Saturday, December 26, 2009

A little recap of the trip to Mosel wine country before tour started this year.


Stokes and I arrived in Frankfurt at 700 am with the normal feelings of jet lag, dazed, confused and not really sure where my place on this earth was. Luckily this is a transition I’m used to making. After stokes and I successfully procured our luggage we hopped into our 9 passenger Mercedes bus and took off onto the autobahn hoping that a day of inspiration in wine country would be just the remedy we needed.
The first trip on the Autobahn every year is as big of an adjustment as the jet lag. You think you’re going fast and then your passed by a 7 series bmw doing 200 kph. Before you know it you’re up to speed and it becomes a little more normal but the first time back is always a shock. The drive into the Mosel river valley from Frankfurt is fairly uninspiring, that is until you reach the switchback roads that drop directly down to the Mosel through some of the steepest vineyards in Europe. At our first switchback we could see thick fog blanketing the town of Traben in the river valley below, as a vineyard plummeted off to the right side of our car. What a welcoming sight.
Our hotel was on the waterfront in Traben, perfectly situated and one of the nicer hotels I have stayed at in Europe. Our room was extremely spacious by European standards, with two floors and a deep soak tub. I took a shower to rinse myself of the days travel, followed by a 45 minute nap that was extremely difficult to wake from, before our 100 appointment at Markus Molitor.
Our drive out of Traben gave us a great idea as to what Mosel is about, perfectly sandwiched towns along the river, abutted by towering vineyards to the rear, oxbow turns in the river and what felt like a very gentle way of life. The blue slate in the vineyards was so intense that during this time of year, without leaf cover, the soil appears blue. Like Cote Rotie, you can tell that there is substance to the people that handwork these vineyards, simply by looking in awe at the ruggedness of the vineyards.
I arrived at the Molitor estate only to find it under construction. I met Markus Molitor, who was in the middle of a meal with his wife, and he kindly redirected us to the temporary tasting house in the town of Zeltingen, two kilometers away. After zigging and zagging through the tight streets of Zeltingen we arrived at the Molitor offices to taste some wines. Naturally, my jet lag limited my attention span, but I managed to take quite a bit away from the visit. Molitor is a very large winery by mosel standards. Our guide told us that Molitor makes over 50 different wines. I was struck by the flexibility and individualism that is allowed under the German wine law, more so than its old world counterparts with their “DOC” restrictions. The control that the winemakers have on when to harvest and what to produce varies so much from vineyard to vineyard and producer to producer. One year a vintner might produce a kabinett from a vineyard and the next year that same vineyard might produce auslese, it all depends on the vintage and what nature gives them. It also gives the winemaker a lot of flexibility to tell the consumer about his vineyards terroir through his decisions on when to pick and what to produce. In Mosel there is a lot of single vineyard desgination, the terroirs are unique and demand individual representation. I also noticed a lot of varying vineyard orientations, something that was strange to me being so in touch with piedmont where most nebbiolo vineyards are planted south-southeast. Riesling classifications (from kabinett to TBA) are done by must weight, or density of liquid (sugar concentration) so within a category, say auslese, you can have a huge variation of must weights within the range that defines auslese, as well as the resulting sweetness based on how long fermentation is carried out. Sometimes you will see stars that will indicate the level of must weight within the range. A few producers, including Molitor do this to help their consumers.
We tasted through 8 or so wines, with varying levels of sweetness. Urziger Wurzgarden, Zeltinger Sonnenuhr, etc etc. All wines were very strong examples of mosel Riesling with some pushing 93-94 points. I did not take many notes here as my attention was limited by the incredible exhaustion I was feeling.
After our trip to Molitor, it was off to a pizzeria for a late lunch as we tried to tackle the challenge of not falling asleep too early. 800 rolled around and I was struggling, stokes suggested we hit the town to try and stay up a little longer. From our hotel we could see a neon sign, which turned out to be the only disco in 50 km. I hesitantly followed Stokes into the night. We sat down and had some drinks, greeted by the pungent scent of cigarette smoke that seems to cling to some European bars, despite recent rules to ban smoking. It was a slow night at the disco, but we immediately began chatting with a German kid named Chris. Chris was the dj here, but he also worked selling Audis, this was just his hobby. He grew up in the area and was very welcoming to Stokes and I. Eventually we met his friends as well. We passed the evening drinking and talking about all the things you talk about with someone from another country that you meet for the first time, ways of life, families, hobbies, oddities of each culture etc. Before we knew it we had stayed up far longer than we thought was possible, thanks to new friends and new culture. We made plans to meet up the following night.
The following morning I awoke early to a beautiful morning. The tranquility of the Mosel flowing by our hotel was too much for me to resist, so I threw on my spandex and set out on a run. I stepped out the door of the hotel only to be broadsided by the smell of fresh baked croissants and other German breakfast delicacies. I fought the temptation and headed down to the Mosel where there was a perfectly paved bike path. The path was lined with small houses, almost Hansel and Gretel like, with wood piles stacked to perfection as only Europeans do. After each bend in the river new olfactory surprises greeted me, the steep blue slopes of the vineyards, swans passing time by effortlessly floating down the mosel, an old lady walking her small dog, greeting me with “guten morgen”. This run was sensory overload and I loved every moment of it in the still peace of a Mosel River morning.
