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Jason and I didn’t drink wine tonight, because we had an important martial arts (Hapkido) test. We tested and passed!  We’re up to the orange belt with a black stripe.  We have a few years before we’ll have any chance of getting our black belts, but it is a fun journey.   We kickbox too – which is great exercise especially when combined with Hapkido.  Its a good thing too, because I eat and drink with gusto!

We came home today after spending a few days in Los Angeles at a trade show. Boy it is great to be back home in Santa Barbara! To celebrate, we opened a local wine, the 2004 Curran Black Oak Vineyard Syrah Reserve, made by Kris Curran. She is responsible for some award winning wines at Cambria and most notably Sea Smoke Cellars. With the Curran brand, she focuses on a handful of varietals including Grenache Blanc, Sangiovese, Syrah, Tempranillo. Her single vineyard Syrahs are really interesting to taste side by side because Kris focuses on trying to bring out the character of the varietal as well as unique characteristics imparted by the vineyard. You can drink the same vintage, the same varietal, with the only difference being that the fruit was grown a mile or so apart at a different vineyard and taste remarkable differences.

We celebrated my father-in-law’s birthday tonight with a special dinner at our place. While prepping the dinner Jason and I opened a chilled Scott Cellars 2005 Pinot Gris which we shared with our guests when they arrived. Scott Cellars is a tiny winery – they produce only about 900 cases a year. I met the winemaker, Peter Scott Fraser, when we were both pouring wine at a charity event. I traded him a bottle of Consilience Santa Barbara County Petite Sirah for one of his Scott Cellars J Cuvee (a lovely fruity blend of Zinfandel and Syrah, named after his wife) which I fell in love with after one taste. Alas, I digress. The Pinot Gris is not subtle nor delicate, it is balanced with a crisp richness that I enjoy in white wine. Dinner was salmon with a lemon dill sauce and roasted root vegetables (pearl onions, garlic, parsnips, potatoes, beets) with a lovely Alma Rosa 2005 Sta. Rita Hills Pinot Noir (90 points from Wine Spectator). The owners of Alma Rosa, Richard and Thekla Sanford, are friends with my in-laws, so we thought it might be fun to drink Alma Rosa wine tonight. The Pinot, with its subtle floral aroma and deep cherry and earthy flavors, went really well with the fish. I also made a “three hole chocolate cake”, using a recipe from my Mom. Since this cake doesn’t call for any perishable ingredients (like milk or eggs), my Mom would bake it whenever the roads were closed (we were snowed in often during the winter and couldn’t get to the supermarket). Here is the recipe in case you are jonesing for chocolate cake.

3 Hole Chocolate Cake
1.5 C flour
1 C sugar
3 TB cocoa
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
6 TB salad oil
1 TB cider vinegar
1 TB vanilla extract
1 C cold water

  1. Sift the first 5 ingredients (flour, sugar, cocoa, baking soda, salt) together into a large bowl
  2. Make three holes (depressions) in the sifted ingredients
  3. Pour salad oil into hole #1
  4. Pour cider vinegar into hole #2
  5. Pour vanilla extract into hole #3
  6. Pour 1 C of water over all
  7. Mix it all together with a spoon or wire whisk until very smooth
  8. Pour into an 8″x8″ pan
  9. Bake at 350F degrees for 30-35 minutes

Sometimes when the cake was still a little warm from the oven, Mom would put a simple glaze on it. With that said, the cake is great without the glaze. Here is the recipe for the glaze:
1 C powdered sugar
1 TB butter
1.5 TB cocoa
A few drops of vanilla extract
Milk (add just enough to make the glaze spreadable)
Mix the glaze ingredients together and then spread over the cake. Enjoy!

Tonight we opened a 2001 Sunstone Syrah but I think we might’ve waited a bit too long to drink it. It just seemed a little one dimensional. I guess we shouldn’t have waited so long. This isn’t the first time we’ve made this mistake. The one that really broke my heart was a bottle of 1970 Chateau Lafite Rothschild that I gave to my husband as a gift (for one of those ‘significant birthdays’) years ago. I cannot be certain, but I was pretty sure that his eyes teared up when he saw the year on the label. We’d waited for the perfect occasion to open the bottle. Everything needed to be right: the glasses, decanter, the season and the friends who’ll enjoy the bottle with us. The perfect occasion presented itself; dear friends of ours who’d recently moved to the Virgin Islands were visiting for the summer. They are passionate, interesting and fabulously alive people and we love spending time with them every chance we get. We don’t drink wine with them very often, now that they’ve moved out of the country, and so this occasion was made even more special. After much anticipation and preparation, my husband Jason handed the wine opener to Bob, biology professor and wine aficionado, and asked him to do the honors. After the cork came out, I knew from the disappointed look on Bob’s face that the wine had turned. We were left with a bottle of dashed hopes and vinegar.

