They say that oenophiles are supposed to live longer. I don't know about that. I don't think that we are the typical oenophiles.
And...oh...Merry Christmas to all...
A Division of the Withrow Park Ball Hockey League - For those ball hockey players who believe there is more to "hockey living" than...beer
And...oh...Merry Christmas to all...


Selected:
1-B. Cru Bourgeois Chateau D' Agassac Haut-Medoc France 2000 $30 13% alc
2-A. Rothschild Reserve Speciale Medoc France 2005 $20 13% alc
3-E. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Larcis Ducasse Saint-Emillion Grand-Cru France 2003 $52 13% alc
4-F. Chateau Pavie Macquin Saint Emilion Grand Cru Classe 2001 $80 13.5% alc.
5-D. Beringer Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 California $29 14.2% alc
6-C. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Haut-Bages Liberal Pauillac France 1996 $111 12.5%
.
Stevie Sancerre & Johnny Cash:
Selected:
1-A. Rothschild Reserve Speciale Medoc France 2005 $20 13% alc
2-B. Cru Bourgeois Chateau D' Agassac Haut-Medoc France 2000 $30 13% alc
3-C. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Haut-Bages Liberal Pauillac France 1996 $111 12.5%
4-F. Chateau Pavie Macquin Saint Emilion Grand Cru Classe 2001 $80 13.5% alc
5-D. Beringer Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 California $29 14.2% alc
6-E. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Larcis Ducasse Saint-Emillion Grand-Cru France 2003 $52 13% alc
.
Johnny Vinovich & Cleopatra:
Selected:
1-E. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Larcis Ducasse Saint-Emillion Grand-Cru France 2003 $52 13% alc
2-B. Cru Bourgeois Chateau D' Agassac Haut-Medoc France 2000 $30 13% alc
3-F. Chateau Pavie Macquin Saint Emilion Grand Cru Classe 2001 $80 13.5% alc
4-C. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Haut-Bages Liberal Pauillac France 1996 $111 12.5%
5-D. Beringer Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 California $29 14.2% alc
6-A. Rothschild Reserve Speciale Medoc France 2005 $20 13% alc
.
Cabernet Chris & Oscar Wilde:
Selected:
1-B. Cru Bourgeois Chateau D' Agassac Haut-Medoc France 2000 $30 13% alc
2-A. Rothschild Reserve Speciale Medoc France 2005 $20 13% alc
3-F. Chateau Pavie Macquin Saint Emilion Grand Cru Classe 2001 $80 13.5% alc
4-E. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Larcis Ducasse Saint-Emillion Grand-Cru France 2003 $52 13% alc
5-C. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Haut-Bages Liberal Pauillac France 1996 $111 12.5%
6-D. Beringer Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 California $29 14.2% alc
.
Father Kev & Napoleon (?-You'd think he'd have selected Jesus):
Selected:
1-D. Beringer Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 California $29 14.2% alc
2-C. Grand Cru Classe Chateau Haut-Bages Liberal Pauillac France 1996 $111 12.5%
3-F. Chateau Pavie Macquin Saint Emilion Grand Cru Classe 2001 $80 13.5% alc
4-A. Rothschild Reserve Speciale Medoc France 2005 $20 13% alc
Ah yes, to be at a cottage in the sweet month of September. With the leaves just starting to turn and the lakes of Haliburton cool but refreshingly swimmable - what a place to go for a wine tasting. Thank you to the gracious Pinot Paul for hosting.

What a shambles of a tasting: numberless bottles and a corked carpet!
Pinot Paul will no doubt be quick to blame the pressence of Patrick The Piano Man (I understand he is not a full member of The League yet - is that correct Pinot? You da man, Pinot, You da man!) Couldn't we also blame the other new member - Languedoc Lloyd?
I'm pouring over the tasting notes now trying to deduce which wine is which.
On Pinot's scoring table I see that he went to the trouble of circling a couple of wines that Chianti Kev got right.
