NYT: The Silk Road Leads Through Queens

Bokharian This NY Times article was just too good to pass up, given its convergence of my hometown, tenuous (very, very tenuous) historical religious roots and, most importantly, the name of this blog! 

My wine recommendation with this sort of varied, spiced cuisine: an Alsatian Riesling, maybe a German one, and perhaps a light Aussie Syrah for spiciness if you prefer a red.

The Silk Road Leads to Queens

     

SUNDAY is family night out in Rego Park, Queens. All 10 tables at Restaurant Salute are crowded with pots of green tea, platters of golden French fries showered with chopped garlic and parsley, and piles of Uzbek plov, a cumin-scented pilaf of rice, carrots and chickpeas. ...

In Queens's Central Asian restaurants, you can read history in the tea leaves.

The geopolitical upheavals of the 20th century sent tens of thousands of people to New York from the former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, as well as Afghanistan and western China. Separated from Russia by the vast Kazakhstan steppe, straddled by mountains that stretch from Afghanistan's Hindu Kush, all the way to China and the Himalayas, the region is home to the Silk Road cities of Samarkand, Tashkent, Dushanbe and Bukhara.

Its mountains cross national boundaries, and so do its dishes. Fresh noodles and lamb kebabs, cilantro and garlic sauces and spiced rice pilafs are home cooking for many of these new New Yorkers.

For more than 2,000 years, Central Asia was home to the Bukharians, one of the most isolated Jewish communities in the world, who evolved a unique language, blending Farsi and Hebrew, that scholars call Judeo-Persian and locals call Bukhori. According to the Research Institute for New Americans, about 40,000 Bukharian Jews have settled in New York since the collapse of the Soviet Union. ...

Reflecting the influence of silk and spice trades, there are tastes of China and India everywhere. Every Bukharian menu offers a garlicky, chili-spiked Korean carrot salad, morkovcha koreyska, that is a legacy of Stalin's mass deportations of ethnic Koreans from the far eastern Soviet Union to its western frontiers. At Tandoori Bukharian Bakery in Rego Park, a samsa - one of Asia's many cousins of the Indian samosa - is deliciously spiked with cumin and baked against the walls of a clay-lined oven that Bukharians, like Indians, call a tandoor.

It is all a long way from bagels and lox.

Neither Ashkenazi nor Sephardi (the two major groups of Diaspora Jews), the Bukharians say that their lineage goes directly back to the Babylonian captivity, before 500 B.C. "Our people are the ones who did not return to Jerusalem afterward, but remained in Asia," said Peter Pinkhasov, a paralegal at a Manhattan law firm who immigrated with his family from Tashkent in 1993.

The Bukharians' Jewish identity was always preserved in the kitchen. "Even though we were in exile from Jerusalem, we observed kashruth," said Isak Masturov, another owner of Cheburechnaya. "We could not go to restaurants, so we had to learn to cook for our own community. My great-grandmother, Sarah Masturov, said that every woman should know how to cook for at least 500 people."

Every Bukharian Sabbath, whether in Forest Hills or Tel Aviv, is greeted with a dish of fried fish covered with a pounded sauce of garlic and cilantro. "We had the most wonderful fresh lake fish in Dushanbe," Ledya Moses, an owner of Salute, said.

A spirit of abundance pervades Bukharian restaurants. Kebabs of pure lamb fat, crisp and smoky, perfume every dining room. Platters of plov are enormous. And warm chewy bread called lepeshka, like a huge bialy, keeps coming until you say stop. A few doors down at Fortuna restaurant, the owner, Isak Babayev, mourns the barberries, the sweet yellow carrots, the pomegranates and the fresh walnuts of his native Uzbekistan. "Everything was organic, although we didn't know that word," he said in Russian. "There were the most wonderful red- and yellow-fleshed melons, and green grapes as long and thin as a woman's fingers."

