Wednesday 27 September 2017

Cheap Tricks (Domaines Schlumberger Recent Releases)

Domaines Schlumberger crand cru vineyards 1

“We are very cheap for a Grand Cru!”

Thomas Schlumberger

Thomas Schlumberger

It could be said that Domaines Schlumberger‘s Thomas Schlumberger doesn’t fully understand the negative connotations of the word “cheap” in the English language. I write that because, as he told me the above quote during a media visit to the Guebwiller property that has been in his family for about 200 years, he phrased it in a tone that was at once proud and matter-of-fact.

The bottom line is that no one really offers a smoother glide path into the vinous world of Alsatian Grand Cru that Schlumberger. First, they have the typical history portion covered: Domaines Schlumberger is still a family business (7th generation export manager Thomas lives across the street from the winery, “where I grew up,” having come back to the family business after a stint in the perfume industry at the behest of his uncle), and still operates out of the area in which the family settled from Germany (choosing the site because of its access to water, needed for their textiles business). From a desire to make wine for their own consumption, they gradually expanded and replanted their plantings in the area to about 70 hectares (this took the purchase of 2500 plots in a single decade, along with ten years of replanting, much of it on terraced slopes so steep that a special breed of horses that don’t experience vertigo were needed to work the vineyards).

Domaines Schlumberger winery dog

obligatory winery dog photo…

From a Grand Cru perspective, Domaines Schlumberger has the raw material to offer inexpensive Grand Cru action: about ten percent of all Alsace Grand Cru wines are sold by them, and they are the largest independent winery in the area, exporting 2/3 of their production to 50 countries (so chances are good that you can find some of their wares).

Maybe most importantly for an ultra-competitive, information-saturated wine market, they have what might be the simplest Alsatian SKU category formula: you can try “classic” versions of Alsace’s principal grape varieties in their Les Princes Abbés line, or the Grand Cru single-site versions, and that’s basically it…


Domaines Schlumberger pinot noir

elegant2015 Domaines Schlumberger Pinot Noir Les Princes Abbés (Alsace, $NA)

You know me, so it will come as no surprise that we’ll kick off with a wine that contradicts most of what I just mentioned above. You’ll have a harder time finding this little gem of Alsace’s lesser-known red production, which according to Thomas has benefited in quality improvements driven by the Chinese market’s thirst for all things French Pinot-related. Aside from maceration, vinification for this Pinot is performed in exactly the same way as their whites. The result is spicy, lithe, and transparent in the prettiness and expression of its fruit.

 

2014 Domaines Schlumberger Riesling Les Princes Abbés (Alsace, $18)

This range is named after the Benedictine Murbach Abbey, who were so dominant in the Guebwiller area that at one time they had their own currency. Today, it’s Riesling that dominates, and it’s tough to find a more solid example of quality Alsatian Riesling at this price. Limes, flowers, petrol, citrus, flint… it’s all here, presented in a super-clean, crisp package that benefits from having about 40% of its fruit come from Grand Cru vineyards.

Domaines Schlumberger crand cru vineyards 2

 

2015 Domaines Schlumberger Gewurztraminer Les Princes Abbés (Alsace, $25)

Floral, expressive, broad, and textural, this is a Gewurz that is insanely, dangerously difficult to stop drinking. Lychee, stone and tropical fruits, spice… textbook stuff, along with being delicious. You need know next to nothing about the grape to get behind this.

Domaines Schlumberger Riesling Saering

elegant2014 Domaines Schlumberger Riesling Saering (Alsace Grand Cru, $30)

This is more than a fair price for a GC in Alsace, but more importantly it’s a fair price for a Riesling this pithy, mineral, and crystalline in its presentation. That it is also fascinating in its texture and pure in citrus fruitiness are bonuses. The most interesting thing, however, is that DS’s Rieslings from this limestone-rich GC site do so well in bottle repose. We tasted back to the 2002 (a cooler year), and it was focused, lemony, long, fresh, and still above all else maintaining its purity. Movie stars don’t age this well.

