Herzog International Food and Wine Festival 2011 Results

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Well 2011 has come and gone and I am finally getting the chance to write up the 2011 International Food and Wine Festival (IFWF) that was held at the Herzog winery in Oxnard. In some ways it was the best ever and in some ways it was not. To start, 2011 was the fourth incarnation of this event and each time it has been well worth the trip. This past year’s event, in many ways, was the best. The food, as usual, was fantastic! The food is catered by Chef Todd Aarons, the head chef of the Tierra Sur, the world-class restaurant that is in the Herzog Winery. As usual, the food that Mr. Aarons and his staff prepare the event is bite size or a bit larger format, food that easily fits on a small plate. Essentially, think of them as normal or slightly large tapas, depending upon the food in question. As usual, the tapas were just divine, and as usual I always get the scarps. I say that because, I want to finish tasting the wines before I eat the awesome food, which would seriously inhibit my ability to write coherent wine notes. Of course, there is never a lack of good wines to taste, so essentially, I always eat whatever is left over as they are winding up the food and wine service. It is a mad rush to get some pictures and eat some food – truly sad, and totally my fault!

This past year’s event was even larger than its predecessors. As usual, the Herzog winery was fully decked out and expanded in the back by adding on a few heated tents. Normally, the French and Israeli wines were poured from the back room and the tent, behind the back room, which itself abuts to the parking lot behind it. This past year, they expanded further by pouring only Israeli wines from the entire back areas, moving Capcanes to the Spanish and Italian section, and moving all the French wines to its own room – the Herzog Situation or Conference room, which is off to the right from the entrance, essentially on the other side of the building. Some may look at that and say they relegated the French wines to the “basement”, but the way I see it, Royal has SO MANY wines to show off from its portfolio, and only so much room in the winery that they chose the best holistic group they could that would not look too small or take up too much room, in the conference room, and that fell to the French wines.

This was the first of the, not so good points, and that was the lack of communication around this change of venue for the French wines! I totally understand the complexity of it, and there was signage. However, given the drastic change that was in affect, a bit more information for some would have been good. I found myself telling many people about the new location for French wines, that they thought were AWOL for 2011. That said, I think this will not be an issue in 2012, as the event will be moving from Oxnard and the Herzog Winery to LA at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, Century Plaza!

Of course, with all the room taken up by wines and wonderful food, there still needs to be place for the humans and this was issue number two, which again will be fixed in 2012. That being, there was very little room to move about as the evening moved on. I found myself having to find a corner to just write notes, let alone not to feel claustrophobic, which is a problem I do not normally exhibit. That said, I hope that the new venue will allow the event to stretch its wings and soar to higher heights with more space and more opportunities to showcase its wonderful food and wines.

I truly believe that 2011, was the first year where the wines totally out shone the food, excepting for 2008, when the French wines were truly off the hizzy. This is not in anyway a slight to Aaron’s food, rather it is a compliment to Royal wine portfolio, that has now reached world class, and something I am sure they are extremely proud of. I do not need to repeat the story of Herzog, which can be found in the middle of last year’s post, as that would be just repeating myself. I just hope you read this and it grabs you enough to buy some tickets that are going really fast for the 2012 version of the International Food and Wine Festival which will be happening in LA this year – enjoy the notes. I need to add my personal thank you to the entire Royal and Herzog staff for putting together such a great show, and much luck on your new 2012 event!

The wine notes follow below, in the order they were tasted:

2007 Domaine l’OrDeLine Chateauneuf du Pape – Score: B+ to A- Would love to know how Herzog pulled this one off, and who is the negotiant for this wine.  I found a lovely write-up about the winery and the name, anyway, on to the note. The nose on this light gold colored wine is hopping with kiwi, grapefruit, lemon, gooseberry, mineral, apple, and white peach.  The mouth on this medium bodied wine is rich with white fruit, tropical fruit, and mineral.  The mid palate is round and balanced, with nice spice and mineral.  The finish is long with clean yet round flavors of of fruit, spice, mineral, and bramble. The wine is so classic in its minerality and clean lines yet ripe and luscious.

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  1. David Rhodes Avatar

    interesting notes, David. The Zur Agency, Royal/Herzog’s agent in Israel, is having a similar tasting in Israel without most of the Israeli wines you listed (except Netofa which is the only Israeli wine they represent in Israel) and I am interested to taste a lot of the non-Israeli kosher wines you tried to see how they stack up against Israeli wines.

    Generally speaking, I think Israel by far is the best region in the world for kosher wines (partly because so much of non-Israeli wine is mostly mevushal which can show in wines more so as they age) I’m eager to taste some of these wines that I’ve so far heard of but ignored as I’ve indulged in honing an Israeli specialization

    1. winemusings Avatar

      First off David, I love your work and I do love Israeli wines. That said, some are overly “sweet/fat” and that is why I am so excited by the work of Recanati on their Syrah and Carignan, though the 2008 RSR is also a bit too sweet.

      The cool thing about some of Netofa’s wines is that they remind me of nice acidic and balanced French wines. Also, please try ALL of Elvi’s wines, they are unique and do not carry that same sweetness, though they are in a Mediterranean climate, of coarse.

