TN: Racines (Oct 9, 2018)

Jeff Grossman

Jeff Grossman
The plan was to visit Racines for one of their new Tuesday night flights. This one focused on Loir wines so definitely in the wheelhouse.

It was not the plan to have dinner alone but that is how it turned out. Pascaline, Arnaud, and David kindly made sure to visit me at the table often.

I ordered the chef's menu and Liebrandt produced some nice plates:
- an asian-style sweet potato amuse, scented with miso and shiso
- a tart cold pho with crabmeat, tomato, peas, and cilantro
- parmesan gnocchi, hazelnuts, and sour cherry in red curry, covered with black truffle slices, and served in a scorched mini-pumpkin on a plate with smoldering wood shavings
- a creamy matsutake pasta with lemon, black pepper, and pine nuts
- venison with sweet potato and spiced apple
- a berry and calamondin dessert

The food, as the last time, was very good if a bit bumptious. (The minor squawk is that the pho was slightly over-seasoned; if you have beautiful seafood then let it speak. The medium squawk concerned the gnocchi, which were wonderful, but the smoldering presentation disabled my nose from four tables away until the smoke cleared. The big squawk was over-cooked venison; it came out rare on the second try.)

Also delightful are the glasses that showed up at my table, almost as many again as were in the flights:

La Villana 2017 VdT Bianco - Pascaline sez try this: savory and juicy, distinct taste of Jura (or orange wine) appears way into the finish... from Lazio (in honor of my recent trip), a white mix of old grapes on volcanic soils, 1 day of skin contact, bright and flexible at the table I think

Flight of two wines:

Dom. Belliviere 2016 Coteaux du Loir "Le Rouge Gorge" - cement dust and pink peppercorns (as always), there is a core of tannic grip and solidity (quite distinct from the nose), milder than my bottles at home usually are

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2016 Coteaux du Loir "La Belle d'Aunis" - very similar nose but gentler and more open-knit and juicy on the palate, good but not great

Flight of two wines:

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2017 Jasnieres Sec - sharp and strong, the PdA is more savory, this is kinda simple

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2015 Jasnieres Sec "Le Clos des Molieres" - OMG, ten times the wine of the entry-level bottling, rich and vivid and complex and tactile, archetypal chenin

Flight of two wines:

Dom. Belliviere 2015 Jasnieres "Calligramme" - so much matchstick!, the wine underneath is crisp and pure (but wait 10 years to try again)

Dom. Belliviere 2005 Coteaux du Loir Blanc "Vieille Vignes Eparses" - 15-20g RS and some botrytis, very full and just a touch sweet, absolutely enticing served alongside a creamy pasta dish

a wine of albillo made in Gredos (possibly Ruben Diaz 2015 Sierra de Gredos Cebreros Fiorella Albillo Real) - With that creamy, lemony, peppery, vadouvan-y, matsutake pasta dish Pascaline sez try this (it has skin contact and 18 months under flor): on entry the sauce obliterates the wine but the finishes harmonize nicely, best to drink after the food, not with; Pascaline is still tweaking what wine to serve with the dish

Baltahzar 2016 Cotes du Rhone - chosen by the guy with the light beard (who was clearly not paying attention and who was making things up about the wines), yup

Philippe Bordes 2017 VdF "No Limit" - With the venison Pascaline sez try this (and it's a varietal): full-on red, spicy and intense, spicy!, not fruity at all, more leather and twigs and a bit of resin, my first thought is Madiran and Corbieres (or something else 'South France'-ish), I guess mourvedre... and it's all Saint-Chinian carignan, sans soufre, 3 mos on the skins

Many thanks to everyone at Racines for a lovely evening.
 
Sounds nice. As an fyi, Duca hasn't been the chef there for awhile. Paul Liebrandt has been chef since I think April.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
TN: Racines (Oct 9, 2018)The plan was to visit Racines for one of their new Tuesday night flights. This one focused on Loir wines so definitely in the wheelhouse.

It was not the plan to have dinner alone but that is how it turned out. Pascaline, Arnaud, and David kindly made sure to visit me at the table often.

I ordered the chef's menu and Duca produced some nice plates:
- an asian-style sweet potato amuse, scented with miso and shiso
- a tart cold pho with crabmeat, tomato, peas, and cilantro
- parmesan gnocchi, hazelnuts, and sour cherry in red curry, covered with black truffle slices, and served in a scorched mini-pumpkin on a plate with smoldering wood shavings
- a creamy matsutake pasta with lemon, black pepper, and pine nuts
- venison with sweet potato and spiced apple
- a berry and calamondin dessert

The food, as the last time, was very good if a bit bumptious. (The minor squawk is that the pho was slightly over-seasoned; if you have beautiful seafood then let it speak. The medium squawk concerned the gnocchi, which were wonderful, but the smoldering presentation disabled my nose from four tables away until the smoke cleared. The big squawk was over-cooked venison; it came out rare on the second try.)