It looks like Kev guessed correctly that wine number one was from France and since we had only one Chardonnay from France that should settle that.
He also appears to have guessed correctly that wine number three was from New Zealand.
So here's how our list looks now:
1. Rully 2006 Montmorin by Jean Chartron Puligny Montrachet France 13% alc $26.95
2. Beringer Private Reserve Chardonnay 2005 Napa Valley St. Helena 14.5% alc $44.95
3. Goldwater Chardonnay Marlborough New Zealand 2006 14% $19.95
x. Reserva Chardonnay Santa Rita Valle de Casablanca Chile 2006 14.5% alc $13.50
x. Flat Rock Cellars Chardonnay 2004 VQA Niagara Peninsula 13.5% $16.95
x. Robert Young Chardonnay 2005 Alexander Valley California 14.3% $45.00
I think we can also deduce that wine number four must be from Chile - since that was the corked wine - but wait Pinot Paul has it rated as his number 5. Number 5? You've been found out Pinot! You are a sham! How can you have a corked wine at number 5?
But I shouldn't be so quick to hurl accusations should I? I should stop while the stopping is good.
Boys, I think we're going to have to re-taste the Chardonnays - and improve our record-keeping proceedures.
Yes, I know that could be painful - given how much we all hate drinking and tasting and all of the juvenile banter of the tasting room. But a small consolation could be some more of that fine salmon bbq-ed by Chianti Kev on those wonderful cedar planks.
Yes - a repeat of the Chardonnay tasting - that's what I say. How bad could that be?
The question is: should we invite The Piano Man?

Now as for the tasting. What can be recalled?
Well, I am digressing here but I am now recalling that Cabernet Chris brought the best cheeses we have had to date: Truffle Molinaro, Testun Capra, Valedon, Pied de Vent. Excellent, just excellent. Chris, is now the "cheese guy".
But the wine, the wine.
Oh, I'm remembering that I vowed to fall on my corkscrew if I didn't guess the $88 Barolo. And sure enough I confused it with the very lovely Chianti.
Can you imagine falling on this?
Well I almost did it but one of the boys saved me from a painful death.
I remember that moment but I can't remember the wine. Damn. Let's look quickly through the notes to atleast see how we ranked the wines as a group:
1. Azelia Barolo Bricco Fiasco 1998 di Luigi Scavino 14% alc $88.00
2. Castello di Fonterutoli 2001 Chianti Classico 13.5% alc $44.00
2. Capitel San Rocco Valpolicella Superiore Ripasso 2005 14% alc $20.95
3. Synthesi Agliancio del vulture 2004 Paternoster Barile, Italy 13% alc $15.20
4. Nemea Driopi 2005 Greece 13% alc $17.90
5. Duca di castelinmonte Cent'are 2005 Nero d' Avola Sicilia 13% alc $13.70
Interesting that the rankings pretty closely followed the prices of the wines. As a group we ranked the $88 Barolo number one. Though I clearly did little to help with the ranking.
It's a mystery to me how I can have had so many bottles of Barolo over the years and not been able to pick one out in a blind tasting.
Don't know what that says about me. But maybe that's one of the many things that make doing tastings such fun: they are challenging and bit like a game - like hockey.
So perhaps it is a good idea after all that we have moved from being a wine club to a wine "league".
But if this is going to be a league, I'm going to have to be better at blogging. Otherwise...someone might take my spot in the line-up...
There are not winners or losers at these tastings, these meetings of the Withrow Park Ball Hockey League Wine Club.
If there were, we'd call it a wine "league" wouldn't we then? We'd keep score wouldn't we?
Ah, there's already enough winning and losing going on in the hockey league (mostly the latter for Team Black in '07) to not have to continue that grind in the off-season.
But I felt somehow like...well not like I lost last night...but that I was "off my game"; that I had underperformed on the night. It just did not go right for me. I felt slow, lethargic, like I needed a better warm-up or something. I swear, if I'd had another hour, I would have done a better job with my picks...
But these are just excuses.
