August 24, 2009

Food and wine pairing now on MyRecipes.com – Powered by Snooth

posted by Gregory in Snooth, Partnerships, Food

Wine fascinates me on so many levels and has added so much to my life but I would have to say that my most emotional connection to wine is its bond with food, mealtimes, and convivial conversation.

My earliest experiences with wine were at my uncle’s table in Trentino, Italy. From an early age I spent my summers there and from an early age I enjoyed a bit of wine with my meals. In the beginning it was no more than a drop of wine in my water but over the years it passed through more minimal stages of dilution until I was allowed to drink pure, unadulterated wine with my meals.

Even in its pure unadulterated state the wine we generally drank was pale and low in both alcohol and tannin yet high in zesty acidity. That acidity made the wine the perfect compliment to the foods we ate. It also set me up for a lifetime as what is known as an “acid freak” in the rarified world of wine geeks. But most importantly it served as my foundation for understanding how wine and food work together.

My love of food and wine saw me through many stages of evolution. From my earliest forays into dinner parties for my friends, at age 16, to nearly 2 decades in the restaurant industry, I never lost interest in the intricacies of food and wine pairings.

Fast forward to today and we may be seeing the culmination of all my accumulated experience: Snooth’s food and wine pairing algorithm that is being used to power the wine pairing widget on our latest partner’s site www.MyRecipes.com.

MyRecipes.com has one of the greatest collections of recipes on the web, sourced from the myriad titles in Time Inc’s portfolio. Some of my favorite recipes seem to consistently come from Cooking Light and Health magazines.

For example, I love jerked foods, that smoky, spicy specialty of Jamaica. I will tell anyone who’ll listen that one of the best pairings I’ve ever come across is Petite Sirah and Jerk Chicken! So what does one do when one wants to jerk something else? I found this great recipe for Jerk-Spiced Shrimp on MyRecipes.com  and checked to see what types of pairings I thought this would work with. I know, it sounds a little weird but I’ve also been checking to make sure everything is working as it’s supposed to!

Well things look pretty good since the pairings are the correct bright aromatic white, fruity, rich rose and a rich, medium-bodied white. The actual wines that may appear for you might be different than what I am seeing since availability is a criterion we are using to choose which specific wines to display.

While I have chosen the styles of wines, trying to make sure to offer a pair of more familiar choices plus a geeky choice for each recipe, the actual wines that get shown to the user will change based on availability and how highly the wines are rated on Snooth.

Our rating system combines the input of professional tasters with that of our user to generate a unique Snoothrank for each wine. If a wine gets rated favorably, its Snoothrank goes up, increasing the likelihood that it will show up in the recipe pairing results.

Not only have we selected specific styles of wines that work with each dish but we are also filtering our huge database of wines to show you the preferred wines within each category. No other wine site brings you the sort of in-depth, intelligent food and wine parings that Snooth does. Our massive database, the largest on the web, gives us a unique advantage to offer this added value to our partners and our users.

Beginning tomorrow you’ll also be able to see the MyRecipes.com database of recipes displayed on Snooth. Each of our wine detail pages lists three dishes to pair with each wine.  It’s a great way to get ideas for your next meal and will make planning your next successful dinner party a breeze.

I hope you enjoy using our recipe pairing widget on MyRecipes.com as much as I enjoyed creating it. It really was a labor of love and I look forward to tweaking it and making sure the results are not only good, but take advantage of our ever growing and improving database to continue to bring you compelling, interesting and varied wines to pair with your favorite dishes.