After that heartbreak bottle, my husband and I decided that we’d try very hard to avoid letting a beautiful bottle of wine turn to salad dressing sitting in wine storage. These days, we make it a point to open a good bottle with most of our dinners. It makes every dinner seem like a celebration, and is also a way to dress up a simple meal at home. Hamburgers, baked beans and a simple green salad get infinitely more interesting when paired with a glass of Rusack Pinot, Andrew Murray Roasted Slope Syrah or the Kunin’s Grenache/Syrah/Mourvedre blend called Pape Star. Also, wine is a wonderful reminder of your travels, as you open bottles acquired on your successful wine tasting adventures. My husband and I went wine tasting in France years ago; we think of our trip whenever we open a bottle from the Chateauneuf-du-Pape region. It is wonderful to reminisce together over a glass of wine; it binds us and deepens our love. It is instant romance, with a baguette and a spot of brie!

We’d been storing a special bottle for a friend of ours for many years. He kept saying “I want to share this bottle with you,” but then he moved to Brazil for a while, got married and years slipped on by. In light of our heartbreak bottle of 1970 vinegar, we prodded Mike until he decided that it was time to open the bottle. He and his wife came to Santa Barbara and we all went to the farmer’s market where we bought yellow and red beets, new potatoes, red grapes, herbed goat cheese, olive tapenade, a loaf of bread and fresh salad greens from Tom Shepherd. We stopped on the way home to pick up a tri-tip. Then we had all the makings of a fabulous lunch. During our casual appetizer course of grapes, bread, tapenade, and cheeses, we set the table for our lunch and Jason started cooking the meat. We opened the 1997 Far Niente Cabernet Sauvignon to give it adequate time to breathe. We roasted the beets and made a salad. After nearly an hour we sat down in the sunshine at a table in the backyard and reminisced about what our lives were like when the grapes were harvested a decade ago. At that time, Mike wasn’t married and had not even met the woman who would later become his wife. Jason and I weren’t married then either. Over the eight years we stored Mike’s wine, Jason and I moved it to three different zip codes. We found ourselves working day and night during the dot-com boom. We traveled to Belize, Guatemala, and Europe. During this time, Mike (also caught up in the dot-com craziness) met and dated Sandra here in the States, then she went back home to Brazil. Mike pined for her and took Portuguese lessons. He then went to Brazil and proposed. They married and then moved back to America. It is breathtaking to think just how much our lives have changed over the years. The wine was the catalyst for us to sit down, really connect, and talk about life and love and travel and food. No heartbreak in this bottle, only sunlight and celebration!

1997 Far Niente Cabernet Sauvignon

1997 Far Niente Cabernet Sauvignon - Michael Wilsker pixillusion.com

Today was gorgeous and warm again so we went for a hike at the end of the day with our friend Andrew. The views of the Channel Islands were clear and beautiful. After the hike we grilled teriyaki chicken & vegetable kebabs and roasted some potatoes. Naturally our conversation turned to wine. Andrew made a comment about Syrah being “okay” and went on to say that he’d never had one that really ‘zinged’ him. I took this as a personal challenge; the gauntlet was thrown! I opened two different Syrahs. The first one the 2004 Skyhawk Lane Syrah (San Luis Obispo County, Alamo Creek Vineyards) is a big, intense Syrah with jammy fruit flavors with a nice long finish. Next, we opened a 2003 Ethan Syrah (Santa Ynez Valley, Purisima Mountain Vineyard). This wine is like a velvet hammer – beautifully smooth on the palate, heavy with condensed blackberry, cassis and white pepper flavors with a satisfying, long finish. We had bottle number 1357 of 3575…it was the second to the last bottle we have left. I will be sad to see the last one go, because it is drinking so well right now. Maybe I can talk Ethan into finding a few more bottles for me in his cellar? I hope so. Ethan’s father is award winning winemaker Robert Lindquist, of Qupé. I can assure you, the apple doesn’t fall far from the proverbial tree in that family. As far as our little Syrah Challenge, the wines definitely ‘zinged’ Andrew. He said, “Wow, I didn’t know Syrah could taste so good.” I love a good challenge.

Jason and I went hiking up the Romero Canyon trail – and ran into Laura Sanchez of the magazine Destination Wine Country. I’ve written a few articles for the publication and so I pitched Laura on a few story ideas and we chatted about how things are going at the magazine. She gave me the news that Destination Wine Country was re-designing its website and should launch the new site soon. After our hike, Jason and I came home and cooled off with the 2007 Carr Pinot Gris. This un-oaked wine (aged in stainless steel for 5 months) has tart apple and mineral notes. The Carr tasting room is located on the Urban Wine Trail, right in downtown Santa Barbara. If you happen to be in town, stop by to taste wines from a number of small production labels.  After we got cleaned up after our hike, we headed down the street to watch the Super Bowl with our neighbors Jo and Daniel and their friends from Los Angeles, Courtney and Mike. We brought along bottles to share, the 2004 Red Head Ranch Zinfandel (Paso Robles) and the 2006 Cleb Syrah of Rose (Santa Barbara). The 2006 Cleb Syrah Rosé is a wonderful, dry Rosé – with so much character and complexity it is like a pink wine masquerading as a red one. The 2004 Red Head Ranch is one of our favorite old vine Zinfandels because of its condensed, bold cherry jam and spice flavors. It has an amazingly long finish and paired really well with Super Bowl chili! There were only 362 cases of this wine made – which is too bad, because it is awesome! The 2006 Cleb Syrah Rosé is a wonderful, dry Rosé – with so much character and complexity it seems to be masquerading as a red wine. From what gleaned from the loud outbursts from the guys, the Super Bowl was a very exciting one – I quite frankly was more interested in the wine (and the commercials). Go team!

