Monthly Archives: January 2013

2011 Dr. Hermann H Riesling and 2009 Dr. Hermann Erdener Treppchen Riesling Kabinett

Dr. Hermann wines

Dr. Hermann wines

As I mentioned in my last post,  at Crush wine bistro in Anchorage we had the lucky chance to try two rieslings by one of my favorite wineries in the middle Mosel region: Dr. Hermann. I wrote about the winery extensively here, so please check that out if you are not familiar with them.

The 2011 Dr. Hermann H Riesling is their entry level riesling made with grapes from the region. I have been a huge fan of that entry level wine, I thought the 2010 was stellar. When we tried this vintage in June 2011, it was not as vibrant as the 2010 I remembered but still a good $7 bottle (at the winery). At Crush, the wine presented itself a bit more settled. The nose had floral notes and some aromas that I can only describe as doughy (as in cake batter); actually quite pleasant. On the palate, the light-bodied wine showed honey and candied apricots and some pear with a decent enough acidity. In the finish, I got almonds. I still thought the wine tasted a bit too sweet, but it was enjoyable. I miss the 2010, but I can live with this vintage, too.

Dr. Hermann H Riesling

The 2009 Dr. Hermann Erdener Treppchen Riesling Kabinett presented itself as having aged quite nicely. In the past, Erdener Treppchen has been my preferred vineyard for this winery and this wine did not let me down (see a photo of the vineyard here). In the glass, we had a golden yellow, slightly amber wine. The nose showed some signs of that particular aroma that aged rieslings have (I don’t know how to describe it, a bit musty maybe), with detectable citrus aromas. On the palate, this lean wine had already contracted a bit and showed a beautifully round aroma of citrus, apricot and toffee with a medium finish that let on hints of vanilla. At first I was surprised by these signs of ageing because I had not expected them, but when I realized it was a kabinett and not a spätlese (as I had originally thought) I relaxed. A kabinett can show these signs after 3 years in the bottle. As it opened up further, it showed pineapple and red apples aromas, too. It really was quite beautiful and is right for drinking now.

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Crush Wine Bistro and Cellar in Anchorage, Alaska

As a few of you might know, I spent Christmas with my in laws in Alaska. The first time I went to Anchorage was in the summer of 2009. And during that first visit, my now father in law decided to take this “wine snob” (my mother in law’s favorite descriptor for me) to the new attraction in town: Crush Wine Bistro and Cellar. It had just opened sometime earlier that year. It was a wonderful place: a rather small establishment in the heart of Anchorage, a great long bar and small tables filling the room. The staff was friendly and knowledgeable, never overbearing. It just had a good vibe to it. It gave me that feeling of belonging, welcoming me, a place I wanted to be in. Why is it so hard for all too many places to create that atmosphere?

Upon looking at the wine list I had to laugh out loud: Certainly, there were Gunderloch wines on the list. Gunderloch is a phenomenon: The winery is located in my hometown Nackenheim and has been available worldwide for a while now: I have found their wines in hotels in Seoul, Korea and pretty much anywhere else I have been (I visited the winery in June 2012, here are my thoughts). I told the owner and he informed me they had more in their storage. So he took me to his upstairs storage facility and there they were: magnums, double magnums, half bottles, lots and lots of Gunderloch. The owner loved riesling, and it was a lot of fun to talk with him. We had a great time that night. The wines we tried were good, the food was wonderful and like I said, the atmosphere was stellar. It was clear that the owners were still trying to figure out what their wine bar would be about and like, but I liked what I saw. I liked it a lot!

Over the last 2 1/2 years I followed Crush on an off. I had not been back over Christmas 2011, for whatever reasons, I don’t actually know why we never made it. Their Facebook site was growing, their chef won award after award, and clearly they were doing something (or a lot of things!) right. They were even named one of the Top 100 wine bars in the United States by the Wine Enthusiast in 2011 (not that I am fond of that magazine or its ratings, but still)! Somewhere, deep inside me, I was becoming uneasy about Crush. What if with that growth and praise they were changing, not to the better?

Well, no way to find out but going. So this winter we finally visited Crush again. We went there after dinner with two friends of ours, and the place was bustling on a Friday night. The staff was as cordial and friendly as ever, and I was pleased to see that the atmosphere had not changed at all: still the small place with the great bar. They also had made some nice changes, including the bar lighting which now consists of empty wine bottles with a light bulb in them. Looked really great, and gave me ideas for a home improvement project…

We put our names on the wait list and I spotted a bottle of Dr. Hermann‘s H Riesling, one of my go to easy drinking rieslings in Germany. I chatted up the guy in charge of the wait list and he told me they also had an Erdener Treppchen. We had a long chat, he was very knowledgeable, as was to be expected, told me to check out their upstairs sales room. It turned out they had followed through on their plans to turn the upstairs storage area into a sales room, aptly named The Cellar above Crush. I grabbed my buddy Will and we headed up there. And what a great selection of rieslings did we find: Dr. Hermann’s 2009 Erdener Treppchen Kabinett, two rieslings by a tiny producer with stellar wines (Loch winery), Dr. Loosens and other wineries I knew. It was incredible, especially because they only had about 250 wines in total, I would guess.