In two decades, more than 90 percent of the 120,000 Bukharians have left Central Asia for Israel or the United States, said Dr. Sam Kliger of the Research Institute for New Americans. New York's Bukharian community, about 15 percent of the Russian-speaking Jews in the city, first followed the Russians to Brighton Beach in Brooklyn, said Solomon Moses, an owner of Salute. "But even though we all speak Russian, our customs are different, our religion is different, and our food is different," he added.

Rego Park (now sometimes called Regostan) and Forest Hills became home to the Bukharians, most of whom observe an orthodox form of Judaism. The Bukharian restaurants close well before dark on Friday and do not reopen until at least an hour after sundown on Saturday. "We Bukharians are good at preserving traditions," said Gulya Katayeva, a hairdresser who was a customer at Cheburechnaya last week, "and we like our own cooking." Her two teenage children nodded agreement, and her son, Solomon, 14, proceeded to explain the finer points of composing baksh, a Sabbath dish of rice and herbs that takes four hours to cook.

This is not a wildly varied cuisine, but its kebabs, stews, noodles and dumplings are savory and satisfying. A traditional Central Asian restaurant is little more than a stop for merchants and shepherds traveling the difficult road over the Pamir peaks; the ancient Persians called the region the roof of the world. These restaurants, called chai khanas, or tea houses, provided travelers in the most remote settlements with a place to warm themselves with pots of green tea, and, if they were lucky, to find staples like rice, lamb, carrots, herbs and onions. "We drink green tea all day and all night, when we are sick and when we are healthy," said Arthur Rubinov, an owner of Tandoori.

Dishes that define the region include lamb kebabs; shurpa, which might be a hearty vegetable-beef soup spiked with cumin or a thin lamb broth; and rice pilaf, whether chunky plov or one of the luxurious pilafs that adorn traditional Afghan banquets.

At Bahar in Elmhurst, the best Afghan restaurant I have found in New York, the naranj pilaf is a rich, glowing orange color, thickly larded with shreds of orange peel, soft almonds and pistachios. Zamarat pilaf, which means "emerald," is infused with spinach and cilantro. "Rice is the first thing we eat, and the most important," said an owner, Huma Lewal, who came to New York from Kabul in 1992. "And the crust on the bottom of the rice pot, the ta-di-qi, is always given to the oldest and most respected person in the room."

Farther north, bread and flour take over - especially lagman, hand-pulled noodles whose name evolved from the Chinese lo mein. Very popular among the Bukharians, lagman have been mastered by another Central Asian group, the Uighurs, who have a small community in New York. Their traditional home is the area around Kashgar, a legendary Silk Road bazaar that is now the remote Chinese city of Kashi, not far from China's border with Kyrgyzstan.

Cafe Kashkar, in Brighton Beach, holds the distinction of being the best Uighur restaurant in New York (there is at least one other). "Uighurs are not Chinese, not Russian, not Uzbek, not Kyrgyz," an owner, Temur Yazova, said in Russian. "We are Asiatskie - Asian." Uighurs are Muslim, and speak a language derived from Turkish; many say that persecution by the Chinese government has forced them out of China, finding their way to New York via Tashkent and Dushanbe.

Certainly the food at Cafe Kashkar is closer to Istanbul's than to Beijing's. Ms. Yazova's menu is mostly dedicated to handmade lagman and dumplings - boiled, steamed, served in soup or even stir-fried and topped with a rich stew of beef and red peppers topped with parsley to make a dish called goiro lagman. "Everyone knows that females are the best at making lagman," she said. Her manti, steamed meat dumplings, are served in clear soup, sprinkled with parsley, and as delicate as fine wontons; to ward off blandness, every table holds a vial of spicy vinegar infused with chilies, peppers and peppery celery leaves. "We call it ug-sauce," Sher Mekhmonov, the waiter, said.