I noticed for instance that Pinot Paul came in carrying a debilitating cold and congestion and did not once whine about not being able to perform up to his always stellar abilities.
You know, every night of tasting, just like every hockey game ever played--is different and you have to adjust. And Pinot Paul adjusted quietly like an old pro. Chris Chelios would be proud.
By the way, this tasting fell on the night of a Leafs game. So we actually watched a bit of the Leafs-Florida game at the beginning and the end of the night. And it seemed to work! Imagine combining hockey viewing and wine.
I think actually, there is great virtue in such a practice for Leafs fans, for taste after taste of interesting wine can create the illusion that the Leafs too are part of something great, something excellent, something fine in the works.
(So, last night, was it the wine that caused me to think that the Leafs had actually won a game in a shoot-out?)
But I digress, I digress, I digress...
Where are those tasting sheets now?...
(Vinovich lifts his hands off of the keyboard and reaching for the sheets is distracted by the glass of wine he always keeps by his side. He takes a long, slow mouthful and lets the wine linger in his mouth..."Ahh...")
Whoops, yes, yes...the tasting sheets.
But first a little sneak-peak of the video coverage of the tasting event (the full-length version available for download from Leafstv.com for $24.99) :
~ Some Hockey Talk ~
*
Please excuse the above digression. (Yes, it is true that no one from the WPBHL gave me the nudge-nudge-wink-wink that the Leafs would be practicing at the very rink where we (bourgeois) iron-men duke it out on ball hockey nights. And as a result I was not able to take my son to this once-in-a-life-time event. No worries mates but keep your heads up when you're trying to fish the ball out of the corner this spring boys...)
Digression you are my middle name... But the wine, yes the wine. And the information from the tasting sheets...
The theme was Shiraz. Otherwise known as Sheer Ass. (Or is that the name of the girl who danced on Shane's lap at the Vegas tournament?) In France, the Motherland of Wine, it is originally know as Syrah. Pronounced Sir-Ah.
Here are the wines now, then:
1. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
2. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
3. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
4. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
5. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
6. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
And here's the video evidence of how the players played them:
~ Playing The Wine Game ~
*
And here is the text version of the player's picks:
Cabernet Chris's Rankings:
1. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
2. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
3. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
4. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
5. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
6. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
*
Cristal Chambers' Rankings:
1. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
2. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
3. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
4. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
5. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
6. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
*
Stevie Sancerre's Rankings:
1. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
2. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
3. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
4. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
5. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
6. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
*
Johnny Vinovich's Rankings:
1. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
2. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
3. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
4. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
5. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
6. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
*
Pinot Paul's Rankings:
1. d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005 14.5% alc $19.60
2. Glen Eldon Dry Bore 2004 Barossa Australia 14.5% alc $27.55
3. Rutherford Hill Merlot Napa Valley California 2003 14.2% alc. $27.55
4. Landskroon South Africa 2004 Paul de Villiers 14% alc $18.65
5. Yvon Mau 2006 Shiraz France 13% alc. $9.20
6. Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia 15.9% alc $32.50.
*
So what does it all mean then?
Well...on average the group of five preferred #6 the d'Arenberg McLaren Vale d'Arry's Original Shiraz Grenache 2005. You'll note that it was not a pure Shiraz and that it was high in alcohol at 14.5%. And at $19.60 it was also not the most expensive wine in the batch: a reassuring thought for those of us who like to drink quality wine on a daily basis.
In terms of the most expensive wine, the Heartland Director's Cut 2005 Langhorne Creek Limestone Coast South Australia at $32.50, Stevie Sancerre was the lone man to pick the high alcohol wine (15.9% alc) as his number one.
Numbers aside, here's some more video complete with adjectives and descriptive language, demonstrating how the boys "felt" about the wines:
~ Feelings ~
*
As you have seen, while I felt a bit off my game tonight, there were no real losers on this the 3rd meeting of the WPBHL Wine Club.
When you have great people earnestly striving to find the greatness in wine, you have only victory.