Baker and Banker Review in SF Chron

Joe Dressner

Joe Dressner
Michael Bauer of the San Francisco Chronicle has just reviewed Baker and Banker restaurant in San Francisco. Bauer likes the restaurant, but writes about the wine list:

While I appreciate the International bent of the menu at Baker & Banker, I find it difficult to warm to the wine list. It's as if the restaurant tried to collect every exotic varietal on one compact menu.

Aside from Chardonnay, the most listed varietal is Chenin Blanc and Malvasia, the main grape in a Croatia selection. I'm sure the 2007 Clai Bijele "Sveti Jakov" from Croatia is a hard sell at $74, even if it is a good wine.

The tendency is even more pronounced in the red wines. Among the 33 on the regular list, there are at least five wines using Rhone varietals, and four Gamays. There's also Zweigelt from Austria, Frappato from Sicily and Hondarribi Beltza from the Basque country.


What's actually on this wine list? Take a look:


Amazing! Someone puts together an interesting wine list and gets attacked in the press. The critic doesn't have anything to say against the quality of the wines and how they go with the cuisine....all he can say is that there's too many foreign names and too much weird stuff.

What's behind the attack? Whether it be local boosterism or plain ignorance, it is inexcusable that a major daily puts such weak material into print.

To read the review go to:
www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/28/FDEA1BVE5S.DTL#ixzz0gxUAWV2f

The Slanted Door is constantly attacked for not having Californian wines. The Baker and Banker list has a lovely mix from various countries and it is still not enough to satify the Chronicle.

Bunch of Idiots!
 
I did a quick blog post about this and I've been informed that it may not be Michael Bauer doing the actual wine comments (though certainly he approves of them). I've emailed him for clarification.

 
The last time I tried it I found it too heavy for my tastes. still very intresting, and I still think Malvasia is the holy grail for orange wines.
 
It's actually not even Malvasia, as it's known. It's Malvasija di Istria, which is a different (though similar) grape. Or so I read.
 
I know that Castello di Rubbia also makes one, in Friuli-Venezia Giulia. I think that there's also one in the same book that has the Camerano wines. That Chicago guy? Can't recall his name.
 
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
It was at the original orange wine dinner. I think Jeff has had the wine.

I love that wine.

The legend goes that Yacov urgently had to go into town because he ran out of Cerdon du Bugey, and did not return until the following evening, having forgotten that he had left the crushed juice on the skins. Unlike Dom Perignon's famous "Come quickly brothers, I am tasting stars", Yacov's exclamation which followed the discovery has been censured and supressed by history. But orange wine was born on that day.
 
originally posted by Brian C:
Damn, that's a mighty fine list for current release drinking.

What about all the '98 Bdx and Burgundy if one wanted "mainstream" wines??
The list is amazing and quite reasonably priced overall...I would search out such a place not disparage it...
 
originally posted by drssouth:
originally posted by Brian C:
Damn, that's a mighty fine list for current release drinking.

What about all the '98 Bdx and Burgundy if one wanted "mainstream" wines??
The list is amazing and quite reasonably priced overall...I would search out such a place not disparage it...

Whoops, didn't scroll down that far...
 
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
I did a quick blog post about this and I've been informed that it may not be Michael Bauer doing the actual wine comments (though certainly he approves of them). I've emailed him for clarification.

It's his byline(signature).
 
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
originally posted by Cory Cartwright:
I did a quick blog post about this and I've been informed that it may not be Michael Bauer doing the actual wine comments (though certainly he approves of them). I've emailed him for clarification.

It's his byline(signature).
Seriously. No disowning your own byline, is there?
 
I realize that everything in the piece is Bauer's responsibility, and ultimately has to be taken as his opinion and his opinion alone, but several people were quick to suggest, both on the blog and in private e-mails, that there has definitely been another hand doing the wine list reviews in the past. So I'm definitely curious.
 
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