Archive for May, 2008

Intellectualizing Wine…Just Do It!

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Golf_ball
My golf coach recently confirmed what I think I already knew: “Tom, you’ve got to get out of your head.”

Translation: my proclivity to live in my head and to think too much interrupts my need to execute really well a body-driven activity on the golf course.

Thinking about my coach′s advice with regard to golfing, I realized that I’m going to have to work very hard to accommodate him, because I’ve always found much more pleasure in intellectualizing what I do than simply doing.

Wine and drinking is a perfect example. I can’t stand the idea of simply drinking a glass of wine and just letting it flow down my throat, letting the droplets fall where they may without thought. I NEED to think about what I’m doing.

Even today as I heard reports about the coming warm weather later this week and into the weekend, I immediately began thinking about drinking Pastis by the pool. But it’s not enough that I think about that pleasurable moment in the future, note that I’m looking forward to it and move on until I pour my Pernod on Saturday. No, Tom needs to think about the what this coming Pernod Moment means, what it reminds him of, what it says about the changing seasons, how best to enjoy that coming moment. And I’m not talking practical considerations. I need to think about what it means.

It’s a nasty affliction I have, this over thinking things, because it clearly prevents me from becoming a more accomplished Golfer. But I think it’s only a case of being a nasty affliction where physical activity is concerned, not where drinking is concerned.

If you don’t think about your wine (or drink) when you drink it, then it merely becomes and alcohol delivery vehicle. When you think about the drink, at least you have the opportunity to be a contemplative drunk, if not more.

But it’s really the traditions that have grown up around the production of wine and wine’s incorporation into local cultures that have made it the heady, intellectual libation it is today for many. Wine can be a cultural translation tool that happens to also make one wobbly. Any Culture, remember, is an entirely mental construct that starts with language, is grounded to territory and is at its best when translated for those who reside outside of it. All this happens in the mind. Wine is a near perfect translation tool.

It seems to me that to simply gulp the stuff is to negate the higher purpose that wine can serve. This notion might appeal to some as placing wine on a pedestal too high. I can see that view. But I can’t accept it. The fact that wine provides a marvelous springboard to contemplating people, places, dirt, history and taste makes it particularly worthy of being on a pedestal.

Now, my golf swing is another thing entirely. No pedestal for it. No explaining its often absurd lines either. Perhaps if I can learn to leave my head behind as I swing a club, it will create more room inside there for indulging in the pleasures of the mind where wine is concerned.




Original post by Tom Wark

An Object Lesson

Monday, May 12th, 2008

If you ever wanted an object lesson in the "Blinders On" mentality that results when a state controls and restricts consumers’ access to wine, all you have to do is read THIS STORY in the Salt Lake City Tribune on ordering wine direct through the state run system that turned into a 5 month odyssey of frustration and surrealism.

The report begins by noting that Utahans often order one of the tens of thousands of wines the Utah state system doesn′t list in inventory from on-line sources then have it shipped to Wyoming, where they go pick it up and drive it back home. Yes, this is illegal, but it turns out it’s really the Utahans only choice is they want to access wine that the good Utah government regulators don′t choose to bring into the state.

But no worries. This illegal activity isn’t necessary: &quotUnder Utah law, consumers
may special order wine, liquor or heavy beer that isn’t one of the
4,000-plus offerings on the state’s listing, says John Freeman, DABC
operations director.&quot

The reporter did just this. He wanted to get his hands on two bottles of Quivera Zinfandel from Dry Creek Valley.

He ordered it through the state in November 2007. He got it in May 2008. You’ve got to read this story.

The really ugly part is that were rational wine shipping laws in place in Utah, the reporter could have ordered his wine from any of more than 20 different on-line wine merchants and had it shipped to him within 3 or 4 days of ordering it.

I’m not one of those Small Government, Conservative kind a guys. But when you read this sort of thing you  really start to understand where those folks are coming from when they claim that if you want something screwed up and as inefficient as possible, just give it over to the government to do.

Original post by Tom Wark

Bloggerview # 19: Peter Liem

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Bloggerview #19

Who: Peter Liem

Blog: Besotted Ramblings and Other Drivel

Where: http://www.peterliem.com

Peter_liem
Peter Liem is the second Wine & Spirits Magazine writer to take up blogging, beating his colleague Wolfgang Weber to the punch by a couple months. Peter’s personal blog, Besotted Ramblings and Other Drivel, has a certain derogatory ring to it, but please don′t let this fool you. Peter is W&ampS’s Senior Correspondent based in Champagne, giving him a unique and insider perspective particularly on the European wine scene. I learned about Peter’s Blog from Brooklyn Wine Guy who highly recommended it and I was not disappointed. Peter’s Besotted Ramblings are likely the best source of information on the Champagne wine region and Champagne the product on the net. It’s an education in the waiting. Peter was kind enough to agree to be Bloggerviewed.

1. When did you begin blogging and why?

I started my blog in November of 2007, mostly because I was living halfway around the world from the majority of my friends, and it was an easy way to stay connected. It

Uncorked! Wine Festival at Ghirardelli Square

Monday, May 12th, 2008

This is a wine tasting like no other that I’ve attended in San Francisco, with a very festive “street faire” feeling throughout the entire event.

Perhaps that’s because it’s happening in San Francisco’s highly visible Ghirardelli Square, where people come from all around the world. Attendees may not have known about the event prior to, but they become instantly attracted by its potential simply because they’re visiting this area. Others return because it’s a great way to taste lots of California wine without have to travel any further than their own back yard.

