family portrait & shout-out 2 @FourSeasons @TRIOAustin @MarkDevinSayre

jeremy parzen marriage

Above: The garden on “Lady Bird Lake” (actually the Colorado River) at the Four Seasons hotel in Austin is one of our favorite spots in town. The superb staff takes the experience there from A to A+.

Granted, I’ve spent so much time at Trio (restaurant) at the Four Seasons in Austin, Texas since I moved here five year ago that I know most of the staff by name.

I first went there back in 2008 when I wanted to take Tracie P on a romantic date and share a great bottle of wine (Vosne-Romanée by Mongeard-Mugneret, I still remember well).

The restaurant’s wine director, Mark Sayre, one of the top wine professionals in Texas, has been a good friend ever since (and he loves to tell the story of how I “interviewed” him over the phone when I called to inquire about the list).

Since that time, it’s become my go-to spot for business meetings, professional wine tastings, and family outings (it’s where Tracie P and I courted in the eighteen months that led up to our union).

Last week, I took all of my girls there for a margarita for Tracie P, a glass of wine for me, and snacks for Georgia P.

We couldn’t have been seated for more than two minutes before Georgia P had a popover (see the video below), a coloring book, and crayons.

The Four Seasons brand is well known for its extreme hospitality and the hotel and restaurant here in Austin are flagship examples of how earnest graciousness is so key to a fulfilling restaurant experience.

Chapeau bas, Four Seasons! Trio is such a wonderful asset in the Austin wine community.

Harvest update from Ornellaia’s Masseto & points beyond

masseto merlot ornellaia

Yesterday, my friend Leonardo Raspini, vineyard manager at the Tenuta dell’Ornellaia, sent me the photo above. The grapes in the photo are from the estate’s famed Masseto vineyard.

As one of the most manicured growing sites in the world (according to WineSearcher, the average retail price for the 2009 [current] vintage is $517 but if you look around, you can find a bottle for around $350), Masseto is a benchmark for any vintage. And because Merlot is always picked before Sangiovese, it gives a good indication of the harvest outlook.

Here’s what he had to say…

“The grapes you see in the photo belong the central part of the vineyeard, where the clays are abundant [in the subsoil], giving the Merlot bunches a particular shape and quality.”

“The harvest began on September 9 and it’s moving ahead well, with a 10-15 day delay [with respect to recent vintages], which originated during budding and flowering.”

“Ripening is ideal thanks to a sunny but cool climate. Yesterday, we were harvesting in the high part of [the] Masseto [vineyard] and the grapes couldn’t be in better shape.”

Yesterday in Montalcino, my friends at the Tenuta Il Poggione began picking Sangiovese for their rosé wine “despite some light rainfall.”

And earlier this week, my super good friend Laura at Il Palazzone (Montalcino) posted this excellent harvest update, including predictions for the vintage and comparisons, by some leading experts, to 1979.

harvest prosecco 2013

Up in the Veneto, my friend and client Luca Ferraro began picking his Glera grapes for Prosecco on Saturday.

He reports — with his usual candor — that unexpected rainfall is “cause for concern.”

Tracie P and I are keeping our fingers crossed for them.

In the Castelli di Jesi in central Italy, our friends and clients Alessandro Fenino and Silvia Loschi’s Verdicchio harvest is in full swing.

And down in Puglia, my friend and client Gianni Cantele is elated about the quality of his Negroamaro grapes.

eggplant parmigiana recipe best

But what he’s really got us thinking about (and craving for) today is his mother’s eggplant parmigiana.

“My harvest exile in the cellar continues,” writes Gianni, who, like all winemakers during this period of the year, literally lives at the winery without being able to return home. “I’m beginning to miss my bed and the comforts of home. But I will stoically carry on.”

“There are two things that give me the strength not to give up: Negroamaro grapes worth shouting about (a great vintage!) and my mother’s eggplant parmigiana.”

All in all, Italian grape growers are hoping for a great vintage this year, despite some inclement weather that’s affecting northern and central Italy.

