Monday, December 26, 2011

An Interview with Seth Mandeville

Seth Mandeville is the sommelier at Sel de la Terre/Back Bay Boston.  He shares his expertise in a passionate and energetic manner, and at a mile-a-minute pace.  I am pleased that he agreed to slow down long enough for this interview.

Eat Drink Travel Write (EDTW):  What got you first interested in wine?

Seth Mandeville (SM):  I was bartending at Ten Prime Steak and Sushi in Providence and a person at the bar asked me the stylistic differences between two of the Pinots and at the time I had absolutely no wine knowledge and I froze.  I don’t usually freeze when I’m behind a bar you know, so I made it a point to never let that happen again.  And that decision kind of grew out of control from there and turned into something completely different.  I had a kid, Scott Brenner, working for me who later told me he was one of Charlie Palmer’s sommeliers at Aureole.  He taught me about wine while we were closing the bar at night.  We’d be sitting there smoking butts and drinking beers, and I’d be taking notes on Cabernet and Shiraz and it kind of snowballed into a whole other aspect of bartending.  It gave me a better working knowledge of wine and I didn’t have to look like an idiot in front of anyone again.  That is basically what started it.

And so when I learned about how to deal with wine, and how to deal with people with wine, I found that people tend to be less comfortable with wine than when they’re talking about beer or cocktails.  I found that you could easily start talking over people’s heads and so from Scott I learned how to present it in a way which was loose and kind of informal, because at the end of the day you are only talking about booze – that’s it.  So, you can’t take it too seriously because when you do you start getting into that realm of do I enjoy my job or am I just sitting there preaching to people.  Fortunately, in the position that I’m currently in I get to deal with all aspects of bar management, not just wine.  So whether it be putting together a cocktail list or running the beer list, I have the luxury of not burning myself out only doing one thing.  I think that dealing with recommendations and food pairings is all about how you talk to people, how comfortable they feel around you.  If you start talking to them like a scientist you lose them and they’ll just stop you and say “I’ll have the Malbec.”  Then you have no chance.  Scott taught me you have about ten seconds at the table before the customers make a decision about how you are as a person – and that’s it.  You have ten or twelve seconds before they either think this guy is a snooty, pretentious jerk or he is cool about it and they may want to try something new and learn.

EDTW:  What sort of formal training did you have?

SM:  Well, Scott was working his way through the Court of Master Sommeliers’ education levels and he kept the materials and would teach me each level as he passed it.  He would white-out his answers from the tests and he wouldn’t let me move forward until I passed the tests.  And when you did pass each level you’d get a different colored pin.  We wouldn’t go any further into any other kinds of wine like the really esoteric reds and the white burgundies that grow in shade on the sides of hills, until I passed the previous test.  I never even passed the third test – it was ridiculously difficult – I didn’t learn enough about Portuguese wines and I had no idea what the hell I was talking about with Greek wines.  I got to question 30 and I just stopped because I just didn’t know enough.  I had to take the second level test twice, but I passed it.

I had the luxury of being able to drink my way through my formal training, and not in a gross getting hammered sort of way.  Now you could read about a wine in a book, but I actually had the wine in front of me and a teacher who had already read the books.  We worked through every single wine that was in the test, plus each little offshoot of it.  We’d do blind tastings where he asked me to identify the wine – not where was it from or what year it was, just what was it – just eliminate what it’s not.  And that’s what I did.  I did not take the classes but I was tutored one-on-one with someone who had done the training.  And he was forward thinking enough to keep his tests.  I got to see how I would stack up to someone who did the training.  It was really a cool experience to learn that way.

EDTW:  Being at that restaurant was your first job in wine?

SM:  It was my first job where I dealt with wine at a serious level and had to talk to people who knew about wine – not just people simply asking for a white zin or a cab.  It was where I had customers with discerning palates who were paying a lot of money and they wanted you to tell them why they should pay $400 for a bottle of wine.  Looking back at earlier jobs, I hate to say I half-assed my way through it:  here’s your red, here’s your white, here’s your Pinot, your Cab, your Shiraz.  Then at Ten it was "here’s your Shiraz," but there were 15 of them; "here’s your Merlot" – there were 25 of them.  There were 285-300 wines on the list, plus the Captain’s list.  It was daunting for someone who was a first time fine dining bartender.  But, in six months I went from being a glorified bar back to being the bar manager running a multimillion dollar wine room and doing all of the wine ordering, the tastings, and all the pairings.  I don’t know how that happened – it just did.  You know, I just didn’t realize how good Scott was at his job, how many skills he had in his bag, and how much I learned from him.  A great man.