All of this adds to an international feeling. I’ve enjoyed the diversity in the past, and look forward to another “San Francisco Day.” (This atmosphere is one of the reasons I moved from Maine to California.)

It’s right in Ghirardelli Street Square. What could be more fun?

I’ve poured at this one in the past, and am eager to return. My crew and I will be pouring with and for (alphabetically) Alhona Vineyards, Big House wines, Black Coyote Chateau, and Foppiano Vineyards.

Uncorked! Wine Festival at Ghirardelli Square, In partnership with COPIA
Saturday, May 17 1:00-6:00pm

Experience the ambience of the waterfront and entertainment along Beach Street and throughout Ghirardelli Square’s courtyards, while you enjoy tastings from over 50 Northern California wineries. Experience chef demonstrations, wine education seminars, and gourmet food sampling.

The event is free and open to the public; however, tickets are required to participate in wine tasting. Tickets are $40 in advance/$45 at the door. Tickets and more information are available now at www.GhirardelliSQ.com.

Original post by Jo Diaz

War of the sexes comes to wine (Miami Herald)

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Sommelier Marnie Old and brewer Sam Calagione have a long-standing, friendly rivalry: She thinks wine is the best beverage to drink with food he thinks it’s beer.

Original post by Craig Camp

Study highlights huge potential for wine in pubs (Publican)

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Licensees are failing to maximise wine sales, according to research from the Wine and Spirit Trade Association (WSTA). The trade body said that there was

Wine festival celebrates moms (Idaho Press-Tribune)

Monday, May 12th, 2008

CANYON COUNTY — The Sawtooth Winery has been holding its Mother’s Day Wine Festival for so long that winemaker Brad Pintler’s own mom — who used to co-own the winery — has taken a break from attending.”Mom and Dad owned the winery with me and they came to about the first 15 years,” Pintler said. “I think Mom’s probably enjoying relaxing this year.”But for the rest of the family and a …

Original post by Craig Camp

Kiwanis plan wine-tasting fundraiser (Kirkwood-Webster Journal)

Monday, May 12th, 2008

The Glendale-Kirkwood Kiwanis will host its fourth annual fundraiser, “Spring into Summer!” a wine tasting event from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday, May 16, at Grapevine Wines, 309 S. Kirkwood Road.

Original post by Craig Camp

Meteor Vineyard, Napa: Debut Releases

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Barry Schuler may know a thing or two about running multi-billion dollar technology companies, but what he really wants to talk about, given the chance, is food and wine. The former CEO of AOL, Schuler often gets credited along with Steve Case (who preceded Schuler as CEO) for the company’s success in the late Nineties. But while his colleagues and most of America’s top technology executives were returning home at the end of their long days to comfortable suburbs near major metropolitan areas, at the end of the week Schuler was making his way back to Napa, California. Schuler may have been one of the country’s top technology executives, but now he spends as much time thinking about wine as he does anything else.

Schuler says that he can remember wanting to live in Napa as early as the age of 18. In addition to dabbling in photography and filmmaking as a teenager, he says, “I was really into cooking. And drinking.” His obsession with food and wine, led him to the altar of Alice Waters′ restaurant Chez Panisse, which he visited for the first time in 1974 on the pretense of considering a graduate degree at UC Berkeley. Instead of attending his interviews and exploring the campus, however, Schuler dined at Chez Panisse, and meteor_vineyard.jpgdrove to Napa, where he spent days wandering around in a daze. “It was like mecca,” he says, “like I was hit by a lighting bolt. It truly was amazing. I decided then and there that I had to figure out how to live [in Napa] someday.”

By his own account, Schuler spent the next 15 years “chasing French wine” and working out the math that would get him back to the Napa valley. While he wasn’t in his own kitchen dreaming of his future Napa estate, Schuler was busy making a name for himself in the emerging world of digital interactive media. He founded an early advertising agency to serve the emerging home and business computing market, then ran one of the first successful Macintosh software companies, and finally ended up founding an interactive design agency called Medior, with several colleagues, including Tracy Goldman, who is now his wife.

Schuler finally moved to Napa in 1989, settling closer to the town of Napa than to the centers of culinary and wine activity farther up the valley, because he was attracted to the change he saw underway in and around the city of Napa. “It was a train wreck in those days,” says Schuler, but he saw something of a diamond in the rough in the scrabbly area to the east and north of town known as Coombsville. When he finally decided he wanted a bit of land on which he might one day plant some grapes, “mostly just to sell, I was thinking,” he says, “I started looking in Coombsville.” Good lots were not immediately forthcoming, so Schuler would spend several years poking around the area until in 1998, when someone told him that a 35 acre parcel was due to be sold in the area, and that he might want to take a look at it.

After rounding the shoulder of the hill and seeing the view of a green cow pasture roll out from underneath the mossy shade of oaks all the way to the San Francisco Bay in the distance, Schuler purchased the property on the spot, thinking he’d figure out whether it could grow grapes later.

What Schuler ended up with is an interesting geologic and climatologic anomaly in the region. The hilltop of ash and clay soil is layered thinly on a deep base of round river stones, and sits up higher than most surrounding points in the traditionally cooler region of Napa. This makes the property a little island of heat that misses much of the fog influence that creeps up from neighboring Carneros and the wind patterns that sweep through the rest of the region, which is a pending AVA (American Viticultural Area) under the name Tulocay.

