A couple nights ago I had a group of girlfriends over for our 3rd wine education/drinking dinner. Our concept is simple, I provide the wine and a little history or lesson along with it, and each of them brings a part of the meal to pair with the wine. I always ask them to give their thoughts on the wine, which I've noticed have gotten significantly more sophisticated each time. Hopefully this means I'm a good teacher, or at least that I've inspired them to speak up. One woman in particular has definitely taken the glass by the stem (or the bull by the horns, whatever cliche you prefer). I had never thought her to be very interested in drinking. She doesn't like champagne, for one, and what girl doesn't like champagne? However, a few days after our first dinner, she mentioned that she was very excited because she was able to use her new wine tasting knowledge to impress people at a work dinner. We had discussed the different types of bottles used for different wines and how that might help you in a blind tasting. She passed along the information and impressed the more wine knowledgeable folks at the table. Then, two nights ago I was surprised to hear her say that her first impression of the 1997 BV Tapestry, a Bordeaux-style wine, (which means it typically would use cabernet sauvignon, cabernet franc, merlot, malbec, and/or petit verdot grapes, of which this bottle contained the first four) we were tasting was "salty". Very confidently she confirmed her opinion, and as I took another sip, I tasted exactly what she did. It was a little like sticking your tongue in the ocean and then quickly pulling it out. I was so elated by her forthcoming statements on her opinion of the wine, as it was such an uncommon one, that I failed to notice that the entire experience of the wine was utterly amazing. The initial saltiness makes a bit of sense. If you look at a diagram of the tongue's sensory spots (see below), which I'm sure many of you didn't know existed, the tip of the tongue is where you taste saltiness. There were bountiful lessons in that first sip for all of us.

The saltiness also made the wine go very well with the aged cheeses that had arrived on our table via the assigned lady friend. She had done a little reading in the cheese shop (because the cheese person, formally called the fromager, was out) and discovered that aged Jack would be a good match, and so it was. As harder cheeses age, they generally get these little crunchy salt pockets that build up. There was nothing better than a sip of that delicious wine and that salty cheese...unless you count the yummy salad with mixed lettuces and salty-sweet nuts, the earthy mushroom risotto, and the feijoada (brazilian meat stew), that the other ladies brought. All were great matches for the wine, which after that initial salty taste, gave way to a peppery and earthy wine with deep, dark berry flavors (fruits like blackberry and cassis). We didn't have much wine left by dessert, but that went very well too; Sticky gooey bars covered in walnut pieces. Yum!
3 comments:
Hey! Some people don't like champagne and that's okay. Makes me a cheap date!
I'm glad to validate that I also have experienced a slight salty taste in my wine... considering that I often pick cabs/reds and tend to add salt even in my desserts, not a surprise that I loved this one!
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