Monday 29 June 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 29, 2020

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 in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

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

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 29, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-june-29-2020/

Thursday 25 June 2020

Wine in the Time of Coronavirus, Part 4 (Legendary Zinfandel Vineyards)

Zinfandel 2020 tasting

Virtual (a.k.a., remote) tastings have been a thing for several years (hell, I was involved in some of the very first… daaaaannnng, remember those?!?), but they’ve positively (and virtually/figuratively) exploded during this time of SIP sipping.

This has been a welcome surprise and a needed respite, since some of us (myself included) are unable to hit the road at the moment, due to a combination of factors (one of which, of course, is not wanting to unnecessarily tussle with a global pandemic when one has regular contact with high-risk loved ones).

This latest dip into SIP (Sipping In Place?) comes courtesy of my friend Robert Larsen, who organized a tasting themed on some of legendary Zinfandel vineyards of California. My thoughts on each liquid entrant are below. As always, Robert provided an educational, entertaining, and high-octane good time, even if we all couldn’t actually clink glasses together IRL (where possible, I have included the words of the folks representing each brand to provide some context on why the vineyards are special)…

crowd pleaser2017 Berryessa Gap Zinfandel (Yolo County, $22)

This one is a stretch to label legendary just yet, however there is an interesting backdrop here. Generally, I really like what winemaker Nicole Salengo is doing here, and she’s going a long way in quickly getting Yolo ‘on the map.’ This particular Zin’s angle is that it’s crafted from a Primitivo clone, and so shows a spicy, lighter, zestier red-fruit side of Zin. Think cranberries, red plums, lighter tannins, and pepper. It does go down incredibly easily, which makes its deliciousness so dangerous (it’s also 14.8% abv).

 

elegant2018 Robert Biale Vineyards Old Kraft Vineyard Zinfandel (St Helena, $55)

According to Biale, during our tasting event:

“We have always considered ourselves part farmers, part winemakers, part historic preservation society. Like a legendary author, actor, musician or sports figure, a legendary vineyard is one that becomes famous for its proven ability to perform at the highest level leaving unforgettable impressions on those who admire. Franz Kraft was a prominent winemaker in the earliest days of St. Helena around 1860. His vineyards and winery were on the west side of town on Madrona Avenue. The iconic old native stone winery is now a cellar for the acclaimed Spottswoode Winery. The vines at Old Kraft Vineyard were planted in 1890 by Franz Kraft. Instead of tearing out the original Zin vines that were planted in the 1890’s, Bill and Margie [Hart, who owned the vineyard estate] decided to go with the recommendation of vineyard guru Bill Pease who saw potential in the craggy, twisted plants. Bob Biale was brought in to assist. In 2002, drainage, irrigation, soil amendments, pruning, and inter-planting were utilized to bring the vineyard back to productive health, and in 2006 the wine had progressed to being worthy as a new special bottling among the series of Biale Zins.”

Elegant, supple, with a ton of bold, deep black cherry fruit and dried, brambly herbal and tea notes, there’s almost nothing about this Zin that isn’t special. This is the kind of old vine magic that most of us dream about when we think of iconic CA Zinfandel; powerful, sure, but surprisingly elegant.

Maple vineyard - 1930

Maple vineyard, circa 1930

sexy2017 Armida Winery Maple Vineyards Zinfandel (Dry Creek Valley, $44)

From Armida winemaker Brandon Lapides:

“I just recently celebrated my 10th anniversary of being the Winemaker at @ArmidaWinery Before becoming the winemaker at Armida, I was introduced to some old, #legendaryzinvineyards working as the assistant winemaker at @PeachyCynWinery and @DuttonGoldfield. [Maple] Vineyard is located at the corner of Dry Creek Road and Lytton Springs Road in Dry Creek Valley. The vineyard sits about 100 feet above the Dry Creek floor. 26 acres of Dry Farmed Zinfandel with an average age of 90 [years]. Owners Bruce and Steve Cousins have owned Armida for over 25 years and have been purchasing fruit from the Maple’s Vineyard for over 20 years. The oldest block was planted in 1910. One of the reasons that this vineyard is legendary is that it somehow survived through Prohibition. Sonoma County removed 75% of vines during that time…Maple Vineyards survived.”

Luckily for us, Maple is a survivor. The fruits are exceedingly dense are dark, with savory notes and spice action popping up all over the place. Succulent and sexy AF, there’s intense ripeness here but it never gets annoying or cloying, the edges of this envelope are definitely stretched, but not at all uncomfortably.