With the help of vineyard consultant Michael Wolf, close friends Bill and Dawnine Dyer, (of Dyer Vineyards) and friend Tony Soter (of Etude Wines) set about carefully establishing their 22 acre vineyard, still with the idea that they’d sell the grapes, and perhaps make just a tiny bit of wine for themselves. After some struggles, the vineyard began yielding grapes in 2003, and by the time the 2004 grapes were going into bottle, it was clear that the fruit was on track to being exceptional. The folks who had purchased the initial lots of grapes were clamoring for more, and new requests were constantly being made.

“At that point,” says Schuler, “we couldn’t resist.” Barry and Tracy enlisted the Dyers to make them 40 cases of wine from the 2004 harvest, and asked them to become the official winemaking team for their first commercial release in 2005. For the name of their project they selected a rephrasing of Medior, the company that had brought them together, and arguably made possible the fulfillment of Barry’s teenage dreams. For their label they chose the silhouette of the solitary, ancient oak tree that anchors the center of their vineyards.

Most of Meteor Vineyard‘s grapes are still sold to select wineries around the valley, but the family holds back enough fruit to make about 700 cases of their estate Cabernet, and about 90 cases of their Special Family Reserve, which represents the best barrels from each vintage.

TASTING NOTES:
2004 Meteor Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon, Coombsville/Tulocay, Napa
Medium to dark garnet in color, this wine has a perky nose of nutty, cherry aromas that are tinged with hints of tobacco and anise. In the mouth its initial impression is of brightness and good acidity, with earthier flavors of tobacco, leather, cherry, and a hint of “stemmy” green wood that doesn′t keep the wine from being tasty. Score: around 9. This wine is not commercially available.


2005 Meteor Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon, Coombsville/Tulocay, Napa

Medium to dark garnet in the glass, this wine bursts from the glass with bright cherry and chocolate aromas that are followed rapidly with sweet tobacco and vanilla scents. In the mouth it is silky, even sexy, on the tongue, with a nice weight to it. The wine is juicy, with acidity that might even be slightly too sharp in comparison to the rest of the beautiful lush cherry and cedar fruits that mingle with pipe tobacco to finish with great length and satisfaction. I would expect this wine to smooth out in the next year or so in the bottle, and continue to improve for several more. Score: between 9 and 9.5. Cost: $225.

2005 Meteor Vineyard “Special Family Reserve” Cabernet Sauvignon, Coombsville/Tulocay, Napa
Medium to dark garnet in color, this wine smells of tobacco, earth, and cocoa powder. In the mouth it displays a deeper earthy quality than the label’s primary release. Nicely balanced flavors of cherry and wet earth, with hints of blue fruit, sit poised on the tongue, nicely balanced for a finish that feels like a leisurely backstroke in a placid pool, as the wine slinks and slips down the palate. Score: between 9 and 9.5. Cost: $300.

The 2005 vintage will be available for purchase starting at some point in the next couple of months. Interested parties can sign up for the winery’s mailing list on their web site.

I also had the opportunity to taste several clonal selections from different blocks of the vineyard, vintage 2007, that will soon be blended. These samples displayed a broad range of deep, complex fruit that are showing their first incarnations in the wines above. The clone 7 cabernet fruit was classically Cabernet Sauvignon — cherry with hints of stem tannins. The Clone 4 fruit was deep and earthy, with notes of slate and graphite aromas and spicy flavors of espresso and orange rind. Finally the clone 337 was an impressive, powerful luge-run of cherry fruit that nearly knocked my socks off. There are clearly many good things to come from Meteor.

Original post by Vinography: A Wine Blog

First Wine Produced from Eagle Foothills Uncorked (Fox 12 Idaho)

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

The first estate grown bottle of wine produced from grapes grown in the Eagle foothills was uncorked Saturday afternoon.

Original post by Craig Camp

Daniel Vineyards hosts

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

For only the second time in 18 years, Dr. C. Richard Daniel hosted a two-day

Brand Matters: The Whining About Wine Is Intoxicating (South African Wine News)

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Much is being made of “The Wine Trials”, to be published this month by Fearless Critic Media , along with recent studies about consumer psychology that says we consumers are nothing but rubes and idiots when it comes to packaging and ads.

Original post by Craig Camp

Wine market losing its sparkle (News Interactive)

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

THE world’s love affair with Australian wine may be over, with export figures showing an unexpected slump in sales, prompting the biggest shake-up to the export industry in more than a decade.

Original post by Craig Camp

Best Wine Blog Posts for May 5th through May 11th

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Best of the wine blogosphere for May 5th through May 11th:

Beaux Vin

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

beaux vyrd pinot 06 Oregon’s Beaux Frères is not only making some of America’s finest pinot noirs, but is also that most rare of things: a winery with courage. Vintage after vintage winemaker Michael Etzel shows the courage of his convictions and produces dramatically distinctive wines with a personality all their own. Some dismiss the success of Beaux Frères as mostly due to the fame of Etzel’s brother-in-law, famed wine critic and publisher of The Wine Advocate, Robert Parker, but considering the stunning quality of these wines I can’t help but believe they would still be sought out by collectors everywhere with or without Parker’s impact.

