Vines & Vittles

with John Brown

Travel Notes From Your Wandering Wino

So here I am sitting in this neat coffee bar in McMinneville, Oregon – the heart of the Willamette Valley – sipping coffee instead of pinot noir, and trying to clear my head enough to post this little ditty.  And, although I’ve certainly slurped my share of pinot noir, I have never ventured to this neck of the wine woods where they produce some of the best pinot on the planet. 

I arrived in town last night from Portland via the Oregon coast  (a round about,  but visually satisfying way, to get here) and enjoyed a superb  meal at the Joel Palmer House – one of Oregon’s most famous restaurants  where the emphasis is on wild mushrooms and – what else – Pinot Noir.

Owner/chef Jack Czarnecki actually wanders the hills of Oregon searching out and picking wild mushrooms, and then creates spectacular menu items using these little fungi as the centerpiece. He and his wife Heidi bought the historic Joel Palmer House in 1996 and began to create one of the most unique restaurants in the US. According to local lore, Joel Palmer was a pioneer who settled in the area in the mid-1800’s after supposedly ascending Mount Hood in the winter wearing moccasins (and I assume other clothing). He later built the house in which the restaurant is now housed.

The goal of Jack and Heidi was to match their passion for mushrooms with their love of wine – particularly pinot noir -to which the earthy nuances of the wine marry incredibly well with the woodsy flavors of all manner of mushrooms. They have succeeded and here is a case in point: my appetizer course consisted of wild morels in a rich brown sauce with flecks of chili pepper flakes accompanied by a clump of crispy Phyllo dough strings (my apologies to the chef – my clumsy description of this course does not do it justice).

The wine – suggested by a very knowledgeable (and unpretentious) sommelier – was a delicious accompaniment. With earthy, dark cherry fruit flavors and perfectly balanced, the 2004 Methven Vineyard Reserve Pinot Noir is a special bottle of wine. While this wine is unavailable in West Virginia, you may call the winery (503-580-1320) and order it, but keep in mind that it is very limited. Also, while the wine is drinking well now, it should continue to improve for another decade.

Suffice it to say that the remainder of the meal was terrific and I am looking forward to sharing with you in coming posts what promises to be an interesting and tasteful weekend here in Oregon.


Comments

14 responses to “Travel Notes From Your Wandering Wino”

  1. Like many great wines, they get better with age,
    Whether Zinfandel, Chardonnay, Bordeaux or Gamay,
    So goes the same with wine aficionado John,
    Who turned 62 at this morning’s dawn.
    Raise a glass and toast to his health,
    As we know this wine scribing ain’t increasing his wealth.
    The vines he’s planted ripen more fully each day,
    And for that we’re thankful in every way.

    With love and affection,

    Your metaphorical terrior

  2. Traci Nelson Avatar
    Traci Nelson

    Happy 62nd to one of my favorite Brown Boys! For the record I don’t think you are over the hill – I think you are still ripening! I hope you have a great birthday and many, many more!

    Traci

  3. You’ve always had an off odor: is it brett,cork taint, or H2SO4? I think advancing age improves wine or winos that have been stored in pristine condition. One look at you and we are disabused of that notion.
    I think than your fruit has dropped out replaced with a caramel-shoe polish mouth & an old leather sand paper texture revealing a brown & gray- hued skein. The volatile acidity is an element that remains persistent in your personality.
    I would give you a 62. Many happy returns. Spike

  4. Happy 62nd B’day and Kudos to JB’ers for his all encompassing knowledge of vino, of which we are thirsting to drink in. In your prime, your hearing may be slightly on the decline, but your taste is well in tact. Thankfully wine doesn’t talk or you might get an earful. However, if you ever start talking to the wine, then we will say “Over the Hill”. In sum, the only thing you may be losing is the ability to comment on and delight in the imperfect symphony of sound your body plays after mass consumption of good food and wine. But, your ability to enjoy, ponder and convey to others the things that make wine-drinking an incredible experience is still ripening. So, eat, drink and be merry in the Willamette and bring a couple cases of the best home for your seedlings, so we can can understand what all the fuss was about. Above all, remember, as the years pass by and your wine cellars get too crowded, Toot and I are here to help lighten the load.

  5. Happy 62nd B’day and Kudos to JB’ers for his all encompassing knowledge of vino, of which we are thirsting to drink in. In your prime, your hearing may be slightly on the decline, but your taste is well in tact. Thankfully wine doesn’t talk or you might get an earful. However, if you ever start talking to the wine, then we will say “Over the Hill”. In sum, the only thing you may be losing is the ability to comment on and delight in the broken down symphony of sound your body makes after mass consumption of good food and wine. But, your ability to enjoy, ponder and convey to others the things that make wine-drinking an incredible experience is still ripening. So, eat, drink and be merry in the Willamette and bring a couple cases of the best home for your seedlings, so we can can understand what all the fuss was about. Above all, remember, as the years pass by and your wine cellars get too crowded, Toot and I are here to help lighten the load.

  6. Echo! Where is delete? Son of a……

  7. Carol Flaherty Avatar
    Carol Flaherty

    Happy Birthday, John! You are just like a fine wine, you keep getting better with age.

  8. Paulina Avatar
    Paulina

    Over the hill or still ripening? – what a question to ponder especially as it applies to our venerable wine critic, John Brown, on this his 62nd birthday. Actually, I was thinking of great wine terms to describe my good friend John – terms liked “subtleness”, “great legs”, and “interesting complexity” but thought better of it. Instead I think more appropriate terms to describe John might be be “corked,” “full bodied”, and “over the hill.”
    Happy Birthday, John.

  9. Happy Birfday, Uncle Bob!
    All the best.

  10. Dennis Avatar
    Dennis

    John has enjoyed great health at a great age because everyday since I can remember he has consumed a bottle of wine except when he has not felt well. Then he consumes two bottles.
    Happy Birthday!!

  11. John Brown Avatar
    John Brown

    To all my friends and especially my seedlings: I’m drinking all the good stuff first!

  12. Mr. Brown – I will treat you with the respect that you deserve on this the day of your birth. Best wishes for a great day and many many more birthdays. (You are like a wine – but maybe more like Mad Dog – enjoyable and cheap!)

  13. If all be true that I do think
    There are reasons we should drink
    Good wine, old friends and being dry
    I’m sure there are other reasons why
    How about 62 years of complex aging
    Now coupled with wine blog saging
    A birthday drink is a reason why
    So pour the Pinot I’m coming by!!

  14. Uncle Bunk Avatar
    Uncle Bunk

    Here he is now sixty-two
    Some parts ripe and the rest not new
    Over-the-hill there’s no way telling
    Cause some of those parts are always smelling
    He’s got nose and a great bouquet
    He’s sixty-two on this fine day!
    Well, I’m with Tom and also dry
    Make mine white, cause I’ll be by!!

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB!!

    Uncle Bunk & Aunt Jan

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