Monday, May 31, 2010

Aloha, Meatless Mondays!

With the warmer summer weather here - at long last! - Mondays make the perfect day to go in for the hottest trend sweeping across North America...Meatless Mondays!

Meatless Monday Movement is gaining support all over the U.S.. Even Mario Batali has joined ranks with Al Gore, Gwyneth Paltrow and Simon Cowell to support the cause.

Japanese Ivies Grow Monday Movement

Veggie Monday in JapanJapan has become the latest country to embrace the growing Meatless Monday movement! Students at four of Japan’s Ivy League colleges are hosting monthly ‘Veggie Monday’ parties to encourage the country to try more plant-based options.

Batali's 14 restaurants across the Lower 48 will promote meat free Mondays by offering two (at least two!) veggie entrees, pizza and pastas. They're even going in for using a Meatless Monday Logo.

Did you know that Meatless is not just good for you but also the planet, too?! Livestock production creates more greenhouse gases than transportation. Choosing beans or beets or edamame over meat even one day a week helps to lighten your carbon footprint (too!). Meatless Mondays and Healthy People for a Healthy Planet! 

Aloha Pineapple Rice..."Ono!!" (means Delicious! in Hawaiian!)

[Can't See The Video? Click HERE]

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Farm To Fork, Foodies And Farmers Together At Last

By Sarah Lemon

Excerpted From Mail Tribune

With restaurants the stage and menus the script for "farm-to-table" cuisine, local diners often relate to farmers only as bit characters in the cast.

Starting next week, farmers and consumers will play roles in the same scene for a new dinner series that runs through November. Founders of "Farm to Fork" are bringing their tables to the farm, their kitchen to the food and farmers and customers together for a meal.

If you go

What: Farm to Fork, a dinner series featuring local foods on the farms and ranches that grew and produced them. A portion of proceeds benefit Rogue Valley Farm to School and Friends of Family Farmers. Events are planned on Saturdays and begin at 4:30 p.m. Tickets are $60, but additional donations are encouraged.

When and Where: June 26, Dunbar Farms, 612 Pierce Road, Medford; July 31, Restoration Farm, 1133 Old Siskiyou Highway, Ashland; Aug. 28, Happy Dirt Veggie Patch, 100 Eagle Mill Road, Ashland; Sept. 11, Blackberry Lane, 2926 Lower River Road, Grants Pass; Oct. 9, Rogue Valley Brambles, 6764 Tarry Lane, Talent; Nov. 6, Dunbar Farms.

For more information and reservations: See the website www.farmtoforkevents.com or call 503-473-3952.

"Meeting the farmer is kind of the first step, and then meeting the land ... is even more enriching," says Kristen Lyon, personal chef and Farm to Fork organizer.

Lyon, 31, enriched clients' food experience last year with help from Lori Campbell, owner of Blackberry Lane farm in Grants Pass. The two hosted an August event for about 40 people, who received five courses comprising the herbs, berries, edible flowers and specialty vegetables Campbell sells to local restaurants. The response was so favorable that Lyon and Campbell planned a series of six such farm dinners this year.

Read More On Mail Tribune...

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Fort Berens Estate Winery, Lillooet, B.C.

Fort Berens Estate Winery Investors See Gold In Lillooet, B.C.

“Fort Berens Estate Winery is the first of its kind in Lillooet. We saw the potential for the wine industry to take root in this area – just like prospecting for gold, sometimes you have to take a chance,” said Pannekoek. “Our new investors share our vision and our excitement in creating quality wines in this beautiful part of the province.”

Proprietors Heleen Pannekoek and Rolf de Bruin, newly arrived from Holland with their young family are pleased to welcome the gold company executives into their ambitious and exciting new business.


Fort Berens Estate Winery, first in Lillooet, B.C.

LILLOOET, BC (May 30, 2010)  – Fort Berens Estate Winery (Fort Berens), today announced that it has attracted the venture capital necessary to accelerate its business plans and build a new winery facility located in Lillooet, British Columbia. With the new funding, Fort Berens will commence construction of a new wine making operation and shop on its property to produce and sell wines from grapes grown on the winery’s initial twenty acre vineyard. The first crop of grapes is expected in the fall of 2011.

Fort Berens is located in historic Lillooet, at Mile 0 of the Cariboo Trail and rallying point for the Cariboo Gold Rush. The winery was established on the east side of the Fraser River at Lillooet in early 2009, exactly one hundred and fifty  years after the Hudson Bay Company started construction of a trading post in the same location under the same name. The fort had been designed to serve the thousands of prospectors who flocked to the Lillooet region in the mid-1800’s in search of gold. However, it was never completed and the fertile river bench was instead used for the growing of melons, tomatoes and alfalfa.


Fort Berens Estate Winery, Lillooet, B.C.

Located in the magnificent Fraser Canyon, this historic site is now home to Fort Berens Estate Winery, Lillooet’s first commercial vineyard and winery. In keeping with the pioneering spirit of the Gold Rush era, the proprietors of Fort Berens Estate Winery are forging a new and unique wine experience in British Columbia, offering superb, distinct, hand-crafted wines.

