Posts Tagged ‘Jane’

The Rosé of the Summer

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

This has been the summer of the rosé. More than in previous summers, all I want to do is drink pink wine. Maybe it’s the heat, or maybe it’s all the veggies I’ve been eating, or maybe it’s the influx of high quality rosé in the market…whatever the cause, rosé has been my go-to beverage this summer. I am not too discriminating when it comes to rosé; I like them all. Pale pink blends from Provence, robust salmon-colored rosés from the States (Washington State and Virginia at the top of the list!), bubble-gum hued Spanish rosés, lightly effervescent Txakolina rosés, and even some elegant pink Champagne when I’m feeling indulgent.

But there was one rosé that stood above them all. Yes, I will say it, this is my Rosé of the Summer: the 2009 Sperino Rosa del Rosa. A blend of 85% Nebbiolo, 10% Vespolina, 5% Creotina from the Piedmont region of Italy, this wine is wildy aromatic: raspberry, red cherry, and pomegranate fruit on the nose, with a burst of ripe fruit on the front palate, softening up to a leesy bitterness at the back. I can’t get enough of it.

What’s your rosé of the summer?

Pappy Van Winkle Cocktail Dinner & Pairing

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Old Pappy Van Winkle Bourbon

Whiskey Dinner

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

hosted by LUSH

with Julian Van Winkle

Appetizer:

Assorted charcuterie, craft cheeses, olives, pickled vegetables, jams, crusty bread

Cocktail: Americana

1 oz. Pappy Van Winkle 10 year 90 proof

½ oz. Campari

¾ oz. Punt e Mes Sweet Vermouth

Regan’s Orange bitters

Topped with bubbly & orange oil

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TOC Eat Out Awards 2010: Best Wine Shop

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

LUSH Wine and Spirits for the wine! No, wait, the win!

http://www3.timeoutny.com/chicago/blog/out-and-about/2010/04/2010-eatout-award-winners-and-nominees/

Seriously, though, we are so very thrilled and extremely gracious to all the lushes out there that voted for us.  Thank you!  We heart wine, we heart you.  And TimeOut Chicago, too.  Oh, and Rick Bayless, cause he’s dreamy.

We were in good company with the other nominees, and very much think they do a rockin job with the wine, as well.

LUSH has busted ass and loves our wine drinking, slinging friends.  Please come on by and check out our interactive, put it in your mouth approach to sipping, getting educated, and having fun.  Classes, tastings, and private events are all integral components of the shop, so give us a ring anytime to get in on the action.

Check out lushwineandspirits.com for more details, or give the GM a call at 312.666.6900.  Ask for Rachel or chat up a LUSH lady or lad.

Right on.  Thank you!  Bubbles! And Champagne to celebrate!

Craft Brewers Conference: New Beligum Brewery ‘LOVE’

Friday, April 9th, 2010

So, one day, Lauren Salazar from New Belgium Brewery gave LUSH a ring.  She had grand plans to invite brewers, brew folk, and friends to a private ‘brewery only’ event right smack in the middle of the Craft Brewers Conference, the World Beer Cup, and copious amounts of public beer events.  She wanted pig.  And beer.  And good people.

Ms. Rachel Driver thought this was just the right kind of crazy idea that could be brilliant and amazing.

Thus, we schemed and scheduled, flew beer in from around the country and Canada, and threw on hella big shindig.  Drowning in beer required.  Special brews, delicious pigs and all sorts of super serious fun were to be had by all.  See the rundown below for a glimpse of the par-tay that New Belgium hosted with LUSH.

Rocking. (more…)

LUSH/Green Zebra Wine Dinner

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Our first partnership with Green Zebra restaurant, our neighbor on Chicago Avenue, took place last night: a progressive dinner celebrating the imminent coming of the Spring season. We could not have asked for a nicer day! Brisk and bright, with hazy afternoon sun stretching out through the beginning of our meal. We had about 50 people in attendance, streaming into the restaurant at 6:30. Everyone was greeted with a little bubbly as they sat down: the non-vintage Zardetto Brut Cuvee, a blend of prosecco, muscat, and chardonnay from northern Italy. A perfect aperitif.

I made a brief speech introducing myself, LUSH, and thanking everyone for being there on our first joint venture. Then, I tucked myself into a booth up front with my friend Bridget, and we took part in the meal. I needed to see first hand how the pairings went with chef de cuisine Molly’s Harrison’s four course meal. Lest you think otherwise: this was work.

Most of the courses had two separate but complimentary parts, and it was our job at LUSH to find a wine that would work well with both. The first course was heirloom radish and Greek yogurt finger sandwiches, along with roasted beets with olive tapenade and spring mache. This kind of antipasti food screams rosé to me, so we chose the 2008 Franz Karl Schmitt Pinot Meunier Rosé from the Rheinhessen in Germany. Last night this wine was showing a bit of funk on the nose: a little bit meaty and mushroomy. But, its palate of bright berry fruits and cooling minerality was a great counterpart to the salty, earthy flavors of the dish. Overall, an awesome pairing.