 

crowd pleaser2017 Pedroncelli Pedroni-Bushnell Vineyard Zinfandel (Dry Creek Valley, $26) CP

The background via Pedroncelli:

“Bushnell Vineyard is a 2nd generation vineyard. It is now 24 years old and just entering its prime. Budwood from the previous old vines make sure it continues the legacy. The singular place where the vineyard is situated: high above the (Dry Creek) valley floor. Head pruned, hand picked, legendary because 4 generations have farmed it. 1 winery has made the wine.”

Winemaker Montse Reece says that Pedroncelli makes “spice bombs not fruit bombs” when it comes to Zinfandel; this big-boned red is a bit of both, but the majority is a spice explosion. Vanilla, black pepper, cloves, licorice, all carried on wave after wave of ripe red and black fruits. A hedonistic wine for hedonistic times.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine in the Time of Coronavirus, Part 4 (Legendary Zinfandel Vineyards) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-in-the-time-of-coronavirus-part-4-legendary-zinfandel-vineyards/

Monday 22 June 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 22, 2020

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 in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

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

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 22, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-june-22-2020/

Thursday 18 June 2020

How I Almost Didn’t Write a Book

While I’ve much still left to report on from the last Portugal jaunt, as well as the result of a flurry of remote tasting events in the wake of Covid-19 SIP sipping, I did promise to get some thoughts onto virtual paper regarding the upcoming book(s), and so… well… here they are.

First, we can completely shatter the misconception that writing a book is a lonely, solitary endeavor. I have lost count of the number of editing phases and talented people involved in the creation of the pair of books I’ve got coming to market next month. While any mistakes in te manuscript are almost certainly my fault, I feel good that said errors would have had to get by several pairs of eyes from dedicated folks in specialized editing roles at Callisto Media en route to publication. For the most part, those people all made the process go more smoothly and efficiently than I ever imagined, and allowed me to focus the vast majority of my efforts where they could actually result in something productive – writing the content. I had input but thankfully very little responsibility when it comes to the structural and visual aspects of the books (which, unless you want to see Iron Maiden graphics or something, is a really good thing).

Probably the most interesting thing that I can tell you about writing the books, however, is that I came incredibly close to just not writing them at all…

For years, many people who I am lucky enough to call colleagues and friends have pestered encouraged me to write a book. My response, in summary, could have been abbreviated as NFW.

I have known dozens of people who have written books, and not one of them has ever said that they loved doing it. The short version of their tales all sounded nearly identical: a sh*t-ton of work to produce something of which they could feel proud, receive almost no help whatsoever from their publishing company, hawk the book almost entirely themselves, and collect next to no money for all of their efforts.

Sure, there’s the “bUt tHe eXpOsUrE aNd aUtHoRiTy!” argument, but at this point in my career in the wine world, I needed neither.

Combine that knowledge with the fact that I felt that the world hardly needed any more wine books at this point, and I skeptically just deleted the first email that I got from Callisto asking if I’d be interested in writing a beginner’s book about wine.

N.F.W.

By the time that I received a followup from Callisto, I’d forgotten about the first one, but had in the interim resolved to be more open to work pitches coming my way, mostly due to the fact that the gig economy under the current presidential administration completely sucks donkey bong, and I needed work. So I parked the skepticism temporarily and we scheduled a call.

Man, am I lucky that they sent that second email.

Callisto allayed my concerns within a few minutes. Sorry, but you’re wrong about the world not needing another beginner’s wine book, they told me; part of their unique business model is that they research book topics that people want but currently cannot find, so they knew there was already a market for the spin that they were putting on the book. Also, I wouldn’t be working on the book sales, I get contracted to write the book as part of a collaborative team of designers, editors, and illustrators. I get paid just as those fine folks would get paid – based on the work, not on having to collect a tiny percentage of sales.

And so we have yet another example (not that we needed it) that outside of the topic of wine I knew precious little about what I had been saying for years.

Go figure.

The other interesting tidbit about the book: following the lead of the book’s main editor, I adopted a position of “insane usefulness.” I.e., if the content wasn’t potentially insanely useful to the reader, then it was going to be subjected to extremely merciless editing. Sure, my voice would be there, but its hyper-verbosity was absolutely going to be toned down in service to the reader.

