Read the wine list at any high-end restaurant in Manhattan and
you'll get a good idea of the wine director's likes and dislikes, and
perhaps a hint of what kind of food is being conjured in the kitchen.
The wine list at Capsouto Frères, the breezily elegant TriBeCa
restaurant, however, could be interpreted as a compact biography of its
creator, Jacques Capsouto,
who, along with his brothers Albert and Samuel, in 1980 installed the
restaurant in a remote, former spice warehouse at the corner of Watts
and Washington streets.
Jacques and his brothers were born into a French-speaking Jewish family in Alexandria, Egypt, fled in 1957 to Lyon, France,
after the Suez War, and then immigrated to New York City four years
later. Fittingly, the Capsouto Frères wine list is made up of bottles
from only three countries: France, America, and Israel.
American and French wines can be found in almost every restaurant
cellar in town, of course. It is Mr. Capsouto's collection of Israeli
wines that has caught the attention of critics and imbibers. He doesn't
just have a token red and a token white, as is often the case. His
150-bottle selection includes 20 wines from Israel, such as a Yarden
Brut Blanc De Blanc sparkler and a Yarden muscat sweet wine, as well as
a Dalton sauvignon blanc and Yarden Merlot. (In case you haven't
noticed yet, Jacques Capsouto is a passionate advocate of Yarden, whose
role in the Israeli wine boom he likens to that of Robert Mondavi
Winery in California.)
"I actually had a Yarden on the list, a chardonnay, when it came to
the New York market in the early '80s," Mr. Capsouto, who still retains
an Old World accent and a certain air of charming Weltzschmertz to go
with it, said. But it wasn't until a 2004 trip to Israel — his first in
decades — that he discovered the strides the country's wine industry
had taken in recent years.
When Mr. Capsouto talks of Israeli wine, he talks of "two
evolutions." The first was spurred on by Edmond Benjamin James de
Rothschild, a Zionist member of the famous French wine family, who
traveled in the 1890s to Palestine and began buying plots of land from
the Turks. The acres, mostly along the coast, were then given to local
farmers, who planted vines. (Carmel was one of the wineries born at
this time.) The second big movement came during the 1980s and continues
to this day, paralleling similar drives toward higher quality wine in
other countries across the world. Among the newer, generally smaller
Israeli wineries now garnering praise and attention are Margalit,
Domaine du Castel, and Bazelet ha Golan.
Mr. Capsouto
makes it clear that, by supporting the country's vineyards, he's
expressing his enthusiasm for the region's wines, not the particular
style of wine for which that region is best known. "I'm representing
Israeli wines," he said. "I'm not representing kosher wines." He points
out that a number of the Israeli bottles on the list bear no hecksher,
or kosher certification. "Of the boutique wineries in Israel, about 70
to 80% are not kosher."
The restaurant isn't the first business to bear the name Capsouto
Frères. A sign with that legend once hung above a small women's
accessories shop in Alexandria.
It was run by the siblings' father and his brothers, who specialized in
such delicate sartorial luxuries as silk stockings and scarves.
"When we were opening the restaurant, we were trying to come up with
a name," Mr. Capsouto said. "My mother came out with this picture of
the store and said, 'Why don't you call the restaurant Capsouto
Frères?' That's why it's called Capsouto Frères instead of Watts on
Washington." Black-and-white shots of the old shop now sit on a table
near the restaurant's entrance; the store's wares are advertised on the
façade in English, French, and Arabic.
Another bottle on the Capsouto Frères list betrays yet another
chapter in the family's story. It's a wine from Gundlach Bundschu, a
Sonoma Valley winery with an unwieldy Germanic name and a long history.
"Seven or eight years ago, the Bundschu family was looking at their
records and they were trying to figure out where their New York
warehouse had been," Mr. Capsouto said. "They had abandoned the
warehouse after the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco, when their winery
got burned." The ancestors of Bundschu (a Bundschu married Gundlach
daughter, thus the name) came to Jacques armed with a couple of
king-size blow-ups of old documents and the conviction that the home of
Capsouto Frères was none other than their long-lost warehouse. One of
the documents was an etching of the 1891 landmark neo-Flemish building.
Albert Capsouto pointed out a horse and cart laden with boxes in the
foreground of the picture. "That looks like wine to me," Albert said.
Jacques Capsouto was convinced enough to host a tasting that
re-introduced Gundlach Bundschu to the New York market a few years ago.
He also put one of their wines on his list. Was he, perhaps, being
sentimental? He pursed his lips ever so slightly, and replied: "If it
wasn't good, I wouldn't put it on the list."