Sharon Bowman
Sharon Bowman
Went there tonight for some supremely tasty chow and necessarily non-French wine, due to the provenance of the co-diners.
As a result, had a 2010 Lioco Demuth Vineyard Anderson Valley Chardonnay, clocking in at 12.3% abv, and which while not EARTHSHATTERING to your reporter, was good PR work, as the frog element considered it confoundingly restrained and lovely for wine of its ilk and region. I drank it too.
Then, I grew more daring. A 2010 Bloomer Creek Finger Lakes Cabernet Franc was a playful pup. Oddly big, pleasingly grainy-textured, it was a total hoot. An OVNI, as the frogs said. It was a happy-making thing. Not quite New York Chinon, but its own curveball for our part of the world. More again, if you'd please.
And I will say that the food that Ralf Kuettel is making at ToT is just such the slam dunk.*
And the friends each had a glass of Northern Spy Ice Cider (which I tasted; well, it's, um, American, for sure... no, no, it was "interesting," but ice cider is a limited range). I had a digestif of (mumblemumble) Austrian fancy distiller wild plum brandy. It made me wish for an ice cube or water to get it to open a little more, but we were too talky and I didn't ask for any modification of an aqueous nature, so I had it as it was. I still muse on the use of the goutte that is so concentrated, tightly coiled in its flavors and high in its alcohol. Musings from others welcome.
*Yes, I am using different sports metaphors. It must be the cold.
As a result, had a 2010 Lioco Demuth Vineyard Anderson Valley Chardonnay, clocking in at 12.3% abv, and which while not EARTHSHATTERING to your reporter, was good PR work, as the frog element considered it confoundingly restrained and lovely for wine of its ilk and region. I drank it too.
Then, I grew more daring. A 2010 Bloomer Creek Finger Lakes Cabernet Franc was a playful pup. Oddly big, pleasingly grainy-textured, it was a total hoot. An OVNI, as the frogs said. It was a happy-making thing. Not quite New York Chinon, but its own curveball for our part of the world. More again, if you'd please.
And I will say that the food that Ralf Kuettel is making at ToT is just such the slam dunk.*
And the friends each had a glass of Northern Spy Ice Cider (which I tasted; well, it's, um, American, for sure... no, no, it was "interesting," but ice cider is a limited range). I had a digestif of (mumblemumble) Austrian fancy distiller wild plum brandy. It made me wish for an ice cube or water to get it to open a little more, but we were too talky and I didn't ask for any modification of an aqueous nature, so I had it as it was. I still muse on the use of the goutte that is so concentrated, tightly coiled in its flavors and high in its alcohol. Musings from others welcome.
*Yes, I am using different sports metaphors. It must be the cold.