Domaines Schlumberger Pinot Gris Spiegel

sexy2014 Domaines Schlumberger Pinot Gris Spiegel (Alsace Grand Cru, $27)

What you (well, what I) typically want most from a PG is for it not to be boring. So when it’s actually sexy, that’s got to make you stop and take notice. This PG is downright spry, full of melon and apple flavors and wet stone aromas. You also get hints of white flowers and spices, topped off with generous richness and almost voluptuous roundness. I might need a cold shower now.

 

2014 Domaines Schlumberger Gewurztraminer Kessler (Alsace Grand Cru, $46)

Ok, so this one isn’t “cheap;” but it is spectacular. Kessler has sandstone soils, and DS own 75% of the site, which is formed by a small valley about 300 meters high in between hills that protect it from the cooler drafts of the area’s north winds. This equates to pretty good ripening potential for Gewurz, and if anything the DS Kessler version is expressive. The nose is, in a word, great: lychee, pear, roses, honey, spices, and marmalade. The palate is rich, with about one ton of lemon drop, but is buoyed by a freshness that is rare for more pedestrian renditions of this grape.

Thomas Schlumberger's Kitterle GC terraces

Thomas Schlumberger’s Kitterle GC terraces

2013 Domaines Schlumberger ‘Cuvee Christine’ Gewurztraminer Vendanges Tardives (Alsace, $NA)

This sweet wine takes its name from Schlumberger’s great-grandmother (as Thomas explained, “we never name the wines after the kids; what if one of them ends up in jail?”). The original Christine managed DS for about twenty years with ” talent and firmness.” This Christine, also made from Kessler grapes, has a sweet-tooth; baking spices, marmalade, mandarin orange, lemon drop candy, dried roses, and honey all mix in the nose, along with a pleasant flinty note. The palate delivers in spades; it’s spicy, rich, full of sultana, lemon candy, and tea flavors. While it doesn’t lack viscosity or richness, there is good balance here with vibrancy. Queue up the Roquefort.

 

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Cheap Tricks (Domaines Schlumberger Recent Releases) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/cheap-tricks-domaines-schlumberger-recent-releases/

Monday 25 September 2017

How to Become a Sommelier

how to become a sommelier

how to become a sommelier

Editor’s Note: This article is being updated. 

 

How to Start your Wine Career

How to become a wine taster

To become a professional wine taster, you need to earn your sommelier certification.

  1. Find a wine school near you.
  2. Register for a sommelier wine course
  3. Attend the sommelier classes
  4. Take the sommelier exam
  5. Graduate from wine school

How to become a wine expert

To become a professional wine taster, you need to earn your sommelier certification.

  1. Find a wine school near you.
  2. Register for a sommelier wine course
  3. Attend the sommelier classes
  4. Take the sommelier exam
  5. Graduate from wine school

How to Become a Sommelier

  1. Read as many wine books as possible.
  2. Take as many wine classes as you can.
  3. Taste at least 10 wines a week.
  4. Earn your level three sommelier certification from a reputable school.

How do you get to be a sommelier

  • Work as a waiter and wait to get promoted
  • Earn your level three sommelier certification
  • Open up your own wine bar.

 

How to become a sommelier online

Of the three major sommelier certification agencies, two offer sommelier certification online. Both Wine & Spirit Education Trust (London) and the National Wine School (Los Angeles) allow for partial participation by online students. Both program ultimately require the student to participate IRL (in real life) along with attending the online course.

  • Wine & Spirits Education Trust – Students can take online courses, but must take exams in person.
  • National Wine School – Students can take online courses and exams for Advanced Sommelier programs. However, level two and three

How many levels of sommelier are there

There are five sommelier levels.

