• About
  • Indiana Wineries
  • Michigan Wineries
  • Wisconsin Wineries

Howard W. Hewitt

~ … The "W" stands for wine!

Howard W. Hewitt

Tag Archives: Languedoc

Kickoff Dinner with Organic Winemakers

21 Saturday Jan 2012

Posted by Howard in France

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Chateau Du Luc, Domaine Cabanis, Jean Paul Cabanis, Languedoc, Marie Teisserenc, Millesime Bio, Montpellier, organic wine, Plaisirs des Mets, Virgile Joly

The press trip for the Millesime Bio got underway tonight with a dinner at Plaisirs des Mets in the old part of downtown Montpellier.

We had three winemakers join us for dinner and pour their wines. I’m not sure if the dinner was typical French cuisine but the group found it interesting. The group is just as interesting. We have a five Danish journalists, several from Germany, one from Finland, and a British wine writer who splits time between London and the Loire Valley.

Dinner was every bit as interesting as the wines. We started with what most of us thought was some deviled crab in crispy shells – much like an egg roll. It was on some greens with a bit of sauce.Our choice of entree was simple fish or veal. I opted for the fish and it was great. The skin was crispy the white fish was really delicious and the bones were pretty easy to deal with. I didn’t eat the head – just couldn’t to it.

The dessert was off the charts. There were two rolled, crispy pastry shells filled with a chocolate grenache. One was a bit more bold than the other.


There was also a nice small foam and an uber-sweet, homemade vanilla ice cream. Some had coffeee and some did not after dessert. We all had more wine.

The wines were uneven, all organic, but for the most part very nice.

Joining us for dinner was Jean Paul Cabanis of Domaine Cabanis, who sat across form me. Marie Teisserenc of Chateau Du Luc and Virgile Joly of the winer that bears his name. Again, all are producing wines from organically grown grapes.

Jean Paul

These are truly small producers. Cabanais, as example, makes about 8000 cases of wine annually. His Mouvredre-based wine was the best of the night for me and a couple of others. It comes from south of Nimes and the southern most appellation in the Rhone Valley. He does all the aging in cement. The wine had a delightful nose, a bit of tartness on the finish and beautiful balance.

I had Jean Paul’s wine with my fish and it was awesome. The Mouvredre blend also won a silver medal at this year’s Millesime Bio.

Jean Paul got the evening started with perhaps the most unique offering. He poured his white claret wine, a grape almost always used for red wines. It had a nice tartness to go along with a unqiue nose and finish. He sells alot of this wine to Japanese buyers to pair with Sushi.

Joly

Joly had the best white of the night for my taste. His wines were the most consistent of the night as well. His new Grenache Blanc was light and refreshing. It had light citrus and beautiful blance.

Teisserenc’s wines had prominent oak and in a couple of instances too much oak. But her ’09 Vigonier was certainly different than many you’ll find. It’s fermented and aged in oak and comes out an unusually dark yellow for this grape. It’s also an unusually high 15 percent alcohol.

Her best wine was a 2010 Chateau Coulon from Corbiers that was light with a blend of Carignon, Syrah, and Grenache. The grapes are all hand picked and handled in a manner her father started years ago.

Teisserenc

Ok, so these producers won’t be easy to find. But it makes a point I’ve made over and over again. Seek out smaller producers and you often find outstanding wines. The wines we tasted Saturday night didn’t have any of the negative characteristics sometimes associated with organic wines – thin on the palate. Some were certainly better than others. But if I poured most wine drinkers the best of what we had tonight they would never haven known whether they were organic or not.

Send comment or questions to: hewitthoward@gmail.com

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

Arriving for Week-Long Stay in Languedoc Wine Region

21 Saturday Jan 2012

Posted by Howard in Food & Travel, France

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Languedoc, Millesime Bio, Montpellier

Montpellier, France – The incredible charm and history of European cities never ceases to amaze me when I have at least a little time to wander the streets.

I left Indianapolis Friday at 1 p.m. and arrived this morning in Montpellier, France (via Atlanta and Paris) for a week-long press stay in this modern and ancient city that sets on the Mediterranean Sea. I’ll be attending the 19th Millesime Bio Monday through Wednesday. Tomorrow the press group will learn more about organic wines, visit a winery, and finish the day with dinner and winemakers presenting their organic wines.

