like that does not match well.

Additionally, my experience has been that the people who do not liek off- dry, sweet or white wines simply have not had one worth liking.

John

Reply to
John Gunn

Miles, I am not sure what the writer meant with Vietnamese Fusion food but there are places in San Francisco like "The Slanted Door". It is Vietnamese but probably a fusion with other mostly asian cultures. ie: Japanese, Chinese, Thai---and then with a French Flair.

That would be my definition.

With those seafood dishes that can be spicy I like and off dry Reisling or Gvertz. Sometimes a Alsace Pinot Gris.

But I agree with John Gunn. I may or may not typically drink certain wines...but with some foods the wines I normally like don't work.

The Slanted Door in San Fran was one of the best dining experiences I have ever had. VERY CREATIVE place.

Reply to
Richard Neidich

Not US, Matt: the restaurant is in Canada, so the prices quoted are in CAD. The markups are still pretty fierce, though.

Mark Lipton

Reply to
Mark Lipton

Mark Lipton wrote in news:0oadnZXH0biITZXYnZ2dnUVZ snipped-for-privacy@insightbb.com:

Oh, wait, the original poster stated "Oh, sorry, I wasn't clear on "Vietnamese-fusion". It's actually Vietnamese-French fusion, heavy on the French. Think Jean Georges Vongerichten, but with Vietnamese instead of Thai. The cuisine is extraordinary, really one of the best restaurants in Seattle."

Reply to
enoavidh

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