Jeff Pinhey
Jeffrey Pinhey
I managed to fake my way into another tasting that was supposed to be for people who buy wine for restaurants and private stores. Amazing what people will accept as proof nowadays when you can make your own business cards at home....
Anyway, this was lead by Michael Palij, MW. He was showing a bunch of wines he imports to the UK, and then to points beyond, from small producers in Italy.
This wine is perhaps the most intriguing. Although I have to admit to being floored by a Dolcetto and a Trebbiano.... The best Trebbiano in the world, it had to be....
Anyway, the Timorasso was:
A pale yellow with floral notes, nuts, and perhaps talc, but with a taste that balances huge acidity with high alcohol while keeping a nutty, mineral, fruit, floral balance.
Palij described his initiation to the grape with a wine that was 20 years old and still amazingly spot on. The combined alcohol and acidity probably help with the life extension.
The next night, I managed to slip into a wine dinner put on for Palij by the local current head of the Slow Food movement here in Nova Scotia, Michael Howell. His job was to match the wines with different courses of food.
Somewhere online, he found a reference to someone having seen Walter Massa, the current proprietor of Vigneti Massa, chowing down on a meal of frog's legs in a nettle sauce with a bottle of his own Timorasso. So we got that - frog legs made into "popsicles", battered, and fried, and then we got to roll them in the sauce. A great success.
And my first ever frog legs.
This grape may have been the original Gavi source, replaced by Cortese after phyloxera. I think it is worth seeking out if you have not yet tried it.
Micheal mentioned that Jancis Robinson had, or will feature the wine on her site, so it may become more difficult to find.
Anyway, this was lead by Michael Palij, MW. He was showing a bunch of wines he imports to the UK, and then to points beyond, from small producers in Italy.
This wine is perhaps the most intriguing. Although I have to admit to being floored by a Dolcetto and a Trebbiano.... The best Trebbiano in the world, it had to be....
Anyway, the Timorasso was:
A pale yellow with floral notes, nuts, and perhaps talc, but with a taste that balances huge acidity with high alcohol while keeping a nutty, mineral, fruit, floral balance.
Palij described his initiation to the grape with a wine that was 20 years old and still amazingly spot on. The combined alcohol and acidity probably help with the life extension.
The next night, I managed to slip into a wine dinner put on for Palij by the local current head of the Slow Food movement here in Nova Scotia, Michael Howell. His job was to match the wines with different courses of food.
Somewhere online, he found a reference to someone having seen Walter Massa, the current proprietor of Vigneti Massa, chowing down on a meal of frog's legs in a nettle sauce with a bottle of his own Timorasso. So we got that - frog legs made into "popsicles", battered, and fried, and then we got to roll them in the sauce. A great success.
And my first ever frog legs.
This grape may have been the original Gavi source, replaced by Cortese after phyloxera. I think it is worth seeking out if you have not yet tried it.
Micheal mentioned that Jancis Robinson had, or will feature the wine on her site, so it may become more difficult to find.