A couple of interesting buildings facing Place de la Comedie

Before flying home Friday, Jan. 27, I’ll be spending Thursday visiting three wineries out in the Languedoc region. All three producers have significant history in the organic wine movement.

Today was about recovery from all that time in the air. So I had a short nap this morning and then met the marketing person organizing the press trip for a nice seafood salad lunch. I then took 2.5 hours to walk the old historic part of the city. I could walk the old streets and soak in the charm for a week without ever getting to a winery.

I love how alive these old European cities are. The huge pedestrian gathering spots and streets draw tourists, locals, and plenty of performing artists. I posted an album you can click here. A few of the photos are labeled but most aren’t. I could look up all the history but as you can tell looking through its an area rich with Roman-style and French architecture.

This evening the 15-member press group gathers for the first time for dinner with a few organic winemakers pouring their wines. Hopefully, I’ll have the energy afterwards to write a short re-cap of meeting the winemakers and enjoying my first dinner in France. Hopefully! If not, come back each night this week for stories, wrap-ups, photos and highlights.

Send comment or questions to: hewitthoward@gmail.com

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...

A Full Immersion into Organic Wine World

16 Monday Jan 2012

Posted by Howard in France

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Languedoc, Millesime Bio, Montpellier

I’ve downloaded the French language app to my iPhone and buried my nose in more than a few articles on organic wine. Next week I’ll be attending the 19th Millesime Bio wine trade show on organic wines in Montpellier, France.

The Millesime Bio brings together wineries and members of the worldwide distribution network in a private trade fair. This year organizers expect 600 exhibitors from countries all over the world, drawing some of the world’s leading wholesalers, brokers, wine merchants, sommeliers, caterers, and importers.

And like any such show, there will be a small number of wine journalists there as well. I will be attending, with a group of Northern European wine journalists, as guests of The Inter-professional Association of Organic Wines from Languedoc-Roussillon.

France’s often overlooked Languedoc-Roussillon region, in southern France, is one of the leading organic grape-growing areas in the world. The region has 50,000 hectares under organic prodcution in 2010. That’s 124,000 acres for you non-metric types.

Exhibitors pouring their wines will come from all over the world. The annual gathering also includes presentations and talks on organic wine laws and growing practices.

I’ll have more later in the week. But I do intend to update throughout my time in France on Twitter, Facebook, and nightly updates here.

I’m blessed to have Veronique Raskin of The Organic Wine Company in San Francisco and Paul Chartrand of Chartrand Imports helping make the trip possible and arranging a few big highlights. The conference runs Jan. 23-25, but Raskin and Chartrand have arranged for me to visit three wineries on Thursday of that week before returning. I’ll visit with founders of the Languedoc organic movement and the AIVB president.

It’s quite exciting to visit southern France and be immersed in the worldwide discussion on organically grown grapes.

Send comment or questions to: hewitthoward@gmail.com

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • More
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Like Loading...
Newer posts →

Recent Posts

  • The other White Burgundy – Aligote!
  • Some wine gifting advice
  • Real Indiana Chardonnay?

Categories

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,063 other subscribers

Photography

Friend Me On …

Archives

My Summer With Lymphoma: Lymphoma - My Third Battle 2024

Scan: ‘No Evidence of Disease Progression’

That’s a nice way to say it. Yesterday, Mar 27, I had a PET scan (nuclear medicine) to look for cancer after my 60-day CAR-T cancer treatment. The headine here was the second sentence in the technical and detailed report. I really didn’t need to read anymore. I am cancer free and now can wear […]

Fighting Disappointment, Wrist Pain

Most of the past week or so has been dealing with the disappointment. I ended my 60 days of restrictions from cell therapy cancer treatment. But I learned a severely broken wrist can even out do cancer. I fell Sunday Feb. 19 in an icy parking lot. I had surgery the following Wednesday then Thursday, […]

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Howard W. Hewitt
    • Join 87 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Howard W. Hewitt
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d