EDTW:  What is your official title here at Sel de la Terre?

SM:  Sommelier.  Now most of the guys next door (at L’Espalier, the sister restaurant) don’t have their pins either.  We work together and do tastings and take notes and study hard.

EDTW:  What advice would you give to someone interested in working in wine?

SM:  If you are not a reader, become one.  Keep at book on your coffee table and, this is really crass, keep a book in the bathroom at all times.  If you’re interested in wine then learn it, read about it, study it.  Get the World Atlas of Wine.  If you really want to learn the basic level get the Everything Wine Book, it's like a wine for dummies type of book, a fantastic place to start.  It reads like a book, not like a documentary – it’s really well done.  Then you get to the boring stuff – the books with 1500 pages on the Rhone Valley with no pictures, no maps.  You’ve got old school books from Mitchell Beazley and Rosemary George that can be painful to read, but you have to do it.  They were the final say for a while – theirs were the books that Scott had at that time.  You have to read a lot, learn a lot.

I asked a lot of questions.  Don’t be afraid to ask stupid questions, because a lot of them are not stupid, you’re just asking the questions someone else is afraid to ask.  If someone knows more than you, you just have to get your ego to back down and you have to be able to let someone teach you and just absorb it.  And you have to be able to do that for someone else the next time around.  You have to remember that if someone is interested in wine they are getting into an extremely vast arena – you can’t go too hard on them.  You have to understand that people have a lot of questions and not get too aggravated hearing the same questions over and over again from different people.  You just have to teach.

EDTW:  Would you also consider yourself the beer meister here?

SM:  YES!  I would!  [Laughter]

EDTW:  How did you learn about beer?

SM:  Well, the thing that started me with beer was that when I was working at the State Street location I was living in Allston near the Sunset Grill and Tap, a big beer bar there.  The bartenders there were as passionate about beer as I was about wine.  Obviously I loved beer so it was awesome that I lived nearby.  Paul and Alex were two of the bartenders and they would sit me down and give me 2 ounce tastings and they’d start at the top corner of the beer list and work down one page and ask me why I liked it or didn’t like it.  I would go in on off nights and I got to be good friends with these guys.  They did for me what Scott Brenner did, but less formally because I didn’t take notes.  Beer just clicked.  You have large genres of beer that fit into one style and have little variations from there.  Like IPA - you don’t have to worry about regions or villages, about grand cru or how the sun hits the field - you just don’t.  It’s a lot easier to block it and learn about it in chunks.  Also, growing up my Dad did a lot of home brewing and I got into it with him.  To this day he still makes the best brown ale I’ve ever had and I’m a huge brown ale fan.  It’s very cool.  It’s fun to seek out a new brown ale, but they never turn out as good as my father made back in 2002 – I can still taste it in my head.  It was also a nice departure from the wine stuff.  Back then the fine beer market was at a trickle, but now it’s becoming huge.  It’s out of control – you can’t taste them all, so you have to cut it down and whittle it away.  But it’s easier with beer because it’s more accessible.

EDTW:  Tell me about your beer nights.

SM:  The beer nights happen every Tuesday night at 7:00 pm.  It’s easier to talk to people about beer because they don’t feel outgunned.  I dress informally with no tie, and if I can fit the people at the bar I’ll do it so it’s even more comfortable and relaxed.  But even if I have to do it at tables, I’ll sit down to answer questions and tell them why I paired the food and the beer.  It’s cool.  It’s nicer than always doing the wine dinners over and over again.  And to this day I’m still more comfortable with beer than I am with wine because you know how snooty and weird wine can get.  I’m not at the snooty point yet and I don’t know how to deal with people who are like that about it.  And with beer I find that I never ever have to deal with that snootiness.  People just tend to chill out – especially when they’re at the bar and they’re rubbing elbows.  It’s amazing that you’ll sit twelve people together at the bar and in five minutes they’ll all be talking to each other.  If you sit the same twelve people at tables they won’t speak with each other – it’s outrageous to see.  But still I try to make it comfortable for everyone.  I tried to do the same with wine, but people weren’t really receptive to it.  People will say something like:  “I only like Pinots from only here or there, but now I like beers from everywhere – France, Germany, Poland – everywhere.”  A lot of people are open to more funky ideas with beer.  It’s been a lot of fun doing it.  I was originally going to do seventeen themes, end with Seth’s Favorites, and then start over, but there are so many beers out there that I had to expand to thirty-five themes and then I can start over.  The business can be really hectic and crazy, but I’ve been having a really good time with it.