I’ll be in the Veneto in a few weeks and will report back then. And I’ll also be in Montalcino, where they should be gearing up for the Brunello harvest.

L’shanah tovah, everyone. I’ll see you in a few days. May your fast be easy and may your new year be sweet and filled with joy and health…

Italian government announces natural wine inquiry

The image below and following text (translation mine) are from a post by Giovanni Corazzol that appeared today on the popular Italian wine blog Intravino.

italian government natural wine

“The meaning of ‘natural wine’ must be clarified. Many bottles are labeled as such and they have invaded the Italian market. It’s a definition that, until today, has been self-regulated and it creates the risk of disorienting consumers and penalizing winemakers.”

With these words, Massimo Florio, a member of [the Italian parliament’s] Chamber of Deputies and vice president of the [Italian government’s] agriculture commission, announced an inquiry into the question [of natural wines].

I’m posting from the road today and don’t have time to translate the entire article. The government announcement has already sparked a thorny debate in Italian-language social media. I’ll post translated excerpts as soon as possible.

The most talked about wine in Texas

ca dei zago

Posting on the fly and from the road today but just wanted to share my note on this Prosecco Col Fondo, the Ca’ dei Zago, the first to make it to Texas.

Everyone — EVERYONE — in Texas seems to be talking about it: sommeliers and wine buyers from Houston to Austin have been asking me about it via text and on the Facebook etc.

I had the chance to taste it last night with one of the most dynamic wine bloggers I’ve ever met (more on him and our meeting later) and we were both thrilled by the wine.

The first tasting descriptor that came to mind was one that Italians like to use for wines like this: sapido, meaning sapid or flavorful. The wine had that great saltiness that lees aging can impart to Glera grapes and it was balanced by the classic sour green note that Prosecco has when it’s made in a traditional and transparent style.

There’s no doubt in my mind that Prosecco Col Fondo — doubled-fermented-in-bottle, lees-aged, and undisgorged Prosecco — is going to be the next big thing in Italian wine. And I’m thrilled to see that a Col Fondo has finally made it to Texas.

Alfonso wrote a great post on his recent visit to Proseccoland, including notes from his tasting at Ca’ dei Zago.

And here’s a link to a Col Fondo tasting that was organized for Tracie P and me a few years ago in the village of Rolle by my friend Riccardo Zanotto.

Okay, gotta run now! More later!

“The essence of wine is the person”—Angelo Peretti (@internetgourmet)

amphitheater vineyard

I feel compelled to post this translation (mine) of Italian wine and food writer Angelo Peretti’s post, published today on his Internet Gourmet.

“The Essence of Wine is the Person.”
September 10, 2013

Over the last few days, I’ve read the many ideologisms scribbled in the margins of the deplorable story of a winemaker who keeps company with verbal vulgarity and racial epithets.

There have been calls by certain commentators, including some leading experts, for the wine to be evaluated on its own, irrespective of who made it.

Has the world of Italian wine come to this?

Perhaps it’s a romantic ideal but I remain convinced that the essence of wine is terroir and the essence of terroir is the person.

If we insist on judging the wine regardless of the person, the wine becomes a commodity — a mere product of consumption.

At that point, we might as well devote ourselves to carbonated soft drinks. At least we know that they are all technically identical.

This is wine criticism’s “betrayal”: when it casts wine’s humanistic roots into darkness and negates its spirit of place in the name of an Enlightenment-age ideal of the presumed objectivity of “taste.”

Please let us take a step back. Let us return to our roots and to the essence of being.

If wine proves unable to express this essence, we will have succumbed to the levelling embrace of global industry.

Angelo Peretti
author of Internet Gourmet

Image by my friend Giovanni Arcari, taken Sunday at dawn in his vineyard in Franciacorta. “The harvest is roughly 20-25 later than in recent years,” he writes.