  1. Level One – Introductory Sommelier Certificate (CMS), Award in Wines (WSET)
  2. Level Two – Foundation Certificate (NWS), Award in Wines and Spirits (WSET)
  3. Level Three – Certified Sommelier (NWS and CMS)
  4. Level Four – Advanced Sommelier (NWS and CMS)
  5. Level Five –  Grand Sommelier (NWS), Master Sommelier (CMS), and Master of Wine (WSET)

How much does it cost to be a master sommelier

How much do sommeliers make

 

What  You Need to Know

What is an advanced sommelier?

An advanced sommelier is also known as a level four sommelier.  Most of the top  sommeliers are certified at this level. They are required  to identify any major grape varietal and wine region in a blind tasting plus have attended at least one year of formal sommelier training.

What is the master sommelier exam?

The master sommelier exam is also known as the Level 5 Sommelier Exam. It is the highest level exam in the wine service profession. The term “Master Sommelier” is a trademark of the Court of Master Sommeliers, and does not apply to all Level 5 Sommeliers. Other terms used for this exam is the Master of Wine Exam (Wine & Spirit Education Trust) and the Master of Enology Exam (National Wine School)

What is a certified sommelier?

What is a wine expert called?

What is a sommelier diploma?

What is a certified sommelier?

What is a sommelier test?

What does WSET stand for in wine?

WSET is the acronym for the Wine and Spirit Education Trust. The WSET is one of several firms that certifies sommeliers and other types of wine professionals. Along with WSET, the National Wine School and the Court of Master Sommeliers are the major sommelier certification bodies currently active in the USA.

What is the CSW exam?

The CSW exam stands for the Certified Specialist of Wine Exam offered by the  Society of Wine Educators. It is a multiple choice exam many wine educators take. It is similar to the Wine Speaker Certification offered by the National Wine School.

What does a sommelier do?

 

The post How to Become a Sommelier appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/how-to-become-a-sommelier/

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 25, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 14 Dutton Goldfield Emerald Ridge Vineyard Pinot Noir (Russian River Valley): A love affair between Restraint & Banging Ripeness. $62 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Pieropan Soave Classico (Soave Classico): 50th vintage, & they show no signs of slowing down this zesty, piquant, delicious train. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Alessandro Rivetto Leonilde Barbera d'Alba (Piedmont): So supple & generous, it's theme song would be Prince's "Sexy Motherf*cker" $29 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Alessandro Rivetto Nascetta (Langhe): Secretly pour it for your besties who only drink Chardonnay; watch as they lose their minds. $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Miner Family Winery Stagecoach Vineyard Merlot (Napa Valley): A smattering of Cab Franc here helps bring the serious to the sexy. $40 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Miner Family Winery Wild Yeast Chardonnay (Napa Valley): As gussied up as you'd expect, but it still looks good with its hair down $50 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Miner Family Winery Viognier (California): Some stone fruits, it seems, are fully capable of running on 240 volt AC power… $22 B >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Christophe Pacalet Chenas (Beaujolais): Sometimes, even pretty Cru Beauj feels like putting its sh*t-kickers on & getting gritty. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Mt. Beautiful Pinot Gris (North Canterbury): Should make the Tre Venezie and Alsace start sweating, at least just a little bit. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Odfjell Orzada Cabernet Sauvignon (Maipo Valley): People dressed this elegantly probably shouldn't try dance moves that funky. $21 B >>find this wine<<
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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 25, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

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Wednesday 20 September 2017

Spit Shine (Domaine Marcel Deiss Recent Releases)

Jean-Michel Deiss

Jean-Michel Deiss, talking spit

Jean-Michel Deiss likes to talk spit.

That his family, winegrowers since 1744, are established as the Alsatian version of winemaking royalty probably helps him to get away with it.

“Wine today is an industrial project,” he told me (through interpretation) during a media tour visit to Domaine Marcel Deiss‘ Bergheim winery. “But great wine is not a question of taste. Great wine is like a [good] book; as soon as you finish reading, you look for someone you love [to share it with].”