Dumplings, samsi and their close relative, fried meat pies, are the favorite street food of Central Asians. At Bahar, the large, flat, crisp bolani, especially ones stuffed with a jammy pumpkin conserve, are superb. And at Cheburechnaya, Mr. Sionov tries to remind his rapidly gentrifying customers that chebureks are best eaten with two hands, not a knife and fork. "The juice runs out on the plate if you cut it," he said. "And if it is not juicy, it is not cheburek."

Bubbly + Sword = What A Holiday Party!

We had the honor of being invited to Russ and Susan's holiday party at Marche restaurant this past weekend, and what a party it was.  How could a holiday party quickly devolve into swinging sabers, shattered glass and howling guests (with laughter, that is)?  A short question & answer session usually does the trick:

Who was there?
All the usual suspects, present company included.

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What was served?
Ramey Chardonnay and Lokoya Cabernet (1997 & 2001).  Excellent choices.

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How did it get out of control?      
Russ (our host) pulled out his scimitar and made the nearest champagne bottle his practice dummy.  His aim was perfect, though, leading a few of us to wonder if he spent time as a mercenary in various global hot spots ...

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But ... how did Russ wind up with a sword in his hands at a holiday party?
No, Susan didn't tell him one of his clients didn't pay their bill.  Rather, chalk it up to the ingenuity (some might say twisted humor) of Paul Conrado, who mentioned to Russ after dinner that he would love a glass of bubbly and there "happened to be" a champagne opener on the gift table.  Of course, Paul failed to mention that the champagne opener was in the shape of a four-foot curved sword but who wants to sweat the details at a holiday party? *

Scimitar

Great holiday party, one of the best we have been to.  Thanks Russ and Susan!

* Note: this version more or less holds true to the version of events witnessed at our table.  Perhaps the author took minor liberties with the actual dialogue but rest assured, gentle reader, it served only to aid in recounting the tale.   

Georis Winery (Carmel Valley) Review

00merlotBack to blogging now after being away for a while on business.  We had the pleasure of going down to Carmel Valley this past weekend for some good food and wine -- on the food front, we are big fans of both Casanova restaurant (in Carmel-by-the-sea) and their more casual sister bistro in Carmel Valley, the Corkscrew Cafe

As far as wine goes, we decided to stay within the "culinary family" and visit Georis Winery, which is owned by the same folks who own the two restaurants above and is well-known for its excellent merlot (as an added benefit, the tasting room is right next door -- literally -- to the Corkscrew Cafe).  Georis puts on an excellent tasting experience in their beautiful outdoor patio, and each tasting is accompanied by a plate of 3 cheeses and a helpful history of the wine from the friendly staff -- highly recommended if you are in the area.

We tried several wines, all of which were quite tasty but the stars were the 2000 and 2002 "Estate" Merlot bottlings.  Unlike some of the others, these were neither too thin (the 2002 Le Sanglier suffered a bit from this) nor too tannic at this age (the 2001 "Estate" Merlot was a bit tough relative to the other two) -- instead, the 2000 and 2002 were complex, well-balanced and showed a pleasant, lingering finish that paired quite well with both the hard and soft cheeses.  These would be great food wines, and the 2000 comes from a renowned vintage that local aficionados believe can be cellared until the 2020's -- since it is so delicious right now, I'm not sure any bottle I bought would last that long.

Bottom line: both the wine and the experience at Georis are highly recommended, along with the Corkscrew Cafe next door.          

Off to France ...

HammockWe're off to France for a vacation and a visit to relatives -- most of the time in Provence and the Languedoc-Rouissillon, with a quick jaunt to Paris at the end for the 2005 edition of Nuit Blanche.  Will blog the great juice we find once back!