The investors in Lillooet’s newest venture are no strangers to the pursuit of pioneering. Hugh Agro, Sean Harvey and John McConnell are Toronto and Vancouver-based mining executives and members of the Board of Directors of a TSX-listed gold exploration and development company.  As investors in Fort Berens Estate Winery they have come to Lillooet looking for a different kind of gold, of a liquid variety.

Agro has had his eye on Lillooet for years and now, with a project that suits his sense of adventure and his desire to establish a presence in south-central British Columbia, he looks forward to assisting the fledgling winery. “I’ve kept a subscription to the local newspaper for years and when I heard about the Lillooet grape project, my interest was piqued,” Agro said. “Then I read that this young couple from Holland was actually planting a vineyard and building a winery and I got in touch with them.  When Rolf and Heleen said that they were looking for investors to grow their business, I came out to see them and I was very impressed with their vision and business plan. Two of my business partners, Sean Harvey and John McConnell, became interested and together we agreed to get involved.”

Fort Berens Estate Winery currently offers five select wines under their label, made from grapes sourced in the Okanagan. They are available for sale in the existing on-site winery and tasting room and also in a number of specialty wine stores in Vancouver, Whistler, Kamloops and Lillooet.

For further information: Fort Berens Estate Winery, (250) 256-7788, www.fortberens.ca

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Saturday, May 29, 2010

Food Down The Road - Summer Reading And References

Want to dig deeper into the issues of food and farming? Click on the links below to find more information relating to sustainable local food systems. Enjoy!  Read More on Food Down The Road, Kingston and Countryside.

Fiction

Non-Fiction

Cookbooks

Periodicals & Reports

Films

Websites

For links to other relevant websites, please click on a following category:

Local Food Directories

Farmers’ Markets

Local Food Stores

Food Security

Local Food Programs Ontario

Canada

USA

New Farmer Training and Resources

Education Centres & Courses(for Farmers and Eaters alike)Ontario

Canada

USA

*  New England Small Farm Institute — www.smallfarm.org

Urban Agriculture & Growing Your Own Food

Kingston

Canada

Food Related Events Kingston

Ontario

Activist & Action Groups  Biotechnology

  • Canadian Biotechnology Action Network — www.cban.ca

Climate Change

Other – Kingston

Other – Ontario

Other – Canada

Other – USA & International

Preservation Initiatives Seed-Saving

Land Preservation

Animal Breeds

Research Initiatives

Organic Research Initiatives

Kingston Community Meal &Food Programs

Cooking with Local Food

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Friday, May 28, 2010

Abacela "Hot Small Brand of America"

Abacela named one of the “Hot Small Brands of America”

by: Christine Collier

Wine Business Monthly just published their 7th edition “Hot Small Brands of America” and Abacela was one of ten to make the list for 2009.

Three Oregon wineries have made the “Hot Brand” list in previous years: A to Z in 2006, Willamette Valley Vineyards in 2007 and Domaine Drouhin last year. We are fortunate that with more than6,000 wineries in the U.S. and less than 500 in Oregon that our wineries are so well represented on this prestigious list.

Read MORE HERE on Christine’s Southern Oregon Wine Blog…

Abacela Winery, founded and operated by Earl and Hilda Jones in the mid-nineties, pioneered the planting of Tempranillo and many other varietals in the Umpqua Valley and the United States. Since then, Abacela has established itself as the industry leader for their region, just check out their extensive list of awards and recognition- wines with 95 point scores and gold medals galore.
More important than accolades, is the mission of risk-taking and innovation Abacela exemplifies. It stems from the personalities of the owners, as the Jones’ made bold moves of leaving behind established careers to realize their dream of producing an American varietal
Tempranillo.

They have tried and succeeded with over twenty varietals including the likes of  Tempranillo, Syrah, Grenache, Dolcetto, and Port Varietals.
To try the “hot” wines of this “hot” brand, visit their Tasting Room in Roseburg, check out their booth at the upcoming McMinnville Food and Wine (SIP) Festival March 12th-14th, or look for the yellow foiled wines on your local wine shop’s shelf.

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Folin Cellars - Perfection On The Palate

by: Christine Collier

Two days after the Folin Cellars Winemaker Dinner and I am still too full to look at this pictures… But, what a great night it was!

A group of 15 guests gathered at the Folin Cellars Carlton Tasting Room at 6 p.m. to kick off the night with a “Soter-Pop” as Rob Folin, winemaker, titled the Soter Vineyards Brut Rosé. Chris and I were running late, as always, because I over gabbed at our last commitment and didn’t know Chris couldn’t teleport us to the event. Then, to continue our traditions, we got lost, had no cell service, bickered about how this was so “like us,” got back on track, talked ourselves into having a great night and walked through the door. The Soter-Pop instantly cheered us up as did the Wild Muchroom Crosstinis, Prosciutto Truffle Butter Breadsticks and Garlic and Rosemary Goat Cheese that Carole Stevens, Folin’s sales and marketing powerhouse turned chef, prepared.

The evening continued as we were ushered across the street to the quaint Carlton Loft where dinner was being held. We were greeted by the 2007 Viognier, which is always a delightful welcome.