Or, in my case, you put it on the Internet to share it with total strangers. But the point is a solid one. Anyway, we were talking about spit.

Busker Du Alsace

Busker Du on the streets of Alsace…

“Salivation is how you measure a wine’s energy,” Deiss continued. “You don’t need to be an expert for that. And there’s no salivation without terroir. It’s like geography in the mouth. Where you get salivation, you get terroir.”

“It’s not an efficient concept,” he added, at which point he showed multiple rips in his pants, presumably the result of his efforts in the vineyard and the cellar.

Domaine Marcel Deiss is still a family-run outfit, utilizing about 20 people and overseeing about 30 hectares of vineyards, many of which are old vine field blends (or, as they like to call them “companion planted” vines) of Alsace’s key grape varieties, with roots deep enough that the different varieties essentially ripen around the same time. Deiss’ focus is now solely on vineyard site (rather than on variety), as well as on biodiversity, minimal sulfur additions, and no filtration. Lest you think that this ostensibly hands-off approach should make life at Deiss easier, Jean-Michel’s son Mathieu echoed his father’s sentiment regarding the amount of extra work required by their approach; “with ‘natural’ wine, you have to be more precise in the cellar, not less.” At which point, he offered up the next generation’s version of dad’s ripped pants: according to his cell phone, he had logged the equivalent of 100 kilometers of walking in the last four days alone…

The result of all of this grit and focus are wines of high quality and intense, glistening purity of expression. And, yes, salivasjɔ̃. A spit shine on fine wine, if you will.

crowd pleaser2015 Domaine Marcel Deiss Blanc (Alsace, $20)

This is a great place to start with the overall Deiss concept, not just in terms of affordability, but also in terms of philosophy. This white is a blend of thirteen different varieties, including Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Auxerrois, Pinot Beurot, Pinot Noir, white and pink Muscat, Sylvaner, Chasselas, and (naturally) Riesling. The plantings are from pre-phylloxera massal clones, and the result is much more delicious harmony than it is kitchen-sink-dilution. Tropical, pithy, mineral, astringent, and delicious.

Deiss Rottenberg Englegarten

sexy2012 Domaine Marcel Deiss ‘Rotenberg’ Bergheim (Alsace, $45)

This site sits on iron-rch Jurassic limestone, making it one of the oldest soils with which Diess works. Essentially, this is a blend of Reisling and “the whole Pinot family” as they put it. Lemon, earth, citrus peel, flowers, honey, lemon drop candy, limes… this is at once fleshy/fruity and astringent. For Alsace, it’s downright seductive.

 

elegant2014 Domaine Marcel Deiss Engelgarten (Alsace, $38)

The soil here is gravelly, at a spot that is a “cannon shot” away from the medeival fortress in Bergheim, with naturally dry soils that stress the vines (in partciular the Riesling) and help to limit yields. Orange peel, pear, white flowers, and yes, a hell of a lot of mineral and stone notes are present. It’s intensely linear and vibrant, with the Riesling, Pinot Gris, Pinot Beurot, Muscat, and Pinot Noir blending together damn-near seamlessly.

Deiss Grasberg

sexy2012 Domaine Marcel Deiss ‘Schoffweg’ Bergheim (Alsace, $50)

A softer limestone soil dominates at this site, which is also rocky and windy (helping to minimize rot). It’s a fleshy wine by Alsatian standards, with hints of vanilla and slate, and a bit of mild tannic bite. Floral and flinty, spicy, and round without being overtly fruity, yet somehow staying overtly flirty.

 

2011 Domaine Marcel Deiss Grasberg (Alsace, $46)

Deiss’ Grasberg vines are on a high (280 meters elevation), south-facing, cooler-area slope, planted on compacted limestone. Personally, I would consider trying to live on that hill in a tent if all Grasberg wines aged like this. This is tropical, nutty, toasty, earthy, vibrant, minty, citric, heady, perfumed, and, above all, fresh. Bonus points for the dried citrus peel and lemon jam action, courtesy of some residual sugar and botrytis on the Riesling, Pinot Gris, and Gewürztraminer.

