L'hotel du Marais - Saint- Jean
38121 Chonas Lamballan
Tel: 04 74 58 83 23
Fax: 04 74 58 81 96
After dark and in the rain and just moments
before our first dinner, we arrived at the L'hotel du Marais-Saint
Jean and quickly unpacked before meeting in the hotel's
restaurant for a
relaxing and luxurious meal. There, we met
up with the third writer of our trip, Ron Holden, owner of Seattle
based travel company France in your Glass. Gregarious , knowledgeable,
and French speaking to boot, the four of us became fast friends,
talking about the evening to come.
Our chef for the evening was Pascal Colliat,
the hotel's Chef de Cuisine for the past 3 years. A shy
and unassuming 23 year old man, Pascal showed amazing skill
and talent, and was entirely in charge of preparing and presenting
the meals we ate that night. Formerly a farmer, Pascal became
skilled through a series of apprenticeships in the hotels and
restaurants of Burgundy and Dijon. This was the one of the most
memorable culinary adventures of the trip. No matter how exquisite
and artistically orchestrated all our meals were throughout
the trip, no meal surpassed the experience of that evening.
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A
Cheese Platter
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Caille Roti et Desossee, Compotee de Choux au
Lard Paysan et Sauce Genievre - Roasted Quail, sitting on a
bed of sauteed cabbage with a ginger sauce, topped with a quail
egg and a juniper egg.
As we were all tired on this initial arrival,
and did not want to pair each course with a different wine,
we paired the entire meal with a 1994 La Louvee Cornas, a wine
produced in the South of the Northern Rhone Valley, on the right
side of the river, a derivation of
Soup
Glacee a la Courgette et de Salmon aux Petales de tomatoes
confites, Eminces d'Artichauts Provrade et Comeaux de
Parmesan
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the Cornas Appelation. The wine had a lot of
tannins, raspberries, not a lot of aroma, but great on the palate.
This wine was decanted and was a beautiful deep cranberry color.
We finished dinner with a pure essence of Pear, a distilled
wine called Poire William.
It was not until morning that we were able to
get the full
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Roasted
Quail, sitting on a
bed of sauteed cabbage
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flavor of the intimate provincial feel of our first
stop. Just a few steps south of Vienne in Chonas L'Amballan, we
awoke to find ourselves in a quaint , but sparse, 10 bedroom Inn.
Reaching out to push open the quaint, wooden shutters, we overlooked
sprawling countryside and vineyards, just adjacent to the l'Amballan
plateau. We were in an area where lots of mushrooms grew, and
truffles were just 25 miles away. On our way out, we quickly grabbed
brochures to check prices for a night's stay...
Domaine de Bonserine
Chemin de la Vaillieere
Verenat 69420 Ampuis, Bonserine
Ph. 94 74 56 14 27
Fax 04 74 56 18 13
First stop was Domaine de Bonserine, where we
met with Responsable Commercial Richard Dommerc. A 25 year old
winery, recently acquired by a corporation in the United
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Richard Dommerc
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States, Domaine de Bonserine was in the process
of replacing all their tanks and barrels. Many of their employees
have been there just under two years. Seventeen parcels of land
make up the ten hectors that produce the 30,000 bottles per
year. "They used to make a correct wine, but now they wanted
to make the best wine," said Richard Dommerc with
great pride.They are currently experimenting with a new plunger
process, and have achieved more tannins and colors with this
new process, and this is the first year they have used this.
They do not use any stems, as they feel that this way they can
make a wine with a lot of tannins, without the bitterness. They
export 30% of all wine produced and in 1999 they started exporting
to the USA, selling through a distributor to restaurants, wine
shops, and upscale stores. They age 100% of their wine in barrels
for 1 ½ to 2 years. Utilizing different barrels to ascertain
cost vs. quality of wine, they have used American oak, French
oak, Russian and Hungarian oak. Russian and Hungarian oak is
not used much, as it makes wine very dry. Currently, half their
barrels are from the US, and they add 1/3 new barrels each year.
We tasted the1999 harvest from the tank. The
color was a deep burgundy, with a green, stemmy spicy nose,
pleasant, with a cherry taste. The 1998 barrel tasting was from
old french oak, and was lighter in color vs. little nose, more
fruit but also more tannins. It had characteristics of oak and
smoke, with sour cherry taste, dry finish, did not taste like
one year old barrel aged. The 1997 Cote Brune was smooth
and elegant, and the Mouton 1997, with its wonderful
aromas and spicy sensations will definitely age well. The
Les Moutonnes Reserve 1998 made with 100% Syrah has beautiful
color, profound aromas of both fruit and flowers.
Part
2 of 5
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