The meal started with Duck Confit Salad with Shaved Truffles and Dijon Vinaigrette paired with the 2008 Mourvédre. This wine is typically used as a blending grape in his GSM (Grenache, Syrah, Mourvédre), but Rob bottled just 25 cases as a Wine Club special. I loved the buttery smell on this wine. Chris informed me the smell, reminiscent of movie theater butter, is diacetyl, a product of lactic acid bacteria… Mmm-Mmm… delicious! We later tried the GSM that incorporated that gorgeous nose, while finishing a bit sweeter.

Next up, Rob introduced the Mushroom Risotto Cakes with Petite Wilted Greens and White Truffles with a story of how this dish came about. Apparently, the Folin crew was dining at Fenouil in Portland and they had a bottle of their Tempranillo already opened. They ordered a dish very similar to the one they recreated and thought it was absolute heaven. To follow suit, the risotto was paired with the 2006 Tempranillo and 2005 Tempranillo Reserve. This was the show-stopper for me!

Between each course Rob would enlighten us with information on the wine and its selection or production method. In his hand was the 2007 Syrah that was 1/2 of the wine pairing for the Pan Roasted Quail with Shaved Asparagus and White Truffle Jus on a Truffled Potato and Carrot Purée. The other 1/2 of the wine pairing was the 2008 Petite Syrah.

Props to Carole who created excellence on a plate. She humbly noted that she has only cooked quail four times (that seems like a lot to me!) in her life and was ready to call in pizza.

And to spoil us even more she topped off our dishes with freshly shaved white truffles that she gathered herself in her secret location. All the truffles were at the optimal ripeness and collected by her and Rob.

As if we needed to continue eating, a platter of assorted cookies was passed around and the 2007 Late Harvest Viognier was poured. The delectable bites were from Two Tarts Bakery and Honest Chocolates. There was a chocolate covered caramel sprinkled with sea salt that Chris and I raved about all day Saturday. Honest Chocolates is located in Carlton, so when you go visit Folin’s Tasting Room be sure to stop by.

Chris and I sat at one of the ends of the table between three very darling couples (sadly one of them is not pictured). I could hardly swallow my food without laughing at one of their stories.

Now you can see why I am still so full! Rob and Carole sure know how to host a wine dinner! We were so lucky to be squeezed into this intimate event, because as you would guess, it filled up quick. The food and wine were amazingly paired, Carole showered us in crazy amounts of truffles, and the company was a laugh-attack. I don’t want to make you any more envious, but this dinner was only $35/person. Can you believe it??! Deal of the decade. Be sure to get on the Folin Cellars’ mailing list to hear about these events (just don’t act faster than me; I don’t want to lose my seat!).

While Carole was the master chef, poor Rob had dishes duty the next day…

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Sunday, May 23, 2010

Farmers Turn Champs-Elysees Into Huge Farm

 (Paris, France May 23, 2010) This weekend French farmers transformed Paris's Champs-Elysees into a huge green space filled with fresh agricultural products from French farms and growers.

If you're in Paris, you still have time to check it out...It's also in celebration of World Biodiversity Day which was Saturday.

Can't See The Video? Click HERE

Thousands turn out to see a Green Champs-Elysees

From the BBC...

One of Paris's main thoroughfares, the Champs-Elysees, has been covered in earth and turned into a huge green space in an event staged by young French farmers.

They want to highlight their financial problems, caused by falling prices for agricultural produce.

Plants, trees and flowers were brought in by lorry overnight to transform the avenue into a long green strip.

More than a million people are expected to visit over the next two days.

The event, which cost 4.2m euros (£3.6m; $5.3m) to stage, has been organised by the French Young Farmers (Jeunes Agriculteurs) union over the holiday weekend in France.

It will serve as a showcase of farm production from sheep breeding to crop growing.

The union, which represents some 55,000 farmers under the age of 35, wants to impress on the public - and the government - the efforts required to produce what goes on the table.

"It's about re-establishing contact with the public about what our profession is and what they want from it," William Villeneuve, president of the Jeunes Agriculteurs, said on Friday.

Espace Vert Champs-Elysees, Paris

Vous dites de Nature Capitale que c'est un "happening épique". N'est-ce pas aussi un trompe-l'oeil, à l'heure où la biodiversité est à la peine?

Read More HERE

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This is a hot-button issue in France right now. See what Sarkozy promised back in March.

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Saturday, May 22, 2010

How To Love The Heartbreak Grape

How To Love The Heartbreak Grape

Pinot noir is a very fickle grape, requiring the utmost attention and respect in every phase of the winemaking process. Winemakers are the first to testify to this, claiming that grapes that have been handled too much can end up making wines that lack flavor and harmony.

Clearly, Pinot noir is a risky (and more expensive) proposition for the winegrower, the winemaker, and the wine drinker. But it is precisely this high-stakes gamble that makes pinot noir all the more alluring and rewarding.