For the next course, we had a creamy Vidalia onion soup. Rich, yet still lively and tangy, this soup demanded a wine that had a hint of oak yet still was bright in acid. And something with a funky nutty, mushroomy note wouldn’t hurt either. The 2004 Chateau Rives-Blanques ‘Cuvee Occitania’ from Limoux, France was up to the task. Entirely composed of the almost extinct mauzac, a grape usually used to make sparkling wine in the Languedoc. Aged 10 months in French oak, this wine had a creamy front palate with bright acid on the back. Notes of baked apple, hazelnut, and oatmeal complimented the soup in an unexpected way.

The next course was a true celebration of Spring: grilled asparagus with preserved lemon, black garlic, prairie farms goat cheese, then leek pancakes with pickled quail eggs and baby spring veggies. WOW. This course rocked. But, hard to pair! Asparagus is notoriously difficult with wine. All the tangy notes (pickled eggs, preserved lemon, goat cheese) demanded a bright white with high acid. But, the bitter rustic components (leeks, black garlic, asparagus) would benefit from earthy/herbal flavors. The compromise: the 2008 Quattro Mani ‘Toh-kai’ from Brda, Slovenia. Made from the grape Friulano (formerly known as Tocai Friulano), this is one of those “double take” wines. It’s so surprising and unique that everyone in the room had nose in wineglass for another sniff. Spearmint, white chocolate, pink grapefruit, and green tea on the nose. Dry and herbal on the palate, with bright acid and a vibrant undercurrent of stony minerality. This pairing worked, but in an odd way. Both the dish and the wine had strong flavors and tastes that were able to coexist. It wasn’t one of those pairings that made dish and wine melt into each other, but rather, it seems that they challenged each other and were able to bring out the bold elements in one another.

The fourth course was perhaps my favorite pairing. The dish had two components: a mushroom tortellini with pickled rhubarb next to Anson Mill Grits with confit artichokes. A heavenly dish. Rich and rustic, with bright notes from the rhubarb and frizzled green onions on top of the grits. With it, the 2007 Cottanera ‘Barbazzale Rosso’ from Sicily. Made from a grape called nerello mascalese, grown on the volcanic slopes of Mount Etna. Bright red fruit, aromatic, transparent in body, with ashy and savory notes. The pairing worked in the exact opposite way as the one described previously; the wine and the dish really became one, one melting into the other and illuminating new flavors and textures in each. A great conclusion to the first part of our meal!

Next, we all walked the half block down to LUSH on Chicago Avenue, regaining our appetite for the final course: a medley of desserts prepared by Molly at Green Zebra. Everyone filed into our events space, newly decked out with comfy black leather couches, a long communal table, and high bar stools. The spread was awesome: chocolate and vanilla cupcakes, carrot cake with cream cheese frosting and candied carrots, lemon tarts with candied lemon peel, rhubarb and cream tarts, as well as peanut and chocolate brittle. At LUSH, we had two dessert wines waiting: the Lustau East India Solera Sherry and the 2008 Montinore Müller-Thurgau from Willamette Valley, Oregon. The first, a rich Oloroso with a bit of sweet Pedro Ximenez sherry added, went perfectly with the chocolate-based desserts. The Montinore (one of the few examples of varietal Müller-Thurgau made in the US!), a lightly sweet wine, with notes of lavender, pear, and sweet pea, was a great accompaniment to the fruit-based desserts.

Full, content, and thoroughly impressed with Molly and our friends at Green Zebra, I fell into bed happy last night, already thinking about our next collaboration. We hope to have more dinners in the future with Green Zebra, so keep an eye out.

Cheers!

Jane

Upcoming Events…March 2010

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS
Rock the vote…
LUSH has been nominated as one of the best wine shops in the city. Please excuse us while we fan ourselves and try to remain calm…eeeeee! So exciting. Please share your love and support of all things LUSH by voting. The TimeOut Chicago 2010 EatOut Awards are about indulging in the good stuff...food and booze, with a close pulse on the city and what is brand spanking new or established and still performing wonders peddling deliciousness. Vote your most bestest favorite restaurant, chefs, bartender, blogger…and wine shop! We heart you!  http://chicago.timeout.com/

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LUSH Interview: 10 Questions with Ms. Jane

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Ten Questions With…
Jane Lopes
Manager, LUSH Roscoe Village