And now to see what might pair with a nice roast lamb dish and peppers from my garden…

Gregory Dal Piaz
Community Manager
Snooth

March 3, 2009

Open That Bottle Night 2009 – North Square Restaurant

posted by Gregory in Snooth, Wine, Partnerships, Food

otbn bottle
After much anticipation Snooth’s OTBN was apon us! We were meeting in the wonderfully elegant Deco Room at North Square Restaurant here in New York City to celebrate, well, celebrating! That is, of course, the point of OTBN. Begun a decade ago precisely in order to give people the reason to celebrate and open that special bottle that had always seemed to warrant a more celebratory occasion. We were fortunate to have partnered up with Wilson Daniels this year and participated in their Twitter taste Live virtual tasting of four great wines but more on that later! Here I am opening THAT bottle!
i’m opening that bottle

Well I can’t think of a better time to open a great bottle than having the opportunity to share it with 22 generous winelovers! And so it was that we filled the bar with treasure after treasure as we began a night of modest excess. It all began with a glass of Schramsberg’s wonderful 2005 Cremant Demi-sec. The theme for this years OTBN was after all exploration and discovery and this was a chance for people to learn more about the Flora grape and one of it’s parents, Gewurtztraminer. The Cremant was wonderful with gentle floral notes and a wonderfully fresh yestiness that recalled fresh brie. The sweetness was just perceptible and balanced well by brisk acidity.
pouring Schramsberg crement on OTBN

We moved on to our 2 starter whites, generously provided by Wilson Daniels. Up first was the 2005 Marc Kreydenweiss Kritt Pinot Blanc with it’s sapid acidity and soil inflected juicy white fruits it was a mouth-watering start to our dinner service. We followed this up with the 2006 Pierre Morey Bourgogne-Aligoté. Bracing as Aligoté can be but with a wonderfully ripe citrus quality and firm mineral tones on the finish it was a fabulous aperitif wine and I wish I had gotten the Tuna tartar to pair with this!
otbn tuna tartar

We then moved on to the pair of reds supplied by our friends at Wilson Daniels beginning with the 2005 Marc Kreydenweiss Costières-de-nîmes Domaine Des Perrieres . This Alsatian producer has expanded into southern France with this biodynamic offering and it’s a great little wine with classic tobacco and earth tinged raspberry fruit and just a hint of funk adding depth. As good as the Kreydenweiss was the 2006 Campo Di Sasso Insoglio Del Cinghiale blew it away. With a hugely aromatic nose redolent of black minerals, rosemary stems, and rich, perfectly ripe black fruits this was captivating. It’s a polished wine that is elegant yet richly flavored with great purity on the palate.

otbn insoglio

From here on out it was a bit of controlled chaos as people went searching for their wine. Actually it was not entirely a free for all as people “pimped” their wines for a short while but once the food began to arrive all bets were off! I worked my way through the wines trying almost every one and it went something like this:

1991 Eyrie Chardonnay Willamette Valley Reserve – This was such a treat and in incredibly fine shape with gentle fruit and perfectly proportioned soil and wood spice tones adding complexity. The acidity has kept this wonderfully vibrant and delicious. My white wine of the night!

1999 Verget Chablis Grand Cru Bougros – I would have guessed this was new world and the Eyrie old if I had to! Lovely crisp apple fruit is winning the battle with the oak and this is in a bit of a strange place right now as the wood is still adding a bit of sweetness but that acid and minerality powers through on the crisp, cleansing finish.

2003 Pfaffenheim Muscat
– Wow, can you smell the Key Lime pie? Redolent of fresh lime zest and cut grass this smelled sweet but was dry and rich on the palate with nice lemon drop fruit.

2007 Dönnhoff Kreuznacher Krötenpfuhl Riesling Spätlese – Insane! This is my third time with this wine and it’s as impressive as ever with real power and superb balance. Great Reisling. Nuff said! Tied for my second place white WOTN!

1994 Gunter Steinmetz Mülheimer Sonnenlay Riesling Spätlese – As much as I loved the Donnhoff, and I love Donnhoff, this took things to another level with diesel, mineral and honey notes on the nose that made you think this was mature but an amazingly rich, vibrant, and drippingly fruited palate that let you know this zesty wine has years of life ahead of it.! Tied for my second place white WOTN!
otbn crowd

With the whites out of the way I moved on to the reds and this is really were all hell broke loose. No matter how many glasses I had I always seemed to be one or two short but I did my best to keep up with the overwhelming flow and this is how I did it.