CONRADO CELLARS BOTTLING PARTY

P1010104This past Saturday we were honored to be invited to the Conrado Cellars 2005 bottling party courtesy of our friends Russ (center) and Susan Perry.  Head winemaker Paul Conrado (right) also operates The Conrado Company, a homebuilder specializing in the construction and remodeling of luxury custom homes in the foothills of Silicon Valley -- as a service to his clients, he also (astutely) plants and helps with the operations of nearly a dozen vineyards on their properties, for which he receives half their fruit as payment in exchange for bottling their wine.  It works out nicely for all concerned.

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Saturday morning, 9am: 145 eager friends and family assemble to begin the process of bottling 96 cases of wine (zinfandel and carignane). 

There was lots, and I mean lots, of work to go around.  The work was well organized, though, and at times seemed akin to a Civil War fire brigade with everyone pitching in wherever needed.  The highlights, working our way down the assembly line:

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Washing and drying the bottles -- very important to the end product.



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P1010073Bottling the juice -- have to watch fill levels for all 6 bottles at once, feels a bit like a video game ...

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Topping off each bottle, like Michaelangelo putting the final brushstroke on the Sistene Chapel.  Perhaps I'm being generous; this was more like the "Goldilocks" job (not too full, not too low ... want the cork to fit juuuuuuuust right)

  Corking each bottle.  How long until Paul goes to screwtops?

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Wait a minute ... I thought they only poured one glass for "quality control"?


P1010093A few mechanical difficulties with the pump, quickly repaired before the workers get antsy ...

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P1010072Sealing each masterpiece with the distinctive foil wrapper.

 

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Labeling each bottle -- steady hands required here, to be sure.  Note the extra-large font, designed to accomodate dinner parties where they need to read the label after sampling a little extra product ...

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In the end, another award-winning effort for the Conrado team.  Great fun all around, we look forward to the next one!

The Dummies Guide to Buying a Wine Fridge

WinefridgeThe WSJ does an admittedly unscientific but very interesting study to see what works best, a $500 "wine chller" or no formal storage at all.  Although they didn't take into account the elaborate temperature and humidity-controlled wine cellar rooms that are on the market, the impression one comes away with is that they are more for show than anything else -- any incremental gains from such a setup are probably negligible:

I draw a few lessons from this: Wine, it turns out, is pretty tough. Second, there's no guarantee that a wine store or restaurant is doing any better than I am at home.

When I was selecting our wine fridge (a 220 bottle unit in dark cherry from Vinocraft) I developed a few simple rules to help narrow down the purchase options:

  • Where will the fridge be stored -- in full view (as furniture) or out of sight (in the garage)?  This is the most important question, since it drives all the other decisions around color, windows, etc.  Consider how hot it gets in that room or garage since this can significantly increase your electricity bill to keep the fridge cool.  In our case, we store it way out of sight in a big closet (with adequate ventilation) in a very cool part of the house next to the garage.
  • If it will be stored out in the open, definitely spend the extra money for a super-quiet fan.  Until you stand next to them, you have no idea how some of these fans can resemble the sound of a jet engine -- you don't want that in your dining room.
  • Be realistic about the size of fridge you need.  If you are moving up from the 10-bottle wine rack in your kitchen (even if it was always full), you probably don't need a 500+ bottle ultra-premium wine fridge unless you plan on devoting a serious portion of your disposable income to building a collection.
  • Accessories you need: an interior light and an exterior lock.  Adjustable racks for different size bottles are a nice option if available.
  • Accessories you don't need: pricey dual-humidity controls, windows, fancy wood trim and handles.  It's a fridge after all -- you want to show off what you pull out from inside of it, not the fridge itself.

That's about it -- good luck and enjoy stocking your new purchase!

Wines for Summer Grilling

Bbq2Continuing our series on on pairing wines with food (other BBQ and grill articles here and here), About.com delivers the goods with a nice little article -- should help to get your pairings right as the summer winds down:

Grill-friendly Red Varietals to Consider:

Zinfandels will be able to handle a wide variety of red meats. This bold red wine bellies up to meaty, smokey flavors – allowing the varietal’s black pepper spice, acidity and ripe tannins to carry the meat’s fats and texture to a new dimension. A Zin will also work well with barbeque sauce, steak sauce and mild salsas – if there is too much spice in the sauce the two will compete and both the wine and the sauce end up as losers.

