So, I've been pretty excited about cider for a while, as I am both interested in fermenting things and live in the climatic equivalent of Normandy here in the PNW. There seems to be a renaissance growing but its still rare to have the opportunity to do comparative tastings so we put one together over a dinner. Last time we included a lot of the bullshit commercial draft style stuff. This time we raised the quality bar and stuck to more artisan farmhouse style.
Started with the Basques
Isastegi 2010 (6%) - not as enamel scraping as I remember. Very dry, appealing amount of bret but plenty apple-y as well. Last time I did a cider tasting it was the only Basque and stood out unfavorably. This time it was liked by most all.
Sarasola (6%) - No one was successful at pouring from 1 meter as per the diagram on the label. Nice, similar in style to the prior but a little cleaner perhaps.
Basa Juan 2009 (8%) Whoa. Smelled like it spent 6 months aging in a horse’s ass. Totally different - much richer and full bodied than the very dry acidity of the above two. This is RUS-TIC. Apples, stinky cheese rinds, horses. Surprisingly loved by most (including myself) but it’s a guilty pleasure. Even after several rinses of the glass you could still smell the bret.
Poma Aurea (Asturias) (6.5%) Very light and elegant Champagne style. Maybe resembled wine the most of any ciders on the table but in the end not enough going on to be that noteworthy.
On to the French
Cyril Zangs 2009 Cidre (6%) Yes. All that I hope for in French farmhouse cidre. Fruit, funk, balance... Makes you want to go outside for a picnic on a hillside on a clear fall day and jump in some leafpiles.
Julien Fremont 2008 “Par Natur” (5.5%) LDM import. Of course Joe would bring this. The hardest for me to procure, but for many, the cidre of the night. Everything the Zangs had but somehow more. Beautiful.
Christian Drouhin “Cidre Pays d’Auge” (4.5%) Very good but for some reason didn’t incite much discussion and was passed over pretty quickly. A good example of Norman style, complex, a kiss of bret. One of my favorites the following day as a leftover.
Etienne Dupont 2009 (5.5%) Very good, very apple-y, a reasonable amount of funk, and the best of the Duponts. I’ve had this a lot as it is the most widely available around here of the Normans. Good introduction to the style.
Etienne Dupont 2010 (5.5%) Again good, but this one was marred by sulfur.
Etienne Dupont 2010 Organic (5.5) Something went wrong here. Terrible. Smelled like burnt sugar. Didn’t taste much better.
Etienne Dupont 2009 Reserve (6.9%) Kind of struck me as a “special cuvee”, southern Rhone-style. More about impact that finesse. Fruitier and bigger framed but more is not better in this case. Good but I preferred the regular.
Eric Bordelet “Tendre” Best of the Bordelets I’ve had. Lighter and less sweet than “Doux”. Good balance, very flavorful, and a surprising amount of apple tannins here. Reminiscent of golden apples like transparents or gold delicious. Even BJ admitted to liking this.
Eric Bordelet “Poire” didn’t get to try this.
Lastly, the domestics
Finn River “Methode Champenoise” WA (8%) A little bit hyped around here but in the end pretty disappointing. Very dry, shows a bit of alcohol. Not very interesting.
Wildfire “Semisweet” WA (7.25%) Really good. Lots of apple tannin. Rich but balanced. All these lack is some funk to round out the flavors. But the apples are deep and complex. I’ve visited their orchard and they are doing good things. Certified Organic orcharding is a challenge indeed west of the cascades. A bit of a sulfur hit on this.
Alpenfire “Bittersweet” WA (7.25%) Same cidery, new name after a trademark dispute. Also good with complex flavors.
West County “Redfield” MA (6.2%) The only varietal cider on the table. Crazy copper-red color. Flavors are surprising and different, rose like strawberry notes, but somewhat confectionary. Totally unique though.
Farnum Hill “Extra Dry” NH Very dry as advertised but a bit thin (and I go for dry style ciders). Reminded two of us of some ciders we had made together (not altogether a compliment). A bit simple.
Farnum Hill “Semi Sweet NH Much more like it and much more complexity and balance. Probably the favorite of the domestics along with the wild/alpine fires.