Everything in the Wine Taster’s Guide needed to be useful. I wanted any random page to which someone might flip that didn’t consist of a splash page/picture to have the potential to edu-tain the reader (and in those cases, the caption needed to be useful). Even the descriptions of the wines in the tastings needed to teach something. This is a bit exhausting, but I think that the results (though not my mental health) are better for it.

Did we meet that goal? I guess we’ll soon see…

Cheers!

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

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at How I Almost Didn’t Write a Book from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/how-i-almost-didnt-write-a-book/

Monday 15 June 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 15, 2020

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 in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

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

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 15, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-june-15-2020/

Thursday 11 June 2020

A Taste of Our Online Wine Classes

Want a taste of our online wine classes? I just edited our Online Wine Quizzo night into a two-minute youtube clip. It’s silly and I am a terrible video editor, but I think you’ll like it.

This specific event was a little different from our usual classes. We had a ton of audience participation and the winning team got a $100 gift certificate. It was the first time we had tried this, and everyone had a blast. We’ll definitely do it again. We’ll have to make the questions a bit harder next time, too.

One of the highlights of these virtual wine classes is that we get to meet so many people from across the country. We’ve also learned a wealth of skills, too. We’ve learned how to light up our wine school studio property and even can do two-camera shots during online classes.  And I’m (slowly) learning how to edit video and audio. I hope you enjoy this fun little video.

The post A Taste of Our Online Wine Classes appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/a-taste-of-our-online-wine-classes/

Alentejo Postcard, Part 2 (Herdade de Coelheiros Recent Releases)

Coelheiros vineyard 1

Among the 800 hectares of property upon which Alentejo’s Herdade de Coelheiros grows walnuts and cork trees sits about 50 hectares of vines. Though their history date back to the mid-1400s (as a hunting estate), those vines that source Coelheiros’ modern wines were replanted over 500 years later, in 1981.

That’s because under Portugal’s dictatorship, the region was designated to grow grain, rather than to adhere to its ancient tradition of the vine.

Luís Patrão

Coelheiros’ Luís Patrão

Winemaking in Alentejo has a rich history, of course, but interestingly for this formerly remote area in Alentejo, wine consumption was local; after all, its residents weren’t likely to get vino from anywhere else for the better part of 400 or so years.

Colheiros has a head start on much of Alentejo when it comes to the region’s modern New Renaissance: along with Esporão, they were one of the first wine companies to reinvest in the region after the fall of the Estado Novo. And, apparently, the time has come to reinvent themselves yet again…

Coelheiros vineyard 2

“We’re in a new time in Alentejo,” oenologist Luís Patrão told me when I visited Coelheiros on a media tour (back when we could still do those things). “Especially in a time when we’re faced with climate change. That’s the most difficult thing we’re going to face; all we can do is adapt. The goal is to be making wine here 100, 200 years from now.”

In the 1980s, planting international grapes was en vogue, but Patrão sees Alentejo’s indigenous (and, in some cases, adopted) varieties as the key to Coelheiros’ – and the region’s – future. Case in point: Arinto, which is adaptable, keeping its notable acidity even with warming weather conditions.

Of course, if the wines sucked then none of this would matter; but they don’t, and so it does…

Coelheiros wines

2018 Herdade de Coelheiros ‘Coelheiros’ Branco (Alentejo, $15)

Speaking of Arinto it’s the showcase in this white, with a smattering of Antão Vaz to fill things out. Pineapple, citrus, minerals, green herb notes, gorgeous acidity; things are just deliciously focused in this, more so than I would have expected at the price point.

 

elegant2017 Herdade de Coelheiros ‘Tapada de Coelheiros’ Branco (Alentejo, $NA)

A blend of dry-farmed Arinto and Roupeiro, the tropical flavor preference of Coelheiros continues here, but it’s accompanied by ripe peaches and pears. A nice hint of citrus-pith astringency, linear acidity, and a touch of lees-like cream all make this textural and interesting; a nutty, toasty finish adds complexity. Ripe, yes (we’re in Alentejo), but thoroughly elegant, too.

Coelheiros vineyard 3

kick ass2015 Herdade de Coelheiros ‘Tapada de Coelheiros’ Tinto (Alentejo, $NA)

Not an indigenous piece of grape skin is to be found in this (still quite young) blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Alicante Bouschet. Plenty of ass-kicking red wine kung-fu is to be found here, however; dried herbs, licorice, violets, cassis, black cherry, red plum, currants… there’s just a lot to process (and to love). Concentrated, grippy, and powerful enough for the hedonists, but poised enough to shut up the haters.