Merlot is the spicy sauce answer to the above dilemma. With the characteristic fruit-forward flavor profile, this varietal will support the spice and not aggravate it. Grilled pork chops, chicken and garden-variety salads with lighter dressings also mingle well with Merlot.

Shiraz/Syrah another varietal that makes the grill-friendly wine list. This varietal is delicious with just about any red meat. Offering dynamic, somewhat aggressive fruit flavors, balanced with more mellow tannins and a softer-fuller body – this wine’s place to shine is definitely at a barbecue gathering! Rhone Syrahs tend to have a smokier flavor characteristic and lend themselves extremely well to smoked brisket.

Cabernet Sauvignon is made for steaks with a higher fat content and burgers of beef or turkey will pair equally well. The tighter tannins are significantly mellowed by the meat’s fat, producing a palate pleaser to remember! Top your burgers with bold cheeses, like blue or sharp cheddar and this varietal gets even better!

Pinot Noir a flexible varietal that is known for being extremely food-friendly. Can go from grilled fish to a juicy burger in a single sip! Pinot Noir is an ideal candidate for grilled fish – especially salmon, burgers and chicken both bare their best in the presence of Pinot Noir. If you aren’t sure if what wine will work with your grilled dinner, Pinot Noir will likely be your best bet.

Grill-friendly White Varietals to Consider:

Chardonnay will work wonderfully with grilled fish (including shellfish), chicken with creamy sauces, and grilled corn on the cob with lots of butter!

Riesling the perfect varietal for grilled brats, shrimp, barbecue chicken, grilled pineapple and a variety of grilled veggies.

Sauvignon Blanc has a herbaceous quality that supports marinades and sauces with similar attributes. For example, grilled chicken that has been doused in Italian dressing or a citrus marinade will be unbeatable with a Sauvignon Blanc. Likewise, roasted peppers, veggies in fresh herbs, grilled fish with dill and lemon will all be highlighted in tandem with a Sauvignon Blanc.

Gewurztraminer often offers a balance to spice with its slightly to moderately sweet character. This varietal would be a great choice to go with blackened Mahi Mahi, or grilled Cajun chicken with fresh mango salsa.

In very, very general red wines go well with grilled red meats - we’re talking your basic burgers, steaks, ribs and the like. These meats can be somewhat salty, a bit smokey and tend to be a touch sweeter if grilled due to marinades, sauces, condiments, cooking times, etc. The lighter meats and sauces are more apt to flow better with white wines that share similar flavors as the foods they are meant to accent. If you are having a backyard barbecue, offer a few whites and a few reds and let your guests mix and match to see which flavor pairs suit their preferences. They are no hard and fast rules when it comes to pairing wines with your grilled foods, just generalities that can get you going. Ultimately it is your palate that your seeking to please by the wine pairing.

Wine and Food Pairing: Spicy Thai, Sushi or BBQ

It's a theme we explore often in this column, but it all comes down to a wine's acidity.  Eric Asimov has a wonderful article about this in the NY Times (free registration req'd) -- a very interesting takeaway is that the similar wines from various geographic regions can pair strikingly differently with spicy foods.

Take bubbly for example -- French Champagne is the drink of choice if you want to branch out beyond beer:

So what is the right wine to go along with these foods? More often than not, it's Champagne. No wine, believe it or not, is as versatile with so wide a range of food as Champagne, and that especially includes foods that are assertively spiced. Chicken chaat with chili, cilantro and that icy feeling in the top of your mouth that comes from coarsely ground Indian black salt? Champagne is your baby. Griot, the Haitian dish of pork chunks that are marinated in vinegar, chili and lemon juice, then fried? You won't go wrong with Champagne. Sichuan twice-cooked pork? Champagne, definitely.

