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Frontier Red, Lot 82
Multi-vintage
California
Fess Parker Winery
• Suggested retail and availability: $10 at wine, liquor and specialty grocers (distributed by Pure Wine Co., Burr Ridge)
In the 1950s, Fess Parker invested his fame earned from TV roles Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone into the purchase of 700 acres in Santa Ynez Valley. Today, the Parker family produces a wide range of wine including Frontier Red, an all-American that borrows the Old World model of blending vineyards, grapes, even vintages to achieve delicious flavor at value prices year after year. Syrah, Grenache and Mourvedre grapes contribute spiciness with plush berry flavors pumped up by California sunshine. Add a sprinkle of chocolate and a dash of smoke and you've got a mouthful of flavor to serve with red meats and the richest poultry and veggie dishes.
Before your grill begins to sizzle with the best burger of the summer, pour yourself a red that's as big and beefy as the burger itself.
Save your Grand Cru Bordeaux, Riserva Chianti and high-priced Napa Cab for a hoitier-toitier meal.
These refined flavors will get lost in a burger's ketchup-mustard-onion-pickle-relish complexity.
Choose instead a wine with full-volume fruit, such as red Zin (Dancing Bull, $12) or Petit Sirah (de Bortoli, $10) to enrich any condiment you pile on the bun.
For an extra dash of pepper, select a Rhone-style red, whether from France (Guigal Cotes du Rhone, $15), the U.S. (see Ross' choice), Spain (Castano Monastrell, $12) or Oz (Peter Lehmann's Clancy's, $15.) For more meaty flavor, turn to southern Italian styles, such as Donnafungata's Nero d'Avola ($12.)
This is one meal you needn't worry about a wine's high alcohol or tannin; they'll simply serve as a gustatory paper towel and sop up your burger's drip-down-the-chin juiciness.
If you must dress up the meal, serve the American classic Brown Derby Hamburger with a well-crafted yet exuberant red like Clos du Val's Cabernet Sauvignon ($35.)
I can almost taste it now.
I'll fire up the grill. You open the wine.
• Advanced Sommelier and Certified Wine Educator Mary Ross writes Good Wine. Contact her at food@dailyherald.com.
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