      Also the Capcanes Peeraj Habib, and the winning French wines are worth a look as well.

      David

      1. David Rhodes Avatar

        thank you for the kind words David (do you know the “Kids in the Hall” song “these are the Dave’s I know”)

        there are more and more Israeli wines going from what you might call “sweet/fat” and others might call New World or ripe/higher alcoholic fruity to more subtle/nuanced lower alcohol Old World wines

        Recanati is one fine example and we’re seeing more movement here on the boutique front than the larger wineries (as the boutiques need to show uniqueness to justify typically higher prices)

        Recanati’s winemaking team changed in 2008 with California trained US born Lewis Pasco being replaced with Israeli born although California trained Gil Shatsberg (note his name is in print in several incarnations including Shatzberg)

        Recanati wine were award winners before the change so it was a big risk for Gil an Ido Lewinsohn (the other winemaker at Recanati) to change styles (not Gil had worked at Carmel as part of the team and senior winemaker at the Israeli boutique Amphorae (where he won several awards) before moving to Recanati) Ido had worked on Lewis Pasco too but was more of an assistant to Lewis than to Gil we he’s more influential as part of the winemaking team with Gil taking the lead

        why that is important is Ido has a lot more European & international training that has helped with Recanati’s evolution post 2008…

        Ido studied at Italy’s University of Milan as well as interning in France and Tasmania before working at Recanati (and has a non-certified garage winery in Israel called Lewinsohn Winery…Garage du Papa label)

        Gil is the decision maker but Ido has helped in choosing new Burgundy coopers, implementing the use of sur lees (for reds and whites) and non-malolactic Chardonnays (which is becoming more common in Israel…i.e Odem Mountain and Tzuba’s Chardonnay)

        BTW… I’m getting pushed towards writing scores since Daniel Rogov passed last year… the industry has a vacuum of someone giving 100 point scores (wine shops and importers and even consumers seem dependent on them… I’ve resisted because I have reservations of scoring any art form ( and I like to think of wine as “organic consumable art”) but if the industry has a need I might step into the role…what I would probably do is only publish scores of wines I recommend because I think wine scores capture a moment in time and to publish a bad score can hurt well motivated people who’ve invested years and small fortunes into a wine… we’ll see how it plays out but this is my first announcement that scores might be forthcoming…I’m not sure how I’ll approach tasting notes even if I give scores because I think tasting notes are so personal that it makes newcomers feel awkward when they don’t taste and smell the same attributes…I’d rather tell technical information such as malolactic non-malo…sur lees non sur lees…type of oak (French or American) ratio new to old and a few key flavors/ vineyard information…winery flavor notes (if I find them to hold true and educate on what they might expect by telling varietal notes on whats in the wine

        from my time attending wine school and my experience since I came to believe you can have several good palettes in the same room write completely different notes so to publish them as gospel can be interesting as far as far as comparing notes but unfair or confusing to consumers as too what they should expect from their experience

        BTW I’ve been recruited by a new site Wines from Israel which should launch soon…we’ll see how that plays out as well

        best of luck in your endeavors and once again it was nice meeting you at Sommelier in Tel Aviv

  2. […] a Rhone GRV Blend (Roussanne 34%, Viognier 33%, Grenache blanc 33%)! Hagafen Winery and Royal’s Domaine l’Or de Line (also a White Rhone Blend of Grenache Blanc, Picpuol, Roussanne, Bourboulenc, Clairette and […]

  3. […] Festival (IFWF) that was being held at the stately Hyatt Regency Century Plaza in Century City. Last year’s event was held at the state-of-the-art Herzog Winery, in Oxnard CA. The intimate lighting and setting was […]

  4. French Wine Avatar

    Thanks for the information. I learned quite a bit from your article.

  5. […] 2009 Domaine du Castel Chardonnay has quite a swirl of controversy around it, given its clear reduction, the last few times I tasted it. Now, I did enjoy it once when I went to Castel Winery itself, but many in the community feel it is […]

  6. […] bought a bottle of the 2010 Domaine Lafond Tavel Rose – which was nice and I had drunk the 2009 vintage at the 2011 IFWF, which they also poured at the 2012 […]

  7. […] in the beautiful and intimate Oxnard winery (2008, 2009, 2010 part 1 and 2010 part 2, and the 2011 and final Oxnard IFWF)! Once again, the rooms at the Herzog Winery will be opened and you will have room to roam and […]

  8. […] in the beautiful and intimate Oxnard winery (2008, 2009, 2010 part 1 and 2010 part 2, and the 2011 and final Oxnard IFWF)! Once again, the rooms at the Herzog Winery will be opened and you will have room to roam and […]

  9. […] Domaine l’Or De Line, Chateauneuf du Pape – Score: A- The last time I enjoyed this wine, it was the 2007 vintage, but that was the white wine, this is the red one. Thankfully, they have once again created a good […]

  10. […] and they hired the now head winemaker, Joe Hurliman. I would see Josh every year at either the IFWF or the KFWE first in Los Angeles, in varied […]

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