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This article was published in The 30 Second Wine Advisor on Friday, Oct. 5, 2012 and can be found at http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor2/tswa20121005.php. Syrah: Something old, something new
When I first met Syrah, it came with a lovable legend about a history that went back to the Crusades: The French warrior Gaspard de Sterimberg, sick of battle, came home to the hills of the Northern Rhône with grapevine cuttings from Shiraz in Persia in his saddlebags. The vines produced luscious black grapes that made a wondrous wine, and he called it "Hermitage" after his home where he would live in peace and study war no more. Nice story. But a few years later, when I had a chance to stand atop the Hermitage hill overlooking a great bend in the Rhône, standing just below Sterimberg's ancient stone chapel, a wine maker told me a different story: Syrah, he said, has grown on the Rhône's hillsides and valleys since the Romans first planted them in Caesar's time. Either way, 1,000 years ago or 2,000 years ago, we can all agree that Syrah has been around for a mighty long time, long enough that the region's wine makers have pretty much gotten it right. Syrah has become popular in most world regions: As Shiraz, it's the mainstay grape among Australian reds. It's popular in California, and just about any wine-growing region with a sufficiently warm growing season has given it a try. It's often grown as a single-varietal wine, varying in style depending on climate from lean and green and laced with fragrant black pepper to a bigger, riper approach focused on black plums and blueberries and even prunes. Ripen it to high alcohol levels and load it up with oak, as the Australians and Californians often do, and you'll get a blockbuster of a wine. Or blend it - Grenache and Mourvèdre are the usual blending suspects, with Carignan and others sometimes added - and you'll add a little complexity for a food-friendly wine that may reach its most popular expression in the warmer Southern reaches of the Rhône. Today's featured wine, the good-value Chateau Mas Neuf 2009 "Paradox" Rhône, is a fine example of the "GSM" (Grenache-Syrah-Mourvèdre style - with Carignan) from Costières de Nîmes, near the Mediterranean at the southern end of the Rhône. You'll find my tasting report below.
Wine Focus: Syrah and Syrah blendsWe're featuring Syrah and Syrah blends as our Wine Focus topic for October the WineLovers' Discussion Group. You're invited to bring your tasting notes, comments, questions, and thoughts about everything Syrah or Shiraz-related, from tasting to viticulture to food-and-wine pairing and wine travel. All forum discussions are open for public viewing, but you must register to post your comments and participate actively in the conversation. Registration is free and easy; we ask only that you join following our Real Names Real Format system. For your user name, enter your real name in the format "John Doe" or "John D", with the capital letters and the space. Having a real name on your name tag is so important to us that all non-conforming registrations will be quietly discarded. Redemption is possible, though. If you overlook this rule and get no response to your registration, feel free to contact me personally by Email at wine@wineloverspage.com, and we'll sort it out. Once your registration has been approved, which usually happens quickly with correctly formed user names, you'll be able to participate in Wine Focus and in all our online wine and food forums.
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Today's Tasting ReportChateau Mas Neuf 2009 "Paradox" Rhône Rouge Costières de Nîmes ($11.99)![]() This typical Languedoc and Southern Rhône blend is 50 percent Syrah blended with Grenache (15%), Mourvèdre (20%) and Carignan (15%). It's dark in color, blackish-purple with a clear edge. The aroma offers good, fresh black plums and black raspberries that carry over in the flavor with mouth-filling black fruit, tart acidity and substantial tannins over a solid but not overheated 13.5% alcohol. U.S. importer: Vanguard Wines LLC, Columbus. (Sept. 28, 2012) FOOD MATCH: The traditional match is beef or lamb, and a steak or roast would serve this wine well. In the quest for diversity I crafted a more offbeat plant-based dish with flavors meant for a dry red wine, and found success in an East Asian dish of tofu and black beans in a sweet-tart Cantonese sauce. WHEN TO DRINK: This is certainly fine now with food, but there's no need to be in a big hurry to drink it, and another year or two in the cellar might see the tannins evolve and soften a bit, with plenty of fruit and good balance to carry it through until 2015 or longer. VALUE: This wine is a very good value at this price, and with its potential for at least short-term cellaring, worth picking up a few to keep in a cool place on their sides for enjoyment over the next few years. WEB LINK: FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:
Talk About Wine OnlineIf you have questions, comments or ideas to share about today's article or wine in general, you're always welcome to drop by our online WineLovers Discussion Group, the Internet's first and still the most civil online community. To find our forums, click: Discussions are open for public viewing, but you must register to post. Registration is free and easy; we ask only that you join following our Real Names Real Format system, using your real name in the format "John Doe" or "John D". Anonymous, cryptic or first-name-only registrations are discarded without notice. Once your registration has been approved, which usually happens quickly, you'll be able to participate in all our online wine, food and travel forums. To contact me by E-mail, write wine@wineloverspage.com. I'll respond personally to the extent that time and volume permit.
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