Monday, October 29, 2012

Pigs and Pinot


     The weather has definitely taken on a chill. The season for backyard BBQ’s has passed. So the Winos and their husbands needed to move dinner inside and we were looking for a twist on a traditional dinner party. My husband and I had read about an annual event in Healdsburg, CA, called “Pigs and Pinot” which is held at Hotel Healdsburg and Charlie Palmer’s Dry Creek Kitchen. It looks and sounds like an awesome event that also raises money for charity events, but we all live 2,000 miles away. Lucky for us, Wino Lisa’s husband is a fantastic cook and is a wiz with his backyard pit. So it seemed only logical that we invite some wine loving friends over and try our “Pigs and Pinot”.

     We invited our friends to all bring a bottle of their favorite Pinot for a blind tasting to begin the evening, and what a treat that was. We had wine from California, Oregon, and New Zealand.


The lineup was:

·         Craggy Range Single Vineyard, Martinborough, New Zealand 2009

·         Talley Vineyards, Arroyo Grande Valley, California 2009

·         MacPhail Frattey Shams Vineyard, Healdsburg, California 2009

·         Winderlea Estate, Dundee Hills, Oregon 2007

·         Sequana Santa Lucia Highlander, California 2009

·         Domaine Drouhin, Willamette Valley Oregon 2008

·         Papapietro-Perry Nunes Vineyard, Russian River Valley, California 2009

    
     My husband, Mike, was the Master of Ceremonies for the blind tasting. We all received a scorecard, a blue chip for our first place vote, a red chip for a second place vote, and a white chip for our third place choice. Appetizers were passed during the tasting, pig inspired of course, including water chestnuts wrapped in bacon and drizzled with Maple syrup and Asian pork skewers with Portabella mushrooms. Both were a great match for the Pinots! As we tasted we wrote our impressions on a tasting card spending about five to ten minutes on each wine. After tasting all seven wines, we picked a first, second, and third place winner and awarded the wines accordingly. A first place vote was worth 3 points, a second place vote was 2 points, and a third place vote received one point. All agreed it was tough picking winners because we enjoyed all of the wines, but the Grand Champion was the Sequana Santa Lucia Highlander.

    
     Next it was on to dinner! Bart prepared the majority of the meal in his pit outside and it was all delicious. We enjoyed Pork Brozol in tomato sauce (a chef Bart creation), homemade smoked sausage, baby back ribs, and chopped pork shoulder with a choice of Carolina sauce or a Texas Red Sauce. On the side there was a cold green bean salad, Dutch oven potatoes, baked squash with cheese and breadcrumbs, and a tomato, cucumber, mozzarella salad with Balsamic dressing, and a homemade flatbread with Parmesan cheese. We enjoyed a lovely Meiomi Pinot Noir with dinner. If you had room for dessert there was Blue Bell ice cream with Papaya and a chocolate covered bacon stake.

     Great wine, delicious food and wonderful friends-it doesn’t get any better than that! So grab a few friends, a nice bottle of wine and enjoy.

Cheers,
Beth

 Wine Word(s) of the Day
"Dry"vs "Sweet" -in wine terms "dry" refers to wine without residual sugar. In the wine making process,  fermentation usually turns all the sugar in ripe grapes into alcohol.  Therefore, "sweet" wines may be only 5-6% alcohol and "dry' wines may be 13-15% alcohol.

           

No comments:

Post a Comment