After getting my blood flowing we headed off for a day in Bernkastel. We wandered the beautiful Christmas markets, a sensory overload that every human being should experience. I took some photos, but quickly became bored and needed some enological inspiration. I spotted a gluhwein stand. Gluhwein is normally red, but here in Mosel it was white, made from Riesling. Quite tasty might I add. Stokes and I sat down to sip our Gluhwein and take in the sights when a small blue pellet clanked off of the bench. We looked up and two small German boys were shooting at us, nervously poking their heads out from the edge of window when they realized we had spotted them. We managed to cast half joking, half threatening looks at them each time they poked their heads out to prevent further assault. As I looked down I saw pellets everywhere, this was obviously sport for them, one that I envied being too old and mature to partake….well I guess that is debatable.
We felt the urge to head into the vineyards that tower over Bernkastel. We wandered up through the streets until we broke out above Bernkastel into blue sky and vineyards. The view was stunning, the sweep of mountains that followed the Mosel’s oxbow turns, the bustling city below us, castles on distant horizons, vineyards on almost every slope. I headed up into the vineyards to check out the famous blue slate soil. Stokes and I had a bit of a touristy photograph session as the beauty was absolutely stunning. As we headed back into the city I counted myself blessed to be here.
After our descent into the city, we continued on across the bridge over the Mosel to the wine museum. The museum was well appointed with self service interactive displays that covered all of the facets of the region and Riesling production one could imagine. It seemed like part of the museum was closed as it was the slow season, but the interactive displays were enough for me. After acquainting ourselves with the region, we then headed over to the enotec where one can taste up to 150 rieslings in season. There were only 50 or so for us on this day, but I figured it would do. The basement of the building houses large metal racks that ran down two corridors that must have been 150 feet long. On each rack was the producer information, pictures, background information etc. In front of each rack was an open bottle of each producer. To gain entry you pay 5 euros for your glass. The wines are all self service and there were a few groups of people who were clearly taking advantage of the Riesling glut! I tasted through most of the 50 or so available wines, quickly becoming bored with the kabinett section. I generally enjoy these with food rather than on their own which is why I was having a hard time tasting through so many kabinetts. My Riesling sweet spot is something with balanced sweetness and a little more tropical essence as well as that racy acidity to balance.
We headed over to the next corridor where the spatlase and auslese wines were hanging out so I could get my fix. I tasted the first two and clearly we were on the right track. As I proceeded through the room I noticed a lot of empty bottles to my dismay. I then looked to the corner and a group of 8 or so had staked out the room for what had to have been a very long time, because most bottles were empty and they were smashed! Not bad for 5 euro! Shortly after a staff member came through opening more bottles. I tasted through all of the wines. I was still quite jet lagged so my attention and record keeping was not what they normally are. Rather I was just trying to get a feel for the styles and terroir differences between the vineyards. Finally I looked at stokes as we seemed to share the same target, the Zeltinger Sonnenuhr auslese from molitor. We were both on the same page, tasting time was over and drinking time was now. We grabbed the bottle and sat back and enjoyed the 93 pt wine ( my palate). The auslese and spatlese levels from Molitor are wonderfully rich and tropical with bracing acidity and deep aromatics. These wines age beautifully as well. It was a treat to spend the afternoon with this bottle in musty cave under Bernkastel.
We headed back to traben to meet up with our friends that we had met the first night. Michael picked us up and we headed to Chris’s house for homemade pizza. Chris lives in a beautiful apartment that looks over the mosel from a perch high on the west side of the river. We started out with some kabinett Riesling, passing the time chatting about video games and the differences in movies in America and Germany. It turns out that the titles of many movies we would find common get changed for foreign markets…interesting and funny because the translation back to English can be hilarious. I popped a special bottling from molitor, 2004 vintage, and poured it to all at the table. The young lady picked up her glass, and at the same time I looked at stokes, thinking the wine was corked, she pronounced that the wine was corked and that it was too bad. All I was thinking was “that was hot”. I guess women with acute wine sensory abilities are my thing! I complimented her on her wine tasting abilities, but she shrugged it off saying that her family was in wine and saying everyone here knows about wine. We had a great evening and headed off to the disco for more entertainment. The evening passed with dancing and merriment. I felt weird drinking Riesling in a club, but hey, when in Rome! Our time in Mosel came to a close in the same way it started, partying the night away. In the morning we would head off to winterberg for the start of tour.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Headed to Vancouver

Im headed off to Vancouver tomorrow night to get my first look at the Olympic track. Im looking forward to good look at what has become the fastest and most dangerous track in the world. Im flying into seattle and driving up to save $. I hear it is a beautiful drive and I am looking forward to it. Ill update everyone when I get there!

