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About Just out. (Portland, OR) 1983-2013 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 2002)
july 19. 2002 C U LTU R E ................... ▼.................... gixxd friend of mine recently introduced me to the world of connoisseur-ship. She has a beautiful cabinet stocked with scotches and an informational video from a group of Scottish distilleries. In a fit of three-year-old admiration and envy, I decided I, too, wanted to be a connoisseur. Chocolate. Wine. Scotch. Mustard. Cotton candy. Beer. For every fixxl product there seems to be a group of fanatics dedicated to finding the best representatives to savor for their unique traits. Which food or drink did I love enough to dedicate years of taste hud-inspired excursions to specialty retail outlets? Scotch is expensive. I don’t have a thing for chocolate. Mustard is good, hut I can hardly imagine enticing my friends to share my newest find. “Look! Mustard!” When 1 moved to Portland four years ago 1 learned quickly that Oregonians take their beer very, very seriously. And though 1 love a good frothy one now and again, it fills my tummy with bubbly carbonation. So I headed on over to Hip Chicks Do Wine to learn how to taste the nectar of the Goddesses. Owners Laurie Lewis and Renee Neely have chosen a great hiding spot for their fab ulous winery. Following bright signs strategi cally placed just off Holgate, the treasure at the end of the rainbow is a looming ware house with an incredible inside mural and barrels and barrels of women-made wine. A table set with “wine tasting word” place mats, wipe-off markers for inspirational notes and spittoons for, well, spitting, drew us tasters to the center of the rixim. The lesson started with a rundown of how wines are made, how they get their names Woody (left) and Mitch of Crush flank the July 3 Naked Wine Tasting’s very special guest star, Lady Liberty stay Hip chick does wine Everything you ever wanted to know about wine tasting but were afraid to ask by E rin S ex to n and how to look at wine. T h at’s right, campers, 1 learned a good wine should he clear and not cloudy when held up to the light and that- specially on Chardonnays— , brown edges are bad. 5 Then begins the sniffing 2 process. Now, I have heard | people talking about the 2 “nose” and the “bouquet,” | hut, frankly, I just thought “ they were being snotty. Turns out that the nose (or aroma) reflects the grapes used and that the bouquet is indicative of the wine-making process as well as how the ferment ing and aging processes come together. To get a good whiff, wine has to settle after it’s been poured. Once you’ve stuck your nose in there, swirl the glass gently and sniff again to smell the bouquet. I was sur prised to notice a really big difference. The tiny, sharp The dykes of Hip Chicks Do Wine teach wine, too StatScript Pharmacy has left Portlandbut Apex pharmacy will continue to provide you the same services and staff, from the same location. 1215 NW 23rd wine in our mouths, swish it about, suck air over it on our tongues, then SPIT IT OUT. Lest you think wine can be best tasted by swal lowing it, let me be the first to sadly admit that spitting it out allows you to experience the fla vors in a simpler, less convoluted manner. That small fact, however, did little to discourage me and some of my fellow rogue tasters from swal lowing after the initial taste. hat does one do with this newfound knowledge of wine? My fellow queers, we live in a wonderful city with a rich blend of diversions to tickle our every fancy. I took my educated taste buds to Crush for Naked Wine Tasting. This Wednesday evening event features four wines from the same region decanted and served for your tasting pleasure. It’s your job to discern the variety, vintage and vine yard. Hah! I set my own personal goals of not dribbling whilst spitting and using my new words to describe what 1 tasted. Unfortunately, there are no spittoons, and I was too self-conscious to ask lest the sweet boys of Crush be offended 1 was spitting out their nice wine. My favorite of the evening was a 1999 Joseph Drouhin Cote De Nuits- Village. It has a spicy nose with a robust and full bouquet. I’d tell you more, but I got carried away and drank it before I remembered to write the rest down. Plus there was this naked, paint ed lesbian running about, which made concen trating really difficult. While I don’t feel like a connoisseur yet, I did learn my most important lesson at Crush. Across from me was a long table full of laugh ing, talking, drinking wine-type folks. I may not be able to tell you what vintage or vineyard my Pinot Noir comes from, but I can tell you that the best thing about wine is drinking it with friends. j n edges of your crystal or glass vessel act to release the complex fragrance that you then get to describe using wine words. H ie most useful piece of paper I’ve received in a long time has to he the “Aroma Wheel” published by the American Society for Enology and Viticulture. (Say that three times fast.) This simple page breaks down common vino scents into cate gories like "fruity,” “vegetative” and “woody.” From there you can distill what you’re smelling even fur ther into “tropical,” “canned/cooked” and “resinous.” And, finally, you can assign words like “cherry,” “asparagus” or “oak.” Such as, “ It has a vegetative nose with a canned asparagus bouquet.” Once you’ve described the smell you get to taste the wine. Finally, the reason I came! Imagine my horror when Ju st O ut’s own wine-tasting Laurie calmly told us to take the snob, Erin Sexton APEX Y Pharmacy Avenue, Portland, OR Hir C hicks D o W ine , 4510 S.E . 23rd Ave., offer tast ings and are perfectly happy to sell you wine, too. Visit them at www. hipchicksdowtne. com. C rush is located at 1412 S.E . Morrison St. Visit them at www.crushbar.com. E rin S exton is the Office Man ager at Just Out when she’s not unscrewing a spicy vintage of Mad Dog 20/20 with a cherry bouquet. Free Parking Community-Based Private one-on-one consultation (503)525-9094 Now Serving Medicaid and ADAP programs for Oregon and Washington*