I headed out to Los Olivos today to work at the Tre Anelli tasting room. Any day at the tasting room is a great one. I work with fabulous people and I get to make wine tasters happy all day long! Tre Anelli is especially fun, because the wines very small production and are only sold at the tasting room.  Stop by, say “Hello”, and sample some awesome wines – be sure to mention you read about Tre Anelli here on WineNationUnderDog.com. After a fun day at the tasting room, I met Jason at Los Arroyos in Montecito for dinner. Los Arroyos serves authentic tasting Northern Mexican food and yummy margaritas. The Arroyo Burrito is wonderful – full of halibut, shrimp, roasted vegetables, black beans, sour cream and guacamole. Another one of our favorites is the Burrito Mojado which consists of your choice of chicken or steak, black beans, rice guacamole and sour cream. It is topped with a savory, spicy red sauce. After dinner we headed home and opened a lovely 2005 Malbec from Opolo. This wine has soft, velvety tannins and tasted of black cherry and stone fruit. What a wonderful way to end the day!

TGIF! It was such a gorgeous, warm January day (THIS is why we live in California, earthquakes or no earthquakes) that Jason decided to chill a 2007 Rosé of Syrah from Ampelos for us to have as our pre-dinner wine. This deeply pink colored wine is dry on the palate with serious backbone; this is definitely not one of those sticky-sweet pink wines! The flavors of the Syrah grapes really shine through – spice, berry and currant. With help from our friends Shannon, Betsy and Brendon we finished the wine and headed down the coast to Sly’s in Carpinteria. Sly’s was wonderful – high quality steaks, fresh Maine lobster – everything you’d want in a steakhouse, complete with a relaxed atmosphere and vintage car racing photos adorning the walls. I am especially fond of Sly’s traditional cocktail list featuring dandy drinks like the Gimlet, Zombie, Sazerac, Vesper, Old Fashioned (I especially love these because they remind me of my Dad), Manhattan and White Lady. My one and only complaint about Sly’s is its limited by-the-glass list– with only 7 red wines. It is a shame that the list doesn’t offer more local choices, especially since the restaurant is located a mere 45 minutes away from one of California’s best wine producing regions. Oh well, the vintage cocktails are so good that I don’t bother with the teeny-tiny wine list.

Tonight we had a family dinner with Susan and Jerry (Jason’s mom and stepdad). We had homemade ravioli, halibut, broccoli and a wonderful bottle of 2005 Goldeneye Anderson Valley Pinot Noir. This wine is a real treat! This is the very same wine that was served to President-Elect Obama and 200 guests at the recent 2009 Inaugural Luncheon. I figure that Mr. Obama had a lot on his mind during that luncheon, but I sure hope he was able to take a few moments to enjoy the color (bright deep red), nose (raspberry, savory spices and earthy scents) and taste (black cherry, black raspberry and mocha) of this shining example of a California Pinot Noir. Hail to the chief!

We headed down to Venice, California to spend the entire day relaxing and catching up with our friends Mike and Sandra today. We brought a lovely 2002 Consilience Rhodes Vineyard  Zinfandel (Redwood Valley – Mendocino County) with us and a 2005 Christian Lazo Cabernet Franc from Paso Robles. Mike and Sandra raided their wine stash and brought out three more bottles, 2004 Arthur Earl Silver Label Syrah (Valley View Vineyard, Santa Ynez Valley – Santa Barbara County), 2004 Heritage Valley Meritage (60% Cabernet Sauvignon, 30% Cabernet Franc, 10% Merlot), and the 2003 Di Bruno Sangiovese, Stolpman Vineyards (Santa Barbara County). With all this great wine, we feasted on a wheel of smoked provolone-like cheese that Sandra and Mike smuggled into the US from Brazil. It was aged, tangy and salty and unlike any other cheese I’ve ever had. By the way, drop me a note if you know where I can order smoked provolone! We also had soprassetto and prosciutto and freshly baked olive bread. We tore off hunks of the olive bread and dipped it in B.R. Cohn olive oil and Los Olivos Grocery fig balsamic vinegar. Simple, but oh so good!

Dinner was a grilled tri-tip with a Mike’s homemade dry rub and roasted potatoes. My friends who are not from California tell me that this is a cut that is unique to the West Coast. So, if your butcher gives you a funny look when you ask for tri-tip, just tell him you want a “triangle roast” or “bottom sirloin butt”. And, if you happen to be in the central coast area try our local specialty, Santa Maria style tri-tip. The dry rub for this is basically a blend of salt, black pepper, white pepper, cayenne pepper, paprika, onion powder, garlic powder; some bbqers include other ingredients like rosemary or parsley. Mmmm…Meat and potatoes – I guess I am a mid-western girl at heart!