Friday, October 30, 2009

Conclusion of Team Trials

Our four race team trials series has concluded and we are now into our season. Team trials were a very mixed experience for me. I had problems in Lake Placid which is usually my stronghold and slid well in park city which is normally more of a challenge for me. My first race in Lake Placid was a solid 3rd place, but was followed by a freak 5th place after I made a very big mistake in curve 4, which cost me a half second on my first run. I placed in 4th both races in park city, which numerically is not the position I want, but I was very close to the fastest sleds, more so than in the past, as these two races were incredibly close. On a more positive note all of my summer training has paid off big time. I am the fastest I have ever been, as I set a personal best in Park City on the start at 4.87. I am currently staying on the west coast until I leave for the intercontinental cup on november 19th, which starts in Winterberg Germany. I will be doing some sliding and alot of physical preparation for the Intercontinetal cup. With both the world cup and intercontinental cup teams named, the next step in the selection process begins. We will have 7 international races before the jan 20 date when the Olympic team is named. On this date the points that everyone has earned will be added up and the top 2 or 3 ( depending on how we perform as a team) will go to the olympics. Im headed up to Whistler to the Olympic track on the 3rd of November to get a good look at the track to prepare for later in the season. I hope all is well with everyone.

Caleb

Monday, October 12, 2009

Olympic trials start in 2 days

Its been a great week and change of sliding here in Lake Placid. Tomorrow is the last official training session before the races on Wednesday and Thursday. Last week was dominated by wet weather around 50 degrees which is not conducive to fast ice. As a result we had a pretty slow track until Sunday when the weather cleared and dropped down to 30 degrees. On Sunday the track sped up almost 4 seconds which made sliding alot more fun! Kudos to the track crew at Mt Van Hoevenberg for getting the track in such great shape and dealing with all the bad weather!

My training in the last week has been very methodical. I have been testing alot of equipment and working on the track a section at a time. It came together fairly well today, but I still need to fix the middle section of the track tomorrow, before Wednesdays race. My starts have been very fast so far. So fast that they have been consistently faster than what I pushed in the race last year! That is a result of a great summer of training and preparation.

Occasionally I will think about all the years I have been training for this moment. Its been a beautiful experience no matter how it turns out. I am trying to keep that out of my mind to decrease the pressure on me. I generally handle high pressure situations very well and this week will be no different. I have a plan and a series of steps that will lead to success, they key is to execute and dont get in your own way!

“I can't control my destiny, I trust my soul, my only goal is just to be. There's only now, there's only here. Give in to love or live in fear. No other path, no other way. No day but today.”

Friday, October 2, 2009

One Last Weekend

Here we are, headed into the final weekend before sliding starts. I stopped by the track today to see how the icing of the track was going. Ive never seen it look so good so early. The track easilly has an inch to an inch and a half of ice and looked mostly bump free. It was beautiful being up on Mt Van Hoevenberg, with millions of different shades of yellow, red and orange that coat the mountain side this time of year. I was feeling the excitement of a child as I walked up and down the track. I am going to spend this weekend reflecting, preparing the final equipment changes that I need, and getting some rest before the 3 week marathon of sliding hits us on Monday. Ill keep you posted as soon as we get on ice. I am going to enjoy a few glasses of wine this weekend as well. I have a 2004 Turley Moore Vineyard Zinfandel on tap for this weekend as well as a Vajra Moscato d'Asti. Ill post on those when I have them. Ciao!

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

An Unplanned Personal Best

Today I woke up with no intention of testing my cleans, but it was just one of those days where I felt good. I had 6 sets of 2 reps in clean on the program. I came in at 120kgs, did 3 sets at 120 then went 122.5, 125, 130. After the 5th set I looked at Jason and said im going for it. I felt good, had some good motivation and let it fly. I nailed 140 kg on my 14th rep over 120 kg's. which means my real max is probably 142.5-145 if I was fresher. Either way its a huge personal best and thats why we work so hard. Its all about making yourself the best you can be. Im excited for sliding. Ive prepared myself as best I can, now all I have to do is let it happen! P.S. Snow in Lake Placid today!