But don't simply grab the first bubbly you see or you might be disappointed:

On first glance, it's obvious why Champagne would go so well with beer cuisines. It's the bubbles. But that doesn't explain all of it. Cava and prosecco have bubbles, but they don't have the intensity of Champagne. California sparkling wine has bubbles, but it often is a little too heavy to refresh. I recently tried a sparkling shiraz from Australia with falafel and hummus with hot sauce, and frankly, I wish I had used more hot sauce to drown out the thick, sweet yet bitter flavor of the shiraz. No, the bubbles are important, but Champagne also has a crucial element that the other sparkling wines too often lack: high acidity.

Acidity gives wine snap and zest. It gives it a sense of freshness and helps to stimulate the palate. Even sweet wines, like a German riesling auslese, when balanced by acidity, can be thoroughly refreshing. Good acidity in a wine is essential if it is to accompany foods that aren't typically thought of as good with wine.

Thai cuisine (in this case, Holy Basil in NYC) is renowned for destroying the flavors of high scoring wines, so you have to pair a bit more carefully than simply picking the "best" wine on the list:

At a meal there I tried a 2002 Bourgueil "Les Galichets" from Catherine and Pierre Breton, as well as a 1995 Rioja Reserva from López de Heredia. The Rioja is wonderful, and about twice the price of the Bourgueil, but with a pungent, tart yet balanced dish like crisp duck with panang curry and kaffir lime? The Rioja had no business on the table. The Bourgueil, though, was perfect - refreshing and stimulating. The Rioja no doubt would receive a higher score in a blind tasting, but at a Thai dinner, the Bourgueil blew it away.

Sushi, though, is a match with an altogether different sort of red wine (but with the same "acid test," if you will):

Sushi and pinot noir is a surprisingly excellent combination, though you need to be careful. Burgundies are generally good choices, because they have sufficient acidity, but American pinot noirs can often be too sweet.

Most importantly, do not go anywhere near the big, bad Cabs that dominate wine lists put together based on scores rather than the restaurant's cuisine:

Cabernet, merlot and other Bordeaux varietal wines may be among the world's most popular, but when it comes to foods off the wine trail, they tend to be overbearing brutes. Tannins, which are generally plentiful in cabernet, and spicy foods are like rivals whom you don't want to invite to the same party. Inevitably, they'll butt heads. When cabernets age and the tannins soften, the roles reverse, and it's the spicy food that does the bullying.

 

WBW #12 Results Posted

Chocolate_layer_cakeSince last year, Lenn at Lenndevours has spearheaded a great concept called Wine Blogging Wednesday and the fun results of latest tasting are posted here.  I have been remiss in not joining in yet ... but this is going to change next month, I guarantee (looks like way too much fun to miss!).

For those of you interested in joining the fun, Lenn has the specifics on the next event (September 7) here -- a chocolate cake pairing, mmmmm ...

World's best inexpensive Cabernet Sauvignon

PennyThe SF Chronicle has good article with some of their best Cabernet picks for under $20 -- very refreshing to see this end of the market being covered.  It has always struck me as strange that so many wine snobs (and wannabe's) insist on only reading and writing about the most expensive and often unattainable wines, while virtually ignoring the lesser-priced gems that the average non-elitist wine drinker is searching out.  Don't get me wrong -- it is fun to read about the latest Ferrari in Car & Driver, but Consumer Reports is going to prove immensely more valuable when I am searching for my next set of wheels.  Why is wine any different?

Some highlights from their picks:

My favorite Cab on this proudly proletarian list is the 2003 Pepperwood Grove California Cabernet Sauvignon ($8), which is more likable than many Cabs I've had at four times the price. The vanilla aroma is strong, indicating lots of exposure to oak, with additional scents of cherry and leather. On the palate, it's nicely balanced between cherry and vanilla flavors with notes of black tea and leather; more cherry keeps coming out on the medium-long finish. ...