Also delightful are the glasses that showed up at my table, almost as many again as were in the flights:

La Villana 2017 VdT Bianco - Pascaline sez try this: savory and juicy, distinct taste of Jura (or orange wine) appears way into the finish... from Lazio (in honor of my recent trip), a white mix of old grapes on volcanic soils, 1 day of skin contact, bright and flexible at the table I think

Flight of two wines:

Dom. Belliviere 2016 Coteaux du Loir "Le Rouge Gorge" - cement dust and pink peppercorns (as always), there is a core of tannic grip and solidity (quite distinct from the nose), milder than my bottles at home usually are

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2016 Coteaux du Loir "La Belle d'Aunis" - very similar nose but gentler and more open-knit and juicy on the palate, good but not great

Flight of two wines:

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2017 Jasnieres Sec - sharp and strong, the PdA is more savory, this is kinda simple

Dom. de la Roche Bleue 2015 Jasnieres Sec "Le Clos des Molieres" - OMG, ten times the wine of the entry-level bottling, rich and vivid and complex and tactile, archetypal chenin

Flight of two wines:

Dom. Belliviere 2015 Jasnieres "Calligramme" - so much matchstick!, the wine underneath is crisp and pure (but wait 10 years to try again)

Dom. Belliviere 2005 Coteaux du Loir Blanc "Vieille Vignes Eparses" - 15-20g RS and some botrytis, very full and just a touch sweet, absolutely enticing served alongside a creamy pasta dish

a wine of albillo made in Gredos (possibly Ruben Diaz 2015 Sierra de Gredos Cebreros Fiorella Albillo Real) - With that creamy, lemony, peppery, vadouvan-y, matsutake pasta dish Pascaline sez try this (it has skin contact and 18 months under flor): on entry the sauce obliterates the wine but the finishes harmonize nicely, best to drink after the food, not with; Pascaline is still tweaking what wine to serve with the dish

Baltahzar 2016 Cotes du Rhone - chosen by the guy with the light beard (who was clearly not paying attention and who was making things up about the wines), yup

Philippe Bordes 2017 VdF "No Limit" - With the venison Pascaline sez try this (and it's a varietal): full-on red, spicy and intense, spicy!, not fruity at all, more leather and twigs and a bit of resin, my first thought is Madiran and Corbieres (or something else 'South France'-ish), I guess mourvedre... and it's all Saint-Chinian carignan, sans soufre, 3 mos on the skins

Many thanks to everyone at Racines for a lovely evening.

Thanks much for the notes, particularly Belliviere (I'm sure there are a fair number of fans here). I've rarely heard the word bumptious used to describe food, though it is clear what you might mean. Many of the dishes seem to have similar issues to those in the menus posted by Pete, which is the insistence on a sweet (or spicy) component. I'm not a fan. And I think it often means the chef could care less that you are not serving - for the most part - wines with some RS.
 
Is Loir pronounced the same as Loire? I think it's dastardly that the French named a tributary after the main river.
 
Loir means dormouse in French. I didn't know they had wines focused on dormice. The dormouse who hangs around our house in France does like grapes, though.
 
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I don't know. Is loir also Latin for dormouse? And why would they have named the river after the creature?

Probably some Roman college students got drunk in their dormhouse and said “hey, you know what would be rilly cool? Thish night hash been sho great, let’s name the river after this spot right here. But they slurred their words.
 
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I don't know. Is loir also Latin for dormouse? And why would they have named the river after the creature?

Probably some Roman college students got drunk in their dormhouse and said “hey, you know what would be rilly cool? Thish night hash been sho great, let’s name the river after this spot right here. But they slurred their words.

Makes sense to me. I think you should alert the appropriate tourist bureaus along the river so that they can add this history to their informational handouts.
 
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Jay Miller:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I don't know. Is loir also Latin for dormouse? And why would they have named the river after the creature?

Probably some Roman college students got drunk in their dormhouse and said “hey, you know what would be rilly cool? Thish night hash been sho great, let’s name the river after this spot right here. But they slurred their words.

Makes sense to me. I think you should alert the appropriate tourist bureaus along the river so that they can add this history to their informational handouts.
I read it on the internet so it must be true.
 
In that circumstance, because my other glasses were filled with more interesting wine, the Balthazar CdR seemed correct but dull. You know: heavy on grenache.

I'm being a little mean but I don't really have an answer for you.
 
originally posted by Lee Short:
How are the early aughties Caligrammes showing? Anyone tried one recently? I think I've got the 02 and the 04.

Does 05 count as early aughts? It was quite rich but gorgeous. Color a little dark, though.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:

Dom. Belliviere 2015 Jasnieres "Calligramme" - so much matchstick!, the wine underneath is crisp and pure (but wait 10 years to try again)

I was too impatient/thirsty to wait 10 years, so I happily opened a bottle of this on Friday night. It was quite delicious and (perhaps because of decanter splash) it did not overwhelm me with sulfur. That said, finishing the bottle 24 hours later was the most delicious part. So while I will not wait 10 years to open the next bottle, I will be giving it even more air.

And speaking of Jasnières, the good old friend Belliviere was much more convincing than recent bottles of Janvier (17 regular Jasnières and 16 Cuvée du Silex). I read good things about Janvier, but somehow over the years the wines never seem to speak to me.
 
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