EDTW:  What is your favorite wine, and favorite beer?

SM:  My favorite wine of all time was the 1997 Coriole Redstone Blend from Coriole Vineyards in McLaren Vale (Australia), followed closely by the 1996 Whitehall Lane Cabernet from Whitehall Lane Winery in Napa (California) – it’s really tough to choose – it’s a coin flip.  And for beer, there are two and I can’t say one is better than the other.  The first is the Tripel Karmeliet from BrouwerijBosteels (Belgium) which is a three grain (wheat, barley and oat) brew.  Brasserie Dupont (Belgium) makes a saison or farm-brew and it’s organic and I hate to use ethereal terms, but it’s sublime - you could pair it with anything.  Those are my favorites as of right now.

EDTW:  What does the future hold for you?

SM:  To be honest I’d really like to run my own beverage program:  to run the tastings, create the lists, and make the recommendations.  Because here the guy who does it is one of the best in the country and he is only 40 years old, so he’s not going anywhere.  I still have a lot to learn from him.  What he has done for me is to teach me the specifics about wine and the wine business and the markups.  I never thought my memory was that good, but this stuff sticks.  Now it’s second nature to me.  I can mentally do mark-ups, and keep the wine and beer orders in my head - it’s nuts!  I probably should have gone to college for something I'd really enjoy doing, I probably would have been a lot better off.  [Laughter]

EDTW:  Well, I think that was my last question, so thank you.

SM:  You’re welcome.  You should come in for one of the beer dinners some time.



Thursday, December 8, 2011

Good Things To Come

Sometimes life has a way of sweeping you away from where you want to be - kind of like a rip tide at the beach.  Well, I've made my way back to my blog and there are good things to come: 

Today I did an interview with Seth Mandeville, the sommelier at Sel de la Terre / Back Bay Boston, which will be posted as soon as I can get it transcribed. 

Tomorrow, Friday, I will be attending Sips for Scholarships, a wine tasting very much like A Sip of Winthrop - it will actually be held in the same location.  This is a fundraiser for Funds for Education Abroad which offers scholarships for university students to take semesters abroad.

Then, at the end of January, I will be a blogging correspondent for the third annual Key West Food and Wine Festival, which should be a fantastic four-day whirlwind of gastronomic experiences.

Also in January I will begin taking the Wine & Spirits Education Trust Intermediate classes offered by Adam Chase at the Boston Center for Adult Education - I need to expand my wine knowledge.

So, while I have been a bit negligent have no fear, there are good things to come!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

A Morning Walk Through Boston - A Semi-Poetic Update

The scenery for my morning walk over Beacon Hill and through the Boston Common and the Public Garden looks a bit different every day. The intensity and the angle of the light change daily and bring out different features; or perhaps I might notice something new like an historic plaque previously hidden by leaves, or the interesting façade of a building I’d never paid attention to before. This morning, however, everything seemed dramatically different. This was because the sun rose an hour early, or at least it seemed so due to our conceit that we can control time. The slanted, golden light was once again hitting the treetops and it highlighted the changes that have occurred as the trees head towards their long winter’s nap. There are those trees that are valiantly trying to hang on to the green of their leaves. Then there are others who have given up and given their leaves over to the yellows, the ochres, the burnt umbers, and the coppers. The fall colors appear more muted this year, apparently due to the warmth of the past months’ weather (except, of course, for our early, but short-lived snow storm). But, while muted, there is enough of a range of color to catch the eye and please the soul. If, that is, you’re willing to pause a moment and take it all in.


