Wine and Dine at Sepia Restaurant Chicago
We held a team / board dinner at Sepia Restaurant Chicago, a short walk from our office, in the trendy west loop district.Sepia offered an imaginative price fixe menu as their standard bill of faire for the evening. Sepia executive chef Andrew Zimmerman,
chef de cuisine Kyle Cottle, and pastry chef Lauren Terrill prepared a delicious, stylish, thoughtfully prepared and artfully presented four course meal.
Wine Director and Sommelier Alex Ring guided us through the extraordinary wine list offerings and selections.
They were also agile and adept at accommodating those of our group that had special dietary requests.
- foie gras tart rosé gelee, peach jam, aged balsamic, (shown)
- sweet corn velouté parisienne gnocchi, pickled blueberry
- kampachi crudo tikka masala consommé, baby tomato, almond
with a kaluga caviar option/supllement, and - king crab chawanmushi, sauce nantua, hon shimeji mushroom
(at a supplement charge)
- crispy soft boiled egg potato porridge, black truffle
(with black truffle supplement) - sablefish misoyaki charred cabbage, dill beurre blanc, grapefruit
- berkshire pork confit cherry mostarda, peanut, five spice (shown)
- hay grilled sirloin smoked spring onion, bone marrow chimichurri, braised beef empanada
- steelhead trout en croûte buttermilk, cucumber, dill
- duck breast plum, sunflower seed, fennel, chamomile (shown)
- ricotta agnolotti chanterelle, summer squash, aged ham butter, pine nut (vegetarian upon request), with black truffle option/supplement
- strawberry & almond olive oil cake, almond cream, strawberry milk crumble
- milk chocolate & banana whipped namelaka, green chartreuse ice cream, crunch
- yogurt & blueberry greek yogurt panna cotta, blueberry-spruce tip sorbet, sunflower seeds
Sepia have an interesting, extraordinarily imaginative winelist with many notable key producers and labels as well as many offerings from lesser known boutique producers. The list is quite broad and extensive with a range of price points for each category.
The price fixe menu also provided a wine pairing flight available for $55 per person.
We were served by Sepia's Sommelier and wine director Alex Ring who was extremely knowledgeable, personable and helpful in our selections and service.
For the whites I was excited to order and try and serve these two imaginative whites:
Maldonado Los Olivos Vineyard Napa Valley Chardonnay 2017
Mas de Daumas Gassac, Languedoc White Blend (Viognier, Petit Manseng, Chardonnay) 2016
Initially I was leaning to the Lail Blueprint Sauvignon Blanc, Napa Valley, but in the end went for 'bigger' more complex whites that would appeal more to my more adventurous white wine drinkers.
Maldonado Los Olivos Vineyard Napa Valley Chardonnay 2017
This is from the Maldonado Family Vineyards, a small Mexican-American family owned
estate of 10 acres in Jamieson
Canyon in the northernmost tip of the Napa Valley. Owner - winemaker Hugo Maldonado comes from a vineyard management
background, who learned
the importance and craft of vineyard care working at Newton Vineyards, and working alongside his father Lupe Maldonado.
Lupe Maldonado arrived in America in 1968 and worked his way up from day
laborer to winery and vineyard owner, that he runs today with his son and grandkids.
Maldonado acquired the ten acre hillside property in 2007 in Jameson Canyon in the eastern hills of Calistoga, looking out to the Palisades mountain range.
The winery, sited in a cave looking south toward the Palisades is where they do all production and barrel aging.
This small boutique producer produces nearly 6000 cases annually under the Maldonado Family Vineyards label, and produces a second label called Farm Worker.
Their flagship brand is classic “big Napa” Chardonnay, notably, this single vineyard designated label.
I woke up the next morning still tasting and thinking about this wine and went on-line to find and buy some. I called all our regular local wine merchants and was told it is discontinued, or out of distribution, meaning they no longer have a distributor here in Illinois, a highly regulated two tier distribution state. It is still promoted and sold on their website, but since I don't need a full case quantity, I'll continue to search out this label.
This was golden colored, full bodied with what I would call a combination of buttery and nutty flavor profile, concentrated but nicely balanced flavors of mineral, pear and citrus fruits, hints of peach and guava with notes of mineral and toasted oak accented by sprites of hazelnut and pain grille.
RM 92 points.
https://www.cellartracker.com/wine.asp?iWine=3663657
https://maldonadovineyards.com
Mas de Daumas Gassac, Languedoc White Blend (Viognier, Petit Manseng, Chardonnay) 2016
As I noted, the two Managing Partners in attendance visited the Languedoc and Provencal regions of Southern France two years ago. We also visited and toured the Southern Rhone, Chateauneuf-du-Pape and the Languedoc around that time. Hence, I selected this extraordinarily unique white blend from the Languedoc-Roussillon region in the South of
France, the area from the Mediterranean coast up to Provence. There a broad range of wine produced in this region, red, white and rose'. The region is traditionally known for more modest table wines, but in recent years it has been upgraded to more and more higher quality fine wines.