Electric Arneis in a bottle of Roero by Brovia (not a bad band name @ablegrape?)

brovia arneis

In oenography, synaesthesia — “the use of metaphors in which terms relating to one kind of sense-impression are used to describe sense-impressions of other kinds; the production of synæsthetic effect in writing or an instance of this” (Oxford English Dictionary) — is owed to our human inability to describe wine.

Without spending too much time on the epistemological implications of oenophilia, it’s worth noting that when we describe wine we don’t actually describe the wine. In fact, we describe what it tastes like.

And there are those among us would-be wine writers who rise above the facile simile and reach for the metaphor.

When my friend Bubba and I shared a bottle of Roero Arneis by Brovia last night, it wasn’t like drinking electricity in a glass. It was electricity in the glass.

The wine was electric. It was alive… ALIVE!

You don’t see a lot of the Brovia Arneis in this country but looking back on my visit with Giacinto Brovia a few years ago, I remember that we did indeed taste it then.

There’s very little of it in Texas. But my friend and client Jeff at Vino Vino in Austin was able to snag some.

There’s so much great Arneis out there. It’s one of those grapes that’s pretty hard to screw up.

But this one is the one

My score on a scale of 1-100? Run don’t walk…

Black wine for a black man in Desenzano circa 1922

When, as a boy, fourteenth-century Italian humanist Francis Petrarch first obtained a manuscript of a work by Latin writer Cicero, he noted that he was enchanted by the sounds of the words even though he couldn’t understand their meaning.

I’ll never forget reading the poems of Langston Hughes for the first time when I was in junior high school. I didn’t understand what they meant at the time. But I knew that they were meaningful. And his works continue to inform me and shape my intellectual life today.

In high school, I read his autobiography, The Big Sea, over and over and over again. And I dreamed about following his footsteps through New York to Europe in the early 1920s.

A passage from that book came to mind (again) today as insults continue to be hurled across the English Channel and Atlantic Ocean. (Yes, they’ve started to call me names, too.)

In the excerpt below, the author recalls his first visit to Italy. He and his friend Romeo traveled to Romeo’s home, Desenzano, on the shores of Lake Garda.

In the wake of the unfortunate episode of a few weeks ago, the poet’s account of his visit give the reader remarkable insight of how Italy’s attitudes about race have changed since the rise of fascism there.

    The night we arrived was Sunday and the whole village had gone to the movies. There was no one home at Romeo’s house and he had no key, so we left our baggage piled in the doorway and went to the movies, too. It was one of those theaters where the screen is at the front of the house beside the front door, so you come in facing the audience Just as we came in, the house lights went on between reels, as they were changing the film. The place was crowded, but as we entered and the people saw us, the whole crowd arose and began to make for the doorway. Soon they became a shouting, pushing mass. I didn’t know what they were saying, for they were speaking Italian, of course, and I didn’t understand Italian. But Romeo and I were swept into the street and surrounded by curious but amiable men, women, and children. Finally, Romeo’s mother got him through the crowd and threw her arms about his neck. I gather that almost all of the people of the village were Romeo’s friends, but I didn’t know why so many of them clung to me and shook my hands, while a crowd of young boys and men pulled and pushed until they had me in the midst of them in a wine shop, with a dozen big glasses of wine in front of me.
    Later that night Romeo explained to me that never in Desenzano, so far as he knew, had there been a Negro before, so naturally everybody wanted to look at me at close hand, and touch me, and treat me to a glass of vino nero. Romeo said they were all his friends, but hardly would the whole theater have rushed into the street between reels had it not been for me, a Negro, being with him.

On August 30, 2013, the online magazine Qui Brescia published an article about a dispute between a Northern League (Separatist) township council member, Rino Polloni, and Desenzano’s mayor, Rosa Leso, a member of Italy’s Democratic Party (they are both bloggers btw). According to the report, the council member has accused the mayor of not protecting the citizenry from African men who frequent the beach there. She has responded by saying that they have every right to be there — like everyone else — as long as they abide by the rule of law. The police department’s current monitoring of the beaches, she maintains, is sufficient to ensure public safety.

