India's First Wine, Food and Hospitality Website, INDIAN WINE ACADEMY, Specialists in Food & Wine Programmes. Food Importers in Ten Cities Across India. Publishers of delWine, India’s First Wine.
                
                
India’s Retail Sector : A Developing Story  India in Numbers : Useful Statistics Wine & Health 101 : Frequently Asked Questions
Advertise With Us
Classifieds
US Report on Indian Market Released
Top Ten Importers of India
On Facebook
 
On Twitter
 
Delhi Wine Club

Taste of California

California makes the plonk. It makes low-end affordable wines. Fortunately most people are aware that it makes some excellent red and even white wines- even some cult wines at prohibitive prices. The recent 2006 Tasting, a repeat of 1976 Paris Tastings, found California ahead of Bordeaux again in blind tastings.

A Taste of California was offered on Monday by Z Group International, a Las Vegas based wine export company. Las Vegas does not produce wine. But it  has every single label of world repute on its menu in the glitzy casinos and numerous fine dining restaurants. It also provides a tax shelter; there are no state taxes. So Ashok Sudhakar, an IIT Delhi alumnus, with a law degree to boot shifted residence from San Diego to Las Vegas a few years ago. 'Z' is the brainchild of his pretty daughter Elizabeth, who grew up in California and is in the process of exporting its wines to India .

The event, aptly named as 'You Be the Judge' was organised by Indian Wine Academy for the members of the Delhi Wine Club. Eleven wines covering a vast range of $8-$45 wines were selected from Napa Valley , Alexander Valley and Lodi . Each participant of the evening was required to judge the wines based on criteria of sight, bouquet, flavour, end, and overall impression.

The idea was primarily to have fun drinking wine, the basic objective of the Delhi Wine Club. Members were also given the onerous task of assessing the quality and taste of each wine.  It was also a study to evaluate how many would be in a position to cross the 13 th hurdle and still rate the wines fully- first two being the warm up wines from Nashik- the Indian Napa Valley .

Entry level Sauvignon, Chardonnay, White Zinfandel, Merlot and Cabernet were selected from Crane Lake Winery in Napa . Hundred Acre Gold Chardonnay from Barossa Valley (bottled in Napa ), Ferrari-Carano Chardonnay 2005 from Alexander Valley , Grgich Hills Chardonnay 2004 were the premier Chardonnays. Lodi was represented by a small family owned Cranston Winery. Heitz (2002) and Ch. Montelena (2003) were the super quality Cabernets.

No spittoons, and only bread and cheese-were provided as the palate cleansers.  

Out of the 5 Crane Lake Wineries, White Zinfandel was generally rubbished. Too sweet and no personality was the verdict, though a few were happy for the same reason. Sauvignon Blanc was clean, aromatic and zingy but weak on the mid-palate with a simple end. A great summer-time, no brainer wine was the majority verdict.

Chardonnay was medium bodied, quaffable and acceptable daily drinking wine.

Merlot was lacking in personality but Cabernet Sauvignon came out yards ahead. The tannins were mild. It is ready-to-drink wine with a decent balance and even some after taste. Must be drunk now, though. The '03 is not going to get any better.

The mid-priced Chardonnays had a chequered response. The 'Gold' Chardonnay reportedly has real gold wafer-thin chips that keep on dancing in the bottle. Most people found this to be a distraction than an additive, charging up the wine. There was a toss up between Ferrari-Carano and Grgich Hills Chardonnays. Jury was split though the Ferrari has a certain racy ring to its name and the later, named after the Polish owners does have a twisted name but also was more mature, fuller bodied and had better balance - a slightly more complex wine.

Cranston Cabernet 2003 showed the common thread of sharing and enjoying a fine wine, that runs amidst wine lovers and connoisseurs. It was the darling of everyone without exception. Dark red colour-almost inky, it had subtle aromas of berries and spices. The flavour was dry, fruity with soft tannins that imparted firm structure to the wine but were not too astringent. The mouthfeel was full and pleasant; taste of coffee and molten chocolate, dark cherries was predominant. It lingered in the mouth.

Chateau Montelena was the star of the show (Heitz was not tasted due to the galloping time and accelerated levels of alcohol in the body). The pre-disclosed fact that Montelena had been a  winner of the historic Paris 1976  blind tasting (albeit Chardonnay) must have biased the palates of our 'tasters'. The superlatives were aplenty. Priced at about thrice the Cranston Cab, this was a wine that did not require any explanation, just refills till it evaporated in the nose and the palate. Very smooth, delicious, full bodied wine that dances on the tongue, you don't want the sip to leave you. The long end makes you savour the taste longer and entices you to drink slower.   

Elizabeth Sudhakar, CEO of Z Group International, who grew up drinking California wines, said she is not married to California wines though. (She is not married, period) 'We shall be importing some interesting Italian wines too and if the market demands it we shall consider other areas as well, since we have access to an excellent working relationship with many regions. But, for now I wanted a select group to enjoy that Taste of California.'

 

Comments:

#Posted By : Raj S Paul

I noticed a bottle of Caymus in the photo but no comment on it - It is a super wine, especially their 'special selection'. If the Heitz cab was from 'Martha's Vineyard', then its their flagship - I've found Heitz cabs are heavy on the tannins typically and need to be 5 + yrs before being approachable. I've never heard of or even seen in a store the other wines such as Cranston, Crane Lake - probably low end stuff for export mainly & you know how I feel about zinfinadels - white, red, rose, they need to be treated like the swill they are and only allowed in the house if used as a pesticide!!
Raj S Paul

Comments:

#Posted By : Subhash Arora

Caymus turned out to be 2004. We thought it would be too young and closed for a tasting of this nature, without food. Heitz is from Heitz Wine Cellars in St Helena. Started by Joe and Alice Heitz in 1961, Heitz 2002 was ready to drink-especailly with steak, or lamb chops. Crane lake is just one of the many wineries in Napa, with entry level wines that can sell through Indian Retail, where high duties of 264% plus excise and VAT have to be added. Cranston may not be available easily. Produced by a family owned winery, it is available in Nine Steak House at Las Vegas. I am told by the exporter,Z Group International that Aureoles Restaurant in Mandalay Bay will soon carry it too. Your feeling about Zin is well appreciated. We folks at Indian Wine Academy present all types of wines and let the tasters judge for themselves.
Subhash Arora

 

Gallery

 

 
 
 

 
I Want to Comment ...
Name *
Email *

Please enter your comments in the space provided below. If you wish to write, mail your article to arora@indianwineacademy.com

 

Please note that it may take some time to get your comment published...Editor

 

Wine In India, Indian Wine, International Wine, Asian Wine Academy, Beer, Champagne, World Wine Academy

     
 

 
 
 
Copyright©indianwineacademy, 2003-2012 |All Rights Reserved
Developed & Designed by Sadilak SoftNet