While a bevy of authors have pilloried Robert Parker for dragging the wine industry down the road of standardized, jammy wines, his own winery is the polar opposite. The Beaux Frères Pinot Noirs are tight, structured wines with a decided spritz from natural CO2 when young. That’s right they’re a little fizzy. These are truly natural wines and the little spritz is a result of the natural, cool slow malolatic fermentation practiced by Etzel. None of their wines is manipulated to make them ready to drink young and even the precocious 2006 vintage produced wines that need a minimum of several years of bottle age to unfurl their now tightly wound personality. These are wines that do not try to mimic Burgundy, but that set their own unique style, both as Oregonian and an expression of Etzel’s winemaking art.

The current release of 2006 Beaux Frères Pinot Noir, The Beaux Frères Vineyard, Ribbon Ridge is nothing short of exciting. In his notes Etzel describes this wine as, "a beauty and can be drunk young." However, he must mean in relation to his wines from previous vintages as compared to other 2006 Oregon pinots this wine far from being ready to drink. The nose is already exotic with layers of black truffle, porcini and dense, black wild forest fruits, but it is not yet resolved and you can just sense the greatness that is to come as the components intertwine and integrate. The wine hits your tongue with a thousand tiny little bites from the firm acidity and the slight spritz of the CO2, but then quickly expands dramatically into the voluptuous textures you would expect from this forward vintage. What strikes you as you taste and smell this wine is the endless swirling of exotic characteristics that make the wine change from second-to-second as you savor each sip. If you must drink this wine now, please give it at least an hour in a decanter before serving. However, at $80 a bottle you may want to give it the respect it deserves and wait at least five years before releasing the treasure inside.

Beaux Frères produces wines of great integrity and character because they are made by a winemaker with the same attributes. Mike Etzel makes what he believes. These are wines that must be on anyone’s list of the best American pinot noirs.

 

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Original post by Craig Camp

Vintner Mom Patty Bogle Turns Mother’s Day Around

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Happy Mothers Day to all of you who are mothers, grandmothers, and great grandmother… The heart of our lives!

On Mother’s Day, it is we who usually thank our mothers.

In this rare instance, I just read my friend Patty Bogle’s Web posting, which turns it all around…thanking her children on her “Care Page.”

If you’re not familiar with Care Pages, it’s a web based community for those coping with illness. Having found her perfect donor match, this past April Patty Bogle received stem cell replant. Because this wonderful mother and grandmother is dear to my heart, I’ve been following her journey, once I learned about this Internet path. The Internet has changed our world in so many positive ways, and this is one of them.

If you you’d like to connect with Patty, here’s the link to Care Page.

Care Pages

Once there, in the upper right hand corner, click on “Visit,” and you’ll be directed to a new page where you can search on Patty’s name and sign up to visit her page. Then, you can communicate with her, too.

Patty posts messages to those of us who care, and we post back. She’s not walking through this chapter of her life alone… So many people are sending her messages of love and encouragement in this most courageous time of her life.

If you know anyone coping with illness, please encourage him or her to use Care Pages, because it’s a way to keep in contact with the ones we love when they’re so far away and can’t be reached by ordinary means.

Here’s how Patty pre-thought her Mother’s Day for this year. She’s an inspiration for us all.

Hello from Patty in Houston, May 8
I’m sorry that it has been so long since we have updated the webpage. Transplant is a long process and very day to day. For the most part I have done very well, I did get a little Graft vs Host disease in my GI tract which they are dealing with, and yet a little Graft vs Host is considered a good sign as long as it does not get out of control or last too long. So I am still in the hospital and continue to thank you for your prayers and support. I did want to take this time to thank everyone who has kept everything going at home during this long battle. The winery had a great first quarter—oops I may obsolete myself—but it is really due to the fact that our longtime employees in production, sales and accounting have always been our secret weapon and the key to our success. Those of you who have been to the winery over the years know many of them and know how wonderful they are. The second key has been my kids who have really stepped up to fill my leadership role at the winery. Warren has added to the huge responsibility of the vineyards and the birth of his first baby—Caden Christopher born on April 5. Jody has her many winery PR duties, export program, and winery club, plus Abby almost 3, and her many visits to me to act as my caregiver in Houston have been exhausting I know. Ryan has been at the winery since my illness working with Controller Brian Wilkinson in the accounting department and Marc Battaglia, our CPA, as well has coming to Houston to visit me when needed as well. These three are acting in my place to oversee winery ownership during my illness and they are doing a great job. It is a huge change for both staff and the kids and I appreciate everyone’s dedication to keeping the winery a place we can all be so proud of. Thank you. I did want to also thank my daughter Kelly. As most of you know, Kelly has twin three year old daughters, which is a monumental job. While she is not active in the winery, she has visited; she has been doing a wonderful job with the kids and keeps in close contact with me which raises my spirits immeasurably. Seeing your children become parents is a wonderful thing—especially when you see them doing their parenting with more patience and more intelligence than you think you probably had when you did !! So Happy Mothers Day to Stephanie, Jody, Kelly, and Becci Roncoroni for doing a great job with our grandchildren that bring us such joy. Thanks as always for the support and I hope the in near future to be able to get out of the hospital and continue my recuperation and final journey home to kids, grandkids, winery and of course all our friends in the wonderful Delta and Woodland areas. Patty & Ernie, Houston

[The image above has Patty in the center, and her friend Ernie is on the right. This image was taken during the Masters of Petite Sirah event held last November at Markham Vineyards in St. Helena.]

Original post by Jo Diaz

Vintner Mom Patty Bogle Turns Mother

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Happy Mothers Day to all of you who are mothers, grandmothers, and great grandmother… The heart of our lives!

On Mother’s Day, it is we who usually thank our mothers.