There is much debate as to the origins of the variety, although one currently popular theory is that the Pinot noir grape is an offspring of Pinot meunier and Gewurztraminer. This union helps explain the characteristics behind the beloved Pinot noir. As author Stuart Pigot notes in Planet Wine, “Pinot meunier gave Pinot noir its bright, berry aromas and initial charm, while Gewurztraminer its silkiness, extravagance, nobility, and fickleness.”


Pinot Noir, the elegant, fickle, silky grape.

The name Pinot Noir is derived from the French words for “pine” and “black” in reference to the varietals' tightly clustered dark purple cone-shaped bunches of grapes. Therefore, Pinot noir refers both to the grape varietal as well as the wine that it produces. The skin of the Pinot noir grape is relatively thin, making it a tricky, albeit rewarding, candidate for wine production.

As mentioned by Karen MacNeil in The Wine Bible, “Winemakers adopt a minimalist approach, and often a percentage of the grapes is not crushed. Instead, whole grapes are put directly into the fermenting tanks, which also helps maximize fruity flavors in the wine. To keep those fruit flavors dominant, many wine-makers are also extremely careful and sparing in their use of new oak for aging.”

Oregon, inspired by the similar climate characteristics of Burgundy, staked its reputation on Pinot noir with much success. Thanks to ocean fog, California has shown that it too has no shortage of spots cool enough to keep Pinot grapes on the vine as they develop fine fruity flavors and texture. Notable Pinot regions in California include Los Carneros, the Russian River Valley in Sonoma and Santa Maria north of Santa Barbara.

Pinot noir is what put Oregon on the map internationally, and is the most planted in the state by far. Wineries in Oregon tend to be small family affairs. Chardonnay, Riesling and Pinot gris follow. Oregon has no such thing as cheap, bulk wine. The climate is distinctly cloudy and cool, especially in the Willamette Valley where most of the wineries are clustered. This gentle climate, which highly resembles that of Burgundy, allows for wines of good acidity and balance, moderate alcohol, and an ideal degree of flavor.

Love Pinot? Check out the International Pinot Noir Celebration!


Summer Wine Reads:  Johnson, Hugh. The World Atlas of Wine, Ed. 4. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1994; MacNeil, Karen. The Wine Bible. New York: Workman Publishing, 2001; Pigott, Stuart. Planet Wine. London: Mitchell Beazley, 2004; Robinson, Jancis. Jancis Robinson's Wine Course. London: BBC Books, 1995.

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Thursday, May 20, 2010

First Lady Gets A Little Fruity


  “It’s All About the Fruit TM” Competitive Grants to Promote Nutrition, Sustainability and Volunteerism

SACRAMENTO, Calif., May 18, 2010 – Jamba Juice and the National Gardening Association (NGA) today announced a fun, easy way for schools and communities to support nutrition education through gardening and the planting of fruit trees. 

“WE Garden is all about bringing communities together to promote a stronger, healthier California,” said California’s First Lady Maria Shriver.  “This new partnership between Jamba Juice and the National Gardening Association will provide ongoing funding for school gardens and establish grants to plant fruit trees.  I applaud their work to support California’s WE Garden program and help take our message to schools across the nation.”


On average, gardening activity burns between 250 and 500 calories an hour.  For children, there's a great deal of research indicating that gardening also helps them achieve higher test scores; connect to the environment; develop social skills; and improve their attention, focus, and self-esteem.
Sip to Support A GardenTM:  Schools and garden organizations that sign up and register for the Sip to Support A Garden program will have the ability to earn year-round funding for their gardens through Jamba’s Community Appreciation Card.  Participation is simple:  Sign up a school garden or organization on-line; the organization will receive a Jamba-Kit that includes swipe cards for supporters, program details and other information; Start swiping -- each time a supporter uses the swipe card for purchases at participating Jamba Juice locations, Jamba will donate 12% of the purchase to support gardens.  10% will be donated directly back to the garden organization and 2% will be donated to support school fruit tree grants administered by 
the NGA. 
 

Pictured in Photos: Maria Shriver and Jamba Juice President and CEO James D. White with student launch Jamba Juice Fruit Tree and Garden Program at State Capitol

Jamba Juice President & CEO James D. White with Sacramento City Unified School District Superintendent Jonathan Raymond, National Gardening Association CEO Mike Metallo with students from Sacramento schools receiving the first 5 $500 fruit tree grants from Jamba Juice  

It’s All About the FruitTM Grants Jamba Juice and the NGA are creating the It’s All About the Fruit competitive grants program where schools can apply and compete for $500 fruit tree planting grants to create long-term sustainable solutions and resources for schools and communities.  To kick off the grant program, Jamba and NGA announced that the first grants are being awarded to five schools in the Sacramento City Unified School District: Oak Ridge Elementary School, Bowling Green K-6 School, Leonardo Da Vinci K-8 School, Will C. Wood Middle School, and Rosa Parks Middle School.  Each school will receive a $500 It’s All About the Fruit grant to plant fruit trees on their school campuses.  Superintendent Jonathan Raymond was present at the Sacramento event to accept the grants along with students from the schools.  The first round of grant applications will be accepted in September 2010 with application requirements announced in July. 

