A red wine acting like Champagne? Jason Quinn of Playground has found it
Jason Quinn is chef/owner of Playground in downtown Santa Ana. In February he opened Playground 2.0 next door, which is really a pop-up space, he says, where it’s a different restaurant every night.
When I talked to him, that night 2.0 was called Mama Roux and serving Cajun and Creole food. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, it’s invitation only and prix-fixe. Quinn is always exploring wine matches with his ever-evolving menu. One wine that caught his fancy lately is Grotta del Sole Gragnano della Penisola Sorrentina.
“It’s a lightly sparkling red wine with just the perfect acidity to drink all day. I know it comes from the Naples area of Italy where it’s commonly served with pizza.” At 2.0, we were doing a dish called otokomaie — “acting like buffalo”— with a high-end Japanese tofu that had incredible texture, almost like bufala mozzarella. So we did tofu with 25-year-old balsamic vinegar, a beautiful olive oil and flake salt. And we served it with the Grotta del Sole Gragnano and called it “red wine acting like Champagne.”
That’s when I started drinking it all the time. If I were drinking a Cab, I could maybe have one or two glasses, but with this stuff, I could drink a bottle or two a night.
So it turns out there’s more to Italian frizzante wine than Lambrusco. There’s this weirdly intriguing red wine from Campania as well.
ALSO:
French wine in a can! And not just swill
A cool, refreshing Napa Valley red for LOLA’s Seth Cripe
Jancis Robinson on a Pinot Noir that makes you crave food
Twitter.com/sirenevirbila
More to Read
Eat your way across L.A.
Get our weekly Tasting Notes newsletter for reviews, news and more.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.