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Wine- Red, Right and Blue
by Darryl Beeson

The skeptic comes out in me when I see a wine created in a possibly gimmick-like
way. On my desk is a bottle of red wine in a cobalt-blue glass bottle with a red
colored cork, no less, and a cute rendering of a koala bear on the label. A
famous pop singer is involved in the making. With an eyebrow arched, I tasted
the wine.
And it was good. The Koala Blue Shiraz, Australia 2001, priced at about $6.99,
is a well crafted red destined to be served with food. The makers in
partnership, Pat Farrar and Olivia Newton-John, both contend that it is "the
perfect match for any type of burger you put on a barbie."
Introduced into the U.S. last fall, Koala Blue was soon recognized in The Wall
Street Journal's tasting of 50 Australian Shiraz priced under $20. Ironically,
it placed in the top seven wines ("good/very good" in The Dow Jones Inexpensive
Shiraz Index) while being the least expensive of the finalist.
This red wine is appealing because it has a bracing crispness, balanced with
good fruit expression, a requirement for excellent food pairing wines. Some
inexpensive Australian reds can be packed with concentrated, possibly over-ripe
fruit flavors, with the result being called a flabby wine. That is not a
compliment. Spokesperson Kathleen Talbert shares below a burger recipe that
could be perfect with this wine.
Koala Blue Burger
2 pounds ground sirloin
salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
8 ounces crumbled blue cheese
2 tablespoons Koala Blue Shiraz
2 scallions, finely chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
4 hamburger buns
Preheat the grill to high. Divide the meat into eight equal portions, forming
each portion into a round patty. With a wooden spoon, beat the wine into the
blue cheese until combined, then gently fold in the scallions. Place a quarter
of the blue cheese mixture between two patties and crimp the edges firmly
together to seal the burger. Arrange the burgers, oil side down, on the hot
grate and grill until nicely browned, usually 3-4 minutes. Brush the other side
lightly with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Turn with a spatula and
continue grilling till cooked to taste. Place on buns, served to your
preference.
I am anticipating a letter to the editor from someone asking what to do with the
remainder of the bottle of wine, less the two tablespoons. Figure it out. Have
you ever been mellow? Or should that be Grease is the word. Enjoy the burger.
For more great wine suggestions, click
here
Do you have any questions, comments or suggestions? Email: jwdineline@aol.com
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