by Eric OlsonCan I be a curmudgeon yet? I feel that way after last night's episode of "Chronicle" on TV. They featured a class being taught at Boston University that included wine and it's enjoyment, but the enjoyment part, or lack thereof, got to me a little later on.
In the episode, a woman looked intently into two glasses of wine, and said, "do you see a little more green tint in this one?” Some very serious students, with furrowed brows, stared into their glasses.
Realize that knowing more about wine could help increase your enjoyment, but the class brought up a Monty Pythonesque scene of a group of very serious people on Salem Common one spring day trying to decipher why it was so pleasant. Is it the dove's cooing, the salty tang in the air, the warmth from a rejuvenated sun? The blue sky? What makes a great day great? Everything.
Same holds true in a wine class: don't take it so seriously that you don't see the forest through the trees. You don't need a formal wine class to increase your knowledge, and you certainly don't need to be a "Master of Wine" to get full enjoyment. Lighten up. Find a laid back wine tasting like we have on Tuesdays. No furrowed brow's, just smiles, and you'll enjoy just as much as the "experts” without the pretense.
Some recommendations for this weekend’s Easter Dinners. If having lamb, then I highly suggest a French Bordeaux, from the left bank. The Chateau Aney, Haut Medoc would be perfect. A Spanish Mencia from Bierzo would work nicely such as the ‘07 Luna Beberide, or the wonderfully dry, earthy Bila Haut, from Chapoutier in the Roussillon region. You want to balance the richness of the lamb with either the tannins in the Aney, the acid in the Mencia, or the gritty dryness of the Bila Haut.
For the ham dinners a softer, fruitier red will do fine, such as the Pinot Noir from Brunel,or the J.P. Brun, Beaujolais. For those who prefer a white with the ham, the fruity, tasty Saumur from the Loire valley would be a good match. Any way you slice it we hope your Sunday is as as pleasant as the weather is supposed to be. And don't waste time trying to decide why the day is so nice, or the wine for that matter. It just is.
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