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Last updated: Sunday, February 28, 2010
Trio

Here are a few wines I’ve had recently, worth letting you in on …

Sextant
2007
12.8% alc.
Bourgogne
St. Aubin, France

This is an unusual pale-gold Burgundian chardonnay—something of a chameleon.  After opening it, I encountered initial aromas of moss, bark and bay leaves. There were rear-palate flavors of clove, lemon, grapefruit, cinnamon and crisp apple. The wine’s high acidity gave it a long length.  Later, however, the nose deepened, giving off whiffs of lilac. The flavors on the palate moved to the front and were less fruity, while leaving a creamier, sensual mouthfeel.  As if Gigi grew into a fetching courtesan in a matter of hours. Importer: Savio Soares Selecions. $19.00

Andreas Baron Widman
Sudtiroler
Vernatsch
2008
12.5%
Alto Adige, Italy

Schiva. In the UK, it is Black Hamburg.  The Germans call it trollinger. In Northern Italy’s South Tyrol, it is vernatsch.  The vine thrives in the Tyrol with little attention. The grape is hardy, productive.  Maybe that’s why the vine is popular in the flatter lands of the region.  It serves as the base of many tourist wines, often blended with ligroin.  But plant Schiava on the steep hillsides of the Alto Adige, prune the vine, ripen it and carefully vinify it, and a good producer can win some charm from this ordinary table grape.  The 2008 vintage has a pale ruby core accompanied by pleasant aromas of tea, cranberry, orange peel and rose petals.  The broad midpalate flavors of musk, dry leaves and cranberry (and a slight touch barnyard) were immediate with medium length. This medium-bodied, medium-concentrated wine had low firm tannins. Overall, the impression was of a lean, supple wine. You could drink it daily with most meals. In my house, it was a perfect accompaniment to sausages, polenta and stir-fried green beans with basil. Importer: Petit Pois Corp.  $23.00.

Aziendo Agricola Bruna
u Baccan
Pigato
2007
13.5% alc.
Liguria, Italy

Ten years ago, you might find a bottle or two of a pigato from Liguria in New York.  Now pigato is more prevalent here. This one is among the best.  A well-structured tonic, it has a stylized peasant allure that speaks of the steep Ligurian seaside vineyards.  (And who says you can’t have a stylish peasant?) In the glass, this wine sits pale gold with an appealing waxy floral aroma.  The wine had a crispness that gave its medium intense flavors of ginger, pear, pine, herbs and white peaches a long length with a slight pear finish. As the wine opens, more tropical notes are revealed.  Though not quite full-bodied, it had a nice rounded concentration of flavor.  This is not the quaffer pigato your parents may have had at a bus stop in San Remo. And what did I eat with it? Pesto walnut pasta with yellow squash.    Robert Chadderdon Selectons.  $31.00.

3/1/10

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