Sunday, September 27, 2009

This weekend was truly special. I flew out to Joe's with Duncan, Delphine and Cornelia Winter for the final wine hurrah of the summer. Before we took off on Saturday morning I attended my godson and nephews baptism. Hes so cute! Following the baptism I met Duncan at the Lake Clear airport where I waited patiently for his piper to drop down onto the runway from the clouds. I have never been in a small plane before and before I knew it I was in the copilot position. I actually flew for a good hour and half between the two days. As we shot down the runway in Lake Clear duncan surprised me by telling me to pull back on the yoke and before I knew it I had the plane in the air. As we gained altitude I looked down on the mountains I grew up in, it was a truly new, peaceful and exciting experience. It was as if I was being taken back to childhood, when a new experience fills you with so much wonder and excitement that you barely can contain yourself. I really seemed to forget about all my problems when I was behind the controls. It was liberating, peaceful and enlightening. I asked a couple hundred questions of Duncan about the controls and their purposes. I learned alot about flying and now I understand what the addiction is all about! I would love to own a small private plane in the future. AMAZING.

The legendary hospitality of Joe Gallo came through once again. Dinner was amazing, calamari with a plum sauce and filets over grilled portabella, roasted red peppers, seared sea scallops and a blue cheese and herb sauce. The wines were even more amazing. 1990 pichon longueville baron, 2004 Richebourg, and 1999 la Mouline to name a few. Between the Richebourg and the Mouline, I sat entranced in my wine glasses for the entire evening. These wines commanded respect and were truly rare experiences. I have never seen a wine change so much over the course of the night as the Richebourg did. The scents were so haunting, ethereal and primal. It was a beautiful experience. I scored the wine 98 pts. The Mouline was out of this world. I maintain that the LaLa wines made bu guigal in cote rotie are the greatest wines in the world. The Mouline was so graceful and elegant compared to the Landonne which I have had in the past and tends to be more brooding. One common thread between the two was the way the wines carry themselves. They are some of the most intensely flavored wines I have come across but they carry themselves with such amazing balance that they almost come off as weightless. They are truly special and I count myself lucky to have experienced the Mouline and Landonne. I scored the Mouline 99pts and scored the 1998 Landonne 100 pts when I had it last christmas. La Turque is the only one of the LaLa's I have yet to try.

Back at it tomorrow. Things are really gearing up and the season is upon us. I will keep you all posted in the weeks to come as sliding and team selection races continue.

Monday, September 21, 2009

4 weeks out

Its amazing how fast the season comes along, we are two weeks away from sliding and 4 weeks from our first team selection races. The leaves have begun to change in lake placid. For me there is no better time of year. It is not only beautiful but represents a very exciting time for me as it is time to put all of the hours of hard summer training into effect on the ice. A week ago we had our second push camp in calgary and it went great. I pushed another personal best and solidified my start technique. My biggest gains this summer have come from flexibility, biomechanical work and a lot of work in sports medicine to really understand my body and what I need to get myself to be my best. A big thanks to peter toohey and jason hartman for all the help they gave me with my physical preparation. I'm currently waiting in jfk airport for my flight to albany.I went out west to visit a friend and clear my mind. I'm ready for this fall. The combie test is tomorrow (physical testing) ill report back w results!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

GREAT week in Calgary

What an amazing push camp in Calgary. It went exactly as planned. I am really excited to return in september. I pushed almost a tenth faster than I did last year. I executed my plan and had almost none of the typical problems I have had in the past. I feel like im on the edge of a whole new world. Thanks to everyone who has stood behind me. Now lets make this thing happen. Back to LP on Monday for 3 more week of training before returning to calgary.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

first calgary push camp

The fact that its time to go to Calgary for push camp is reminding me of one thing and one thing only. US Team Trials, one of our most important two week stretches of the year is rapidly approaching. So far the summer has gone almost exactly as planned. I have made big gains in my flexibility and biomechanical work already. Im hoping that the transition from pushing on the summer time push track in lake placid to the ice in Calgary goes very smoothly this week.

This weekend we had a great wine weekend hosted by my friend Duncan Winter. We had a wonderful wine cellar dinner on Friday night followed by a rhone tasting on Saturday night. It was really great to see a lot of my friends together over food and wine who had never met before. Wines power to bring people together is just another reason why I love it.

I am now in Calgary and getting ready for the first push session today. Ill report back and let everyone know how it goes!

Sunday, August 2, 2009

LP Wine Weekend

This upcoming weekend is the Lake Placid Wine Weekend for me and some of my good friends. We are kicking things off with a dinner at Lake Placid Lodge on Friday night and an educational Rhone tasting on saturday that I will be leading at my friend Duncan Winters house. Big thanks to Duncan for hosting the weekend!