A native of sunny California, Jane grew up virtually surrounded by the vineyards of the Bay Area and exposed to the culture of eating, drinking, and breathing wine earlier in life than many of the Lushies, which may help to explain her deep-seated passion for all things fermented. The moment she walked into the shop for an interview, decked out with electric orange, rubber robot earrings dangling beneath her flaming locks, we knew she was meant for LUSH. In the precious few moments when not running the show as manager and wine buyer at LUSH in Roscoe Village, Jane’s [also tall & redheaded] doppelganger can be found slangin’ classic cocktails at the Violet Hour one night each week. Ms. Jane has an ingrained knack for discerning obscure nuances and flavors, as well as a gift for creating amazingly quirky flavor combinations and innovative, classically inspired cocktail recipes. Like both Rachel and Erin, curiously enough, Jane is also a University of Chicago graduate, rounding out the three stores’ trifecta of innate, total geekiness. Word on the street is that she harbors a literary nerd deep within, and may or may not have been a notoriously clever Shakespeare scholar while in school. True to her alma mater, Jane will happily get down and dirty and all educational with you over whatever wine or spirit about which your little heart desires to learn. (more…)

LUSH: Staff Picks 2009, Veterans

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Get your GEEK on: LUSH Staff Picks - The Veterans
Our favorite wines of the year are a moment captured by a sip, a sigh, a wisp of pure delight…these wines are what we crave, what excites us right now. In an ever evolving world of imbibing, this is the snapshot of the best hits of 2009. (more…)

The Wonderful World of Sherry

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Ah, sherry. So delicious. So diverse. So misunderstood.

A lot of times people want to jump in, and start talking about sherry in terms of the different styles. We’ll get to that. But the first thing that needs to be discussed — the thing that is the basis for all sherry — is the solera system. Sherry wine (’Vinos de Jerez’) is believed to have the unique property of taking on the characteristics of older wine when blended. In a solera system, older barrels of wine are topped with young wine to create a consistent flavor profile. It usually takes at least 4 years for wine in the solera system to reach the profile of the house style, at which point it can be bottled.

So, while a lot of the wine produced in the world will change from vintage to vintage depending on the weather and conditions that year, the object of Sherry houses is to create a consistent product from year to year. The solera system not only creates this consistent style, it also allows the wine to take on the benefits of both old and young wine: older wine is refreshed by younger juice, and younger wine gains complexity from blending with the old.

Each barrel in the solera system is a 550 liter butt, but is only filled to 500 liters. This takes us to the next important aspect of sherry: the interplay of the wine, oxygen, and a magical substance called flor. Flor is the layer of yeast that develops on top of sherry in each butt. Although the specifics are complicated and somewhat vague, flor grows nowhere else in the world: there is something about the unique conditions of Jerez and Sanlucar in southern Spain that allow this magical film to develop. Flor gives sherry many of its unique characteristics. That nutty, green apple taste you get in a fino sherry is a direct result of the strains of yeast found in flor.

After 3-5 years on average, sherry butts are assessed. If the flor has stayed strong and resilient and the sherry inside is delicate and unoxidized, this wine is slightly fortified and bottled as fino sherry. This is our first style! Delicate, with green apple and nougat notes (now you know where that comes from!), fino sherry is a wonderful food wine. Drink it chilled, with shellfish, tapas, or some of those hard to pair foods like artichokes and asparagus.

Finos that are made in the seaside town of Sanlúcar de Barrameda are called manzanilla sherry. Because of the proximity to the sea, these wines are often more briny and salty than finos, as well as a touch more savory and bitter. Drink chilled with some green olives or marcona almonds. Nom nom.

When a butt is assessed and it is NOT fit to become a fino (i.e. the flor is not still intact, and the flavor is a little too broad and robust), the wine remains in the barrel to become a different type of sherry. Barrels that are not destined to be finos will often be coerced into becoming an amontillado. The flor is deliberately compromised, which allows the wine to become oxidized. Aged for 8 years, this style of sherry is still dry, but much darker,  more nutty and full. Usually fortified to around 17.5% alcohol, and exposed to oxygen in their aging process, amontillados survive longer after being opened than finos and manzanillas do. Great on its own, amontillado also goes quite well with salty, gamey dishes (think: beef stew, duck, and anything wrapped in bacon).

Palo Cortado is a rare kind of sherry, in which the flor dissipates on its own accord (magically!) part way through the aging process. This makes true Palo Cortados quite expensive, because you never quite know when one is going to turn up.

Oloroso sherries develop in the barrel without any sort of oxidative protection (no flor!). These wines — although naturally dry — are robust and nutty, with lots of dried fruit and toasty flavors. Pedro Ximenez wine can be added to Oloroso sherries to make them sweet. Olorosos can be paired with rich cheeses and terrines, as well as venison, veal, and the like.

Welcome to the wide world of sherry. Enjoy.