In this rare instance, I just read my friend Patty Bogle’s Web posting, which turns it all around…thanking her children on her “Care Page.”

If you’re not familiar with Care Pages, it’s a web based community for those coping with illness. Having found her perfect donor match, this past April Patty Bogle received stem cell replant. Because this wonderful mother and grandmother is dear to my heart, I’ve been following her journey, once I learned about this Internet path. The Internet has changed our world in so many positive ways, and this is one of them.

If you you’d like to connect with Patty, here’s the link to Care Page.

Care Pages

Once there, in the upper right hand corner, click on “Visit,” and you’ll be directed to a new page where you can search on Patty’s name and sign up to visit her page. Then, you can communicate with her, too.

Patty posts messages to those of us who care, and we post back. She’s not walking through this chapter of her life alone… So many people are sending her messages of love and encouragement in this most courageous time of her life.

If you know anyone coping with illness, please encourage him or her to use Care Pages, because it’s a way to keep in contact with the ones we love when they’re so far away and can’t be reached by ordinary means.

Here’s how Patty pre-thought her Mother’s Day for this year. She’s an inspiration for us all.

Hello from Patty in Houston, May 8
I

Vintner Mom Patty Bogel Turns Mother

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Happy Mothers Day to all of you who are mothers, grandmothers, and great grandmother… The heart of our lives!

On Mother’s Day, it is we who usually thank our mothers.

In this rare instance, I just read my friend Patty Bogle’s Web posting, which turns it all around…thanking her children on her “Care Page.”

If you’re not familiar with Care Pages, it’s a web based community for those coping with illness. Having found her perfect donor match, this past April Patty Bogle received stem cell replant. Because this wonderful mother and grandmother is dear to my heart, I’ve been following her journey, once I learned about this Internet path. The Internet has changed our world in so many positive ways, and this is one of them.

If you you’d like to connect with Patty, here’s the link to Care Page.

Care Pages

Once there, in the upper right hand corner, click on “Visit,” and you’ll be directed to a new page where you can search on Patty’s name and sign up to visit her page. Then, you can communicate with her, too.

Patty posts messages to those of us who care, and we post back. She’s not walking through this chapter of her life alone… So many people are sending her messages of love and encouragement in this most courageous time of her life.

If you know anyone coping with illness, please encourage him or her to use Care Pages, because it’s a way to keep in contact with the ones we love when they’re so far away and can’t be reached by ordinary means.

Here’s how Patty pre-thought her Mother’s Day for this year. She’s an inspiration for us all.

Hello from Patty in Houston, May 8
I

A corking scandal in the wine world (New York Daily News)

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Perhaps the best analysis of “The Billionaire’s Vinegar” comes from one of Will Smith’s partners in optioning the film rights. As he said: “For me, the movie is the unraveling of a mystery that comes down to a guy who punked the wine world.”

Original post by Craig Camp

Put A Cork In It?

Saturday, May 10th, 2008

Fewer sales reps are more paranoid these days than cork salespeople. They barrage you with emails damning all other types of closures. At trade shows they meet winemakers with frigid stares that have changed over from cork to something else.

The battle is fully engaged on what is the best closure for a wine bottle and as always, in the heat of battle there is often more confusion than fact. Much as a war correspondent sees through the smoke of conflict, writer George Taber has cut through all the brouhaha to offer us a clear look at the cork conflict in his book, To Cork or Not to Cork: Tradition, Romance, Science and The Battle for the Wine Bottle. Taber is also the author of Judgment of Paris, which is bound for the big Hollywood screen. The journalistic temperament that Taber brings to his book, a rarity in wine writing, should be no surprise as he is a twenty-one year veteran of Time Magazine.

The combat is about the dreaded TCA (2,4,6 trichloroanisole) that destroys anywhere (depending on whose giving the stats) from 3% to 15% or so of every bottle of wine sealed with a cork in the world. These are the so called “corked” bottles as wines spoiled by TCA have a distinct musty character that can range from the wine seeming just not quite right, to bottles that almost make you gag. What makes TCA the nightmare of winemakers it that most affected bottles are consumed by unsuspecting consumers that are unaware the the wines are actually spoiled, instead thinking that whatever the winery is just doesn’t make very good wine. This dramatic rate of failure combined with disastrous PR has turned many wineries away from natural cork to closures like screwcaps, crown caps and glass stoppers.

To Cork or Not to Cork is a must read for wine professionals and aficionados alike. Don’t expect to have the best closure revealed in the last chapter as Taber presents the whole story without judgment as you would expect from someone with his journalistic credentials.

As Taber points out, all closures currently in use have potential issues so the jury is still out and the closure of the future probably is not invented yet. My major issue with many cork fundamentalists is the constant reference to the tradition of cork and the romance of the ritual and sound of pulling a cork. Screw tradition, the argument should always be about wine quality not superficial issues like romance. What’s romantic about a corked bottle of $50 wine?

Perhaps in the end the solution will be different closures for different wines. After all, cabernet sauvignon and pinot noir age very differently and what is good for one may not be good for the other. Put a cork in it? The answer seems to be sometimes yes and sometimes no. Whatever happens in the future, the century old monopoly of the cork is over.

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Original post by Craig Camp

The Artful Side of Being on the Road and in the Air

Saturday, May 10th, 2008

Loving to travel is in my DNA so is being a photographer. At the age of 10, I asked my grandfather for a camera. I got (and still have) my first Eastman Kodak Brownie. It’s long since operative, but it’s a constant reminder of knowing who to ask for what.

