Perfect places to find the vino
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Stephen Santacroce
January and February are often slow months in the restaurant
business. Feeling guilty from the holiday excess at the table and the
mall, many diners opt to stay home to manage their waistlines and
their budgets.
The cooler winter weather also helps. There’s sometimes nothing
nicer than staying home in front of a fire, testing out the new
cookware that was a gift and opening a favorite bottle of wine.
The cooking part of a stay-at-home dinner is easy, at least when
it comes to the grocery shopping, but what about finding that perfect
bottle of wine to augment the kick-it-up dinner from your new Emeril
cookbook?
Luckily, Newport-Mesa residents have a good selection of wine
purveyors to satisfy their search for just the right bottle. And if
recent news stories are any indications, this could be the perfect
time to stock your cellar.
Articles in many wine magazines and even a front-page story in the
Los Angeles Times are heralding the end of the wine boom. Higher
priced wines are sitting on shelves as consumer pocketbooks reflect
the worsening economy. Wine prices, which became ridiculously
inflated during the late 1990s, are finally starting to approach
something that can be considered reasonable.
So this week, I’m going to take a break from restaurant reviews
and talk about some of the area’s better wine merchants.
Just about anyone living in Orange County who collects wines knows
that the granddaddy of all wine shops is Hi-Times Cellars in Costa
Mesa (250 Ogle St., Costa Mesa, [949] 650-7463). Boasting the largest
temperature-controlled retail wine cellar on the West Coast, Hi-Times
offers one of the largest selections of wines anywhere.
Walking into the large store, set behind a 17th Street shopping
mall, is like walking into an adult candy store. The first floor
houses several high-end specialty stores, including a chocolate shop
and a smoke shop featuring fine cigars stored in a walk-in humidor.
Diedrich’s coffee got its start here. I can still remember walking
in and smelling the enticing aroma of fresh-roasting coffee beans. In
addition to the specialty stores, the main level houses a full liquor
store with an extensive selection of spirits, including a large
selection of single malt scotches, small batch bourbons and rare
cognacs.
The real fun at Hi-Times starts when you walk downstairs. Most of
the basement floor is taken up by the store’s vast wine cellar. Step
through the glass doors into the temperature- and humidity-controlled
room, and you’ll be confronted by a multilevel array of wines from
all over the world.
The selection is logically arranged by country and then by wine
type, and if you can’t find a particular bottle here, you’ll be hard
pressed to find it anywhere else. Locked cages house bottles of older
and rare wines. Hi-Times’ collection is as impressive for its
vertical (same wines of different vintages) selections as it is for
its breadth of labels.
In addition to the comprehensive cellar, the basement floor also
sports a wine bar that hosts do-it-yourself tastings (patrons pour
tastes into marked glasses and keep a tally of their total), as well
as numerous special events. A sample of upcoming events includes a
tasting of ports (today, $40) and a sampling of the 2000 Bordeaux
(Jan. 23, $35).
On the reverse end of the intimacy scale is Overstreet Wine
Merchant at the corner of Via Lido and Via Opierto on the Balboa
Peninsula (3400 Via Lido, [949] 566-9463). Compared to the almost
supermarket atmosphere of Hi-Times, walking into Overstreet is like
walking in the library at a posh English country estate.
The store is anchored by the wine-tasting bar, which is done in
heavy oak, as are the tables and chairs that surround the bar. Old
English furnishings and family crests add to the comforting
atmosphere. Overstreet, like Hi-Time, features a temperature
controlled wine room that houses a selection focusing on European and
Californian wines.
Owners Dennis and Chris Overstreet opened their shop six months
ago, but have successfully run a similar store in Beverly Hills for
30 years. Dennis is passionate about his wines and wine drinking
(he’s written several books and numerous articles on the subject) and
loves nothing more than sitting with customers for a discussion of
the subject. The philosophy at Overstreet is that tasting is an
integral part of the wine buying experience, and the wine bar is open
until 11 p.m. most evenings, offering patrons samples of the store’s
collection. Special tastings are held periodically and the store also
offers for sale a selection of artesian cheeses and other specialty
food items.
Another smaller shop that specializes in smaller boutique
California wineries, as well as a growing selection of European
wines, is the Wine Gallery in Corona Del Mar (2411 E. Coast Highway,
[949] 675-3410). Owners Jeff Schroeder, Chris Olsen and James Huston
opened the store in October 1999 to offer customers a selection of
harder-to-find wines at reasonable prices. The Wine Gallery expects
to have its tasting license in a few months and will be building a
lounge below the main store to host tasting events.
Finally, if you’re the last-minute shopper who grabs his or her
wine along with the groceries for dinner, check out the wine
department at Bristol Farms (810 Avocado Ave., Newport Beach, [949]
760-6514). The upscale grocer offers a fairly extensive selection of
wines from all over the world at fairly reasonable prices, thanks to
their corporate purchasing power. The managers of the wine department
are knowledgeable about the wines and can offer good choices in any
price range to complement the evening’s dinner.
I’m particularly impressed by the strong cross-section of whites
and sparkling wines that are kept chilled for a truly last-minute
purchase. Bristol Farms also offers regular wine tastings. Call the
store for the current schedule.
True wine aficionados consider their hobby almost as a way of
life. Dennis Overstreet correctly noted that while you probably won’t
want to call your friends to tell them about the martini you had last
night, you would almost certainly make sure to share your experience
of a good bottle of wine.
Any of the stores mentioned here will offer ample choices to stock
a cellar, as well as the opportunity to increase one’s knowledge on
the vast subject of wine.
* STEPHEN SANTACROCE’S restaurant reviews appear every other
Thursday. Send him your comments at [email protected].
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