Understanding Wine: How I Learned to Stop Hating and Love the Riesling
ICE and USHG have paired up to offer Understanding Wine: a unique wine course led by James Beard Award-winning Wine Director and Master Sommelier, John Ragan. The course is based on the same insider educational curriculum taught to all USHG sommeliers, and ICE鈥檚 Content Manager Caitlin Raux had the chance to tag along on this 10-part voyage into the world of wine.
鈥淐onvictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies.鈥 It鈥檚 a quote from Friedrich Nietzsche and not exactly what you'd expect to hear from a sommelier trying to sell you on Riesling. But when that sommelier is Paul Grieco, described by the as the 鈥渉igh priest of the American Riesling revival,鈥 you can bet your Bordeaux you鈥檒l start questioning your own convictions 鈥 especially if you鈥檙e still a non-believer in Riesling.
Paul, a sommelier at the TriBeca winebar, Terroir, was the guest presenter at Week 6 of Understanding Wine, a 10-part series of wine classes led by USHG Wine Director and Master Sommelier John Ragan. Sporting a mechanic鈥檚 shirt and a long goatee, Paul鈥檚 wine preferences seem as irreverent as his fashion choices, but spend some time soaking in his Riesling gospel, and you just might become a believer, too. I myself started to see the light by the end of the evening.
Every Tuesday night, a roomful of food and wine lovers like myself gather at ICE to spend a few hours smelling, tasting and learning to talk about wine. Each week, the focus shifts to new regions or grapes 鈥 Wines of Italy; Burgundy and Bordeaux; New World Wines, etc. 鈥 and a different local wine expert joins the class: Kyungmoon Kim, sommelier at The Modern, and Jenni Guizio, Wine Director at Maialino, to name a couple.
On this particular week, a post-work meeting had me doubting whether I would be able to make it. But I鈥檝e come to look forward to this weekly wine ritual 鈥 you don鈥檛 have to twist my arm to get me to enjoy eight delicious wines. I hustled to make it just in the nick of time and settled into my seat with the half-glass of sparkling wine that greeted me as I entered. When I flipped open our course binder and discovered that the night鈥檚 theme was The World of Riesling, I sighed quietly and sunk into my chair, wishing that the meeting would have gone long. I felt about Riesling the way I do about cole slaw 鈥 sure, I'll take it if it's in front of me, but I'd never order it. It's too sweet, so I thought, and just not my thing.
Hoping for the best but prepared for the unremarkable, I joined my classmates on a voyage through Riesling vineyards in Germany. 鈥淩iesling is the most glorious white grape in the world,鈥 Paul proclaimed. Boom. But what about those white wines from France we tasted a couple weeks back, made with Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc? We began swirling, smelling and tasting, to see if he could convince us on the grape鈥檚 merits: versatility, yumminess (his word, not mine) and potential to express its home turf or terroir.
The first three wines, all from the Mosel region of Germany, shook my wine world. I thought Rieslings were supposed to be cloyingly sweet 鈥 these wines were anything but, and super versatile. Though produced in nearly identical conditions 鈥 same grape, same vintage (2015), same producer, same vineyard 鈥 the grapes of each wine were picked 10 days apart. John explained that the difference in ripeness accounted for the huge variation between the wines. All were high in acidity (that thing that makes your mouth pucker and water after a sip), but completely different in terms of intensity: from light and elegant (鈥淜abinett鈥 style) to dry (鈥淭rocken鈥) with intense orchard fruit flavors.
As we headed southwest to the Alsace region of France, I started to convert 鈥 I started to become a fan of Riesling. According to Paul, whereas German Rieslings are characterized by unbridled acidity with the potential for residual sugar, Alsace Rieslings are all about the power (read: alcohol). Wine 5 鈥 a 2005 Brand Grand Cru Riesling from a third-generation producer Albert Boxler 鈥 was downright yummy. I couldn鈥檛 have put it better than Paul, who described it as 鈥渇ully ripened grapes in a glass.鈥
From there, we flirted with comparable grapes 鈥 骋别飞眉谤锄traminer from France and Gr眉ner Veltliner from Austria, while slurping up cold sesame noodles flecked with spice, courtesy of the hit restaurant, Untitled 鈥 a perfect pairing for the fruity, aromatic 骋别飞眉谤锄.
We nibbled and listened as Paul filled us in on the winemaking history in Austria. Austria was enmeshed in a grape juice scandal back in the 80s, when several winemakers were caught adulterating their wines with diethylene glycol 鈥 yup, that鈥檚 toxic 鈥 a trivia tidbit that prompted Paul to ask the class, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 your favorite scandal?鈥 鈥淭he OJ scandal!鈥 chirped the aspiring somm in the front row. We were six wines deep at that point and emboldened by sprightly white wine. 鈥淟et鈥檚 scale it back,鈥 Paul joked, and we forged on.
Our final wine was far less scandalous than the Juice (the football player, that is) and far more crowd-pleasing: a reasonably priced 2015 Br眉ndlmayer Riesling from the Kamptal region of Austria. My tasting notes read: high acidity, dry, only a touch sweet 鈥 love (underlined). By this point, Paul had won me over. Best part, with the low alcohol levels of all of the wines, I had no semblance of a hangover the following day. Now that鈥檚 a happy ending.
If you鈥檙e an aspiring sommelier or a wine lover looking to take your wine knowledge to the next level, register for Understanding Wine.