The 2002 Two Tone Farm Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($10) is very successful in the oaked-up style. It smells mostly of vanilla and oak with some cherry; on the palate, oak dominates and the tannins are assertive, but the cherry and vanilla flavors are pleasing through the medium-length finish. Let it breathe at least 30 minutes to soften the tannins.

If you prefer minimal oak flavors try the NV HRM Rex Goliath California Cabernet Sauvignon ($9). It's pleasantly jammy and almost all fruit, with aromas and flavors of blackberry and cherry with hints of mint and herb. ...

Australia is a great source of bargain wines these days, and there's plenty of Cab planted Down Under. The 2001 Handpicked Yarra Valley Cabernet Sauvignon ($10) delivers flavors and aromas of cherry, black tea, coffee, red currant and herb.

Its fellow Aussie, 2003 Kelly's Revenge South Eastern Australia Cabernet Sauvignon ($6), is very simple, with aromas and flavors of black cherry and herb, but you gotta like getting the king of grapes for that price.

And they even have good things to say about wine in a box, if you can believe it (although the very classy Vin Vino Wine shop in Palo Alto carries the first one, so perhaps it is not such a surprise):

The jokesters behind Three Thieves wines have helped once again in liberating wine for the masses. The 2002 Three Thieves Bandit California Cabernet Sauvignon ($7 for a 1-liter box) has a bright, appealing aroma of cherry, cherry candy and vanilla. On the palate, it's a simple and likable combo of cherry and vanilla flavors. The Tetra Pak box it comes in has many advantages  --  it's lightweight and portable, and I once smuggled one into a baseball game where I doubt I would have been able to bring a bottle. However, be warned that it's difficult to pour from without spilling.

The 2003 Black Box Wines Paso Robles Cabernet Sauvignon ($18 for a 3- liter box) comes in an entirely different kind of box that's not intended to be portable. The bag-in-box packaging is designed to keep wine fresh for several weeks after opening; I haven't tried this myself, but others have and report that it works. Every time you push the spigot to pour a glass, the bag depresses, creating a vacuum and preventing oxidation. Be sure to store the wine in a cool area, especially after opening. This Black Box Cab, which contains the equivalent of four 750 ml bottles, offers simple aromas and flavors of black cherry and toast with an herbal note.

 

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Recommended books on wine

  • Andrea Immer Robinson's excellent teach-yourself course on wine
  • The other great wine & food pairing book on the market
  • One of the two best wine & food pairing books on the market
  • Encylopedic reference tome on all regions and wines. Very educational.
  • Well-written and very informative.
  • A great compact reference book -- extremely helpful when trying to decipher wine labels in other languages.
  • Easily digestible sections for each micro-region in the world. Fantastic maps
  • The gold standard -- read this cover to cover and you'll know more than most wine shop employees

Great wine shops

  • Vintage Wine Merchants
    More than a destination shop -- you can easily spend the whole day talking with Alex, Joe, Mike, Harry and the gang and learning a ton about fine wine. Santana Row wouldn't be nearly as much fun without their shop!
  • K&L Wine Merchants
    Great selection and newsletter. One of the best-designed wine websites around.
  • The Wine Club
    Some real hard to find gems, good futures prices and a great newsletter.
  • Joseph George Wines
    Think about it -- how many wine shops do you know that are 3rd generation family-owned, provide you the owner's name and phone number on their website (and invite you to call for assistance in selecting wines), and are only open noon-5pm Monday through Friday ...! A sign of how well the shop is doing.
  • Vin, Vino, Wine Bottle Shop & Tasting Bar
    Tucked away on California Ave. in Palo Alto, this is truly a shop for the connoisseur -- not as comprehensive as some of the bigger shops, but they more than make up for it with deep collections of exceptional red and white Burgundies. Their newsletter is required reading each month.

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