2011 Domaine Marcel Deiss Gruenspiel Bergheim (Alsace, $NA)

You’ll have a difficult time finding a bottle of this field blend of Riesling, Pinot Noir, and Gewürztraminer; which is a shame, as this wine is a singular experience. The site’s name basically means “draughtboard,” and is meant to describe the varied topsoil there, including deposits of granite, gneiss, and sandstone over marl. As Mathieu Deiss put it, “we assume some people won’t like it; once you have personality, you assume not everybody will like you.” I can assure you that this wine is not in any way attempting to be friendly. It’s broad, expressive, ripe but also lively, bitter, young, and at turns even brooding. Stone fruits mix with smoke, spices, and flowers into something both funky and delicious.

Deiss Mambourg

elegant2013 Domaine Marcel Deiss Mambourg (Alsace Grand Cru, $90)

Spock fascinatingOligocene limestone, magnesium, and marl mark this site, which has had a reputation for making good juice since at least the Middle Ages. Structured, pure, and pithy, this Pinot-family blend offers deep citrus flavors, a sense of power, and a presentation in the mouth that is almost Burgundian. In a word, it’s fascinating (spoken with Mr. Spock inflection).

 

2012 Domaine Marcel Deiss Altenberg de Bergheim (Alsace Grand Cru, $87)

This site benefits from a mix of soils, including ferrous limestone and clay-calcareous deposits. Tropical fruit and citrus flavors combine with marmalade, honey, and a broad mouthfeel that has sweet candy and resin notes, with aromas of white flowers and vanilla added to the mix. All of the permitted Alsatian varieties show up in this field blend, and somehow it all adds up to a sweet sum much greater than we should expect from its constituent parts.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Spit Shine (Domaine Marcel Deiss Recent Releases) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/spit-shine-domaine-marcel-deiss-recent-releases/

Monday 18 September 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 18, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 11 Lalanne Lataste Gran Vino (Somontano): Dark, earthy & developed; settled in, but eemingly not quite settled on its true identity. $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Onward Sparkling Rose of Pinot Noir Petillant Naturel (Redwood Valley): Fresh, and funky, but neither forced nor forgettable. $30 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Miner Family Winery Stagecoach Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon (Napa Valley): Holds nothing back; delicious, demanding & full-throttle $75 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Tommasi Le Rosse Pinot Grigio (Veneto): The Red Ones? Really? This is more like the Tasty, Energetic, and Mellon-Infused ones. $14 B >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Grgich Hills Estate Chardonnay (Napa Valley): It's difficult to find this much fresh tropical fruit, even when in the tropics. $43 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Dutton Goldfield Fox Den Vineyard Pinot Noir (Green Valley of Russian River Valley): This might contain Fountain of Youth droplets. $62 A >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Siduri Sta. Rita Hills Pinot Noir (Sta. Rita Hills): Sometimes, the whole being > the sum of the parts is reason enough to rejoice $35 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Cortes de Cima Trincadeira (Alentejo): You'd probably need to be at a big city Gold's Gym to see more flexing of muscularity. $45 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Quinta da Plansel Dorina Lindemann Limited Edition Tinto (Alentejo): From grip to verve to thyme, everything here is substantial. $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Joao Portugal Ramos Marques de Borba Reserva Tinto (Alentejo): Young & focused, give it some years to bloom within the bramble. $65 A- >>find this wine<<
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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 18, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-september-18-2017/

Wednesday 13 September 2017

Like A True Nature’s Child (Exploring The Wildness Of Grignolino)

Grana

My latest article for the online celebration of all things vinous in Monferrato, MyNameIsBarbera.com, is now available; and in it, I explore the born-to-be-wildness of one of Italy’s most unsung fine wine grapes, Grignolino.