On Sunday I will be leaving to Calgary for our first push camp. I am well prepared and exactly where I want to be with my training at this point in the year. Its so exciting knowing that we will be on ice in a little over two months!

I had a really nice Nebbiolo made my Jim Clendenen in California. I bought this wine when Scott and I were out there three years ago. It is the best Nebbiolo I have had outside of italy. Heres the TN.

2001 Clendenen Nebbiolo "Bricco Buon Natale" Bien Nacido
A much better effort than the 00, On point nebbiolo aromatics of orange spice, cherry, nutmeg, bright florals, tar and hints of meat. This wine shows on a hint of lushness that suggests CA, just slightly lower acid than what you would expect from italy nebbs, but its still mouth gushing med + acidity though. slightly over medium tannin. oranges cinnamon and cherry make up the flavor prodile. medium + length finish. Very nice. Best nebb I have had outside of italy. 91pts

vs

2000 Clendenen Nebbiolo
Pomegranate in nature with some mushroom. A very moderate expression of tar red cherry and tannin. texturally very easy to drink, but has alot of holes. 84-85 for me, but right up to 89 with food. The food really filled the gaps and made this wine long, fruity and pleasant. 85pts

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Training Update

Summer is well underway here in the Adirondacks although you wouldn't know by the weather. So far training is going just as I would like it to. I am making alot of progress with my weak points, including flexibility and biomechanics. Work is going full tilt which is always a challenge as it is very physically demanding. Add 30 hrs of training to 30 hrs of work and you have a pretty exhausting week. For the next few weeks I will really be focusing on fine tuning my push on the Lake Placid push track before our August push camp in Calgary. The season is coming quickly and right now all im focused on is making the most out of every day, ensuring that I am properly prepared for the US team trials in the fall. Gotta run!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Summer Training

Its been nice to be back home for a summer of training. Ive spent the last 3 years living in california during the summer months and that experience has heightened my Adirondack experience this spring. My eyes were constantly drawn to the light green vivid colors that took over the barren landscape this spring..every flower, every color grabbed my attention...The beauty and full blown emergence of life in the Adirondack spring stands in stark contrast the desert like conditions in San Diego.

So far training is going very well. I feel a bit more mature this year in terms of my training management. In years past I followed a cookie cutter approach that wasnt personalized enough for me, mostly my fault. Now I am taking the time to train to my weaknesses rather than my strengths and I am already seeing results.

I wanted to shoot off into some quick thoughts about wine. I currently have a bottle of wine called Clos Du Cardinale from Comte Peraldi open. This bottle was hand delivered to me in Lake Placid by my good friend Gregory St Genies, a French skeleton slider. Gregory and I share in vinous activity throughout the season. It is a nice break from our often one dimensional sport dominated lives. This wine comes from Corsica where his father currently lives. It is something that is close to Greg, a wine that he regaled me with tales of. Greg and I have a trip to France planned next year after the season, but it amazes me that I can experience something so local and revealing about where he is from in a bottle thousands of miles away. Wine that has been made with respect has this way of telling you "its" story, also the story of its people. During our season greg was toting around corsican charcuterie that we would enjoy during the evenings..it was intense, burnt in flavor, funky, wrapped in intestine and with very little work one can imagine the corsican landscape with one taste of these charcuteries. This wine is exactly that, a unique niche wine that reflects its sense of place so clearly that when one drinks it they know that it is one of a kind. As I drink it I can see the lifestyle of living in the burnt corsican landscape under the intense mediterranean sun. I can see gregs father Merry enjoying a sunset while sipping comte peraldi and enjoying corsican charcuterie alongside fresh seafood from the mediterranean. This bottle was just opened and it is slowly revealing itself...perhaps I opened it too young..im not sure as I dont know much about the sciacharello grape or this wine, but this bottle isnt about that, its about enjoying it in the moment and toasting to a good friend and his father who remind me that life is more than sport. The people who can be our fiercest competitors on the track, can be some of our best friends in life.

Tasting Note- 2006 Comte Peraldi Clos Du Cardinale

Light ruby color.
Unqiue aromatics of charcuterie, tar, orange, garrigue, roasted nuts, faint vanilla, pepper, red fruits, like no other wine I have smelled. In the mouth this is very silky and surprisingly intense with a very pure core of cherry fruit, dried orange, cinnamon, and minerality. Tangy acidity, but full throttle alcohol that is barely contained...seemingly remniscent of corsican culture. Extremely long finish...we are talking one minute plus here.
93pts CS

Monday, April 27, 2009

VinHomeTastings

Check out www.vinhometastings.com and let me know if your interested in doing an event. They are fun, informative and the perfect addition to any party!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

My trip to barolo

Before I head off to Italy on Thursday I wanted to post something I wrote during my last trip to Barolo during January.