Going to the Florida Winefest meant that I’d have my own downtime for images that would have nothing whatsoever to do with the event, but would be fun weekend fodder.

I love aerial shots, almost as much as I love sitting in the aisle seat. Not having arranged for my seats this time, I was issued window seats coming and going from San Francisco to Tampa, and then back again on the return flight.

This year’s event was held at the Ritz Carlton in Sarasota. In the lobby, where all of the activity was in a constant hustle-bustle, quietly stood Andy Warhol… Observing, with his arms crossed. This figure was so quiet and so lifelike that my husband Jose completely missed him. Honestly, in the four days were were there, I didn’t see another single soul stand there in awe. He was just too lifelike, and no one had him on his or her brain. There stood Andy, quietly in a corner, arms crossed, freaking me out every time I looked at him. It was so uncanny to have something so surreal be so real. Art at its best for me.

Every year, the Florida Winefest commissions an artist to create their annual logo. As a thank you to the vintners who have come to pour, the organizers give the wine representatives a porcelain plate with annual number (18th this year), the commissioned art in the center, date, etc. This year’s creation was done by Craig Rubadoux. For me, this one’s the best so far, because is says it all. I end up loving each year as it goes along, regardless of “best representation.” At the time it is the best representation. This one, however, is going to be a really hard act to follow. It’s so passionate.

In the wine business, we throw the word “passion” around like it’s a sting of beads on Bourbon Street during Mardi Gras. Every thing’s so passionate; from the people who are born into or get into the business, to the people who are making, selling, marketing the wine; right down to the consumers who are enjoying the wine. Is there any other business where there’s so much passion all along the chain?

I love art that just cracks me up… This one is right on the corner of North Tamiami and North Gulf Stream Avenue. It’s called “Dance” and is a Dustin Shuler sculpture. After I had photographed this, I stood on the busy intersection, camera around my neck waiting for a signal so I could cross the street and return to the Ritz (I’d slipped away unnoticed to get this provocative shot), when a guy rolled down his window and shouted to me, “Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,” over his child sitting in the passenger seat. I hadn’t understood a word, so I said, “Excuse me?” He shouted back, “That’s not art!” It caught me completely off guard, because to me it clearly was.

Perhaps I was missing something? Nope! I shot back, “I love it! And I’m not from here.” Perhaps that’s why we have differing opinions? That said… My Jose comes up with very astute thoughts, and his reaction when I told him what the guy said to me was, “Some would argue that it is art, because it evoked emotion.”

When I crossed the street, I took time to photograph another sculpture by Seward Johnson, called “Comprehension.” I took it in this way, because we have a statued couple discussing the tooth - perhaps one of them is headed toward a root canal - with another couple discussing the couple and the tooth… How many driving along the road are discussing it all? One can only wonder… Again… Art.

As we headed back to California, we first flew up to Washington, DC. I remembered this wall on the way in, and shot it on the way out. I had to hurry to catch my connecting flight, but Jim and Helen Concannon (who were also flying with us) and Jose had hurried on ahead of me, so I knew I had a second to shoot this wall. “The flight wouldn’t leave me behind,” thought I.

Then, as we flew across the center of the country, clouds began forming. I have a series of how a mass of clouds all come together, but this one is enough for now. The world below us as we fly is a tapestry unto itself. If one’s never flown, this is an image of awe… Even though I’ve had more than share of flight opportunities, it still never ceases to amaze me. Flying is a wondrous thing.

When we flew over Oakland, the earth below sparkled with lights. I wondered what it would look like if I held my camera against the window to steady it, and just let the shutter speed capture the light in as much time as it needed, in order to have a decent image. This is the end result… Who would know without explanation? Who would need one?

…The guy on the corner of of North Tamiami and North Gulf Stream Avenue.

Original post by Jo Diaz

Book Review: Red, White, and Drunk All Over by Natalie MacLean

Friday, May 9th, 2008

natalie_maclean_cover.jpgReview by Jessica Yadegaran

Do readers really care about active yeasts and secondary fermentation? Or do they long to understand wine’s seductions, and its otherworldly sense of place? Do they care about a region’s production, or would they rather hear how a glass of juice resembles a curvy redhead, and why it makes them feel the way it does? You know, drunk.

This is among Natalie MacLean’s first points in Red, White, and Drunk All Over: A Wine-Soaked Journey from Grape to Glass. A descendent of Celtic alcohol-lovers and livers, MacLean, a sommelier, writes first and foremost from a sensual place, dispelling many commonly held myths about wine writers: she doesn’t spit a whole lot, and she loves the buzz just as much as she loves obsessing over the grape. The book is entertaining, informative and ideally suited for someone who has a working knowledge of wine.

From her first visits to Domaine de la Romanee-Conti and Domaine Leflaive to her honest appraisal of biodynamics in Burgundy - she’s on the fence - MacLean’s observations are cerebral and spot-on, and her language both beguiling and accessible: “Some wines will always taste like a lost argument or a long embrace.” The book lacks an index, but is part-travelogue, part-memoir. You learn as she learns.

From Burgundy, MacLean leads us to the cellars of Champagne, winning points with readers who might not be familiar with the grande dames who have kept that region running. We meet Gerard Liger-Belair, a professor of bubby at the University of Liger-Belair before taking off for the land of Zinfandel, and MacLean’s internship with Randall Grahm of Bonny Doon Vineyards.

