Entrée: Baked Fish Filet with Tomatoes and Mushrooms
Optimal characteristics of our wine pairing: A medium bodied, dry white wine that is fruit forward as well as floral. Preferably a white blend to pair well with the different flavors of the dish. The wine should be clean, balanced and assertive with a lingering finish. The wine should be high in acidity and lower in alcohol content. Pairing with fish, the wine should be crisp, refreshing and low in tannins.
Wine Example 1: 2014 Bridge Lane White Blend
Grape Varieties: 35% Chardonnay, 26% Pinot Blanc, 20% Riesling, 15% Sauvignon Blanc, 4% White Pinot Noir
AVA: North Fork Long Island, New York State
Vintage / Winemaking Notes -2014 saw a near perfect summer and fall with relatively warm, sunny and dry conditions. Yields were higher than average but fruit quality and concentration was extremely high. Fermented in stainless steel.
Color: Pale Straw
Tasting Notes – Medium-bodied, dry white wine with juicy acidity and lemon, tangerine and apricot notes.
Viticulture/Vinification practices:
Wine Example 2: Taste White 2015, Bedell Cellers
Grape Varieties: 64% Albariño, 18% Chardonnay,10% Sauvignon Blanc, 8% Viognier
AVA: North Fork Long Island, New York State
Vintage / Winemaking Notes: The 2015 vintage was unique and exceptional. All grapes are sustainably farmed, estate grown fruit and fermented with indigenous yeasts.
Color: Pale Straw
Tasting Notes: Taste White is an intriguing blend, a terrific wine with very good depth, richness, and lots of flavor. This year’s blend works!
Wine Example 3: 2015 Coalescence, Shinn Estate
Grape Varieties: Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Riesling
AVA: North Fork Long Island, New York State
Vintage/ Winemaking: 2015, Biodynamic farming.
Tasting Notes: This tangy refreshing wine has clean vibrant citrus notes adding complexity to the fresh and juicy finish with a zing of acidity.
Viticulture/Vinification practices that effect the taste of wines:
- Harvesting– harvesting late in the season will produce a wine with higher residual sugar in the end product.
- Pressing– Pressing grapes rather than crushing grapes extracts the juices leaving the stems and grape must left in the press and giving the juice a richer, fruitier flavor profile.
- Aging– Aging wine in stainless steel tanks rather than French or American Oak will give the wine a lighter body with a crisp, clean style and additional aromatic and fruit forward flavors. Most blended wine is meant to be consumed within a year of being released. However, some blended wines can continue to develop as they age.
- Clarification- This will separate proteins within the wine which if not done could produce unwanted flavors after a certain period of time. This is an important aspect of vinification.
- Temperature– When aging white wine, the juice should be kept at temperatures between 44-52 degrees Fahrenheit. This keeps the wine healthy and keeps the flavor profile consistent.
- Botrytis– In order to prevent botrytis growing on the grapes, one has to use drying agents. In maritime climates, botrytis is very common and can affect all grape varieties.(Steve Koplan, 2010).
References
Steve Koplan, B. H. (2010). Exploring Wines. Hoboken, NJ, USA: Wiley.