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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Fort Langley Weekend Afternoon

Summer is the season for exploration and discovery. Often this takes the form of travel and in our desire to see the world, we sometimes forget about what's in our backyard, or the special spots that lay just outside the main destinations.
Fort Langley is bejeweled with boutique wineries and artisan food shops and, what's more, it's a convenient outpost to Seattle, Vancouver, and even Tsawwassen when you're catching one of the BC Ferries to the Gulf Islands or Victoria.
Langley is one of those places where, when you do stop, you are pleasantly surprised by the quality you find and you can't help but reward yourself for being such a savvy traveler – perhaps with a chocolate from Euphoria Chocolates on Glover Rd. or maybe a sweet to accompany afternoon tea from Milsean Shoppe, specializing in traditional Irish sweets.
Planning a little bit ahead can give you a fuller experience. For example, Well Seasoned is both a gourmet food shop and cooking school so when you book in advance, you can spend your afternoon or early evening cooking up the fresh treasures you've found that day on your Farm Gate forage at, say Vista D'Oro Farms and Winery, JD Farms or Krause Berry Farms in Langley.
There's also The Seasonal Experience that offers cooking classes followed by professional wait staff serving you a tasting of the demonstration menu. Their classes are designed to “give you the restaurant experience with the added value of a cooking demonstration.”
On the calendar for June is the Langley Children's Festival and what better than to combine this with a few hours of strawberry picking and a stop at the B.C. Farm Museum?
May Day Parade
The parade on Monday, May 24 will commence at 11:00 AM and will start at Mavis and Glover.  The parade will proceed down Glover Road to 88 Avenue then west on 88th Avenue to Trattle and north on Trattle to the Community Park behind the Fine Arts School.
There are a good many choices for accommodations in the area, but keeping the kids in mind, they are sure to love the two-storey water slide into the heated pool that Langley's Super 8 Motel features. The hot tub, right next to the pool, is an easy place from which to keep your eyes on the kids while you relax away the day's stresses.


Waterslide at Super 8 Langley. Kids love it!
This Super 8 sits right next to a Tim Horton's but the kids might hardly even notice after they've filled up on the Motel's complimentary breakfast of fresh-made waffles, yogurt, fruit and orange juice.

Some of Langley's outstanding wineries include Township 7 Vineyard and Winery, Blackwood Lane Vineyards & Winery to mention only a couple.
If you seek a Zagat-rated Bistro attached to a winery, look no further. Domaine de Chaberton Estate Winery's Bacchus Bistro fits the bill. Owners Claude and Inge Violet traversed the wine-growing regions of B.C. when they first migrated from France in the 70's. They chose Langley in which to grow their vineyards because Claude Violet, whose family has been making wine since 1644, found that the area mimicked weather conditions in Northern France. Domaine de Chaberton offers winery tours daily, weather permitting.
For a more complete list of Langley Goodies, contact Tourism Langley www.tourism-langley.ca

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The Wine Spies - Estancia Estate

Mission Codename: The Estancia Estate

Operative: Agent Red

Objective: Send Agent Red to Estancia Estate, one of Monterey County’s premier wineries, in order to secure an ample cache of their 2006 Reserve Meritage

Mission Status: Accomplished!

Current Winery: Estancia Estates

Wine Subject: 2006 Reserve Meritage

Winemaker: Scott Kelley

Backgrounder: Meritage (pronounce like ‘heritage’, no French style accent) wine, blends made in the tradition of the great wines of Bordeaux can only carry the name if the winery is a member of The Meritage Association based in Sonoma County. Most wines made in the US are varietal wines, comprised of over 75% of a single varietal. Unfortunately, this labeling requirement is believed to impair many winemakers from making exceptional blends, since they are often labeled as simply Red Table Wine with the noble grapes of Bordeaux. Thus in 1988 Meritage was born as a way to highlight the winemaker’s art of careful blending and crafting of wines in the tradition of some of Europe’s finest wines.

Today’s selection is 58% Cabernet Sauvignon, 34% Merlot and 8% Petite Verdot and is aged for 14 months in French and American oak, 40% new.

Wine Spies Tasting Profile:

Look – This wine shows very dark red, with a darker garnet heart and a vibrant brighter rim of pure ruby. When swirled, the edges of the glass are coated and skinny wine-stained legs move quickly down the glass.

Smell – The bouquet is fruity and has lots of red berries and sweet oak shadings. Pronounced black cherry and cranberry lead the fruits. These are followed by soft chocolate and hints of sagebrush and anise.

Feel – Lush and smooth, but with a distinct Cabernet character that is clearly in charge here. Everything feels round and smooth with ripe soft tannins.

Taste – Loads of fruit and easy textures that showcase the red fruits, polished and easy, but with a real fruit forward style that Estancia is known for, with black cherry, raspberry, currant and plum layers.

Finish – The finish is full and rounded with nice length, with the Cabernet flavors staying on for a long time. The Petit Verdot leaves a pretty spicy element as well that lingers on and on.