It’s hard to decide if it’s MacLean’s colorful prose, pop wine sensibility or portraitures of winerati that make her book so readable. The latter is definitely the case when it comes to Grahm, who, through MacLean’s eyes, comes across very much like one of the wild-eyed Ralph Steadman drawings that grace his bottles. In other words, spot-on.

The book quiets down a bit when MacLean gets practical. She pulls a nine to five at two wine stores - The Jug Shop in San Francisco and Discovery Wines in New York City - and even does sommelier duty at Le Baccara in Quebec (yes, she drips). She shows you how to throw a tasting party.

She takes on Georg Riedel and Robert Parker and devotes too much of the book’s denouement, sacrificing her flow, in my opinion, to wine auction number-crunching, but makes up for it by ending on a lavish dinner with Jay McInerney, the 1980s cocaine-novelist-turned wine writer, who tells her: “Wine makes me more thoughtful. I always want to taste the next thing so it slows me down; I pace myself. Wine saved me from rehab.”

And MacLean saved us from another predictable wine book.

buy-from-tan.gifNatalie MacLean, Red, White, and Drunk All Over: A Wine-Soaked Journey from Grape to Glass, Bloomsbury 2007, $10.17 (Paperback).


Jessica Yadegaran is a wine writer for the Bay Area News Group and wine educator. Read her blog at www.ibabuzz.com/corkheads or visit her Web site at theswirlgirl.com.

Original post by Vinography: A Wine Blog

The Velvet Bite

Friday, May 9th, 2008

I’m going to buy this wine...because I just think it’s terribly cool that a winery would honor one of the greatest jazz vocalists in the history of the genre. (Have you ever heard Ella sing "mack the knife"?!!?)

However, I’m probably not going to drink this Domaine Carneros Sparkling Wine while listening to any jazz, including Ella.

Here’s why.

I’ve long believed that even given the range and the diversity of the Jazz genre, the absolutely most appropriate drink to accompany Jazz is something that attacks the senses, throat, palate and body with a Velvet Bite.

No pure wine I′ve ever consumed possesses this quality.

By "Velvet Bite" I mean, first, that sensation of a subtle sting that warms just as the sting diminishes when the liquid is poured over your palate. You need to feel the relief of the alcohol sting diminishing just as the alcohol also begins to warm the throat and stomach. 

There must be a soft clamping down on the palate that does not linger, but also is not escapable. The sensation alerts the senses in a momentary shock like no wine can do, yet fades away, relinquishing its bite in favor of alertness and warmth.

This state, I think, is best suited for listening to Jazz.

Bourbon, Whiskey, Scotch and even cognac and armagnac are the proper drinks to pair with Jazz; best suited to provide a velvet bite.

Further, I believe the full affect of pairing the Velvet Bite with Jazz occurs when a shot of any of the above beverages is taken in advance of sipping on a second round of the same. And, how this shot is performed can affect the pleasure of the pairing even more if done right.

The shot, while it should be taken in all at once, should not be targeted at the throat so that it slips down past the palate with minimal contact. On the other hand, taking time to swish the beverage around the palate will also ruin the experience. Rather, the throat should be half to 3/4s closed when the shot enters the mouth. The partially closed throat will promote a slow movement of the bourbon over the palate, followed in quick order by it slowly sliding down the gullet. The technique delivers the bite, but does not sear the palate. And at the same time, a decent amount of alcohol enters the body and the blood stream in relatively quick fashion.

Yes, I’m suggesting that Jazz is best appreciated with a slight buzz.

Not a "drunk". But a warm, comfortable, smirk inducing buzz.

It should be noted that after the initial shot of our preferred beverage, the second round can be sipped, and probably enjoyed even more due to the palate, body and mind having been properly prepared by the initial shot.

Wine is simply too week to stand up to the challenging nature of jazz; the subtle, complex and sometimes jolting nature of jazz rhythms require the body to be properly prepared with an anesthesia that both weakens one’s grip on convention, yet provides a bite.

Thus, Jazz is best paired with beverage.

Original post by Tom Wark

Venge Vineyards is Moving!

Friday, May 9th, 2008

Venge Vineyards may be changing its location soon. We found this out when we visited the winery earlier in the week. This is quite regrettable because the setting is so lovely and the wines so delicious. The winery is located at the base of Howell Mountain on Crystal Springs Road.

First, though, let

Vinography Images: Water Droplet

Friday, May 9th, 2008

vinography_desktop_waterdroplet_two.jpg

Water Droplet
“Taking interesting pictures in vineyards isn’t easy. While many are surely picturesque, there is a lot of sameness in them — row after row of vines — and that repetition makes it easy to overlook little details like this that can be quite beautiful″ — Alder Yarrow

INSTRUCTIONS:
Download this image by right-clicking (Mac users, click and hold) on the image and selecting “save link as″ or “save target as″ and then select the desired location on your computer to save the image. Mac users can also just click the image and drag it to your desktop.

To set the image as your desktop wallpaper, Mac users should follow these instructions, while PC users should follow these.

PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality print of this image, or any of the other vineyard images featured here on Vinography, you can purchase one on the Michael Regnier Photography web site for $85.

ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Vinography regularly features images by photographer Michael Regnier for readers’ personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images.

Original post by Vinography: A Wine Blog

Making the Best of Appellations

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Aamedals
The assumption of the American Viticultural Area (appellation) program is that there is something unique about those areas that are granted AVA status

Fixing Stupid Laws

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

The somewhat recent revelation that it is technically illegal for home winemakers in California to hold public tastings and even competitions of their wines is one of those instances where a truly out-dated law of little or no value, previously unnoticed, comes to light and makes folks chuckle, shake their heads and get on with getting rid of it for the sake bringing laws and rules into line with reality and good sense.