1983 Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars Cabernet Sauvignon Stag’s Leap Vineyards Napa Valley- From magnum this was just great with all the complexities one can get from older California Cabernet and the classic dusty velvet texture that makes these wines so much fun to drink. I loved this wine and for me it was Wine Of The Night!

1993 Lucien Boillot Volnay Les Caillerets – This had a wonderful tension in the mouth between bitter cherry fruit and a lovely gamy, nutty nuance. As expected it got lost a little between all the big fruit and tannin bombs but was memorable for it’s elegance.

1993 Armand Comte Pommard Clos des Epeneaux – from magnum – This on the other hand was pretty damn powerful, and a bit tight and short on the palate but it had an effusive perfume of sweet spice, woodsy aromas and black cherry fruit. I’ll check back in on this in 5 years if I can!

2003 Beaux Frères Pinot Noir Beaux Frères Vineyard – I thought this was a little older than 2003 but it was still captivating with a gentle yet sweet nose and a lovely, lithe feel that is almost impossible to find in domestic pinot. I want to find more of this!

2006 ROAR Pinot Noir Santa Lucia Highlands - I tasted this just briefly and it had some spritz so I put it aside to let it dissipate but II never got back to trying it. Darn!

2006 Moric Neckenmarkter Blaufrankisch – This was crazy good wine. Delicate yet precise with such detail and balance. I loved it and can’t wait till the next time me and this wild blackberry beauty have a chance to get to know each other a little better. Tied for my second WOTN!
otbn crowd

By this time my lamb had arrived so fortunately I had a foil for some of the larger scaled wines to come. And boy did I need it! One after the other great wines appeared only to be replaced by another set of great wines. I was in heaven!

1987 Kistler Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma Valley Kistler Vineyard – I have never smelled such a floral California Cabernet before and this was captivating. Great green olive and cassis notes as well and with the seductive texture only aged California Cabernet can have!

2004 Joseph Phelps Cabernet Sauvignon Backus – This was a bruiser but beat you with the proverbial iron fist in a velvet glove! Great iron flecked crème de cassis fruit in a seamless velvety package. A great wine from one of my favorite vineyards!

2002 Vergelegen Estate Red – This was just gorgeous on the nose with smoky, green chile, cassis and oak tones all layered and in balance. It’s a bit simple still on the palate but this flagship South African red has the stuffing to turn into something special!

1991 Carmenet Vin de Garde Reserve Selection - This was a bit peppery and stern and reminded me a bit of 1986 Bordeaux with it’s powerful expression of tobacco tinged fruit. This is an old style of California Cabernet that one rarely encounters today. Can you say Dunn Howell Mountain?

otbn full room shot

New world? Old world? The lines can get blurry sometimes and nowhere is that truer than in Spain these days. I’ll be posting my impressions from an old Rioja tasting soon and along with the notes is my take on Tempranillo these days. I go off on a lot of producers who are trying to make Tempranillo in to something it’s not and while I genuinely believe that sometimes the results make me reconsider my position, for a little while at least!

2004 CVNE Pagos De Viña Real – No mistaking this for anything but a huge, modern Rioja but the black raspberry and vanilla tones are in balance and the wine is big yet so smooth and polished that you can’t help but like it, just give it a few years in the cellar.

2004 Buil & Giné Montsant Baboix - This is another decidedly modern Spanish bruiser and it’s packed with lovely herbal, mineral and spice tones embedded in rich cassis and blackberry fruit. It’s intensely spicy and really deserves something rich and spicy to cut through!
otbn beef

As modern as the last pair was I moved back into two classics from France, Bordeaux and Chateauneuf. Both were real treats and matched perfectly with my lamb chops.