Sunday, November 6, 2011

A Sip of Winthrop - A Review

Winthrop Massachusetts is a peninsula that juts out into Boston Harbor and it has the look of a typical New England seaside town.  It’s known for beaches, a multitude of piers where fishing and pleasure boats dock, and for being the tightly-packed home for a middle/working class populace.  But it’s not known for wine.  However, a local merchant and the Winthrop Chamber of Commerce are trying to change that.  On Friday evening the annual A Sip of Winthrop was held at the Cottage Park Yacht Club with the proceeds benefitting a business district beautification program.

Paul Lucerto (shown in the photo with his family), owner of Swett’s Liquors in Winthrop Center, enlisted the distributors he does business with and invited other food businesses to donate and showcase their products.  While a jazz quartet entertained the well-dressed crowd, representatives from eight beer and wine distributors offered tastings of their wares.  I had already met a number of the distributor reps at the regular Friday evening tastings that Paul offers throughout the year at his store.  Here are a few of my favorites:


Brian Hammond represents Genuine Wine Selections, which specializes in small-production wines from artisan wine makers.  My favorite of his wines was Lūmos Pinot Noir, a surprisingly smoky red from Oregon.  When I asked about this smokiness, Brian said it was the result of the terroir of the Temperance Hill winery - very intriguing.  For those who are unfamiliar with the term “terroir,” it denotes how the geography, geology and climate of a specific place affect the flavors of what is grown there.




Brian Regan from Martignetti Companies introduced me to Laguna Ranch Chardonnay.  His description in the program explains the wine has “notes of apple, pears, quince, and tangerine, framed by sweet undertones of Asian spice.”  I’m always in the market for a good chardonnay.







Gwen Richardson of Berkshire Brewing Company showcased their fine ales and lagers, plus Still River Winery’s Apfel Eis (Apple Ice) Wine.  It is a delicious dessert wine and I was told each bottle contains the fermented juice of 80 Massachusetts grown apples.  My tasting companion, Rochelle, was especially taken with this sweet delight.

Then there were Adam Senesi and Chad Whitman from Horizon Beverage.  Adam showed me their Renwood Amador Ice Wine, a 2009 Ice Zinfandel, another great dessert wine.  While Chad had me taste Tait Ball Buster, a Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot blend from Australia – an amusingly named, big flavored import.

Also featured were passed hors d'oeuvres, bruschetta from Letterie's Italian Market and ginger snap cookies from my friend Laraine Mitchell who, with her husband Grant, owns Crusty Crumpet Bakery. 

At each tasting I learn a bit more about wines and spirits and I’m definitely looking forward to next year’s event.







Urinetown - The Play

Our starlet and her Nana
On Saturday night I went to see my niece in Hamilton-Wenham Regional High School's production of Urinetown.  Now with a name like that, I just wasn't sure what to expect.  However, this show which was originally produced on Broadway and won three Tony Awards, is a fun and sassy musical about a future faced with deprivation.  In this imagined time there has been a 20-year drought and a corrupt corporation has stepped in to control water and it charges fees for people to pee.  I realize it doesn't sound too enticing, but it ends up being the story of an elite minority controlling resouces and finances while leaving the majority to barely eke out an existence - sound familiar?  And this tale is told with lots of humor and mischievous breaking of the fourth wall.  This was the most energetic show I'd seen in years and was delighted by the level of talent of the cast.  So, if you ever see a production of Urinetown advertised in your town, my advice is:  GO!

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Looking Back: Valparaíso, Chile

Another adventure from my time on the ship.

1/26 - We were in Valparaíso, Chile.  It is a funky, crowded, crazy city built on 42 hills - I really liked it.  Because of a tour office mistake I ended up escorting two tours - one in the morning and one in the afternoon.  I had been upset because days before, while I was working, all of the tours to Santiago were filled, however my tours turned out to be a lot of fun and when all of the Santiago tours returned everyone was complaining about the heat and long drive, so it all worked out for the better for me!  The reason I was so taken with Valparaiso is a certain whimsy that exists about the place.  It's name translates to goes to paradise.   

Some homes are built practically atop one another and barely hanging onto the hillsides.
Each house is painted a different, bright color and this diversity of palette is strongly encouraged. 











