I am putting Seth Rosenberg’s TN to the test tonight

maureen

maureen nelson
A few friends are coming over this evening to dine and watch a movie. Yesterday, at the Arlington farmers’ market, I found that my favorite farmer already had English peas and they were sweet. So I decided I had to make my (delicious and justifiably well-regarded) minted pea soup to serve before dinner. I went into CT to view others’ notes on my wines, sorted to Germany and by vintage, and started looking for young Mosels characterized as “minty.” I found more than one note that said the 2021 Falkenstein kabinett “Gisela” shows notes of mint, but Seth’s recent note sealed the deal - besides the usual accolades for this wine (which I have bought in several vintages but have not yet tried 😱), Seth said, “Kaffir lime and tangerine, rock candy and mint and green peas.” Sounds like i should work well, no? I will let you know.
 
on, sorry. The wine is delicious and proved to pair well with the soup but I cannot claim it tasted of mint and peas when consumed on its own.

But I am not a person who names flavors in wine. More about structure and balance. And yums.
 
originally posted by maureen:
on, sorry. The wine is delicious and proved to pair well with the soup but I cannot claim it tasted of mint and peas when consumed on its own.

But I am not a person who names flavors in wine. More about structure and balance. And yums.
Wait. You started looking for "young Mosels characterized as “minty,” yet you cannot call a wine minty. In any case, I've never had a Falkenstein kabinett that leans in that direction. Veltliner can be minty, and would have been my choice for a fresh pea soup, but the sweetness of peas generally does not work with rieslings that have RS because peas are not that sweet.
 
originally posted by mark e:
In any case, I've never had a Falkenstein kabinett that leans in that direction.
So, maybe what's missing from their holdings is a large stand of eucalyptus. Where do you think it would be best to plant it: towards the river or in the woods to the Northeast?
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by mark e:
In any case, I've never had a Falkenstein kabinett that leans in that direction.
So, maybe what's missing from their holdings is a large stand of eucalyptus. Where do you think it would be best to plant it: towards the river or in the woods to the Northeast?

rather, isn't the question in which direction the eucalyptus is leaning?
 
originally posted by Pavel Tchichikov:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by mark e:
In any case, I've never had a Falkenstein kabinett that leans in that direction.
So, maybe what's missing from their holdings is a large stand of eucalyptus. Where do you think it would be best to plant it: towards the river or in the woods to the Northeast?

rather, isn't the question in which direction the eucalyptus is leaning?

Like so much of the world these days, they lean to the right.
 
why not turn the tables and describe and say a lentil and sorrel salad has lovely gruner veltliner complexities? or describing cherries as having enchanting gamay fruit nuances? etc., etc.
 
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