If you’ve never tried a good Grignolino before, you’re un-enviably currently missing out, but are enviably in for a real treat – it’s one of the most unique red wine drinking experiences you’re likely to have, and therefore one of the most geekily memorable, as well.

Hit up the link below for the full article. When you’re finished reading, if you find yourself feeling the kind of thirst that only a Grignolino is gonna quench, I suggest hunting for one from Vini Evasio Garrone, based in Grana. They won’t be easy to find, but they’re worth the effort. One of that family-run business’  head-honchos, Dante Garrone, is a tireless champion of the grape; he also happens to be a good guy and a serious Raiders of the Lost Ark fan…

GRIGNOLINO D’ASTI: BORN TO BE WILD

Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Like A True Nature’s Child (Exploring The Wildness Of Grignolino) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/like-a-true-natures-child-exploring-the-wildness-of-grignolino/

Monday 11 September 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 11, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 14 Donnafugata Ben Rye (Passito di Pantelleria): A 1/2-bottle of honeyed, fig-tinged magic, with fingertip lighting special effects. $40 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Lobo da Silveira Solar dos Lobos Grande Escolha Tinto (Alentejo): Textural and gripping, once you get past the initial shyness. $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Herdade do Esporao AB Alicante Bouschet (Alentejo): The pointy edges have been rounded out, much to the benefit of red wine lovers $39 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Quinta do Zambujeiro Monte do Zambujeiro (Alentejo): All around the mulberry bush… we'll be doing some sultry dancing… $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 11 Henrique Uva Herdade da Mingorra Vinha da Ira (Alentejo): Doing its best to make ripe plums seem sexy… and largely succeeding. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Jose Maria da Fonseca Jose de Sousa Red (Alentejo): The red and the black (fruits, that is) engage on a stone-laden battlefield… $17 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Monte Branco Tinto (Alentejo): Sporting an intensity that would likely put many athletes in the NFL combine to total shame. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Windvane Carneros Pinot Noir (Carneros): Smoked meat this inherently good probably doesn't need quite so much wood on the fire. $45 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Windvane Carneros Chardonnay (Carneros): The weather is a little steamy, but there's a crisp breeze blowing in this direction. $40 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Lasseter Family Winery Reminiscence (Sonoma Valley): Big, brash, bold, brambly, bombastic, and, at turns, kind of beautiful. $125 A- >>find this wine<<
Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 11, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-september-11-2017/

Thursday 7 September 2017

Hanging Heavy (September 2017 Wine Product Roundup)

The Winemakers of Paso Robles

With some crazy travel happening in the short term, I’m making the executive decision to go ahead and give you the September 2017 edition of the monthly wine product review roundup a bit on the early side (rather than scrambling to get my act together on it at the end of the month, which is my usual MO).

I have some reservations about both of the non-edible products from this month’s sample pool, so let’s begin with the item sporting the fewest of saidreservations:

The Winemakers of Paso Robles by Julia Perez & Paul Hodgins (328 pages, $119)

This impressive tome, almost equal parts gorgeous photographs and Paso Robles winemaker profile pieces, began as a Kickstarter project and has seen a recent surge in media and press (within the US fine wine sphere, anyway). And when I write “impressive,” I do mean impressive. As in, Darth-Vader-in-The-Empire-Strikes-Back levels of impressive.

Vader impressivePerez’s stunning photos are the focus of this coffee-table book, with Hodgins’s prose providing the support. The profiles, while not exactly fluff pieces, tend towards the lifestyle-magazine tone of prose; not necessarily a bad thing, and certainly not without leaving you with a good sense of what drives the winemakers of Paso to do what they do so well. But if it’s controversy that you’re after, you’ll need to look elsewhere.