Cheers,

Jane

MO-VEE-AHHHHH

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Ales Kristancic [courtesy of Food & Wine Magazine]

Ales Kristancic (courtesy of Food and Wine Magazine)

Most of the world tends to think of boundaries in terms of nationality. I’m Portuguese. It’s from Germany. The fox is French. The wine world thinks in this way as well. Restaurant lists, wine stores, and importer’s portfolios are organized and separated by country.

Sometimes, though, these distinctions can be useless.

Take, for example, Movia. The winery is officially nestled in the hills of Slovenia. If you want to send Movia a piece of mail (say, a love note), you would jot down a Slovenian address. But, if you ask Ales Kristancic (pronounced alesh chris-stan-zick), the gregarious and charming proprietor of the estate, Movia’s identity, terroir, and juice is not tied to a particular nation. Instead, it’s tied to an appellation.

Perhaps you’ve heard of Collio? An appellation that straddles the border between Italy and Slovenia, Collio is famous for its crisp, lush, and mineral-driven whites: Tocai Friulano, Pinot Grigio, Pinot Bianco, Malvasia, Sauvignon Blanc, Ribolla Giallo.

Ever heard of Brda? Probably not. It is the Slovenian name for Collio. Among the sommelier set, the name has emerged as one of the most promising wine producing regions in the world right now, due in large part to the wines (and the personality) of Ales Kristancic. An outspoken champion of indigenous grape varieties, terroir-driven winemaking, and nothing but the most natural, organic, and biodynamic processes, Kristancic could be called a traditionalist.

He could also, perhaps just as justifiably, be called a radical. He leaves his white wine to age on its lees for up to two years (a looooong time) in 600 liter Slavonian oak casks. He performs his filtering by hand and in a limited manner, as dictated by the atmospheric pressure associated with moon cycles. And — get this — Kristancic bottles one of his sparkling wines undisgorged. This means the bottle arrives in the hands of the consumer with a ball of yeast in its neck. The longer a wine spends with said yeast, the more complexity it is thought to attain; Ales is maximizing this time by releasing bottles that have yet to be disgorged. The consumer must submerge the bottle in water, pop off the cork, and quickly bring the bottle upright. The yeast is released under the water, and the bottle emerges freshly disgorged and ready to be drunk. Oh yeah, you have to store the bottle upside down (try a large mixing glass or something similar) for two days before opening it to condense the yeast.

Crazy? Perhaps. Brilliant? Probably. Effective? Absolutely. The Movia ‘Puro’ (100% Pinot Noir bubbly) is one of the coolest wines the Lushes have tried this year. Yeasty, bready, yet fresh, with piercing minerality, and a mint/ginger spice on the palate. This bottle has not hit the LUSH shelves yet, but look out for ‘Puro’ (and a demo of it being opened!) at our West Town launch party on December 4th.

The Movia wines we have in stock right now include the Quattro Mani ‘Toh-Kai’ 07, a project involving four winemakers making wine from indigenous grapes around the world. I once read this wine described as ‘bizarrely delicious’ and I think nothing could be more apropos. Mint, white chocolate, apricot, menthol, green tea, and lemon peel all intermingle in an odd yet entirely satisfying progression of aromas and flavors. For $13, there may not be a better deal this year.

We also currently have the 04 Veliko Bianco (”Big White”) and the 04 Lunar. Both wines are made with the Ribolla Giallo grape, a native varietal that tends to produce creamy, rich, dry wines with great acidity. In the hands of the right person (ahem, Mr. Kristancic), these wines can be remarkably ageable. The Veliko Bianco is also blended with Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc, and vinified according to the methods I mentioned above. The nose suggests a certain sweetness: honey, after-dinner mints, tangerine. The palate is dry and fierce, yet not without serious richness. This wine is lifted in a way that’s hard to describe: it’s almost like there is a layer of white flowers and menthol that sits between the wine and your tongue. It’s a pretty incredible sensory experience. Weird, yet utterly delicious and drinkable.

The Lunar is a different beast. 100% Ribolla Giallo. As an experiment, Kristancic wanted to make a wine that had no human intervention except at harvest and at bottling. The grapes were hand selected and then left to their own devices until spring in specially designed barrels. No pressing. No added yeasts. At bottling time, the juice is drawn off its skins using a vacuum and bottled with no sulfur dioxide. What emerges is nothing short of glorious (and nothing short of extreme): a wine that pours a rusty orange color, more reminiscent of beer than it is of wine. A bizarre confluence of tannin (from the extended skin contact), slightly oxidized flavors, rich, ripe fruit, piercing acidity, and residual carbon dioxide, this wine is mind-boggling. Cerebral yet still accessible, this wine will undoubtedly evolve for decades to come.

Join us in exploring this frontier of winemaking. We are very excited to offer these wines at LUSH, and hope that you enjoy them as much as we do .

Cheers!

Jane