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The Dish

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The sipper club: meet the city’s competitive cabal of top sommeliers

Will Predhomme belongs to a competitive cabal of top sommeliers who sniff, sip and spit their way through hundreds of bottles a week. They do this to help you decide what to drink with your dinner, while making you think it was your idea all along

One hundred and fifty-one people have reservations at Canoe tonight. Among these are many Bay Streeters, a couple celebrating their 25th wedding anniversary, dozens of people on dates, including the bar manager from Crush, and a young woman who plans to propose to her boyfriend over dinner. The two private dining rooms are fully booked.

Canoe, part of the ever-expanding Oliver and Bonacini empire, is routinely considered one of the finest restaurants in the city. Last summer, in a rigorous competition held by the Canadian Association of Professional Sommeliers, known as CAPS, Canoe’s head sommelier, Will Predhomme, was proclaimed Ontario’s best. Predhomme has devoted a third of his life—he’s 29—to wine scholarship. He now knows more about wine than almost anyone in Toronto.

Just after 5 p.m., the bar area begins to fill up with commuters sipping cocktails as they wait for the traffic on the clogged Gardiner, 54 floors below, to dissipate. One of the restaurant’s first guests, a retired trial lawyer, arrives. As a young female host escorts him to his large corner table, he puts an arm around her shoulder. “I don’t like to pay bills,” he says. “I want a fucking account. Last time I was here, I offered those ladies”—referring to the hosts who greeted him at his last visit—“$300 and told them to set up an account for me. And I still don’t have one.” He and his three dining companions, Canoe regulars, have brought in several bottles of their own wine, including a cabernet franc from the ex-lawyer’s private vineyard in Tuscany. When Predhomme arrives at the table to discuss the wine, the ex-lawyer, captivatingly bratty in a way that only the rich and sort-of-powerful can be, repeats his complaint. “Look, I spend about $50,000 a year at Bymark, and I’d do the same here if I had a fucking account.” Predhomme is unmoved, but gracious. “If you give me your contact information,” he says, “I’ll make sure that it gets to the right people.”

“You’ll get me an account?”

“I’ll look into it.”

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The Dish

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Kiwi Magic: 29 standout New Zealand wines

New Zealand is famous for its sauvignon blancs. Now it’s wowing the world with pinot noirs

(Illustration: Brian Rea)

You can’t help but admire New Zealand’s vintners. In the span of a generation, the country went from having a marginal wine industry to being a top producer. In 1975, a tin hut winery called Matua Valley entered N.Z.’s first sauvignon blanc into a competition in Auckland. The intense blend of green and tropical flavours caught the attention of local growers, who soon transformed Marlborough’s sheep pastures into vineyards. By the early ’90s, sauv blanc had become the focus of an industry and government plan to export clean, green and “expensive-but-worth-it” wine—a script Ontario, a similarly small, cool-climate market, would be wise to copy. It’s been an enormous commercial success.

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The Dish

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Safety in numbers: Are the world’s highest-scoring wines really that good?

A taste test of critics’ picks

(Illustration: Dan Page)

It has been three decades since a group of American critics introduced the 100-point scoring system and revolutionized wine reviewing. Some purists still argue that you can’t put a number on a piece of art (assuming wine is art—an unwinnable debate for another day) and that taste can’t be measured. But, like it or not, the system has become the industry standard. Ratings are now so important that retailers worldwide market their wines according to them. Vintages recently grouped more than 30 wines that scored highly among international critics in a special release called North of 90—a 90-point rating being the tipping point to excellence. The idea is to offer consumers what Vintages calls “a low-risk purchasing decision.” The promotion seems to work; the 90-point releases are among its most popular.

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Best 10 wines under $10

Value, not prestige, is the new watchword in the wine world. Here, 10 bottles under $10 that smash the stigma of cheap wine.

bestbargainwine

(Photo by Daniel Shipp)

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Globe Bistro’s Kevin McKenna and Eigensinn Farm’s Michael Stadtländer serve up an epic eat-local dinner

It was gastronomic ecstasy at the elegant “eat local” Globe Bistro Wednesday night, when Eigensinn Farm’s Michael Stadtländer made a guest appearance to heat up the kitchen with his former student, Globe chef Kevin McKenna. A portion of the proceeds from the lavish seven-course wine-paired feast go to the Toronto East General Hospital Foundation. “That’s where I’m going to go after my first heart attack from pork,” owner Ed Ho joked. We were relieved that lamb was the order of the evening.

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Cheap wine for the weekend

malbec_illustration

Illustration by Brian Rea

Here at Daily Dish, we like a glass of expensive Italian barolo as much as anyone, but casual weekend sipping can be a more affordable and equally delicious venture. In his recent column for Toronto Life, our resident wine expert, David Lawrason, extols the virtues of Argentine malbec: juicy, fruity and cheap. With plenty of options at the nearest LCBO, Lawrason has found 11 bottles (the majority are under $15) to try.

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