The SOMM Journal

October / November 2016

Issue link: https://digital.copcomm.com/i/735024

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 22 of 132

22 { THE SOMM JOURNAL } OCTOBER/NOVEMBER { bottom line } by Randy Caparoso "WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE," WROTE COLERIDGE, "NOR ANY DROP to drink." That's how I've always felt about the palatability of big wine lists—in my book, anything over 150 selections. Way back in the late 1970s I read about Kevin Zraly, who said, "Eighty percent of our wine sales always came from about 40 wines . . . the other 800 to 1,200 wines on our wine lists [at New York's legendary Windows on the World] were no more than window dressing." As a young sommelier I took that to heart. In fact, inspired by Michelin-starred French chefs who hand-wrote their dinner menus each day, for a short time in the early '80s I tried writing out (and photo-copying on parchment) 50- to 60-selection wine lists—until computers came along, at which point it became even easier to bang out our short wine lists, several times a day if we wanted. Freedom! Problem, of course, was that it was the wine lists with hundreds or thousands of selections that usually got the most press, or garnered "Grand Awards." Still, we earned our share of national awards—for the quality of our wine programs, not their size—and our restaurants were profitable and critically successful enough to expand to over a dozen states. "Thirty bottles is the new 300," the San Francisco Chronicle wrote just a few years back, while quoting Christie Dufault, a former working sommelier who now teaches at Culinary Institute of America Greystone (and contributes to The Somm Journal). To Dufault's thinking, "A lot of time you go into these places with huge wine lists, these tomes . . . but you can't find anything to drink." Dufault, of course, is referring to the fact that big wine lists are typically filled out with wines you can find anywhere, not so much of what might impress knowledgeable or adventurous wine lovers. The best wine lists, she says, "should be like a short story . . . every word should count"—which is what she has been teaching her students, assign - ing exercises where they are graded on lists with no more than 50 selections. FSR (Full-Service Restaurants) magazine recently covered Austin's popular Eastside Café, where owner Chef Elaine Mar tin took a scalpel to her wine program following the depar ture of her business par tner, who had been in charge of the wines. Mar tin, who is much happier with a wine program consisting of no more than 24 selections (by the bottle and glass), explained: "I am a practical person, so . . . the last thing I want to do when I go to a restaurant is work . . . I want people Are Short Wine Lists Truly Back in Style? to look at the wine list, find something familiar or rely on the servers, and get on with their lives. They are here to relax and enjoy dinner." In Gourmet Traveller I read an inter - esting comment on the latest trend in Australia: short, disciplined wine lists. This quote encapsulates why, in truly focused restaurants, short lists really make the most sense: In Melbourne, the 40 wines and 20 sakés on offer across all styles at Minamishima are a perfect reflection of the focused, precise, minimalist approach to the food; at Franklin in Hobart the list of 40 wines reads like a roll-call of the hipper end of the natural-wine world; and at Africola in Adelaide, the two-dozen bottle selec- tion—classics from Stellenbosch rub- bing shoulders with cult wines from the Barossa—is wonderfully in keep- ing with chef Duncan Welgemoed's homage to both his homeland in South Africa and his adopted home in South Australia. Sharpened food affinity, ease of dining, maximum flexibility and creativ- ity—for these reasons alone you have to ask, why even bother with oversized wine programs?

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of The SOMM Journal - October / November 2016