Wine

Concert & Dégustation@Domaine de la Grange From the invitation:'A cette occasion, le duo Please Spring composé d'Heloïse Lefebvre au violin et de Paul Audoynaud à la guitar vous invitera à partager son univers 'Crossover', un mélange de ...
Concert & Dégustation@Domaine de la Grange From the invitation:'A cette occasion, le duo Please Spring composé d'Heloïse Lefebvre au violin et de Paul Audoynaud à la guitar vous invitera à partager son univers 'Crossover', un mélange de Jazz, Folk et Musique Classique en début de soirée. Vous serez transportés dans un univers aux accents cinématographiques, un imaginaire sonore où la mélodie fleutre avec une énergie pop/rock tout en gardent l'élégance de la musique de chambre. A découvrir!Nous nous retrouverons ensuite pour la partie degustation en vous proposant des vins du domaine et produits du terroir.N'oubliez pas de réserver par téléphone au 06.72.40.47.19 ou par mail à pleasespring@gmail.com Entrée: 15€'Bruno Curassier
score: 1 41 minutes ago
The average IQ of pole dancing palace with dancing Poles Mavericks, on Buitenkant Street, shot off the scale at breakfast yesterday as the 39 curators for Cape Town World Design Capital 2014 met next door at Truth Coffee with an Internat...
The average IQ of pole dancing palace with dancing Poles Mavericks, on Buitenkant Street, shot off the scale at breakfast yesterday as the 39 curators for Cape Town World Design Capital 2014 met next door at Truth Coffee with an International Advisory Committee of designers from Lagos, San Francisco and the Wilderness who had flown [...]
score: 1 about 2 hours ago
Michele Faro loves his mother, and I do too. In fact, I wanted to kiss the woman after a long day of driving from the northern tip of Sicily down to the eastern slopes of Mount Etna. Tired and hungry, I arrived at the tiny boutique hot...
Michele Faro loves his mother, and I do too. In fact, I wanted to kiss the woman after a long day of driving from the northern tip of Sicily down to the eastern slopes of Mount Etna. Tired and hungry, I arrived at the tiny boutique hotel that Faro has named after his mother, Donna Carmela, and sat down to a bowl of her rustic pork ragu and freshly made pasta, and practically burst into tears it was so good. Simple, essential, bursting with flavor, and perfectly spiced -- the tangy tomato sauce playing counterpoint to the rich, fatty saltiness of the pork and the starch of the paste. Faro grinned as I tucked into the bowl enthusiastically, and confided that it was among his favorite dishes growing up. He waited patiently while I apologetically scarfed up several more mouthfuls before turning to my notebook and pen to learn how he had become the proprietor of a small winery named Pietradolce on the slopes of the volcano that boomed occasionally in the background as we ate, talked, and drank. The Faro family are perhaps most easily described as nursery magnates. They run a vast and highly-successful ornamental plant business that spreads over many hectares just outside the little hamlet of Carruba di Riposto in the province of Catania, Sicily. From precious small plants to large palm trees, the Faro family exports plants all over Europe, with delivery trucks rumbling down the improbably narrow back streets of Carruba at all hours to the massive shipping terminal that attaches to the orderly nursery grounds and greenhouses. The 18-room hotel that Faro has named after his mother sits at the heart of this nursery operation, and is clearly funded by the former's great success. "My family were winemakers three generations ago," says Faro, "but my father strayed into landscaping agriculture and we stayed there." Still, Faro remembers his grandfather making wine from a three-acre plot when he was growing up, and he distinctly remembers his first taste of wine at 10 years old, a sip of Nerello Mascalese ceremoniously drawn from his grandfather's old oak cask. As Faro began his professional career as part of the family business, he found himself increasingly interested in wine and at the same time wondering why his family had abandoned their winemaking roots. "I had fallen in love