All in all a fun night, good food, and great company. Very educational to taste them all side by side. To my tastes I think the Euros pretty much stomped the domestics.
Started with the Basques
Isastegi 2010 (6%) - not as enamel scraping as I remember. Very dry, appealing amount of bret but plenty apple-y as well. Last time I did a cider tasting it was the only Basque and stood out unfavorably. This time it was liked by most all.
Sarasola (6%) - No one was successful at pouring from 1 meter as per the diagram on the label. Nice, similar in style to the prior but a little cleaner perhaps.
Basa Juan 2009 (8%) Whoa. Smelled like it spent 6 months aging in a horse’s ass. Totally different - much richer and full bodied than the very dry acidity of the above two. This is RUS-TIC. Apples, stinky cheese rinds, horses. Surprisingly loved by most (including myself) but it’s a guilty pleasure. Even after several rinses of the glass you could still smell the bret.
Poma Aurea (Asturias) (6.5%) Very light and elegant Champagne style. Maybe resembled wine the most of any ciders on the table but in the end not enough going on to be that noteworthy.
On to the French
Cyril Zangs 2009 Cidre (6%) Yes. All that I hope for in French farmhouse cidre. Fruit, funk, balance... Makes you want to go outside for a picnic on a hillside on a clear fall day and jump in some leafpiles.
Julien Fremont 2008 “Par Natur” (5.5%) LDM import. Of course Joe would bring this. The hardest for me to procure, but for many, the cidre of the night. Everything the Zangs had but somehow more. Beautiful.
Christian Drouhin “Cidre Pays d’Auge” (4.5%) Very good but for some reason didn’t incite much discussion and was passed over pretty quickly. A good example of Norman style, complex, a kiss of bret. One of my favorites the following day as a leftover.
Etienne Dupont 2009 (5.5%) Very good, very apple-y, a reasonable amount of funk, and the best of the Duponts. I’ve had this a lot as it is the most widely available around here of the Normans. Good introduction to the style.
Etienne Dupont 2010 (5.5%) Again good, but this one was marred by sulfur.
Etienne Dupont 2010 Organic (5.5) Something went wrong here. Terrible. Smelled like burnt sugar. Didn’t taste much better.
Etienne Dupont 2009 Reserve (6.9%) Kind of struck me as a “special cuvee”, southern Rhone-style. More about impact that finesse. Fruitier and bigger framed but more is not better in this case. Good but I preferred the regular.
Eric Bordelet “Tendre” Best of the Bordelets I’ve had. Lighter and less sweet than “Doux”. Good balance, very flavorful, and a surprising amount of apple tannins here. Reminiscent of golden apples like transparents or gold delicious. Even BJ admitted to liking this.
Eric Bordelet “Poire” didn’t get to try this.
Lastly, the domestics
Finn River “Methode Champenoise” WA (8%) A little bit hyped around here but in the end pretty disappointing. Very dry, shows a bit of alcohol. Not very interesting.
Wildfire “Semisweet” WA (7.25%) Really good. Lots of apple tannin. Rich but balanced. All these lack is some funk to round out the flavors. But the apples are deep and complex. I’ve visited their orchard and they are doing good things. Certified Organic orcharding is a challenge indeed west of the cascades. A bit of a sulfur hit on this.
Alpenfire “Bittersweet” WA (7.25%) Same cidery, new name after a trademark dispute. Also good with complex flavors.
West County “Redfield” MA (6.2%) The only varietal cider on the table. Crazy copper-red color. Flavors are surprising and different, rose like strawberry notes, but somewhat confectionary. Totally unique though.
Farnum Hill “Extra Dry” NH Very dry as advertised but a bit thin (and I go for dry style ciders). Reminded two of us of some ciders we had made together (not altogether a compliment). A bit simple.
Farnum Hill “Semi Sweet NH Much more like it and much more complexity and balance. Probably the favorite of the domestics along with the wild/alpine fires.
All in all a fun night, good food, and great company. Very educational to taste them all side by side. To my tastes I think the Euros pretty much stomped the domestics.