Conclusion – Founded in 1986, by Augustin Huneeus, Estancia has been crafting great wines for years. Today’s wine reinforces Estancia’s history of offering clean and well made wines for a fair price. This wine shows all the pleasures that Paso Robles has to offer with lush fruit and easy tannins, making for a perfect wine for novices and wine lovers alike. This juicy Paso Meritage is truly a wine for everyone. Enjoy this wine on its own, or with hard cheeses, game or lamb.

Mission Report:

SUBJECT: Scott Kelley, Estancia

PLACE OF BIRTH: Salinas, CA

WINE EDUCATION: UC Davis

CALIFORNIA WINE JOB BRIEF: General Manager and Director of Wine Making-Estancia

WINEMAKING PHILOSOPHY: Estancia’s winemaking philosophy continues to be firmly rooted in terroir, with the goal of producing wines that reflect the unique vineyards and appellations in which they are cultivated.

SIGNATURE VARIETAL: Pinot Noir

CAREER HIGHLIGHT: Becoming GM and Director of Winemaking at Estancia.

WINEMAKER QUOTE: “It begins and ends in the Vineyard.”

WINEMAKER INTERVIEW

AGENT RED: Greetings, Scott. We are thrilled to be showing your 2006 Estancia Reserve Meritage today. Thanks so much for taking some time to answer questions for our Operatives today.

SCOTT: Thank you very much. Always happy to chat with the Wine Spies!

RED: Was there a specific experience in your life that inspired your love of wine?

SCOTT: I knew I wanted to do this since I was seventeen. I grew up in agriculture family and had an early interest in chemistry while in high school. I really found winemaking to be the perfect blend of agriculture and chemistry. My older brother was into viticulture as well, so that probably influenced my career direction a bit.

RED: And where did you learn the most about winemaking? SCOTT: Growing up I had a lot of varied interests, not just in oenology but also in food science, so I pursued studies in Fermentation Science at the University of California at Davis. In addition to winemaking, I also explored the principles and science behind distillation, food engineering and even a little cheese-making. Since my brother and I were experimenting with home brewing during the summers, I took the opportunity to study at Davis’ Institute of Brewing Studies, eventually earning a Master Brewers Certificate. After Davis, I joined the Carmel Brewing Company, and eventually assembled a brewpub in Monterey from the ground up, formulating the recipes and brewing all the beer that we would serve on tap. I had always enjoyed the engineering side of things such as fluid dynamics and heat transfer, and working in a small brewpub allowed me to be hands-on throughout the brewing process and use some of the mechanical skills I learned growing up.

Ultimately though, I found that brewing didn’t really fulfill my creative side, and I found myself gravitating back toward winemaking. In 2000, I joined the Robert Mondavi family of wines working on a variety of brands that took me from Australia to Italy. These experiences abroad really shaped my philosophy about wine and winemaking, my travels to Italy clarified the synergy between wine and food, while making wine in Australia introduced me to a new approach with a focus on the details and the idea that you only get one chance to make a wine great.

RED: What is your winemaking style or philosophy?

SCOTT: Winemaking fulfills my artistic side without giving up the innovative hands-on experience that keeps me in touch with my family’s roots in agriculture. I enjoy all of the challenges that each vintage presents in order to shape the style of wines we make at Estancia.. Our winemaking style is one that fully embraces the coastal terroir.

RED: Tell me, what makes the Monterey and the Central Coast region so special?

SCOTT: Born and raised in Monterey County, I have tremendous respect for the climate – the wind and fog and the impact it has on the fruit and wine. Whether it is using less oak in the Chardonnay to protect the tropical characters or fermenting Pinot Noir only in open-top fermenters to respect the silky tannins, I am really passionate about making estate-based wines that have truly have a reason for being.

RED: Please tell me a little bit about the wine we are featuring today

SCOTT: Estancia Meritage is a sophisticated, rich, complex and luscious wine harvested from the distinctive terroir of our Keyes Canyon Ranch and the Paso Robles AVA.. The 2006 Meritage was a blend of 58% Cabernet Sauvignon, 34% Merlot, 8% Petite Verdot. This wine has vibrant, dark black cherries with hints of anise, rosemary and sage. Accents of chocolate powder and soft oak. Intense flavors of chocolate dipped black fruit, accompanied by notes of sweet oak. Wonderfully structured ripe tannins lead to a nice long, fruit driven finish.

In 1999, Estancia planted its Keyes Canyon Ranch, covering nearly 700 acres of vineyards in appellation of Paso Robles. This unique appellation is home to more extreme temperature swings than any other wine-growing region in California. During the day, the vines bask in the warm sunshine and at night they are soothed by a cool marine layer from the Pacific Ocean. In addition, the infertile soils and rugged terrain of Keyes Canyon, encourages the vines to yield small fruit clusters with tiny berries packed full of rich berry tones.

The 2006 harvest was compact due to a wet spring, cooler than average summer, and then a record blast of heat at veraison. September 26th marked the beginning of harvest which continued through October 26th.

RED: What is your favorite pairing with today’s wine?

SCOTT: I think this wine is very versatile, but it would marry particularly well with steak or nicely grilled rack of lamb.

RED: Please share one thing about yourself that few people know

SCOTT: When I am not making wine, my fiancée Dena and I try to find time to pursue one of our many hobbies. We golf, cook, hunt, scuba diving and we go fly fishing for Steelhead in Oregon.