Please also read Alfonso’s beautiful and heart-wrenching post from yesterday about Little Tony of Italy.

Taste with me in So Cal @JaynesGastropub & @SottoLA Sept 17 & 19

jeremy parzen wine

TUES. SEPT. 17 ITALIAN WINE DINNER @ JAYNES (SAN DIEGO)
THURS. SEPT. 19 ON THE FLOOR @ SOTTO (LOS ANGELES)

It’s hard to believe: I haven’t been on a plane since my last trip to NYC in May 2013.

Paternity leave has been so awesome but the time has come to hit the road again and bring home some of that bacon.

I’m thrilled to share the news that I’ll be speaking at a dinner at Jaynes Gastropub in San Diego on Tuesday, September 17.

We’ll be pouring some of my favorite wines, including Cantele, Venica, and Produttori del Barbaresco. And I will be digging into my cellar for some 2001 Produttori del Barbaresco crus to share that evening as well.

Click here for details and reservations.

It’s always a night to remember at Jaynes, one of our favorite restaurants in the States and our home-away-from-home (Tracie P and I had our wedding reception there in 2010).

produttori 2007

Then on Thursday of that week, I’ll be working the floor at Sotto in Los Angeles, where my bromance Rory Harrington and I write the wine list.

The best way to reserve is OpenTable.

You never know who you’ll bump into at Sotto (I’ll never forgot pouring Anne Hathawy a glass of Cantele 2009 Salice Salentino! For reals!) and it’s so much fun when I visit: a lot of “wine folks” come out and we always crack open something incredible (we’ll be debuting our secret stash of Luigi Tecce that night, btw).

If you happen to be in Southern California that week, please come out and say hello and taste… I’d love to taste with you.

As the great Italian wine writer Marco Arturi says, wine is a pretext for us to be together and for us to say “we”

L’shanah tovah

shofar rosh hashanah

Image via the Contemporary Jewish Museuem (San Francisco) Flickr.

L’shanah tovah! Happy new year, everyone!

May your year be filled with joy and good health.

Tracie P and I have so much to be thankful for this year.

My goodness… Every time I feel stressed about money, work, or any of the headaches of life, I look at beautiful Tracie P and the gorgeous little girls she’s given our family and my heart bursts with immeasurable joy.

And I ask myself, borrowing a line from a favorite Kris Kristofferson song,

Why me Lord?
what have I ever done
to deserve even one
of the pleasures I’ve known?
Tell me Lord
what did I ever do
that was worth loving you
or the kindness you’ve shown?

jeremy parzen family

My life’s journey has been such a trip… Sometimes I don’t really know how I got here but, man, I have so much to be grateful for and I love my family so very much…

Happy new year, everyone. Thanks for all the support and warm wishes and thoughts for our family this year.

Bless you all.

I’ll see you after the holiday…

Does a “bacon fat” note make a kosher Syrah treif?

kosher wine texas rosh hashanah

As I was writing my kosher wine cheat sheet for the Houston Press, the thought occurred to me: if I get a classic bacon fat aroma on a kosher Syrah from Israel, does it make the wine treif?

On Sunday, when I headed to the kosher section at the supermarket, I was surprised by the breadth of wines and the low prices I found there.

And after picking four wines randomly, basing my selections solely on the information reported on the labels, I was also surprised by how drinkable the wines were — at least two of them.

That was the good news.

The bad news is that so many of the wines had elevated alcohol levels.

Jews aren’t known for being big drinkers (present company aside). And so many bourgeois Jews in this country only drink fine wine on Jewish holidays and during Jewish festivals.

Wouldn’t it make more sense to give them low-alcohol wines? And come to think of it, wouldn’t it make more sense to give everyone low-alcohol wines?

Ummm… where have I heard that before?

Here’s my post, including my “Temple Beth Israel circa 1978” descriptor.

L’shanah tovah, yall!