 

kick ass2010 Herdade de Coelheiros Vinha do Taco Tinto (Alentejo, $NA)

A single vineyard (from granitic soils) expression of 100% Petit Verdot (I know, I know, we were talking about indigenous grapes… sorry…), named after the estate’s historic hunting pavilion (now a tasting area). Earthy, spicy, gamey, brambly, chewy, plummy, smokey, savory, and lots of other -y adjectives, this is deep, ripe, structured, and basically doing its best impression of an entire three-course meal in a glass. At nearly a decade old, it’s a mere babe, and the type of red that gives PV a good name.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Alentejo Postcard, Part 2 (Herdade de Coelheiros Recent Releases) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/alentejo-postcard-part-2-herdade-de-coelheiros-recent-releases/

Monday 8 June 2020

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 8, 2020

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 in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

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

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 8, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-june-8-2020/

Thursday 4 June 2020

Alentejo Postcard, Part 1 (Cartuxa Recent Releases)

Cartuxa vines

Portugal’s Cartuxa is fairly well-known for being one of two wineries run by a wide-ranging non-profit foundation (focusing on developing the Évora region culturally). It’s equally well-known for being named after a monastery and having roots going back to 15th Century Jesuit monks, and still employing amphora from the 1800s.

CartuxaBut Cartuxa is most famous for producing one of Portugal’s most sought-after and historically expensive dry wines: the (arguably overpriced) Pêra-Manca Tinto, a wine that I’m not even going to discuss here, since during my media visit to Cartuxa back in December it wasn’t even poured.

Despite getting Heismaned pretty hard on the PM Tinto pour, I can’t help but have a great deal of respect for Cartuxa, and not just because of their foundation’s mission of community development; their more affordable wines are, simply put, damned good ones…

Cartuxa wines 1

 

sexy2018 Cartuxa Foral de Évora Branco (Alentejo, $NA)

This Malvasia is a minor wonder; it manages to be fruity, perfumed, tropical, floral, luxurious, creamy, substantial, long, and sexy AF, all while clocking in at a mere 12.5% ABV. Seems improbable, I suppose, but it’s true, and happens to be impressive irresistible drinking.

 

kick ass2018 Cartuxa Évora Colheita Branco (Alentejo, $22)

Primarily Antão Vaz with a splash of Arinto, there’s a lot going on with this one: herbs, citrus, melons, pears, bay leaf, and a palate that feels big, but balanced. The finish is long, with power and tension, and a healthy dose of citrus pith. Also an impressive effort, considering that this one never sees a single plank of wood during fermentation or aging.

 

Cartuxa wines 2

 

elegant2015 Cartuxa Évora Colheita Tinto (Alentejo, $25)

A blend of Aragonez, Alicante Bouschet, and Trincadeira, this is a red that brings the spices (smoke, tobacco, wood, forest floor, and leather). The plum, currants, cassis, and black cherry flavors are concentrated and serious, and delivered with power and a modern sense of polished refinement.

 

Cartuxa wines 3 

 

elegant2016 Cartuxa Pêra-Manca Branco (Alentejo, $49)

As far as this dude is concerned, this white is where it’s at as far as Cartuxa is concerned. Crafted from older vine Antão Vaz and Arinto, and balanced equally between stainless steel and French oak treatment, this is a little slice of Portugese branco céu. It’s heady, butty, yeasty, round, complex, and silky, with a ton pear, blossom, and saline action. Gorgeous.

 

Cartuxa wines 4

 

kick ass2017 Cartuxa de Talha Bio Tinto (Alentejo, $NA)

The obligatory “clay pot” amphora Alentejo wine. Dark, leathery, and peppery, full of violets, character, power, and finesse, Cartuxa squeezes every once of nuance that it can from Portugal’s adopted son Alicante Bouschet grape here, deftly demonstrating why that variety is popular in Alentejo in the first place.

 

Cheers!

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

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Copyright © 2020. Originally at Alentejo Postcard, Part 1 (Cartuxa Recent Releases) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/alentejo-postcard-part-1-cartuxa-recent-releases/

Monday 1 June 2020

Winemaking 101

History of Winemaking

We have been making wine for ten thousand years. For much of that time, winemaking has played an outsized role in our lives. It has been an economic engine since before the Roman Empire and an essential part of many religions. Today, dozens of countries make wine on a commercial scale, and the demand for the drink keeps rising.

