• Single-Vineyard Champagne

    4/20/15 - Once, the vineyards of Champagne were simply divided into the wines of the mountain and the wines of the river.  During the winters of the Little Ice Age (16c-19c), these wines, particularly those of the river, would often experience stuck fermentations. Spring’s warmth would restart those fermentations, creating slightly sparkling wines, a natural product of terroir.  While the monks of the Abbey...
  • Lilian Duplessis - The New Generation of Chablis!

    4/15/15 - (Lilian pouring a tasting in his cellar. Photo by Sophie Barrett.) Organic farming and natural winemaking are not the first things to come to mind when thinking of Chablis. Industrial farming is commonplace, with chemical pesticides and mechanical harvesting in the vines and lab yeasts and other winemaking tricks in the cellar. There are, however, a few producers working against the norm,...
  • Learning to Love VinItaly

    4/13/15 - (There are at least 12 buildings like this one – the Emilia-Romagna pavilion. Some kind of wheeled vehicle might be a good idea…) We’re kind of learning to love VinItaly. Yes, it’s crowded, sometimes with inebriated sightseers who make it extra-hard to navigate. Yes, the food sucks, but that’s hardly why you go. True, the bathrooms are a topic to avoid –...
  • Jefferson's Bourbon - Chambers Street Style

      4/10/15- (A commemorative Hank Williams, Jr. bottle at the Jim Beam museum.) We continue our Bourbon odyssey with a special selection from Trey Zoeller’s fantastic Jefferson’s label. Jefferson’s is unlike other Bourbon, because instead of distilling they focus on purchasing the best barrels possible from other producers to create superb, ultra-small production lots. Trey created the Jefferson’s label in 1997 before the world’s...
  • Piedmont Week - Friday - Cavallotto

    4/10/15 - In the opinion of this map-loving wine geek, Alessandro Masnaghetti, the author of the map pictured above, would already be Sir Alessandro, as he has performed extraordinary services for his country – if only Italy had knighthoods. Masnaghetti’s ever-expanding library of vineyard maps began with fantastic maps of Barolo and Barbaresco. Above you can see some of the map for Castiglione Falletto,...
  • Piedmont Week - Thursday - De Forville and Barale

    4/9/15 - A few weeks ago we had a wonderful dinner at Franny’s, the excuse being a chance to taste a number of vintages of De Forville Barbaresco. Prior to dinner, the oldest De Forville I’d tasted was about 14 years old (the excellent 1995), so I really didn’t know what to expect. All of the wines we had at dinner are included in...
  • Piedmont Week - Wednesday - Franco Fiorina

     4/08/15 -   (The label reads: “Barolo, the jewel of Italian production, is the most aristocratic and the most refined wine for a roast, as is universally known. Handle delicately, and take care to uncork the bottle some hours before serving it at a temperature of 18 degrees [64 farenheit].”) We can’t offer much sound information about Fiorina without blatantly plagiarizing Wasserman’s Italy’s Noble...
  • Piedmont Week - Tuesday - A Favorite, Cordero di Montezemolo

    4/7/15 - (The hill of Monfalletto with the famous Cedar of Lebanon; the Cordero winery is to the left of the hill. Thanks to Gregory Dal Piaz for the photo.) Cordero di Montezemolo is one of our great favorites for their wines made up until 1990, after which they went to a modern-style wine. Hearsay has it that things are moving back at Cordero,...
  • Piedmont Week - Monday - the Historic Wines of Fontanafredda

    4/6/15 - (Emanuele di Mirafiore, illegitimate son of King Vittorio Emanuele, inherited Fontanafredda in 1878. The property remained in family hands until 1927.) The historical importance of Fontanafredda for Barolo cannot be overstated; it’s one of the oldest and largest properties in the region, and one of the first to estate-bottle and market under its own label. This is beautifully related in Kerin O’Keefe’s...
  • Exciting Arrivals from California: Three Mourvèdres and a Pair of Great Grenaches!

    4/2/15 - Dirty & Rowdy's Hardy Wallace is one of the hardest working (not to mention nicest) winemakers in the business. His expressive lineup of Mourvèdre wines (eight of them) alone requires consistent travel from the winery in Santa Rosa, California to far-flung parcels around California's Santa Barbara, Monterey, Contra Costa, Mendocino, El Dorado, and Amador Counties. Dirty & Rowdy’s reds are hard to come by...
  • Principiano - Fine Barolo That You Probably Haven't Heard About

    4/01/15 - Grape growing in Barolo and Barbaresco has changed quite a lot in the 12 years since I first visited, the most visible and obvious factor being the greatly diminished use of herbicide – there’s still plenty used, but at least the whole place doesn’t look like the moon with vines growing on it. Some of the better known producers who have farmed...
  • The High Road

    3/31/15 - Sitting in the multistory steel and glass atrium of the soon to be re-opened 5 Beekman Street, you can’t help but notice the drive and the confidence that marked New York at the end of the 19th century. It was a similar boundless industry and optimism of bold spirits that raised the copper stills and the smoke stacks of some of Scotland’s...
  • The Return of Blue Moon Fish!

    3/28/15 - (Marc Ollivier of Domaine de la Pépière with Alex Villani of Blue Moon Fish) We're very happy that our friend Alex Villani of Blue Moon fish has recovered from some health issues last fall and is back on the water! His boat, the Blue Moon, operates out of the Mattituck Inlet in Eastern Long Island and since 1988 he has been trucking...
  • 2012s from Martin Bart and Gilles Lafouge; Lovely Burgundies, Great Values!!

    3/27/15 - (Gilles Lafouge)   "Value" and "Burgundy" are words that don't frequently go together and yet these two estates consistently produce beautiful wines which we are able to offer at extremely reasonable prices. The 2012 vintage is particularly successful for both Bart and Lafouge with the wines showing great purity of fruit, bright acidity and great terroir expression and balance. (Please note: Bart...
  • Beautiful Wines from Tenerife (Canary Islands): Viñátigo, Ignios, Monje, and Tajinaste.

    3/18/15 - (Approaching Mount Teide (Tenerife), the highest point in Spain.  Photo by Ariana Rolich.) The Canary Islands started their ascent from the eastern Atlantic more than 20 million years ago, just 100 kilometers off the western coast of Africa near the southern border of Morocco. The gradual emergence of the volcanic island chain began with Fuerteventura and Lanzarote in the east and continued...
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