The day started with a little sleeping in only to wake up to a dreary rain. We headed off up the la morra hill swinging by annunziata to renatto ratti. They were not able to receive us so we continued up the hill to la morra where we parked and took in the limited view during the raging snow storm. We walked around la morra a bit and hit the enoteca where we sampled a dolcetto and barolo to get the palates warmed up for the day. The alleyways in these hilltop castle based towns are beautiful. You really can get a sense of the slower pace of life here. Alba is a busy place but when your in the communes you feel a million miles away. I had sent emails over the weekend to manzone, cavallotto and sandrone and as we walked around la morra I received confirmation from manzone and cavallotto for 1 and 3 o'clock appts respectively. We still had some time to burn so we scooted down the hill to barolo where we stopped by the castle that houses the enoteca. Unfortunately it was closed until the 31st, a common theme of our time here. We had snagged two pizzas to go the night before at this old italian couples joint and we brought them along for a cold lunch. We headed across into the serallunga valley for our first stop in monforte. The snow was absolutely dumping, something the wine makers had indicated hadn't happened with the type of regularity It had been in a long time. ( There was over 7 feet in sestriere where I was competing) we ducked inside a little coffee-bar slash enoteca on the side of the road to take refuge. The walls were lined with bottles of wine with a great cappucino bar set to the side on one wall. I ordered a glass of barolo for 4 euro while I parused the list, with a 5 dollar increase in price for drinking the wines there. Back dated vintages to 1990, strong producers across the board, and ohhh the prices.....mostly below us cost. I glanced up to the wall and saw a label that calls to me, luciano sandrone cannubi boschis....I looked to the list....1999-80 euro, 2000-80 euros, 2001-80 euros, 2003-80 euros.....could it be I asked myself, I quickly snapped to the 2004 section and my eyes got as wide as a building. The girls were watching me seeing me barely able to contain my excitement, both made funny comments about me being a kid in a candy shop. There it was sandrone cannubi 2004 80 euros, appx 95 to 100 bucks. This wine costs over 200 in the states, with high end estimates at 500 a bottle. I asked the owner how many he had. He brought out a 6 pack. I took 4 because that was all I could get home as I already travel with a couple hundred pounds of luggage. I snagged the wood box too. With my wine-gasming complete we headed back into the wintry mess to make our way to manzone.

I pulled into the manzone estate and waited for a few minutes as we were a bit early. Mauro manzone, giovannis 23 year old son who has been in oenology school since the age of 14 greeted us. It was nice to hang with him, his english was great and I could relate to his youthful passion and exuberance. I think annie and kimber liked it as well. There was no pressure on them, we were hanging with a family. Giovanni who speaks no english made us feel as welcome as he could while mauro prepared the room. Immediately they gave us photo albums showing the generations of family, including giovanni as a kid. They explained the difference in piemonte before 1980, how it wasn't always about wine and for that matter nebbiolo. Barbera and dolcetto were the major players before that. In translation giovanni explained how grateful he was for the change as it seemed to have transformed him from a very poor man to a wealthy man. The one thing I noticed was the dirt under his fingers, it made me smile on the inside. We got down to the wines with mauro starting us on the way with a dolcetto. It was a very basic rendition as almost all are with wonderful inner sweetness and purity. These are great for basic foods...you know, lunch time wines. Next we moved on to the barbera 2006 la serra. This is a single vineyard wine with a great pure core of sweetness, clean barbera acid and a little tannic structure to back it all up. Again a wine to drink at any moment of the day. The barolo showed well in a similar vein of purity and accesibility with the most interesting wine being one that is not imported anywhere. The langhe rosserto 2007 was a beautiful white wine made of an indigenous variety whose name escapes me. This was serious white wine with length structure and the ability to age.