with wine at that point," says Faro, recalling his thinking in 2000 when the idea to start a winery came to him, "and I thought why not get back to winemaking?" In 2001, vineyard land wasn't hard, nor expensive to procure on Etna, thanks to the utter impracticality of making a living growing grapes in the 21st century. The small villages that ring the slopes of Mount Etna were surrounded by countless tiny plots of old vines, abandoned in favor of pursuits more economically sound. With the help of hired winemaker Carlo Ferrini, Faro sought out a total of 16 acres of old vines high on Etna, which he carefully rehabilitated. Some are 120-year-old, pre-phylloxera Carricante vines whose twisted trunks produce precious little fruit each year. Already trained in the ancient albarello (head pruned) style, Faro eliminated every trace of modernity, ripping out the formed cement posts that supported many vines and providing wooden stakes to those gnarled vines that couldn't hold up their own weight. The vines are mostly dry farmed, and have never been treated with insecticides, or herbicides. They occasionally get a small dose of organic fertilizer mixed with water drawn from a well that sits next to the tiny stone hut that is slowly crumbling next to the vineyards. Faro's oldest vineyards are in the Contrada Rampante area of northern Etna, and at the upper limit of altitude for the DOC growing area. A few days after our dinner, early one morning we bounced up an irregularly maintained dirt road to take a look at some of his oldest vines. "We've just got these small pockets of soil, and then other than that it's just rocks, rocks, rocks, rocks," s
score: 1 about 2 hours ago
Bear Cave Seller?The only wine made for bears, by bears.Hello, ma’am, sorry to bother you at home, but could I have just a moment of your time? Oh, no, I’m not here to try to change your religion, I know that this is a Jesuit town, throu...
Bear Cave Seller?The only wine made for bears, by bears.Hello, ma’am, sorry to bother you at home, but could I have just a moment of your time? Oh, no, I’m not here to try to change your religion, I know that this is a Jesuit town, through and through. No, I’m here to talk about an exciting wine I have to offer. It’s a Bear Cave 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon, and it’s the only wine specifically designed for bears. Now, I know what you’re going to say. Why does my bear need to drink wine? And I hear you, but tell me this: why does ANYBODY need to drink wine? It’s about enjoying life. And doesn’t your bear deserve that much? With Bear Cave wine for bears, you’ll find that- Oh, you don’t have a bear? Oh, you think I’m an insane man? Oh, you’re calling the police?
score: 1 about 4 hours ago
Well it’s not cheap, but it’s very good. Importer: Mondo Imports.
Well it’s not cheap, but it’s very good. Importer: Mondo Imports.
score: 1 about 7 hours ago
From memory, this is the unoaked wine, or at least no new oak, if not stainless steel only.
From memory, this is the unoaked wine, or at least no new oak, if not stainless steel only.
score: 1 about 7 hours ago
Total production of 150 dozen. Eden Road rarely send me any wine, but with this set of 2012 Chardonnay I’m glad they did: the pleasure has been all mine.
Total production of 150 dozen. Eden Road rarely send me any wine, but with this set of 2012 Chardonnay I’m glad they did: the pleasure has been all mine.
score: 1 about 7 hours ago
The New South Wales wine catch cry of ‘Ask for it’, is one of the more ridiculous pieces of marketing I’ve come across, although in this case you might change it to ‘Beg for it’. This uses 15% new oak, and i...
The New South Wales wine catch cry of ‘Ask for it’, is one of the more ridiculous pieces of marketing I’ve come across, although in this case you might change it to ‘Beg for it’. This uses 15% new oak, and is beautifully made.
score: 1 about 7 hours ago
With the increasing pace of technological and social change taking place in our lives, we at VinTank strive to provide our users with the best tools to stay ahead of the curve. To maintain that goal, we come across many great articles an...