He planted Chardonnay
(cuttings from Comte Lafon), Viognier (cuttings from Georges Vernay) and Muscat.
Guibert and Véronique loved to travel, and wherever they went, they
brought back a few cuttings of other vines and planted them.
In 1978, the great oenologist Emile Peynaud, who supervised the rebirth of Château Léoville-Las-Cases and acted as a consultant to Château Margaux, Haut-Brion, La Mission Haut Brion, and La Lagune, visited Mas de Daumas Gassac. He monitored progress and advised on the first vinification.
The 1982 vintage was recognized with the first media endorsement of Mas de Daumas Gassac red wines, hailed by the magazine Gault & Millau as ‘Languedoc’s Château Lafite’.
In 1986, the white Mas de Daumas Gassac wine, a uniquely crafted wine showing huge aromatic complexity, made its debut. This label was designed to showcase fruit aromas, was a complex blend of Viognier, Chardonnay, Petit Manseng and Chenin Blanc, and augented with around fifteen other grape varieties from Old Europe.
The portfolio continued to expand with the release of rosé Frizant in 1990 which completed the estate’s range of wines to three – a red, a white and a rosé.
In 1991, the Guilhem and Figaro labels were released, completing the Moulin de Gassac selection. Today, annual production totals 2.2 million bottles.
The business continued to prosper and expand but remains a family affair, with four of Véronique and Aimé Guibert’s five sons, Samuel, Gaël, Roman and Basile involved, the siblings taking over management of the property in 2009.
This white wine is a unique blend of 25% Viognier, 25% Chardonnay, 25% Petit Manseng, 15% Chenin Blanc and 10% other grape varieties including Courbu from Bearn, Petite Arvine from Valais, Rhole from Provence, Marsanne from the Rhone valley and 10 other rare grape varieties.Gold in colour, full bodied, complex but nicely balanced, bright expressive almond nut flavors accented with tropical fruits of peach and citrus with sprites of orange, lemon, pineapple and apple with hints of floral, vanilla and stone fruit with a nice balance of acidity on a full finish.
RM 91 points. Decanter gave this 93 Pointshttps://www.cellartracker.com/wine.asp?iWine=2459925
https://www.daumas-gassac.com/
https://twitter.com/masdaumasgassac
time nominee for the prestigious James Beard Award.
The Matthiassons share duties in running the business with Steve responsible for winemaking and vineyard operations while Jill tends to the business. Beyond Matthiasson wines, Steve also provides vineyard consulting services to some other notable top wineries including Araujo Estates, Dalla Valle Vineyards, Spottswoode and Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars.
This was dark garnet colored medium bodied with soft elegant black-currant fruits with notes of herbs, cedar, and graphite with moderate tannins on the lingering smooth finish.
RM 90 points.
1995 cases produced.Producers notes on the Matthiasson Vineyards:
The Dead Fred Vineyard in Coombsville sits on rocky volcanic soil. It’s south-western exposure causes it to pick up heat during the day, and the proximity to the mouth of the Napa Valley keeps the nights cool. This vineyard has been leased by Mathiasson since 2012.
The York Vineyard is in the heart of Rutherford, on the classic gravelly alluvium known to create the famous “Rutherford Dust” character. This has been leased since 2013.
The red wines are produced exclusively from Syrah and are often long lived and may be aged for 30 years or more. They are known for their robustness and rich aromas of leather, coffee and red berries.
Around 7.5 million liters of wine are produced and sold under the Crozes-Hermitage title each year. This is more than the other seven northern Rhône appellations combined. There are 1,768 hectares of vines currently recorded for the appellation (4,368 acres).
There were two such wines on the winelist, this and one from producer Alain Graillot which we have had on many occasions. Hence, in the spirit of adventure and experimentation, I opted to try a new producer and label and chose what I hoped would be a similarly situated equivalent at relatively the same price point. In retrospect we might have been better served off with the Alain Graillot Crozes-Hermitage, Rhône (Syrah) which we have featured in these pages. This alternative did not stand up to my exectations based on earlier tasting experiences with the other label.
This was ruby colored, medium full bodied with dark berry fruits accented by non-fruit notes smoke and leather and a slight funkiness from what might be hints of bacon fat, turning to notes of anise and black cherry liquor on the spicy finish.
RM 87 points.
https://www.cellartracker.com/wine.asp?iWine=2937760