Red Wine of the Week | Red Wine Reviews

Reds and Rosés you can grab in the Twin Cities for under $15. Expect a new wine to be revealed each Thursday(ish).

Archeo Nero d’Avola

Cost: Average price $5

Where buy now: Trader Joe’s for $4.99

Grapes: Nero d’Avola

Region: Sicily, Italy

Vintage: 2010

Archeo Nero d’Avola

Archeo Nero d’Avola “Neh-roe DAH-voe-lah” by Ruggero di Tasso is a delightful wine that hails from Sicily. Like the dark-black grapes this wine is named after, they have been blasted by the Southern Mediterranean heat providing the wine with a deep, rich crimson hue. It is a fuller bodied wine with lots of juicy flavor. It tastes of black cherry, raspberry and a teensy-bit of sweet baking spices and chocolate to round it out. The tannins are mild as was the acidity.

I know lots of folks love Cabernet, Syrah and Zinfandel, but dammit, give Nero d’Avola a chance!

As it’s a milder Nero d’Avola, this is the one I’d strongly suggest for the uninitiated. Also, it can hang with all three of those varietals, and I bet you’ll find as good [if not better] a bottle for much less dough. I love me some Cab and steak, so, substitute the Cab with Nero d’Avola, and that’s exactly how I enjoyed a home grilled porterhouse the other night.

Dining al fresco

Great thing is, this wine pairs well with grilled meats, but would also go really well with your Tuesday night frozen pizza.

If you’re already making the sojourn to Trader Joe’s (which, if you live near the St. Louis Park location, pack a lunch) to pick up the “Skank Wine of the Month” Primitivo, then grab a bottle of this Archeo Nero d’Avola. Make sure you get the Archeo priced at $4.99, not the Epicuro priced at $5.99! I just don’t care for the taste of the $6 Epicuro Nero d’Avola nearly as much as the $5 Archeo. I just asked a friend to pick up a few more bottles for me because, while my recent vacation was fun, MAN did it kill my vino budget! It’s simply not an option to run short on great, staple wines, now, is it?

DeLoach Pinot Noir

Cost: Average price $13.99

Where buy now: Cellars Wines & Spirits for $11.99

Grapes: Pinot Noir

Region: Russian River Valley, Sonoma, California

Vintage: 2009

DeLoach Pinot Noir

So many people have asked me for a budget Pinot Noir recommendation. I’ve tried a few Chilean Pinots, and they’ve been, well, “meh”. Since they don’t exactly taste like Pinot Noir to me, I think they’re a decent value. I’ll be honest and say I’m a California & Oregon Pinot Noir fan. That’s my own palate preference with this wine varietal. [That is, until my good friends at Familia Meschini come out with their Pinot.]

I’ve visited the DeLoach vineyard, located in the Russian River Valley of Sonoma, California. Typical of the Russian River Valley, this winery creates some primo Pinot Noirs, and with a price tag to match. So, when I saw a DeLoach Pinot Noir on sale for $11.99, I thought I’d give it a go. Now, a $12 price for Pinot is a bit like seeing a new Mercedes for $4000. However, with the DeLoach name on the bottle, I figured it wouldn’t be entirely useless swill.

I was right.

Now, this isn’t a $40+ bottle of Pinot Noir. It just isn’t as refined as others. In fact, you could say it’s a little rough around the edges. But that’s OK, because sometimes we like it a little rough.

Until then, I think this DeLoach Pinot at $12 and change is a great value. The grittier, rougher Pinots may just excite you in a way you never thought it could. It may not rock your world, but it also won’t rock your wallet like one quadruple its price.

Merlot Tasting – 2012

Cost: Average price $13 to $50+

Where buy now: North Loop Wines & Spirits, Solo Vino, France 44 and basement cellar

Grapes: Merlot with some interpretations

Region: Italy, France, California, Washington

Vintage: 2010 and older

Recently, I quasi-invited myself & a wine-friend to a #Geeks’nGrapes (as they’re known in the Twitter world) Merlot tasting. This group’s moniker couldn’t be more apropos, as it is comprised of two Sommeliers [as deemed by their level 2 certification] along with a fellow I’ve deemed “Mr. Wine Encyclopedia”.