RED: What is your favorite ‘everyday’ or table wine?

SCOTT: It’s tough to pick a “favorite” as it really depends on what time of year it is or what we might be enjoying for dinner. Pinot Noir is always a favorite, and I have to say that that the more we play around with the Grenache fruit that we have on some of our Estate properties the more excited I am getting about that varietal.

RED: Thank you so much for your time. We learned a lot about you – and about your wine. Keep up the great work, we are big fans!

SCOTT: Thanks, this has been a lot of fun. I hope everyone enjoys the Meritage…it’s one of my favorite wines to make each year.

Wine Spies Winery Check:

The location of the Estancia Winery can be seen in this satellite photo.

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Saturday, May 15, 2010

Si Se Puede! White House Goes Mexican


Rick Bayless has been asked to prepare the elegantly balanced, many layered Mexican food for which he has become famous at the [White House State] dinner on May 19 that will honor President Felipe Calderón of Mexico.- NY Times, May 11, 2010
So why Bayless? and what's his relationship to Mole'?
Here's a couple of interesting things we dug up on Local Food afficianado, Chicago Chef Rick Bayless:

For six seasons, the critically acclaimed series Mexico – One Plate at a Time has brought to life the foods, the flavors, the stories and the fun of Mexico for public television viewers. In each episode, beloved chef,  and culinary adventurer, Rick Bayless, effortlessly tosses together cooking demonstrations, cultural musings, exotic locations, ideas for home entertaining and a generous helping of off-the-wall surprises to create a whole new kind of cooking show that mirrors the thrilling diversity and depth of Mexico. Now, Frontera Media Productions proudly announces Season 7— Mexico City Live!  *Editor's Note, this premiered September 2009

Mole' and Bayless
There’s a magical Mojo de Ajo sauce that’s culinary gold on everything from popcorn to pasta; a luxury guacamole bar that offers a whole new do-it-yourself way to entertain; an authentic, made-ahead Chicken in Mole for a crowd, and much more.
Rick's world-renowned restaurants, Frontera Grill and Topolobampo, are where he and his chefs reinvent classic Mexican dishes in fresh new ways. He makes a signature sous-vide Carnitas and a dazzlingly decadent Pan-Seared Lobster with Truffles and Pata Negra Ham.
We hear that Topolobampo is a very popular Chicago eatery.  It's also Green!

Frontera Grill & Topolobampo awarded 3 Star Certification by Green Restaurant Association

"Rick Bayless has long been a supporter of The Green Chicago Restaurant Co-op (GCRC.) As part of their "Guaranteed Green" program Frontera Grill and Topolobampo became certified as a Green operating restaurant. Using their transparent certification standards, the Green Restaurant Association assessed our food purchasing, waste management, energy use and efficiency, water conservation practices, cleaning chemicals, and more to determine how our environmental accomplishments measured up within their program." 

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Thursday, May 13, 2010

Simpatico

Bravante Vineyards 2003 Howell Mountain Simpatico Meritage

  •     *    Varietal: Meritage       *      Region: California: Howell Mountain (Napa)

SUPERIOR WINE ALERT
    Today’s wine is a fantastic Meritage blend that is so good that we issued this special alert. We only feature wines that we love, but issue these alerts when we spy a really stand out wine for you.

Current Winery: Bravante Vineyards

Wine Subject:  2003 Simpatico Meritage

Winemaker: Duane Dappen

Backgrounder: Today we return to Bravante Vineyard, a true sleeper hit among our Operatives.  Today, Agent Red returns from the Bravante library with a small handful of cases of their ultra-rare 2003 Simpatico Meritage, a fantastic wine that is layered and delicious.  Read Agent Red’s tasting notes, below. 

Wine Spies Tasting Profile:
Look – Deep mulberry or garnet, with a glinting rim of finest ruby. After swirling this wine, skinny wine-stained tears run slowly down the edge of the glass.

Smell – Bold cherry, blackberry, plum and bramble lead the way. These are accompanied by softer blueberry, roasted purple fig and a hint of soft eucalyptus.

Feel – Velvet entry, leading to a medium body. Soft minerality and fine grained tannins give way to a elegant dryness.

Taste – Sweet cherry juice yields quickly to darker flavors of blackberry, plum, tart boysenberry, cooked fig and soft oak, with hints of anise, cinnamon and pepper.

Finish – Long and elegant, with lingering black cherry and soft spice notes with a soft mineral dryness.

Conclusion – This is a serious wine with a elegance that makes it a sheer delight to imbibe. Deeply aromatic with balanced flavors on the palate that show off big dark fruit, tempered against bright red fruit and fine tannins.  This wine paired beautifully with grilled tri-tip and grilled artichokes, and we can’t wait to pair it up with stuffed peppers or pulled pork.  Enjoy this great wine now, or cellar some bottles for the next few years.
  
Mission Report:

WINEMAKER INTERVIEW

AGENT RED: Greetings, Duane. We are thrilled to be showing your 2006 Trio today. Thanks so much for taking some time to answer questions for our Operatives today.