We grabbed the Erdener Treppchen, because it was also quite reasonably priced at $19.50 and had it chilled downstairs. By the time we got back down, the girls had secured a spot at the bar and we were offered complimentary sips of the H Riesling. We chatted with staff and among each other, the bar was still full and I was so glad to be back. One of the bar tenders was actually a classmate of Nina’s; Anchorage is a village.

After a while, a table opened up and we moved there. We took the Erdener Treppchen and enjoyed it there. I will write a review of the wine in a separate post, suffice it to say it fit our mood. After that, Nina and I shared a flight of Austrian reds (more about those in another post) and our friends had a Washington riesling. The wait staff continued to be friendly and attentive and we had a great time. We left Crush as they were about to close down.

A red flight at Crush Wine Bar in Anchorage in 2009

A red flight at Crush Wine Bar in Anchorage in 2009

If you ever get a chance, check Crush out. It is kind of my idea of a wine bar: open space, but close knit atmosphere; knowledgeable staff, people who care and know what they talk about; great food; and rotating wine lists, challenging my taste buds and expanding my horizons. If I lived in Anchorage, I would be a regular. They offer several flights of three wines each for $12 that rotate quite often, from the eclectic to the exclusive. While we were there they had an Austrian red wine flight, a mourvedre flight, a Southern Cross flight (red wines from the Southern hemisphere), a garnacha flight, a “spicy” white flight with wines from Argentina and Spain, and a dry riesling flight.

Crush Wine Bistro and Cellar
343 West 6th Avenue
Anchorage, AK 99501
(907) 865-9198

 They are on Facebook, too.

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2010 Caiu a Noite Vinho Verde and 2011 King Estate Acrobat Pinot Gris

2010 Caiu a Noite and 2011 Acrobat Oregon Pinot Gris

2010 Caiu a Noite and 2011 Acrobat Oregon Pinot Gris

We were invited for at dinner party on our last Saturday evening in Alaska before flying back to Ann Arbor. The hosts had told us to bring wine and sent us a menu for dinner: broccoli, roasted lemon-herb chicken, mashed lentils with caramelized onions and balsamic vinegar. In my opinion, this dinner was screaming out for white wines. I guess a Côtes du Rhône would have worked fine as well, but with the lemon chicken I just felt safer with whites.

We headed over to the liquor store and I was thinking something along the lines of a Burgundy chardonnay. We kept checking the pretty decent wine selection when Nina had the idea to bring a vinho verde to start with. We couldn’t see any, so we asked the lady in the store who promptly sent us to the Chile wine section because Portugal was somewhere in South America…ah, well. I finally spotted a vinho verde, the 2010 Caiu a Noite. I had never seen that wine before, but it was $6.99 and since a bottle of vinho verde has yet to disappoint me, we picked it up.

With some uneasiness and the very limited selection of Burgundy whites I was convinced by Nina that we might want to look into pinot gris. I complained that I am not the person who brings pinot gris to a dinner party (I am not the fondest supporter of that grape). I saw some Oregon pinot gris and I decided that that might be a route to take. I have never had Oregon pinot gris before, so it was an experiment. The 2011 King Estate Acrobat seemed about right, and cost around $10.

Both wines turned out to be very good (as did dinner!). The 2010 Caiu a Noite Vinho Verde still had some bubbling going on, which I did not expect given that it is a 2010 vintage and vinho verde is usually meant to be drunk young. It had a great nose of fresh apple and citrus and in the glass showed these same apple aromas, a very slight sweetness backed up by a nice acidity. It was a really good vinho verde, probably one of the best I have had (better than the Trader Joe’s Vinho Verde Espiral, I think, because it was more rounded and less wild). I highly recommend this wine if you get a chance to try it.

The 2011 King Estate Acrobat Oregon Pinot Gris poured in a very light yellow color. The nose was a bit perfumy, but somewhat subdued. Not very expressive at first. On the palate the wine was beautiful. It had a nice body to it, was dry and showed some interesting fruit aromas of pear and apple. It had a nice length to it and was just incredibly smooth and wonderful to drink. I enjoyed it tremendously, and I loved that there are always wines out to positively surprise me. It also paired well with dinner. I have to try more Oregon wines, from what I hear this is a wine region that is producing wines that I will like. I am very excited about that prospect.

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