Wine is an artisanal beverage made with care. But it can also be a standardized industrial product. Both are fermented grapes: the difference lies in the winemaker’s intent and her audience. So, how’s a wine made? And what’s the difference between an eight-dollar bottle of wine and one that runs for a few hundred?

vineyard

All Wines Start in the Vineyard

The Vineyard

It all starts in the vineyard; a ton of grapes can cost a few hundred dollars or several thousand depending on the grapes. At it’s most basic, quality is measured  in Brix (sugar), pH (acidity)  and phenolic maturity (ripeness of the skins). A winemaker is seeking grapes that will produce delicious and complex wines.

In the wine trade, one of the best ways to source high-quality grapes is to focus on specific vineyards. Soil, vine orientation, and microclimate  each play a role in determining whether a vineyard will produce mediocre or magnificent wines. The best grapes will become premium wines, and the mediciocre will probably end up as supermarket value brands.

In either case, when the time is right, the winemaker will call to harvest and the race to make wine begins.

The Crush

How grapes are harvested is another price differential. Mechanical harvesting is  less expensive than having a dozen specialized people picking clusters by hand. Of course, a machine can’t tell whether the grapes are healthy or not, at least not as a professional picker can.  Workers haul the grapes to a truck; using small boxes that don’t allow the grapes to crush each other. Often, the harvest is done before the sun rises, transporting the grapes back to the winery while the grapes retain an evening chill.

Sorting of the grapes after harvest near Bordeaux, France

Grape Sorting During Crush

Once at the winery, the grapes must be sorted and separated from MOG (or material other than grapes), like leaves, and sticks. Rotten, underripe or damaged fruit will also be discarded. The grapes then will pass through a crusher-destemmer machine and pumped into fermentation vats. The winemaker can then choose to leave the grapes to sit for a while, leaching color and tannins before fermentation or go directly into the winemaking process. The resulting grape juice is called the must

Alcoholic fermentation is the process in which yeast (a fungus) consumes the sugar in the must. The main byproducts are alcohol and CO2. The reaction also generates quite an amount of heat but fermenting grape juice is more than letting it sit around, especially when making red wine; you must continuously punch down the cap that forms from the grape skins.

Closely monitoring the must weight tells the winemaker how much alcohol has been transformed and how much sugar is left. Once the sugars have fermented out, the wine moves on.

Winemaking Programs

If you are interested in winemaking programs, we offer an annual program for our students. You have to pass the Core Wine Program to quality.

winemaker training

Winemaking & Winemaker Certification

Monday, October 19 from 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm
3 Seat(s) Available

Malo

The winemaker faces another decision, allowing a secondary fermentation, called malolactic fermentation, where lactic bacteria transforms the sharp tartaric acid present in wine, into mellow lactic acid. For reds, it’s a given, for whites, it is entirely optional. Have you ever tried those buttery, creamy and coating wines made from Chardonnay? They’ve experienced malolactic fermentation, which in the trade we call “Malo” for short.  It may take months for Malo to complete.

Wine Barrels Stored at a Winery

Oak Barrels

After about a year,  wines will be ready to bottle. But first, they will need to be filtered and clarified before being bottled. For that time in storage, what they are held in matters. Inexpensive reds and whites are often stored in stainless steel vats.

Most premium wines are rested in a white oak barrel. Oak is a noble wood: permeable, flexible, but water-resistant, it’s ideal for making barrels, It has other peculiar properties too. It can impart spicy aromas and scents of smoke and vanilla to the wine. The longer the wine sits inside an oak barrel –and the newer the barrel–the more it will take in those lovely aromas.

Oak barrels are quite expensive. A new French-oak barrel can cost up to $2,000, and a winemaker needs dozens if not hundreds of them every year. No wonder why some bottles have a three-figure price tag!

The End Result

At the end of the day, decisions, from the vineyard to the bottle, make a wine worth your money or not. Premium wines are handmade and usually come in small quantities, elevating the price even more. You can tell when there’s passion behind a bottle of wine, and passion is always a good buy.

The post Winemaking 101 appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/winemaking-101/

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 1, 2020

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 in a “mini-review” format.
 
They are meant to be quirky, fun, and (mostly) easily-digestible reviews of (mostly) currently available wines (click here for the skinny on how to read them), and are presented links to help you find them, so that you can try them out for yourself. Cheers!

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

Shop Wine Products at Amazon.com

Copyright © 2020. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For June 1, 2020 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-june-1-2020/