The move to change the law licketty split is under way. Family Winemakers of California and State Senator Pat Wiggins have joined forces to introduce SB 607, a law that would allow winemaking competition among amateur winemakers.

It’s an easy fix to a pretty stupid law and both FWC and Senator Wiggins should be commended for moving it forward.

Changing stupid laws like this is not always so easy, however, Take for example the CA law that makes it a crime for a an out-of-state retailer to ship wine to a CA resident. This one went into effect in 2005 and was supported by Family Winemakers of California, The California Wine Institute, The California Association of Wine Grapegrowers, Napa Valley Vintners and a number of wineries. The bill was opposed by a number of CA retailers who realized that not only was the law unconstitutional as it discriminated against out-of-state retailers, but that it would encourage other states to lock out CA retailers from shipping to their state residents.

There has been no enthusiasm by California’s winery organizations, Free the Grapes, or any politicians to change this other example of a stupid law, though they all are well aware of the law. One wonders if it will be “discovered” in a few decades and quickly reversed by legislation because it no longer has any value, rhyme or reason.

It turns out this law is actually on hold because retailers sued the state of CA and were able to get an agreement from the state not to enforce it until the end of 2008. However, that time is quickly approaching. One hopes that consumers, wine organizations and politicians will feel an equal urgency to fix one more stupid law when it comes to light.






Original post by Tom Wark

Wordy

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Every once in awhile I like to remind Wine Camp readers that I can be significantly longer winded than I am in my normal posts on Wine Camp. So here I provide an annual reminder that I don’t employ an editor by providing links to some of my favorite longer articles:

Original post by Craig Camp

PR 101: When you hire someone to do PR for you, that’s not where your job ends

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

It’s where it begins for true success…

I wish I had penned that bit of wisdom, because it’s brilliant. Alas, it was penned by another, and I don’t take credit for someone else’s words of wisdom. So, credit to the universe.

When I read it, I didn’t make note of the author. The words, however, have never left my mind.

Another great bit of knowledge that I’ve found is by LAD Communications, penned by Anne Louise Bannon (May 2002 issue of Wines & Vines): “Which may mean that even when you’ve gotten big enough to hire someone to do your publicity for you, you’ll still be doing much of your own PR. But that’s what telling your story is all about, and that’s what sells wine.”

This is very important information when you’ve decided to hire a PR agency or person to represent you. In the wine business, how many brands are out there? I’d love an exact figure, but I don’t have it for this world-wide market. It’s not outside the realm of possibilities that there could there be as many as 10,000 worldwide?

It’s not like the peanut butter business, let’s say, where you’ve got less than a dozen brands. Those stories are very easy to tell. Nobody cares who started the company, and nobody’s going to oogle over the flavors. It’s pretty straight forward, “Is is smooth or chunky?”

With wine, your flavors will stand on their own, against the other 10,000 in the world.

So, what’s going to really sell your wine to a wine writer who could be thinking to him or herself? “Who are the characters behind the scenes, tell me everything you can about this person or people, and when may I talk to him or her?”

So, PR 101 is really what my mom drilled into my head ever so long ago, “God helps those who help themselves.”

PR people are just the missing link in the process to bridge the gap between who you are and getting that story into the hands of a writer. PR people open the door for you, and your job is to then step-up and be willing to tell your story, when the opportunity arises. And remember, opportunity only knocks once.

Cliche? Yes.

Good advice? You decide…

Original post by Jo Diaz

PR 101: When you hire someone to do PR for you, that

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

It’s where it begins…

I wish I had penned that bit of wisdom, because it’s brilliant. Alas, it was penned by another, and I don’t take credit for someone else’s words of wisdom. So, credit to the universe.

When I read it, I didn’t make note of the author. The words, however, have never left my mind.

Another great bit of knowledge that I’ve found is by LAD Communications, penned by Anne Louise Bannon (May 2002 issue of Wines &amp Vines): “Which may mean that even when you’ve gotten big enough to hire someone to do your publicity for you, you’ll still be doing much of your own PR. But that’s what telling your story is all about, and that’s what sells wine.”

This is very important information when you’ve decided to hire a PR agency or person to represent you. In the wine business, how many brands are out there? I’d love an exact figure, but I don’t have it for this world-wide market. It’s not outside the realm of possibilities that there could there be as many as 10,000 worldwide?

It’s not like the peanut butter business, let’s say, where you’ve got less than a dozen brands. Those stories are very easy to tell. Nobody cares who started the company, and nobody’s going to oogle over the flavors. It’s pretty straight forward, “Is is smooth or chunky?”

With wine, your flavors will stand on their own, against the other 10,000 in the world.

So, what’s going to really sell your wine to a wine writer who could be thinking to him or herself? “Who are the characters behind the scenes, tell me everything you can about this person or people, and when may I talk to him or her?”

So, PR 101 is really what my mom drilled into my head ever so long ago, “God helps those who help themselves.”

PR people are just the missing link in the process to bridge the gap between who you are and getting that story into the hands of a writer. PR people open the door for you, and your job is to then step-up and be willing to tell your story, when the opportunity arises. And remember, opportunity only knocks once.

Cliche? Yes.

Good advice? You decide…

Original post by Jo Diaz