Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Wine News: What I'm Reading the week of 1/28/18


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Welcome to my weekly roundup of the wine stories that I find of interest on the web. I post them to my magazine on on Flipboard, but for those of you who aren’t Flipboard inclined, here’s everything I’ve strained out of the wine-related muck for the week.

Wine Faults and How to Recognize Them
An excellent primer.

Sorry, Paris: London Is Europe’s New Wine Capital
Jon Bonné loves a little cultural coup.

You’re Ordering Wine Wrong
Robert Bohr suggests ways to improve your game.

Life After Being a Sommelier
Stephen Satterfield reflects.

Burgundy’s new breed of wine producers
Jancis on a new crop.

We may be drinking less wine, but it’s better wine
Dave McIntyre on the latest annual stats.

Do Your Genes Predict Your Wine Preference?
Brooke Borel on ongoing matters of debate.

Drinking in Vienna’s Wine Scene
Worth going to.

The risk-takers: The realities of buying a vineyard
You know the saying…

A New Perspective on the Vineyard Labor Shortage Situation: The Case of Cain Vineyard
A look at ongoing options.

What do we mean by fine wine?
Tim Atkin ponders the question.

War over planting rights erupts in Champagne
Expansion isn’t easy.

Putting a Cork in the Oxidation Question
Corks don’t really “breathe.”

Artificial Intelligence Changes the Wine World
Eventually.

The State of Central Coast Syrah
Thoughts from folks who know.

Trade Talk with Levi Dalton
Levi gets interviewed by the Greeks (PDF)

Maps of German Wine Regions
Geeky super cool digital cartography.

Today’s wine dichotomy
Two kinds of wine, says Jancis.

Sommelier Belinda Chang Predicts 2018 Will Bring a Return to Wine Classics
Europe is in, she says.

What’s new: Amador’s wine profile continues to grow
Nathan Hurst profiles gold country wine.

The volcanic wines of the Azores
Worth reading for the vineyard photos alone.

A Comparison of In-Amphorae Winemaking to Barrels/Barriques in Chardonnay Wine
Super wine geek alert – this is about chemistry

48 Hours in London with Laura Rhys
Drinking in London, sommelier style

Getting to Know Mexico’s New Wine Scene
Peter Weltmann dishes on the hottest name in Mexico

Clearing the Air: Smoke Taint and the Aftermath of the California Wildfires
Jessica Zimmer talks impact

Jefford on Monday: Tracking terroir
Microbes!

Gallo Opens Up in Public
Blake Gray covers what sounds like a remarkable speech

Weed is Impacting Wine Sales
Rob McMillan shares his thoughts and some interesting research

Old grapes, new barriers
Simon Woolfe on efforts to grow indigenous varieties in the Languedoc

Bored? Oh, Those French Grapes
Oliver styles argues for variety

How looming wine shortages could shape the market
Robert Joseph isn’t throwing himself off a cliff due to the Prosecco shortage

Can Zinfandel be saved? Conversation with Turley’s Tegan Passalacqua
Great conversation

Premier Cru Victims Stung Again
The very definition of adding insult to injury.


from Wine News: What I’m Reading the week of 1/28/18


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Saturday, January 27, 2018

Vinography Images: Moulin


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Moulin
GIRONDE, FRANCE: An iconic windmil, or in French: moulin a vent, looks over the vineyards of Chateau Ausone in Gironde on Bordeaux’s Right Bank near Saint-Émilion. Ausone is one of only 4 wines classified as Premier Grand Cru Classé in the Saint-Émilion classification.

INSTRUCTIONS:
Download this image by right-clicking on the image and selecting “save link as” or “save target as” and then select the desired location on your computer to save the image. Mac users can also just click the image to open the full size view and drag that to their desktops.

To set the image as your desktop wallpaper, Mac users should follow these instructions, while PC users should follow these.

BUY THE BOOK:
This image is from a series of photographs captured by Andy Katz in the process of shooting his most recent work The Club of Nine, a visual exploration and celebration of Bordeaux’s top Chateaux. The book is available for $60 on Andy’s web site.

PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality, limited edition print of this image please contact Andy directly.

ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Vinography regularly features images by photographer Andy Katz for readers’ personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images. These images are not to be reposted on any web site or blog without the express permission of the photographer.


from Vinography Images: Moulin


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A Long Awaited Journey


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I have a confession to make. I have been drinking sake seriously for more than 18 years. I have been writing about it and reviewing sakes here on Vinography for 14 years. I have taught seminars on sake at places like the Aspen Food & Wine Classic. But until this week, I had not been to a sake brewery. It’s a little shocking to think about, even for me, given my history and experience with wine. By the time I started writing about wine I had already visited dozens of wineries. I even lived in Japan for more than 18 months, but I never made it to a sake brewery during that time, nor in subsequent visits over the years.

But now I’ve corrected that mistake, thanks to the generosity of the Japan Sake and Shochu Maker’s Association, who brought me back to Japan and provided the opportunity to make my overdue journey into the heart of sake.

Winter is the season of sake, and the best time to visit breweries, or kura as they are known in Japanese. Depending on their location, the brewing season will last from October to March. Brewers rely on the crisp, chilly air of the season to minimize ambient bacteria and yeast populations, as well as to assist with the low temperature fermentations that make for the highest quality sakes.