Mauro took us downstairs through the blizzard to the new area of the winery that was under construction. It was beautiful. We shot down underground to the barrel room and their new callar carved into the ground. At one end was a cave filled with water a little surprise they found while digging. Now they have a cave wine cellar that's almost 120 feet long with a underground pond at one end, pretty cool! Manzone is using about 30 percent new oak in the barolos and more in some of the more basic wines. So these guys are tweeners, a little modern and a little traditional. Both manzones were adamant about expressing their terroir and making wines of purity and accessibility and place. Mauro also loved the aspect of small producers and their stories and indicated he hoped to go to napa to visit some small producers that I think reminded him of himself. At every step of the way mauro indicated the his care and attention to detail in his wines. He even let the girls label some wines as they were begining to bottle. As we left we purchased some wines for our next two weeks in austria and germany as the selection can be a little rough. I then tried the 2004 gramolere, a wine that had been opened for 10 days, not a sign of oxidation. Amazing, beautiful and complex...still. Mauro commented that with barolo the longer it stays open the more ageable they tend to be as a rough rule....something giuseppe cavallotto remarked on later. Giuseppe would later comment that there are barolos out there that are made to be amazing aromatically in the first half hour, after which they quickly fall apart. Something I have experienced with joe on some bottles of cascina luisin. He says they do this because of the critics...back to manzone....across the board these are fresh pure ripe wines and I think they are great wines to get people into barolo as they are accessible yet true to barolo and their place. We left with a gracie mille and I autographed my skeleton card, as did the girls which excited mauro. I left him my contact as he said he will be doing some traveling to new york soon. I told him I would welcome him if possible and if all else failed hopefully see him at the skurnik tasting in new york. Mauro is the new face of his family, 23 years old, fluent in english, educated in the modern wine world, including business. A stark contrast to his fathers poor begininngs. I'm sure giovanni is very proud of his well spoken son as he is a wonderful ambassador for the winery. This seems to be a theme in piemonte. Its about family and I prefer that to the corporate styled places.

Off to cavallotto heading down greasy piemonte swtichbacks toward castiglione falletto. We pulled into cavallotto 15 minutes late where giuseppe quickly escorted us inside. An older generation than mauro, giuseppe was a bit worn by work looking as if he had just came in from the vineyards. With his work sweater and winter tuque. Intensely humble and soft spoken he escorted us to the cellars to look at their barrels. All slovenian botti of different sizes...no new oak here. Cavallotto clings to the traditional style. I immediately engaged giuseppe asking him fairly intricate questions about vineyard locations and why they are where they are, why dolcetto is planted here and barbera there,indicating my love and passion for all wines In piemonte.We Talked about the botti and why he likes to use them and how he plans to integrate the new botti to maintain consistency in his wines.. I wanted giuseppe to know I share a love for his passion so that he did not hold anything back. Over the course of 3 hours we sat and talked. His unique perspective as one of the few remaining true traditionalists came through. I told him immediately about my deal on the sandrone which he recognized and said it was a great find. He also stated that this modernist made the best wine in barolo. As soon as he indicated he had room in his world for two kinds of barolo I explained to him that I love nebbiolo no matter the method as long as the wines were balanced. He indicated that many modern nebbiolos are great to drink in their early life but said he did not think they age well. he stated that the oak seems to fall away and the wines end up unbalanced if not drank early, something that aligns with my experience with these modernists. He acknowledged that when young these wines are great. I told giuseppe that I buy and enjoy both. The modernists I will drink young, as I am patient for the traditionalists in my cellar. As we talked more about traditional barolo, Giuseppe highlighted the importance of a lack of oxygen in the process of making nebbiolo due to the ease of oxidation with this variety and said that many of the 2000s are oxidized at this point. A unique thing about cavallotto is that all the grapes are on site so they rarely sit out for long. He noted that in hot vintages getting the nebbiolo in quick enough is a big challenge. Because of the thin skins any punctures or lag time to the cellar can start a fermentation, which is a big problem. Producing nebbiolo is a very oxygen free process which is not true of all wines in the world. He didn't seem to care for the hot vintages much. Over and over giuseppe said you need to know the producer you need to know the method...he hammered this point down as the only way to know what a bottle of barolo will do. He explained that the hottest vintage was 03, I told him I did not care for these as they are very hard, I did tell him that one of the only 03s I've liked is the monprivato from mascarello. I could literally see the monprivato vineyard from the tasting room, a unique surprise given that I had brought it up without knowing where it was. It lies next to cavallottos vignolo vineyard. Giuseppe began to explain to me that in the west side of barolo there is a lot of sand which creates a problem in hot vintages as it bakes the wines and forces their hand to harvest too soon. He continued, on the east side of barolo there is more clay in the soil, this helps cool with vines because it creates an ability to humidify the vines with the water it holds. Boschis is around 70 percent clay while vignolo is like monprivato with even more clay. He said it made sense that the 03 monprivato drank so well. He indicated that 00 was a warm vintage as well but not as warm as 03 and also included 01 in the warm camp. He said in the warm vintages you must know the producer. He gave 04 a pass and said everyone made good wine in 04 it was so consistent with a touch of rain before harvest which freshened the wines. He indicated 05 wasn't great but good and that the wines have good aromatics but he didn't seem to think the palates matched the nose. Early drinkers he said. I had never had the vignolo bottling before and boy did it show, it was a 2000 and my favorite out of the 04 boschis, 01 vigna san giuseppe that sat in front of me. It was great to see what the clay soil did in a hot vintage. He said the critics prefer boschis but he prefers vignolo. I agreed and I love boschis. During this process he brought out a plate of the best parmesean I've had, salt crunchies galore. He explained that you cannot buy this anywhere, you must go to the location, aged 5 years he said. It was heaven and paired the best with the young, concentrated and tannic 2004 boschis.

