Claret before Burgundy -- agree? important?

To what extent can we believe today's wines are equivalent to the wines from the time these guidelines were first developed?

Isn't this a "banquet recreation", you know, along the same lines as Civil War battle recreation?
 
originally posted by Matt F:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
It's an old (very old) saying that I think represents late 19th/early 20th century views of both wines as so labelled and available in England, i.e., adulterated Burgundy, if not Bordeaux. Nothing to do with today's reality.

I see no reason other than snobbism to serve both at the same meal.

I see plenty of reason -- namely to match the food.

While I agree with this, I generally find that if I'm having a beef or lamb course that matches Bordeaux, I really want my other courses to be lighter, fresher food that demands white wine or bubbly. Maybe I could Bordeaux/lamb followed by cheese/burgundy if I started with an appetizer an/or a salad and then served a fresh vegetable with the lamb. OTOH, I have no problem serving burgundy twice with something like fresh pasta with wild mushrooms followed by duck and a vegetable.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by kirk wallace:
Pete, doesn't Brillat Savarin resolve this in his 2 meals with the Crown Prince of Eurasia?
Do you have a reference? I found some Escoffier-related material but it was all about the cooking, not the serving.

Thank you, Jeff. Your question made me go back and check. It is not in Physiology of Taste, but Marcel Rouff's fictional character Dodin-Bouffant, who is very Brillat Savarin-like (to say the least) who teachs the Prince a lesson over the famous pot au feu (built around a foie gras cooked in Chambertin). Unfortunately, while I keep my Physiology of Taste close at hand, I can't find my copy of The Passionate Epicure, but as I recall (FWIW these days), the order of the wines is very much detailed.
 
What an interesting looking book! Thank you, I shall have to get it.

Meanwhile, the snippet at Google Books appears to have fallen favorably... I think I can read the wines for two of the three services here.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
What an interesting looking book! Thank you, I shall have to get it.

Meanwhile, the snippet at Google Books appears to have fallen favorably... I think I can read the wines for two of the three services here.

It is a fun book; and kudos, Jeff, to your google skills. So, in the 19th Century, definitely Bordeaux before Burgundy. In the 21st, I vote with Claude. I do not like to mix them in the same meal.
 
originally posted by Matt F:
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
It's an old (very old) saying that I think represents late 19th/early 20th century views of both wines as so labelled and available in England, i.e., adulterated Burgundy, if not Bordeaux. Nothing to do with today's reality.

I see no reason other than snobbism to serve both at the same meal.

I see plenty of reason -- namely to match the food.
I can't really think of menus that hold together where you can't fill out with all wines from one or the other. Can you suggest some?
 
When I am doing a serious multi-course dinner I prefer to mix regions. When I have a lot of the same I just wind up comparing them to each other, they blur together, and some don't get the attention they deserve. But if there's a progression with one example from a bunch of regions I appreciate each one better for what it is.
 
A bit of a sideways tilt to the conversation. Why do five-plus-course meals nearly always follow a progression that is one long crescendo of richness, culminating in full-on fatty desserts? I personally prefer that long meals build up and ramp down. It makes for a much more enjoyable experience.
 
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
A bit of a sideways tilt to the conversation. Why do five-plus-course meals nearly always follow a progression that is one long crescendo of richness, culminating in full-on fatty desserts? I personally prefer that long meals build up and ramp down. It makes for a much more enjoyable experience.

Word.
 
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
A bit of a sideways tilt to the conversation. Why do five-plus-course meals nearly always follow a progression that is one long crescendo of richness, culminating in full-on fatty desserts? I personally prefer that long meals build up and ramp down. It makes for a much more enjoyable experience.

Yep.
But truly, unless the courses are one bite each, I'd just prefer a course or two made simply. The last time I ate a multi-course dinner, I came away feeling uncomfortable and couldn't sleep well.
And actually, I like fitting into my pants.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
A bit of a sideways tilt to the conversation. Why do five-plus-course meals nearly always follow a progression that is one long crescendo of richness, culminating in full-on fatty desserts?
Taking you seriously: Because each dish must have more oomph than the last -- more spice, more flavor, more fat -- in order to keep making an impression on one's getting-progressively-duller-and-duller palate.
 
originally posted by Scott Kraft: I personally prefer that long meals build up and ramp down. It makes for a much more enjoyable experience.

Scott, Well said!

Properly conceived and composed multi-course dinners need constraint and balance.

Like you, I prefer the last two courses to be a simplistic cheese-oriented dish then a simple dessert minus all the frills...which, by the way, will best showcase the final wine(s).

. . . . . . Pete
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
A bit of a sideways tilt to the conversation. Why do five-plus-course meals nearly always follow a progression that is one long crescendo of richness, culminating in full-on fatty desserts?
Taking you seriously: Because each dish must have more oomph than the last -- more spice, more flavor, more fat -- in order to keep making an impression on one's getting-progressively-duller-and-duller palate.

Yeah - see I really disagree with this idea, which presumably drives most Michelin types (and would-be ones) to devise this kind of experience. I've found that it's entirely possible to hit a top-note on richness and follow with dishes of remarkable flavor and intensity that slowly take you down. And leave you feeling great. Which is after all the point, right? Far better and much more satisfied.

And I agree with Jim. However, I think it's not just about quantity. (Although the habit is to also make the richest dish the largest by far - another trait I find a bit bizarre.) As Jeff points out, the fat, seasoning, spicing all increase also. Often times to a point where it's an all-out assault on one's senses. Like many a spoofed wine, really. Brute power over finesse. Food chemistry over nature's beauty.
 
We did a food geek dinner not long ago (some known wine geeks were in attendance) in which we planned waves rather than a long crescendo. It worked well. Plus, it solved one of my long-irritating peeves about foie gras, which is always, always, always served at the wrong time, just where it can obliterate the courses before it and linger too long over the courses after it. We followed the pt de foie gras with a Long Trail Winter White sorbet, and then started a new ascent in hour 4.

For what it's worth, the long tasting menus we had in Euskadi opposed the unfortunate trend towards ever-increasing volume, both at the traditional and modernistic places. There might be pork belly, and there might be foie gras, but they won't necessarily appear where or how one thinks, and they're rarely the peak topping a long ascent of the flab mountain.
 
I tend not to like serving Bordeaux and Burgundy at the same meal for the reasons expressed in this thread. After a good Burgundy, most Bordeauxs will seem simple. After a good Bordeaux, many Burgundies will seem light. So, I tend not to drink them at the same meal.

If I have to do so, I would drink the Bordeauxs first. IMHO, Bordeauxs just don't taste very good after Burgundies.

But, the counterargument is drink the Burgundy first so that it will show at its best and then who cares about the Bordeaux (a variation on the give the Bordeaux away as party favors expressed above).
 
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