1989 Clos du Mont Olivet Chateauneuf du Pape la Cuvee du Papet – Who wants the funk? Bring on the funk! And black olives, leather, lavender, mushrooms, you got it all on the nose and while the palate was wonderful with lovely truffly edges this had started to thin out a bit but was still fabulous.

1982 Château Grand Puy Lacoste – Classic freaking Bordeaux! This had that restrained power and endless layers of flavor that only Bordeaux can offer. As much as I love the texture of mature California Cabernet the elegance and complexity of Bordeaux can bring things to an entirely different level. Tied for my second WOTN
the smaller otbn table
And then I was left in my happy place; surrounded by Barolo! As you might know Nebbiolo to me is magical and while none of the Barolos tonight made it in to my top five wines I was thrilled to be ending my night with them!

1997 Paolo Scavino Barolo Rocche dell’Annunziata Riserva
– And as much as I love Barolo I didn’t feel the love here. While the nose offered up nice mushroom, rose and licorce scents there were loosing the battle with the spicy wood. Pretty much the same in the mouth, the fruit was intact and nice but all the complexity came from the wood so I didn’t get much depth here.

scavino barolo

1982 Brovia Barolo Rocche Dei Brovia – This was great in it’s own way. A very good wine, but just a great glass to drink at the end of the night. Lacking some complexity as well, but just so bright and balanced with fine red berry fruits and a slightly gamy twang on the finish. I was refreshed!

1989 Marchese di Barolo Cannubi Barolo – While I preferred the Brovia to this I can’t say one is better than the other, just different. This had more complexity and deeper fruit but was a bit less elegant and refreshing. It’s still a delicious glass of big black cherry fruit.

We spent the night trying to Twitter our notes as we participated in Twitter Taste Live with our virtual drinking companions but it was not with much success. Connectivity, in the virtual sense, was limited in the dining room but that didn’t prevent us from trying!

mark twitteringmore twitteringthat glow is my glarephilip twitters

There was one bottle that I missed the 2005 Turley Howell Mountain Zinfandel. Can anyone let me know what it’s like? And with that I was left with the 2 dessert wines. First up was the rather crappy bottle of 1985 Warres Port. Alcoholic, disjointed and volatile it’s only redeeming feature was that it was marginally sweet and smelled faintly of fruit. I chose to move on an end my night with the fairly remarkable 2005 Feiler-Artinger - Ruster Ausbruch Essenz. Intense and intensely sweet yet with such incredible acidity that this never became cloying and the mineral notes on the finish cut right through the remaining fresh fruity sweetness so it never became over-powering or boring either. Simply a great sip with which to end a brilliant evening.

my otbn wine of the night!

I want to thank everyone who helped make this evening so special.

Thanks to Wilson Daniels for their support and generous contributions

Thanks to North Square for taking such good care of us.

And thanks to everyone who made this such a special evening with their generous contributions and brilliant company. I can’t wait to do this again. Do you really want to wait an entire year? I know I don’t!

Gregory Dal Piaz is the Community Manager at Snooth, an avid Wine Geek with a passion for things Italian, and a long suffering Mets fan.

November 17, 2008

Snooth and Chambers St Wines Rocche the house!

posted by Gregory in Snooth, Wine, Partnerships

It was great to see so many of you turn out for the great tasting we had this past Saturday! Our friends at Chambers St. Wines really know how to put on a tasting and we all pulled out all the stops pouring an amazing line-up of wines from the great Nebbiolo grape.chambers crowd

We began with a fine 2004 Ferrando Carema from the northern reaches of Piedmont. Ferrando is the star of the zone and while this white label bottling is his entry-level wine I prefer it to the more expensive, as well as more heavily oaked and extracted black label. This had lovely floral tones, crisp red fruits and elegant structure. A great way to ease into Nebbiolo._mg_8772.jpg

From there we went on to a mini vertical of 2004 Barolo. We sampled the base level bottlings from three producers in this wonderfully elegant vintage. Brovia’s wine, from Castiglione Falletto, was restrained with great balance, very typical of the village and the producer, it has calmed down since I last tasted it in the cellars in May but looks to be evolving into a classic bottling. Massolino’s was more powerful and extracted marrying Serralunga’s darker, more masculine fruit with a more modern winemaking bent.  Finally Oddero’s wine was a wonderful blend of the lush fruit of La Morra with the elegance and structure of Castiglione. It looks like I under-rated this wine when I tasted it in the cellars last summer. The rest of their line-up was so compelling that I feel I gave this short shrift. It is a brilliant bottle of wine and was the value of the tasting!