As giuseppe continued to explain traditional barolo he explained that the most important development in traditional barolo is what happens in the bottle. He called it a second evolution and quickly stated that it is very hard to tell or predict this evolution and that the critics don't seem to have a grip on it when it comes to the traditionalists. Over the course of the conversation he also indicated his frustration with critics tasting nebbiolo so fast and without enough attention although he seemed to accept it as he understood their hectic schedules and the sheer volume of wines they taste per day. Either way it wasn't a service to the wine. The greatest complement I received over the course of the conversation was when giusepe said I can see your passion for barolo, you are an expert and know more than many journalists who sit in your seat. I blushed, what a compliment. The conversation drifted on as it seems neither us nor giuseppe wanted to leave as if we were the negatives and positives of a magnet. The girls were transfixed with the wines each grappling with the haunting aromatics coming out of the 3 glass barolo comparison, each comparing tannin acid and aromatics, as I gave them something to think about with each passing minute. It almost seemed as if giuseppe and I continued in technical conversation while the girls were doing what joeg and I normally do, drift away in the moment of the wine. Kimber is new to wine but had asked me more questions in the last few weeks with me than most do, so she clearly has an interest in the technical aspects of wine. On the other hand my girlfriend annie has drank a lot of high quality wine with me over the years only to give me an occasional ooo this is good or I don't like it. I've never seen her get lost in a wine....until then....annie seemed almost giddy at the aromatics and tastes of her wines....she finally said I think I understand why you get the way you do about wine. I looked at her tasting notes, she had written to die for, this smells amazing, and smells beautiful. I'm not sure why but I think she has always viewed wine with a stigma. With the gentleness of mauro and giusepe and the amazing surroundings and clear passion of these two men I think she finally let her guard down and let the wine take her away. This was special for me, because she has had these wines before from my cellar...she didn't know it though until after. The only force strong enough to pull our experience apart was the hunger that was tugging at our stomachs. I signed an autograph card for giuseppe and gave him some pins to put along side his usa curling pins from when they visited. He was so excited. We indicated the wines we wanted to buy and he went to get them. On his return he sat back at the table. He made a comment that he would be the last generation, at least of the traditionalists. He said no one wants to do the work, all the younger kids want to do is go to the disco and drink beer. He almost indicated that the traditional method is dying and that something new is replacing it. It saddened us. As I tried to give him my credit card for the wine he refused to take it, stating the first time is free for you, I know you will appreciate them and that is what matters. As we got in the car he rushed to give us all a cavallotto corkscrew and a detailed map of castiglione falletto, its very hard to find these he said but they are the most detailed. We wisked off into the night all with a new perspective about wine and life.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Is Spring Coming?

It sure doesn't feel like it here in Lake Placid, but boy am I ready for it. Its been a while since I posted here and its mostly because I haven't had the energy to do so this year. Its been a year of the unexpected, with  many twists and turns. As I reflect back on this year it may have not only been my most difficult year but my most valuable year to date. I came into this year with my eye on one race, world championships in Lake Placid at the end of the year. My qualification for this race did not work out...I guess thats racing, sometimes it just doesn't work out like you plan. This last week during the world championships I spent my time coaching rather than competing, something  that was difficult as well as cleansing for my mind. Giving back to other sliders is one of the few things that brings happiness amidst failure in the sliding world. I find it to be very enjoyable, even though it is incredibly difficult. I believe that through coaching others you can learn quite a bit yourself at the same time, in that sense I took some good things from last week. I will continue to maintain that coaching is far more difficult and taxing than being an athlete!  I also got to spend some time with friends and enjoy some good wines, and anyone who knows me knows how much that means to me!

This year tested me in many ways, some races ( mostly in europe during the second half) I saw and got more out of myself as a slider than I have in a long time. I finally have full confidence in my start and have a strong handle on what it takes to be fast at the start. This was one of my biggest successes of the year. I got to the point of full confidence on many of my shaky european tracks which is also huge going into next year. This year I really had to push my focus to the bigger picture and to next year rather than the individual races in front of me. In essence I never walked away from one situation without taking something positive or learning something new from it. 

Im still weighing how long I will slide for, but I am treating this olympic year like it is my last. Doing everything that makes me happy, training at 100 percent, and creating a situation where I can allow all that I have learned in my career to come out for a peak next year, this is my focus. I have also decided to stay in Lake Placid training for the summer, rather than San Diego. With Home Depot dropping their USOC sponsorship I have little reason to go to San Diego to work. I will stay home with friends and family and enjoy a spectacular Adirondack summer of friends and training.

I hope all is well with everyone.