DUANE:  You’re welcome.  I am excited to be working with you spies and I promise to not reveal your true names.


RED: We appreciate that! Was there a specific experience in your life that inspired your love of wine?


DUANE: As I was growing up in El Dorado County, I worked with a friend’s father making home wine in their cave that was an abandoned gold mine.  I actually did a 4-H project of winemaking.  We entered our wines in the El Dorado County Fair and won ‘Best of Show’ for our Wild Blackberry wine.

RED: What wine or winemaker has most influenced your winemaking style?

DUANE: I have worked with many winemakers and have influences from several, so there is not any to really single out. Working here in the Napa Valley for 25 years has allowed me to work with and try many wines.

RED: Who do you make wine for?

DUANE: I make it for the ladies.  Wine sales many times ultimately come down to whether chicks dig it or not?


RED: Please tell me a little bit about the wine we are featuring today.

DUANE: Our Simpatico is a blend of the best wines from the vintage.  I blend this to be rich and elegant, with good complexity.  The name is from the grapes and the owners being in simpatico

RED: What is your favorite pairing with today’s wine?

DUANE: I love this wine with a nice dry aged steak,  or a rich risotto with veal stock and some mushrooms.


RED: Yummy! In your opinion, what makes the Howell Mountain region so special?

DUANE: The Howell Mountain is a place where the soils and microclimate help produce grapes that have intensity and complexity.  They have great structure that works with the complexity to produce elegance.

RED: What is occupying your time at the winery these days?


DUANE: I am racking the last vintage wines and preparing the  prior vintage blends for bottling later this year.

RED: How would you recommend people approach your wines and wine in general? 

DUANE: They should get some good friends and loved ones have some of our tasty Howell Mountain wines and good food and enjoy themselves.  The main thing anyone needs to know about wine is what they like!
  
RED: Is there anything else you’d like to share with our readers?

DUANE: Come check out the new winery and enjoy the beautiful Howell Mountain countryside.

RED: Thank you so much for your time. We learned a lot about you – and your wine. Keep up the great work, we are big fans!
   
Wine Spies Vineyard Check:

The location of the Bravante Vineyards winery can be seen in this satellite photo.

 

 

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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Wine And Herbs


By: The Wine Ladies

With spring in full swing, this week we’ll explore how the fresh herbs from your garden can influence the perfect food and wine pairing. Our in studio guests from beautiful Niagara-on-the-Lake, will be our guides sampling select herb-inspired appetizers and wine combinations, courtesy of participating wineries at the “Wine and Herb Touring” weekends taking place throughout the month of May.

On today’s show Jana Bonifero with the Niagara Grape and Wine Festival who will lead us through the wonderful up and coming events that taking place in this stunning wine region as well as Executive Chef David Penny of Jackson-Triggs Vintners who is in charge of the food component bringing with him some wonderful fresh-herb inspired appetizers with wines to match.

And finally, navigating Niagara wine country whether on foot, on two wheels or four, Lance Patten, Proprietor of Niagara Wine Tours International will be with us to share a variety of tours to suit your every need.



If you missed last week’s TV show not a problem, watch The Wine Ladies TV podcasts and archived shows on www.thatchannel.com/TheWineLadies from anywhere and anytime.
Today we explore the Languedoc, often referred to as the largest vineyard in the world, producing some of the best value wines out there, including a very hot wine that has just hit the LCBO here in Ontario. Introducing JUST Chardonnay and JUST Cabernet Sauvignon. Joining us in studio to tell us all about it, Tom Noitsis, President of Eurovintage Wines and Spirits. Also while discovering this fabulous region and sipping on these wonderful wines today, we will be working up an appetite as always as joining us too, sommelier and chef, as well as Director of Vintages for Eurovintage Wine and Spirits, Deana Folco Robles.
And until May 22nd when you purchase either a JUST Chardonnay or a JUST Cabernet Sauvignon at just $9.95 per bottle you will receive a bonus mini bottle of the other wine varietal just in case you want to try that too! It’s just that simple.

Up-coming events in May not to be missed

Terroir Wine Celebration in Prince Edward County May 29th,2010
This year 5 new county wineries will open their doors, bringing the total number of wineries in the county to over 20. Come taste their wines first at Terroir, Sat. May 29, 2010 from Noon – 5:00pm.Wineries will be serving their own unique county-produced wines, featuring the new spring releases. Crystal Palace Fairgrounds, Picton, ON $20.00 pre-purchased ~ $25.00 at the door (cash only) Please note that attendance is restricted to those 19 years and over. Wheelchair accessible. Click here for Tickets.
Wine and Herb Weekends in Niagara-On-The-Lake, May 2010
Niagara-on-the-Lake’s casual spring celebration of great wine and fresh herbs! Spend a weekend in May exploring our neighbourhood of 22 wineries with your Wine & Herb touring pass. As you tour, each stop will feature a different herb-themed food pairing matched to a premium Niagara VQA wine selected to highlight the flavour and aroma of the herb. Your touring pass may be used any weekend in May. Touring pass $43.00. Passes can be purchased online at www.niagaraonthelake.com