Okay, blah blah blah Merlot, blah-blibbity-blah. “Sideways” was years ago, people, and NOT a documentary! Are we still solely enamored with Pinot Noir, frivolously casting away Merlot like a redheaded stepchild? Well, kids, if you haven’t welcomed Merlot into your household, for shame! Mind you, Paul Giamatti was handed that script. Much like Lowell’s (the “other” guy in the movie- remember the TV show “Wings”?) chubby chasing character, you always have a choice.

So, not knowing what beast’s belly I was heading into, I drove up to North Loop Wines & Spirits as they were having a buy one, get one ½ price sale. I talked to the wine dude there, his name is Kyle. I trust this guy implicitly, I don’t know why. I don’t know him very well but I do know that he’s a straight shooter who: a.) enjoys biking, b.) is a huge fan of The Band (RIP Levon), and c.) is a fellow Nordeaster. Oh, and for you gals (and non breeder males) reading along, he’s easy on the eyes, too.

I told him I needed a good recommendation for a Merlot tasting, but wanted to stay under my $15 price point. He introduced me to the Grayson Merlot from Napa Valley. Since I was going into this whole “Geeks” thing blind, I told him I’d blame him if this wine was deemed useless swill. Spineless? Perhaps, but I wanted to test his fortitude. (I mean, he’s _kind of_ playing the role of my physician, right?) To the #GeeksnGrapes event I go!

We started the evening with a 2005 Merlot from Tuscany, Italy called “Lamaione” from Marchesi de Frescobaldi.

Lamaione

I learned that Merlot is the third most planted grape varietal in Italy. This wine was garnet/ruby colored, with an orangish hue due to it’s age. The wine was aged for 24-48 months in oak. An earthy, musty, oaky wine with a medium to full body without much berry flavor, but with a long finish. After being uncorked a couple hours, it opened up to have a strong cedar scent and taste.  This wine was in someone’s cellar for a few years, and sported a price tag greater than $50, so we speculated it could possibly be found at i Nonni.

We followed that with a 2009 Bordeaux from France called “Chateau Vauzelle, Lalande de Pomerol”.

Chateau Vauzelle LaLande de Pomerol

This wine hails from Northern France. This wine differed in that it wasn’t a straight Merlot [bi-curious, perhaps?], but included Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon. Garnet in color, this had more cherry to it compared to the Tuscan Merlot, and was tannic and dry. I found it to be one of my favorites. This wine can be found at France 44 & North Loop, around $35-$40.

After that we went on to try the 2010 Grayson.

Grayson Cellars

Oh wow, what a switch from Old World (Europe) to New World (Americas, Australia, New Zealand) wine! Like the British Office to the American version, or Jefferson Airplane to Starship [only way less crappy than either Grace Slick vehicle]. This wine was a brighter garnet color, and was more fruit forward than it’s European cousins- less tannic, softer, but tasted of sour cherry and stewed fruit. This wine is around $13 at North Loop and Solo Vino.

Then we moved up the Coast to “The Velvet Devil”, a 2010 Merlot from Washington State brought by my friend.

The Velvet Devil

This was slightly deeper in garnet color compared to the Grayson, but still lighter than the others. This Merlot was oaky, smoky and slighted spiced. This wine is also around $13 at Solo Vino, North Loop and Pairings.

Number five on the docket was another Washington wine called, “Pedestal”, a 2007 Merlot from Columbia Valley in Walla Walla.

Pedestal

This wine is deeper Garnet in color and is big bodied [not unlike the Starship-era Slick]. It was robust and bolder than the other New World Merlot’s. We deemed this to be a Cabernet Sauvignon lover’s Merlot. This wine can be found at France 44, around $55.

Lastly, we travelled back down to Napa Valley and tried a favorite of “Mr. Wine Encyclopedia”, Chappellet’s 2009 Merlot.

Chappellet

This wine had the highest alcohol content, yet was smokier, spicier, thicker and heavier than the others, still. A great finisher, indeed.

As we sat around and waxed poetic about what first got us interested in wine, we revisited each one to notice more changes and evolutions to the scents and tastes. It’s one of those entities that you cannot judge at first site. There are nuances that continue to evolve. Our jobs are to find that balance of nature, skill, age, knowledge and enjoyment. This is when we understand what the winemaker desired and what we desire in a wine, we appreciate the efforts put forth to enable you to drink said wine and we enjoy the fruits of someone’s labor [no pun intended] while enjoying life’s riches. We truly are a lucky people.

Oh, and Kyle’s recommendation lived up to it’s promise: a truely smokin’ Merlot for under $15.