Travels with Pablo . . . and Me?

Pablo Valqui

I first met Pablo Valqui a few years back when he was a fine-food buyer for Spec’s. He became my go-to guy for fancy imported mustards, for example. But one day he wasn’t there anymore and I lost track of him. (Hey, during COVID, I lost track of almost everybody.) But fortuitously we bumped into each other at the Bordeaux tasting downtown a couple weeks ago and that led to a catch-up lunch.      

These days he’s repping wines – Texas’ Newsom Vineyards, to name one – and again planning to lead food-and-wine-centric tours now that the friggin’ pandemic has become less of an obstacle for same. Two trips, both headed to Germany, are on the books for this fall (www.gourmettours.biz) and will be previewed in some detail here today. Why Germany? Valqui’s mother is German and he lived there for a decade, becoming hip to the culture and learning to speak the language fluently. He’s also half-Peruvian, so he’s fluent in Spanish, too. He’s no stranger to French and Italian, either.

I know. Don’t you hate folks like him?

Being equal parts knowledgeable, passionate and people-friendly, Valqui seems like a very fun guy to travel with and that figures to be in the cards for me at some point in the not-too-distant future. We’ve decided to brainstorm a couple of itineraries for possibly as early as next spring that I’ve long wanted to lead through the South of France and Northeast Italy, two places he doesn’t know as intimately as I do.

One figures to start in Lyon, head down the Rhone Valley, then swing through Provence and the Languedoc before wrapping up in Bordeaux. That’s 10/11 days right in my happiness wheelhouse. Another is likely to kick off in Marseille, head to up Aix-en-Provence, the Luberon and the Var, then cut through France’s Southern Alps – yep, my neck of the woods – in route to Italy’s Piemonte, finishing in either Turin or Milan. A biking adventure and a grand aperitif at my house in the Ubaye Valley is certain to be included.  

Intrigued? Keep watching this space.

View from Baden’s Texas Pass

As for Valqui’s pair of German tours, both of which will be limited to 10 guests maximum, the first will start in Munich Sept. 1 and finish there Sept. 11. It will be co-led by Valqui and Chef Johann Schuster, whom you’re likely to remember from his much-loved Charivari restaurant in Midtown. He’ll focus on places that shaped his personal culinary career from Munich to Manheim to Freiberg to Luxembourg, with several stops in between. Collaborations with chef friends are in the mix and copious amounts of wine will be tasted in Baden, the Mosel Valley – a river cruise is on the docket – and even Luxembourg, the wines from which are also gaining traction internationally.

The price is $6,850 and is all-inclusive (food, wine, transit, etc.) save for the airfare to and from Munich, easily reached from Houston via Lufthansa and United nonstops, although the latter’s flight has had some cancellation issues of late, which I experienced firsthand in April.         

The second trip will be Sept. 15-24 and is called the “Wines and Shrines of Germany Tour,” which he’s marketing it to foodies, oenophiles and Catholics. A priest friend of Valqui’s, Father John Torres, will be leading this voyage of discovery, to include a mass led by the Archbishop of Cologne himself, followed by a private rooftop tour of the city’s famed 12th-century Gothic cathedral, home to a shrine of relics connected to the Three Magi among its many wonders. Wine regions on the docket are the Ahr and Mosel (I headed straight to the latter on my first-ever visit to Europe in the 1980s), plus the Rheingau and the Pfalz, followed by a five-day journey through Bavaria, where some beer just might get sampled.

The tariff for this adventure is $6,500, which also includes everything except airfare to and from Germany. Again, check out Valqui’s Gourmet Tours website for a far more detailed description of the myriad wonderful things you’ll be seeing and tasting along the way. And, to learn more about his personal journey to Houston, here’s a link to an interview he did with highdrive.tv: https://www.highdrive.tv/businessmakers/pablo-valqui-gourmet-tours/

Sippin’ with Sporty

Rosé

2021 Maris – This delightful biodynamic Pays d’Oc pink was first introduced to me by a friend in France. Then damned if I didn’t find it on the shelf at Spec’s in Midtown – for only $14.99! Winemaker Robert Eden’s certified-organic grenache grapes are grown in the Languedoc-Roussillon and the wine is made in what the Englishman Eden, who took over the Maris property 20 years ago (chateaumaris.com), says is the only cellar anywhere constructed entirely with hemp blocks. Because of hemp’s geothermal properties, it doesn’t need a heating or cooling system, making the facility, which contains no plastic, paint or chemicals of any kind, not only energy self-sufficient but also one of the very few carbon-negative constructions in the world.


White

2021 Fiddlehead Cellars Grüner Veltliner – Austria meets the Santa Rita Hills in this relatively new white (second vintage) from Fiddlehead’s owner/winemaker Kathy Joseph. Fermented in a combination of French oak and stainless steel, it tastes of jasmine and white pepper an d couldn’t be more well-suited for summer sipping. Joseph is a for-real pioneer in the Santa Barbara area, where she was one of the first women winemakers, founding her winery (fiddleheadcellars.com) in 1989, originally focusing on site-driven pinot noir and sauvignon blanc. Today she she makes her many wines, which include several from Oregon’s Willamette Valley, in what she calls the Lompoc “wine ghetto” while running the business from more centrally located Davis.      

Red

2017 Newsom Vineyards Tempranillo Texas High Plains – Full discloser: This was a gift from Valqui, but it stands just fine on its own merits. Neal Newsom’s tempranillo vines were the first of the varietal to be planted in the state back in 2001 and they have certainly withstood the text of time. I think it’s Texas best across-the-board red grape period today and Newsom’s is a prime example of what it the grape has to offer, which is to say gobs of delicious red fruit. Newsom’s 148 vineyard acres near the New Mexico border are at 3,700 feet in elevation. Nineteen varietals are planted, supplying fruit to a dozen Texas wineries. The wine can be purchased for $34.95 online (newsomvineyards.com) or at the Newsom tasting room inside  The Empty Glass Texas Tasting Room & Wine Bar (theemptyglass.com) in Tomball. While I’m at it, I’d also like to give a hearty shout-out to Wedding Oak Winery for its 2019 Reserve Sangiovese, although that one is available only to Wedding Oak’s club members (weddingoakwinery.com). Consider joining just to get your hands on it!     

H-town Happenings

* Ninth Birthday Celebration – Camerata, Sunday, July 10. 4 p.m. until closing. 713 522-8466 or cameratahouston.com.

Follow me

* Podcast: Sporty Wine Guy

* Instagram: sportywineguy

* Twitter: @sportywineguy

* Facebook: Dale Robertson

Other folks to follow

* Sandra Crittenden (winelifehouston.com) – Sandra shares a piece she wrote for Galveston magazine breaking down Oregon wine country’s newly designated sub-regions.

Russ Kane (vintagetexas.com) – Russ touts his new Specialist of Texas wine certification class scheduled for mid-September and also announces that he’ll be offering a first-ever Level 2 Certification program this fall, now that there are almost 200 folks who have earned Level 1 certification.       

Jeff Kralik (thedrunkencyclist.com) – Jeff shares the story he wrote for the Fort Bend Focus on Ancient Peaks Winery in Paso Robles.

* Jeremy Parzen (dobianchi.com)  – My podcast partner in crime wants you to join him for upcoming events at the Boulder (Colorado) Wine Merchant on July 6 and for a Prosecco lecture/tasting at Fort Worth’s Amon Carter Museum on July 14. The latter happens to be his birthday, too, so there might be cake!    

* Katrina Rene (the corkscrew concierge) – Kat has seven rosés to try that she guarantees will make Houston’s summertime heat more sufferable.   

 

 

  

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