These homes are contrasted with stately civic buildings and grander stone homes, which are sometimes also brightly painted. 















There are ascensors, a strange mix of cable car and elevator, which take people up to their homes on the hills.

The morning tour was to the Casablanca Valley - a very beautifully verdant valley surrounded by high hills (or low mountains depending on your perspective).  It is one of the prime wine areas of Chile. 


We stopped at Viña Mar Winery for a tour of the wine making facilities, a wine tasting, and of course the opportunity to buy wines. 

Viña Mar Vineyard

Aging Room


There I was introduced to Carménère and I was enchanted by the story behind this grape.  The vine that produces this wine was thought to be extinct in Europe due to an infestation of phylloxera, an aphid-like insect.  Years later, the vine was rediscovered thriving among the Merlot vines in Chile and the wine is now thought of as mainly a Chilean export. 

The tour then went to Viña del Mar, a seaside/resort suburb of Valparaíso where we passed the casino and the popular beaches.

Strolling along Viña del Mar beaches

Crowded Beach

Viña del Mar Casino

La Sebastiana
The afternoon tour focused on downtown Valparaíso.  We stopped at La Sebastiana, one of the homes of Pablo Neruda, the author/poet.  It is a four (or perhaps five, depending on where you start counting) story townhouse with stairways that lead to dead-ends, stained glass windows placed in unusual spots, statuary fitted into the walls, and tilework and artwork spanning many very different periods.  There are nooks and crannies for sitting quietly alone or for viewing the city below.  He had the house designed and I like the way the man thought - very unconventional. 

We then drove to La Colombina, a strange looking restaurant with amazing views where I was introduced to pisco sours.  Pisco, which I had never heard of, is a wine brandy which is then mixed with lime juice and sugar (and sometimes egg whites) - a very tasty summer drink.  I also liked the people I met there - they were welcoming and put you quickly at ease.  It’s a place I'll have to revisit at some point.


Saturday, October 1, 2011

Looking Back: Chilean Glacier Fields

Another travel adventure from my time on the ship.

1/24 - Yesterday we had a change of course and instead of merely stopping at Cape Horn and then continuing around the outside of the southern tip of South America, we turned and headed into the Beagle Channel to view the Chilean glacier fields.  We traveled through what felt like a river with tall mountains on each side, and then we came upon the glaciers - how amazing, how beautiful!  I'd never seen a glacier before.  I think everyone was grateful for this change in the planned route.  The best thing was that while the day began and ended in fog and rain, the middle was clear and almost warm - perfect for being on deck and seeing the sights.

Cape Horn, Chile

Port Williams, Chile












Sunday, September 25, 2011

Looking Back: Montevideo, Uruguay

January 20th - Montevideo is very much like Rio in that you see the modern city amidst the tattered remnants of their colonial pasts.  

Fanciful architecture
Some of the old architecture is amazing, however most of the buildings are simply falling apart from neglect and lack of funds.  I liked the feel of Montevideo - it seemed comfortable and laid-back - though we were there on a Saturday and that may explain everything.




Palace Trancato
I escorted a walking tour of Constitution Square, Palace Trancato (a museum), the Metropolitan Cathedral, and Teatro Solis
. 









After I dropped off the tour paddle and changed clothes, I decided to head out on my own and walked back to the square we had toured earlier in the day.  As we were in the Southern hemisphere (their summer), it remained daylight until almost 9:00 pm.  At the Metropolitan Cathedral, which bordered one end of the square, a huge wedding let out and I stopped to watch all the beautifully dressed people.  I then went to a lovely restaurant named La Corte located in a grand, historic building, Club Uruguay.  

Club Uruguay

Carolina, my waitress, spoke English very well and we had a nice chat as I drank tannat wine (a Uruguayan red wine), ate and people-watched out the window.  We were scheduled to leave the port at 1:00 am and so at 11:30 pm I decided it was time to take a cab back to the ship.  The exchange rate is so favorable that I was able to eat (a lot), have a couple of glasses of wine, dessert and coffee, purchase two bottles of the tannat wine, and be driven back to the ship for around $50.00 - not a bad deal for a Saturday night.  It was really nice to actually be able to spend an evening in a port since we usually have to reboard the ship at 4:00 pm for a 5:00 pm departure.