Seventh Washington International Wine and Food Festival

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Seventh Washington International Wine and Food Festival
This year’s Washington International Wine & Food Festival, held June 24-25 in three cavernous ballrooms of the Omni Shoreham Hotel just off upper Connecticut Avenue, N.W., was crowded, fast paced, well organized, and fun. Seminars on Food and Wine Tastings, Celebrity Chef presentations, and Wine Seminars completed the bill. It was not an inexpensive event. The event was pricey ($61-$71 for one day, another $10-20 for the second day), with the costs of seminars in addition. The morning hours were open to the trade (press and other wine and food professionals), and the public was admitted in the afternoon. The scale of the show was enormous. It was not possible to taste more than a good sampling of what one preferred or wanted to try. That left perhaps a thousand other wines untouched, from many countries! The organization of this year’s show was superior to that of last year, and there was something of a comeback by French wines, which had not figured appreciably in last year’s Convention Center show. My only disappointment was in the pricey seminars offered, not one of which featured French wines. Last year’s seminar on the 2003 Chateauneuf du Pape vintage had been an outstanding feature of the show. This year, if you were interested in red Portuguese table wines or the Tannat wines of Uruguay and wanted to pay extra for the privilege, you could do so.  And so I prowled the aisles and tasted wines from many countries, including France, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Croatia, which were there in quantity, and of course, American wine production was well represented.      There were many old friends, some in new guises. Here are some tasting results. Perhaps you might enjoy trying some yourself!    The Robert Mondavi selections recalled our visit to his winery some years ago. Their Private Selection Pinot Grigio (retail $11) was a good dry wine, with nice fruit but not too much of it, a clear step up from basic Pinot Grigios. The Private Selection Fume Blanc (actually, 100% Sauvignon Blanc) is barrel fermented, rather creamy. I would not have placed it as a Sauvignon Blanc. It tasted more like a Semillon blend, and at 13.5% alcohol, is rather a large wine.      Mouton Cadet ($8-$10) Blanc has recently changed its blend to more closely suit American tastes, with 50% Semillon, 40% Sauvignon Blanc, and 10% Muscadelle. It is a rounder, softer and more fruit forward blend, less austere. I was sorry to hear that Mouton Cadet Rose is still not exported to the USA. That is a fine wine, and as Bordeaux produces more and more rose wines, Moton Cadet may be losing American market share by this strategy. The Mouton Cadet Rouge had been predominantly Cabernet Sauvignon, but it is now 65% Merlot (largely from the Entre deux Mers region), 30% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 5% Malbec.      Wines from Monkey Bay, New Zealand, were a delight. This is a coastal region, and their wines ($10-$12) were refreshing and delightful. I was told that Sauvignon Blanc, first grown there in the eighteenth century, is particularly well suited to the cool climate. This wine had a flavorful touch of grapefruit and lemon, very refreshing. I also liked their Chardonnay, vinified in steel, also 12.5% alcohol. It had good fruit, but was in a lighter style. I was reminded that French varietals had circled the globe, and that French winemakers had left their mark in many places. In South Africa, it was said that the basis for the wine industry was begun centuries ago by Huguenots who were forced to leave France. Some found refuge in Holland, and jobs aboard Dutch ships. Those who brought grape plants with them were said to have started the wine industry in South Africa.      Since we will be in Dubrovnik later this month, I was delighted to taste some Croatian wines, from BIBICh in Zadar, Croatia. The Export Manager explained to me that wines had been grown along the Dalmatian Coast for many centuries. The Riserva 2005 ($15), a blend of three varietal grapes “grown here for 2,000 years” was pleasant, as was the Grenache Riserva ($20), which reminded me of a flavorful Merlot. However, the star performer was the DeBit03 ($12), a white wine rather like a young Sauvignon Blanc, and at just 11.7% alcohol, a refreshing wine that won’t put you to sleep after luncheon. I enjoyed it very much. A good market should await this fine wine, said to be made from “traditional antique grape varieties” whose names I couldn’t pronounce, so the “DeBit” abbreviation is used for identification.      Old friends from Quebec were there, with a delicious Apple Ice Wine (“La Face Cachee – Neige”). This is taking the problem of cold temperatures, and turning it into a virtue. Apples remain frozen on the trees, and the juice then extracted and fermented. This Apple Ice Wine was delicious, just sweet enough, and not overly alcoholic. Have it with dessert, chilled with hot apple pie and a slice of cheese. Argentina was next. Familia Zuccardi’s Santa Julia Tardio 2004 ($16 for a 500 ml bottle) was a pleasant discovery. This is a late harvested wine like a Sauternes, very nice, sweet  but not cloying, with good balance.   Some French wines were tasted next. I am glad that the poor 2003 Alsatian vintage is now history, and vey much prefer to taste the fine 2004 wines. Hugel of Riquewihr is a favorite producer, and his 2004 Cuvee les Amours is a treat, with wonderful aromas and good body. I tasted the Olivier and Pat Leflaive Deux Rives Chablis 2004, which was flinty and good, as quality Chablis should be. The nice lady pouring this wine promised, however, that the 2005 vintage for Chablis will be “even better.” Will it be…
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