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 Terroirs of Burgundy with Robin Garr
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In This Issue

 Seedy Grignolino Yet another tasty but little known grape variety goes on the tasting table.
 La Casaccia 2004 Poggeto Grignolino del Monferrato Casalese ($10.99)
This Piemontese red is light and delicate, with a pleasantly medicinal herbal note that's reminiscent of Campari.
 Terroirs of Burgundy with Robin Garr Sample the glory of Burgundy in a tour designed for value-seeking wine lovers.
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This article was published in The 30 Second Wine Advisor on Friday, Mar. 9, 2007 and can be found at http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor2/tswa20070309.php.

Seedy Grignolino

There's something just a little seedy about today's featured wine, but don't worry about it: Grignolino ("Green-yo-leen-oh"), keeps good company among its compatriots from Northwestern Italy's Piemonte.

Its name, borrowed from a local dialect word for "grape seeds," simply means that this red grape is abundant in seeds, so much so that the wine it makes can be unusually astringent and tannic for such a pale-colored, lightweight fluid.

If wine grape conservationists kept track of threatened species, Grignolino might be on a watch list, as its plantings even in Italy are declining. A finicky grape that requires good sun exposure for ripening, this grape needs quality vineyard space that regional producers, with one eye on the Euro, prefer to use for more commercially viable varieties like Barbera and Dolcetto.

But as long as a few traditionalists remain, this heirloom grape will likely persist in at least small amounts, in Piemonte and also in Northern California, where long-ago immigrant wine makers brought over vines for nostalgia's sake, and here and there small patches remain. Napa's Heitz Cellars, for instance, has been tending an eight-acre plot of it for nearly 50 years, and still uses it in a red and a crisp rosé.

Today's tasting is Italian, another tiny-production wine that's worth seeking out if you like to collect unusual varieties on your life tasting list.

As I mentioned Wednesday, we're celebrating strange and little-known grapes this week in honor of the Wine Century Club, a casual organization for wine lovers who actually keep count of the varieties they've tasted and can submit a list of at least 100 of them. The club plans its annual gathering in New York City on Sunday, March 18. For details, click
http://www.winecentury.com/.


La Casaccia 2004 Poggeto Grignolino del Monferrato Casalese ($10.99)

Poggeto

This is a clear, cherry-red wine, rather light in color. Its delicate scent mingles dried fruit and pleasant medicinal herbs in an overall effect that's somewht reminiscent of Campari. Flavors reflect the nose, light-bodied and crisp, red fruit and mouth-watering acidity that lingers with a citric snap. Light but appealing, good with food. U.S. importer: Selected Estates of Europe Ltd., Mamaroneck, N.Y. (March 6, 2007)

FOOD MATCH: This tart but rather delicate wine looks for a subtle food match, and finds it in a simple vegetarian dinner of fresh oyster mushrooms in a truffle-scented Italian cheese sauce over rice.

VALUE: An easy addition to the grape-seeker's life list; its $10-range price tag is more than fair.

WHEN TO DRINK: With its light and delicate flavor profile, this one strikes me as a drink-me-now wine, best enjoyed within the next year or so.

PRONUNCIATION:
Grignolino = "Green-yo-lee-no"

WEB LINK:
Here's a link to the U.S. importer's Website:
http://www.selectedestates.com

FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:
Wine-Searcher.com lists only limited vendors for La Casaccia wines.
http://www.wine-searcher.com/
find/Casaccia/-/-/USD/A?referring_site=WLP

For more retail sources, click "Where to Buy" on http://www.selectedestates.comthe importer's Website. I found it, as I do so many of my more strange and offbeat wines, at Chambers Street Wines in NYC, which will ship to many parts of the U.S.:
http://www.chambersstwines.com/



Talk About Wine Online

To read and comment on today's column in our non-commercial WineLovers Discussion Group, click:
http://www.wineloverspage.com/forum/village/viewtopic.php?t=6928

Today's article is cross-posted in our Netscape WineLovers Community, where we also welcome comments and questions.
http://community.netscape.com/winelovers?nav=messages&tsn=1&tid=5149

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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http://www.wineloverspage.com/wineadvisor2/2007/03/seedy_grignolino-print.html