I was recently asked by a group of wine professionals what
was my “desert island wine”. This
is, of course, a sucker question.
The answer is used to judge me based on some criterion that were not
being shared with me, much like asking someone in a job interview asking “where
do you see yourself in five years?” or asking a record geek “what’s your
favorite album of all time?’. This
is a way to pass judgment, a parlor game with unspoken winning answers. Not having met these people before, I
had no idea what they were looking for.
My favorite wine? What I
think is “the best”? The rarest
and most treasured? What do you
want from me damn you!?!
I always think of these things from a strictly logical
standpoint, so if asked what I would want on a desert island, I am assuming it
is going to be hot and tropical, so I should have truthfully answered “a
session IPA kept really cold” or “an endless stream of Budweiser from a tap
carved of ice”. I really flamed
out and gave a safe answer I thought they would want to hear, and named Lafite
Rothschild, a ludicrously high priced Bordeaux. It is the blue chip of blue chips. It is also not only the
last thing you would want on a desert island, it’s a cop out of an answer. (“I like what you like! Love me!”, groveled the little sissy.) Really I should have named some
insanely obscure white Burgundy from an under appreciated vintage or maybe even
a crazy Riesling, but that would have been a lie too.
When you get down to brass tacks, one of the best wines I
ever had was something I don’t even know the name of or even the type of
grape. I was in the Cinque Terre,
a group of five remote villages on the Ligurian Sea in Italy. These little villages are connected by
a commuter train, but the real way to go between them is by a path that was
originally made by the Romans that winds along the rocky coast line. These towns were once very under the
radar, so much so that my familiarity with the region once made a beautiful
woman remark “Who are you?” when I said it was one of the best places I had
ever traveled.
I remember at the end of a day walking between the villages
with a group of friends. We had
met in the morning in an even smaller village named Deva, where I had started
the day by bobbing in the ocean after traversing the tiny pebbles that made up
the beach. The locals stared at
the American with ridiculously long surf trunks that clumsily walked on the
rocks as they gracefully hopped in wearing their micro speedos without a
care. Afterwards I was unable to
withdraw money from the bank for some Italian reason like “It is Tuesday. Come back tomorrow.” offered as the
only explanation. I borrowed some
lire from a friend who then walked around the entire day telling befuddled
locals, “You see this guy? He’s
into me for about FIFTY FIVE THOUSAND lire!”. I don’t know if they didn’t understand English or if they
couldn’t understand what the big deal was of spotting $28 to someone. (The exchange rate was a little out of
whack. It was tough to figure out
of a shirt for $173,000 was a ripoff or the deal of a lifetime when you had to
figure the 17,862 lire to dollar exchange rate.)
We spent the entire day walking village to village. It seemed like something Disney had
built for a set. It was so
authentic it couldn’t be real.
Leather skinned fisherman smoking hand rolled cigarettes repairing
nets. Little old women with
scarves on their heads talking in the church square. Old silent men sitting in cafes nursing tiny glasses of red
wine. Dark eyed packs of girls
chattering furiously in Italian while boys with slicked hair tried to get their
attention walking around them.
Ancient churches. Lazy cats
flicking their tales waiting for the fish to be cleaned. Beautiful coastline that had been
walked by people like me since the Romans. It’s a great place.
As the sun began to weaken we sat at a small café. A cover of grape vines woven through a
portico gave shade. The waitress
brought chilled bottles of the local white wine, perfect for the food they
pulled from the sea. Above us on
the terraced ledges were those grape vines just as there had been for
centuries. That same wine, if
poured in Ohio at a non-descript restaurant today, would have probably been
awful. Yet on that day with the
smell of the olive trees and the sea, it was the best wine I had ever had and
one I remember to this day.
That’s the answer I should have given.
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