Israeli wine buying season – even on a budget
The weeks leading up to Passover represent the lion’s share of the kosher wine industry’s annual sales. Just like December is the peak season for general retail revenues every year, post-Purim early spring is where it’s at for kosher wine transaction volume. Young wines from the fall harvest are starting to be bottled and marketed at this time, and those handling the wine buying for a Seder must procure enough for the proverbial four cups consumed by each participant as part of the Haggadah’s rituals, meaning around one full bottle per person – plus whatever’s consumed separately during the meal.
And just as consumer retail columnists formulated analyses and advice columns this past December, focusing on how to make solstice holiday purchases where one garners maximum bang for one’s buck in today’s tough economic climate, Ha’aretz‘s renowned wine critic Daniel Rogov recently released a highly practical guide to affordable spring 2009 kosher Israeli wines:
For several years, knowledgeable wine drinkers have known that the best buys in the country were the Tabor, Galil Mountain and Dalton wineries as well as in the Gamla series of the Golan Heights Winery. Those wines are now being joined by wines from the Zion winery and, while those may not make for the most sophisticated drinking, they do offer excellent value.
He goes on to rate nine kosher Zion winery (their Hebrew-only official site) products, all of which falling well within his “good to very good” stratum of scoring.
Rogov is getting out there more and more nowadays, serving as a formidable advocate of Israeli oenophilia. I’ve written about Gary Vaynerchuk of Wine Library TV before, and the enthusiastic eccentric personality also seemingly has Passover fever nowadays, having welcomed Rogov himself recently on the program (check out the fascinating 38-minute episode here). The banter-laden rapport between the two alone makes the video worth watching.
To Israeli wine lovers like you and me, this is not all big news (the fact that kosher wine no longer exclusively resembles cough syrup, and the fact that great Israeli wine is not exclusively kosher – we’ve known these things for years), but it’s great to see more and more mainstream wine-oriented media channels recognizing the quality coming out of this part of the world.
Wine library TV does Israeli wines
I’m not what you’d call a wine guy. Sure, I can easily differentiate between quality wine and bad wine and I can appreciate those who enjoy wine tasting as a hobby, but I draw the line when people search for things that aren’t there. Vanilla accents in that merlot? Subtle taste of wild mushrooms in that chardonnay? Sorry, I don’t buy that. It’s a bit much for me to swallow and more than a little pretentious in my eyes. Quality wine can be quite reasonably priced and wine tasting shouldn’t be for the exclusive set. Gary Vaynerchuk of Wine Library TV abides by this philosophy. Yeah, his descriptions can be quite over the top sometimes (kiwi with splenda on top? pear skin?) but it is certainly difficult to accuse him of anything but sincerity. He certainly doesn’t lack passion – and a hell of a lot of fun. On yesterday’s episode Gary took on a few non-Kosher Israeli wines. And he was very impressed.
Hat tip: HaKerem: The Israeli Wine Blog