With the increasing pace of technological and social change taking place in our lives, we at VinTank strive to provide our users with the best tools to stay ahead of the curve. To maintain that goal, we come across many great articles and resources that we use to keep our bearing. Every week we will share the best from both inside and outside of our industry. We would love to hear your thoughts or questions as to how we can help put these ideas to work for you. How Wine Criticism Is Changing Consumers don’t need-or want-centralized gatekeepers telling them what they should or shouldn’t drink. Consumers still need advisors, of course, but when today’s consumers want information, they’re willing to look past professional critics and instead turn to friends and trusted networks. With travel, restaurants, movies, and so much else, this trend would hardly be worthy of commentary. TripAdvisor long ago supplanted paper-based guides like Frommer’s. Yelp is now the holy grail of restaurant reviews, and local blogs are increasingly influential. With movies, opening the local newspaper for commentary no longer makes sense when you can check out dozens of reviews on Rotten Tomatoes. With wine, however, this shift runs counter to so much of what’s sacred. Everything about wine-the bizarre tasting rituals, knowledge of obscure regions and varietals, and identifying good values-is supposed to be handed down from on high. Read more… VinTank’s Twist It’s well understood that consumers are turning to the internet and social networks for hotel or restaurant recommendations. This is now the reality for the wine industry as well. Take CellarTracker for instance, “about 800,000 people visit the site each month, and more than 2,200 wines are reviewed on the site each day. This means CellarTracker users review more wines in just six days than Robert Parker reviews in an entire year”. Our platform tracks your mentions across many sources at once, including CellarTracker and other widely used tasting note websites. Log in to your VinTank account to see on your dashboard any new tasting notes from a variety of sources. If you click on the tasting notes section, you will see them all in one place. The ‘Unfashionable’ Semillon Grape Gets Dirty and Rowdy in Napa “Semillon is not a fashionable variety,” announces Wine Grapes. “Nowhere outside Sauternes,” the book continues, “does there seem to be a groundswell of enthusiasm for this noble variety.” Time for a re-write, Wine Grapes. A “Semageddon” party went down in Napa last week, devoted entirely to this oh-so “unfashionable” Semillon grape. The party was attended by wine lovers and winemakers-many of them among the most influential in California today. There were four picnic tables, three ice buckets, and two coolers filled with bottles of Semillon gathered from around the world. The clincher: custom-made Semillon T-shirts!! Groundswell of enthusiasm?? In your face. Originally from Bordeaux and used in both dry and sweet wines there, it’s true that Semillon isn’t exactly mainstream in California (yet?). Wine Grapes says that less than 900 acres of it existed in the state in 2010.  Read more… VinTank’s Twist In statistics, a long tail is the portion of a distribution having a large number of occurrences far from the “head” or central part of the distribution. It is a term used in online business, mass media, micro-finance, user-driven innovation, and social network mechanisms (e.g. crowdsourcing, crowdcasting, peer-to-peer), economic models, and marketing (viral marketing). It is important to note that what we are going to see from the interconnectedness of networks, is that there will be new markets for non-traditional brands or varieties. If you find yourself in the “long-tail” of the wine market, fret not, hike up y
score: 1 about 11 hours ago
Sailing boat entering St Katharine's DockThe Michael Patrick (Mil'Pat) heads up towards St Katharine's Dock and Tower Bridge (above and below) Waiting to enter the dock (above and below) Heading into St Katharine's Dock A wave from 'A...
Sailing boat entering St Katharine's DockThe Michael Patrick (Mil'Pat) heads up towards St Katharine's Dock and Tower Bridge (above and below) Waiting to enter the dock (above and below) Heading into St Katharine's Dock A wave from 'Anjou Pur Breton' Isabelle Legeron MW in red coatMichel Patrick Olivier Cousin preparing for a new role! Isabelle's delight at arriving before the crew and passengers drank all the wine! Mil'Pat in the lock waiting to proceedTribunal d'Angers: an impromptu hearing! Mil'Pat approaching her berth Journey's endLe Capitaine.... ... boire avec modération Unloading the cargo Wine for the RAW wine fair
score: 1 about 12 hours ago