Red, White, and Sacrebleu
From wine elves to classy pitchmen, American winemakers have
tried just about everything to challenge the dominance of French
vintners. And yet, with infamous labels like Ripple and
Thunderbird, Yankee wines had long endured the reputation of being
good for just one one thing-getting blitzed.
So it must have seemed like a cruel joke in 1976 when a British
wine merchant arranged The Paris Tasting, a one-of-its-kind
competition that pitted mighty France versus lowly America in a
blind taste test judged entirely by Gallic wine experts.
But as viewers of the movie Bottle Shock and
the documentary Mondovino
can tell you, the unthinkable happened: America took home top
honors for both red and white wine.
The Paris Tasting made Mike
Grgich an instant legend, but back then, even the maker of the
winning white couldn't believe he had won. "I said are you sure
it's me?" recalls Grgich. How could this American, an immigrant who
fled communist Yugoslavia, shock the world?
The French wanted to find out, so Jean-Noël Fourmeaux, an official
government wine taster became a wine spy. He headed to California
to discover how, in the span of a couple of decades, American
winemakers progressed from Thunderbird to Grgich's award-winning
white.
Fourmeaux encountered a freewheeling atmosphere of technological
and cultural innovation-one that attracted the likes of Squire
Fridell of Glen
Lyon Vineyards, a winemaker who has his own reason for smiling
at America's emergence as a leader in wine. Fourmeaux pondered what
he could create by mixing French tradition with Yankee innovation,
and it led him to a most unexpected decision.
"Red, White, and Sacrebleu" is written and produced by Ted Balaker,
who also hosts. Director of Photography: Alex Manning; Field
Producers: Paul Detrick and Hawk Jensen; Production Associates:
Zach Weissmueller and Tannen Wels.
Special thanks to D'Argenzio Winery and the
Wine Institute.
Approximately 7.30 minutes. Scroll down for embed code and
downloadable versions.
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