The reservation comes from the book’s size and price (and weight); all are pretty hefty. It’s not as though you’re getting ripped off – far from it – but this is a coffee table book that’s damn nearly the weight of a coffee table. In paging through it, I kept thinking that a) I can’t read this in bed, because it will crush my sternum, and b) it might behoove these guys to put out a smaller, less expensive (and lighter?) soft-back edition…

Expovinalia

The Expovinalia bottle holder, in its final resting place at Chateau Dude

The reservations count goes decidedly up with respect to the next product, the Wall Hanging Bottle Holder by Expovinalia. My sample came directly from Spain, but lacked the screws for securing this to the wall (though they might have fallen out during shipping… the packaging was definitely showing the wear of the journey by the time it arrived on the porch).

My sample is made from pine, has a 12-bottle capacity, and only two screw holes; you are definitely going to want to secure this sturdy item to a stud, particularly if you plan on putting full bottles on display with it; the combined weight will need the support. Generally, the material and the construction of this bottle holder are solid. I noticed some inconsistencies in the finish (pooling, for example), but they weren’t prominent enough to detract from its aesthetics, especially when viewed from any reasonable distance (and if you’re getting that close to my bottles, then we might have words anyway). Bottles placed in the holes (neck-first, see inset pic) seem to stay put, but those holes only fit narrow/standard sized bottle necks; anything with a large lip at the tip simply won’t fit at all. Which rules out a lot of the trophy bottles that geeks would want to display, such as many Champagnes, and those hey-look-at-me big-ass heavy bottles usually reserved for pricey Cabernets.

The above cavils would be minor when considered individually, but taken with the fact that this holder only seems to be available via Expovinalia’s website, on which I could not locate a price (the shipping label has a value of 30), a translation option, or even a button for adding the holder to my shopping cart… well, one could reasonable wonder if all of the cavils together aren’t enough to drive oneself to declare “f*ck it” and shop for something else, somewhere else.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Hanging Heavy (September 2017 Wine Product Roundup) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/hanging-heavy-september-2017-wine-product-roundup/

Tuesday 5 September 2017

And You Were Expecting What, Exactly? (Thoughts On The PA Pay-To-Play Scandal)

“The most endangered species –
The honest man”

-Rush, Natural Science

In the great room of my house, there are two 5″x7″ framed prints in Chinese script, each of which represents one of the two “house rules” of the home shared by me and my daughter (it’s generally too big of a space for the two of us, but she understandably – and emphatically – did not want to move after I filed for divorce).

And yeah, there really are only two house rules at Chateau Dude. One represents Integrity, the other Honesty.

And yeah, we really do believe in and live by them. The fact that I feel compelled to write that last sentence is, I think, indicative of just how far through the looking glass we have come, socially speaking, in the USA, even in my relatively short lifetime.

And yeah, this will eventually get to the topic of wine, but that’s not the crux of this article (you have been warned). To get to that, we’ll need to review a couple of articles by W. Blake Gray that were recently published on Wine-Searcher.com [ full disclosure: I utilize their affiliate program ]. The first of these, Pay-to-Play Scandal Exposed, detailed the fallout from illegal bribes (including several thousand dollars spent on “adult entertainment”) offered by the likes of mega-distributor Southern Glazer’s to the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board to influence what alcoholic products were/weren’t carried on its state store shelves.

That story justifiably got a lot of traction. But it’s Gray’s follow-up story that, to me, is actually more important, and should have most of us outraged…

In that one, Digging Deeper in Pay-for-Play Scandal, Gray describes just how little justice has actually been served so far in this case (e.g., only four companies have paid fines to date, several PLCB staff potentially involved have not been charged, etc.). Not only is the lack of swift and meaningful justice not surprising, Gray sums up the collective thinking of the wine biz regarding this case – and the prevalence of illegal pay-to-play activity within the wine industry – near the end of his article:

“…most of this is probably happening in many spots around the country. We only know about Pennsylvania because wine and spirits are bought and sold there by a state monopoly.”

As wine lovers, industry folks, and just plain old humans who give a shit, we should be outraged at scandals like this. We should be pissed off that bribery and deceit are affecting (in secret) the choices of our favorite beverage in the Universe, in a supposedly free market.