We then stepped it up a notch with two wines from the problematic 2003 vintage. While the vintage may have had it’s problems these two wines, from two of the most talented producers in Serralunga, if not Piedmont, were exceptional. Both beg for time in the cellar. Cappellano’s Rupestris bottling had an intense nose of raspberry liquor that was captivating and was rich, if tannic, in the mouth. Conterno’s Cascina Francia is one of my absolute favorite wines and this was one of the top 2003’s that I’ve tried. Rich and complex with admirable freshness, it’s a wine I am willing to wait on.chambers bottle

We ended the tasting with three aged beauties. The 1982 Brovia Rocche from magnum was very slow to evolve, fantastically mushroom and truffle filled on the nose,,it took 7 hours for the fruit to really gather steam and this magnum looked to be capable of improvement for 7 hours more. It’s a wine just coming into it’s own. I can’t wait to try it again, but I will wait 5 years, just to be safe.

The next wine was the wine closest to its peak. Coming from the arch-traditional producer Francesco Rinaldi, this 1970 Barolo still had hard acidity but the tannins had fairly melted away leaving behind a lovely core of sweet fruit. It faded somewhat over the course of the tasting but was a beautiful expression of Nebbiolo.me at chambers

The final wine was the 1967 Oddero Barolo. This illustrated the evolution of Barolo so well as we moved from the fruity but evolved Rinaldi to this wine, full of tertiary notes and looking a bit like cognac with only a hint of rosy red remaining. It was none-the-less an engaging example of old Barolo and a good learning experience for those who had never had the opportunity to try wines at this stage of their development.chambers last

All in all it was a great event and I want to thank the folks at Chambers St for having us, and for inviting us back! I hope to see you all soon, maybe back on Chambers St.

Gregory Dal Piaz is the Community Manager at  Snooth, an avid Wine Geek with a passion for things Italian, and a long suffering Mets fan.

November 14, 2008

Snooth and Chambers St. Wines

posted by Gregory in Snooth, Wine, Partnerships, Press

Well the day many of us have anxiously been awaiting, well maybe only one of us, is almost here.

Tomorrow, Saturday Nov 15 I will be at the newly remodled, and fabulous looking new location of the great  Chambers St. Wines pouring new and old Barolo, with a few surprises in store.

From 4 to 7 pm I will be helping  friends out at New York’s best spot for aged Barolo by lending my expertise and flexible wrist/opposing thumb combination. In what must be the in-store tasting of the year we will be pouring:

1982 Brovia Barolo Rocche from magnum

2004 Brovia Barolo

1967 Oddero Barolo

2004 Oddero Barolo

1970 F. Rinaldi Barolo

2003 Cappellano Barolo Franco

2004 Ferrando Carema

and a surprise or two mixed in with these classic wines!

We are very excited about this, as was the New York Times with their mention of the event in yesterday’s paper.  We are getting ready to meet friends, new and old, and are looking forward to talking with New York’s most sophisticated, knowledgeable groups of wine geeks! Look for a follow up post early next week with updated tasting notes and great photos.

I hope to see you all there. Get ready for the free tasting of the year. Only from Chambers St. Wines and Snooth!

4pm-7pm

Chambers St Wines

148 Chambers Street
New York, NY 10007
Phone: 212-227-1434
Fax: 212-227-7978

Gregory Dal Piaz is the Community Manager at  Snooth, an avid Wine Geek with a passion for things Italian, and a long suffering Mets fan.