Desert Island Wine... Pink Sunshine! âIf you were stranded on a desert island and only had time to grab one case of wine before your ship sank, what would it be?â Though an unlikely scenario, I ask this question of almost every potential employee of RSV. As bizarre as it may seem, it reveals much about an individualâs food and wine knowledge and if their philosophy is simpatico with RSV. Some might choose what many wine writers have deemed the greatest wine of all time - the 1947 Cheval Blanc. Choosing to be stuck on an island with your only beverage being this powerful (and well aged) Right Bank Bordeaux might score some points for wine trivia knowledge; it reveals this candidate needs work on their food and wine philosophy. Letâs have a reality check. As great as this wine may be, it isnât going to go well with your foraged fruits and roots⊠and the protein you might be lucky to find on land, or spear or net from the ocean, isnât going to be the most enjoyable⊠a true first-world problem! And its auction value of many thousands of dollars wonât help on an uninhabited island. I guess one could use the bottles to write SOS on the beach and hope a well heeled yachtster sniffs it out. At one time, I probably would have said Pinot Noir was my preferred desert island wine as it can go with the birds you might be lucky enough to dispatch, yet it can also work with fish and roots one might have to survive on. But it is still not ideal. Then, when we started to make Abraxas, that became my choice as the aromatic white blend would work with just about everything. But what about the Vin Gris of Pinot Noir? It has enough oomph to work with the heartier fare one might find running on or flying around an island, yet it has the aromatic qualities that can go with the roots and some of the fruits - and itâs definitely delicious with the fish, molluscs, crustaceans, cephalopods and even the seaweed that can be found in the sea. Most people think of rosĂ© as a summer wine. I could not disagree more. It is an anytime wine. Of course I love it at summer picnics at the beach, but it is also delicious apres-ski with raclette or, more simply, a good soup and a grilled cheese sandwich after a hard day on the back forty. It is a refreshing contrast for just about any food and it can bring a little sunshine to the grayest of days. The Vin Gris of Pinot Noir is the perfect desert island wine no matter what season finds you stranded on your own private island.