But we’re not.

More likely, we’re just more f*cking exhausted than we are pissed off. I know that I am.

Look, I spent an embarrassingly long time having the wool pulled right over my eyes in my life, and while I’ve been called a good number of disparaging things in my time, “dumb” and “naive” has never been two of them. When I decided that enough was enough with the lies that were undermining my personal life, I was astonished at how flippantly people generally treated outright lying and deception. The attitude seemed to be “well, shit, everyone is lying all of the time anyway,” as if all lying were somehow equalized in scope, importance, and impact.

The problem is that attitudes like that one – enabling, cowardly attitudes of complacency – are cop-outs, and also happen to be dead wrong (e.g., see the Chateau Dude House Rules at the top of this article). Most people lie about something, usually when the stakes are small; but most good people do not actively deceive, especially when the stakes are large. When you do that, you’re probably an asshole, and from the looks of things, Southern Glazer’s and the PLCB have ample supplies of assholes, who were, in secret, determining to what beverages the people of PA should and should not have access.

The fact that we’re not surprised by any of this is a sad indicator of just how low our collective self-opinions and expectations regarding the truth have sunk (at least in the USA). No matter what your political stance, only a non-reasonable person would not recognize that we have recently elected one of the most publicly prolific liars in recent memory as President of the United States. One of the most popular, entertaining, and well-written wine websites at the moment consists not of investigative journalism or reviews, but is almost entirely insider-baseball style satire; while I love it, I’ve been unable to read it lately because it feels progressively less and less absurd compared to the absurdity that we accept around us daily.

The crux here, if there is one, is to demand better.

Not just from the wine business, though it would be great to have such a storied, enduring, fantastic, and civilized industry become an example of how above-board business can be successfully conducted in the USA. But also from ourselves; if you’re not angry, maybe it’s time that you did get a little angry. Not kick-the-dog angry, but just angry enough to clear out of the haze of complacency, and demand better conduct from both ourselves and the industry that we love.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at And You Were Expecting What, Exactly? (Thoughts On The PA Pay-To-Play Scandal) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/and-you-were-expecting-what-exactly-thoughts-on-the-pa-pay-to-play-scandal/

Monday 4 September 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 4, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 16 Batan De Salas De Beroz Essencia de Gewurztraminer (Somontano): Flowers, apples, toast, texture, & a serious streak of seriousness $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Fields Family Lodi Native Stampede Vineyard Zinfandel (Clements Hills): Grip, grit & gumption; lay it down, & thank me later… $35 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Mt. Beautiful Chardonnay (North Canterbury): Crisp? Check. Racy? Check. Mineral? Check. Wait a minute, this isn't from Chablis? $21 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Donnafugata Sedara (Sicily): Nero blend that gets to kick its work shoes off, lean back in the recliner, and take a load off. $16 B >>find this wine<<
  • 11 Donnafugata Mille e una Notte (Sicily): You'll wish that you had 1001 bottles after draining one of these; Nero d'Avola for lovers. $80 A >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Gini La Frosca Soave Classico (Veneto): Trying to think of a reason not to buy this wonder by the case; sorry, coming up blank… $30 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Alessandro Rivetto Barolo del Comune di Serralunga d'Alba (Piedmont): Perky, energetic, & one of the more easy-going of the big Bs $48 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Heinrich Spindler Musenhang Riesling Erste Lage (Pfalz): Stones and limes in its shoes, making its footing sturdy & step lively. $27 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Durant Vineyards at Red Ridge La Paloma Pinot Noir (Dundee Hills): A funky dance attempt that stumbles a bit in finding the groove $35 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 10 Gloria Ferrer Anniversary Cuvee (Carneros): Textures that are richly constructed, interwoven, & layered; so, basically, a delight. $40 A- >>find this wine<<
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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For September 4, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-september-4-2017/