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Unlike wine, whose yearly vintage “crush” consists of a flurry of autumnal activity lasting a few weeks, sake brewing happens continuously through the winter season, depending on the production size of each brewery. During this season the toji, or master brewer, and a crew of several helpers will literally live at the brewery, rising well before dawn, seven days a week without a day off, to perform the series of backbreaking activities involved in making sake.

Leaving aside the milling of rice – the process of sanding each individual grain down to a fraction of its former size – which most breweries now outsource, the work of sake brewing involves the following activities that often begin as early as 5:00 AM: washing rice; steaming rice; cooling rice; turning a portion of the rice into koji by inoculating it with a special mold; creating a starter batch of sake by mixing koji, freshly steamed rice, water and yeast; tending that starter and adding more rice in successive batches; completing fermentation by pressing and filtering the sake; and then putting the sake into tank or bottle for aging.

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The nature of the sake making process (especially the making of koji), the need to carefully control the microbiology at work (since the slightest bit of unwanted bacteria or yeast can lead to nasty odors or flavors), and the physical capacity of tanks and the people manning them means that sake must be made in many, many, many successive batches. The largest, most commercial breweries can make more, larger batches at once, but even they run into the limitations of needing steamed rice to be at just the right temperature and moisture content, and the fact that koji must be made fresh in carefully tended batches every 48 hours.

While some breweries employ (pretty sophisticated) machines that assist with these tasks, they remain incredibly intense physical activities, as I learned firsthand yesterday morning as I was pressed (quite willingly) into shoveling steamed rice, carrying bags of rice, and stirring fermenting batches of rice at a brewery I visited in Kochi Prefecture on the island of Shikoku.

Needless to say, winter mornings are when you’d want to visit sake breweries, as they are ceaselessly abuzz with activity for more than five months, as their increasingly sleep deprived workers repeat the same tasks over and over and over with a dedication and precision that astounds.

But before you pack a bag and head out to visit your favorite sake brewery, you should know that the world of sake differs from the world of wine in many important ways, especially when it comes to tourism and the consumer experience.

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To be blunt, while many breweries will happily receive you at a small shop next to the brewery where you can purchase a bottle or two, a sizeable percentage of breweries lack even this most basic of hospitality offering. And as for getting up early and showing up to poke your head into the kura to see sake making in action? Unless you’re on a pre-booked and carefully organized tour with an outside agency, you can forget it. Language barriers aside, brewers generally don’t want the distraction (or liability in what can be a dangerous environment) of tourists underfoot.

And you thought making visits to cellars in Burgundy was tricky.

Exceptions to this generalization continue to grow in number, as forward-thinking breweries continue to seek ways of compensating for generally shrinking consumption of sake in Japan, but despite more than 400 years of history, the sake industry remains quite undeveloped when it comes to tourism. Advocates for the industry, as well as third-party tourism agencies do regularly organize tours, so anyone who has their heart set on visiting a brewery will find it is possible with a bit of extra effort. Accompanied by a bi-lingual guide, this can be an immensely rewarding and educational experience. For now, however, just finding your way to a brewery hoping to do a little tasting remains a somewhat fruitless pursuit.

Should you make it to a brewery, don’t expect it to be like your average winery facility just with rice instead of grapes. Compared to even the most modest wine regions around the globe, the world of sake brewing remains significantly under-capitalized. The vast majority of brewers who manage to get bank loans almost always do so for the purposes of buying equipment or higher quality rice. Only the most visionary producers (who also often happen to be the most newly established) are working to create anything other than a purely functional environment at the brewery.

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Most breweries are old, industrial, and by wine world standards, quite dingy. While fastidious in their focus on minimizing microbiological contamination (those allowed to visit the kura must wash and sterilize their hands, wear hair nets, remove their shoes, not consume yogurt or other active culture products in the days before a visit, and generally not touch anything while inside), the insides of breweries are dark, noisy, tarnished, and in most cases a bit decrepit. Think of the most humble, Old World winemaking facility you’ve been to, double the number of hoses, tanks, and carts, and then add a bunch of steam pipes and odd looking machinery in various states of antiquity and you’ll get the general idea. The gleaming, spotless, well-lit fermentation rooms of Sonoma these most certainly are not.

But what these environments may lack in both curb appeal and interior design, they make up for in the humble passion of the people running them, and the ethereal purity of their products, which can taste like blooming flowers and the first deep snowfall of the season in a cedar forest. Despite a steady decline in Japanese sake consumption for more than thirty years the dedication and craftsmanship of those brewers who choose (sometimes barely) to remain in business is as remarkable as it is inspiring.

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At the center of each grain of rice lies a small white heart that the Japanese call the shinpaku. This bundle of pure starch contains the carbohydrates that must be broken into sugars to fuel the fermentation of rice into alcohol. The complex process of making sake begins with the painstaking work to expose and exploit this miniscule resource, hidden by the rough exterior of a brown rice husk. Each grain is milled down to a fraction of its former size, stripping away the fats and proteins that hide the shinpaku until it becomes visible, a tiny fleck of brilliant white amidst the cloudy refined form of the polished grain. Even after milling, soaking, and steaming the shinpaku remains out of reach. Only thanks to the magic of koji does the shinpaku release its grip on the valuable sugars within.

While I learned many lessons during the time I spent living in Japan, one of the most important was that there were always deeper levels of significance and meaning beyond my surface understanding of any aspect of the culture. Sake embodies this truth perfectly. Look past the grimy patina that marks the walls of most breweries, taste a few really good bottles, and you’ll catch a glimpse of the soul and complexity of sake, a profound expression of Japanese craftsmanship and a unique landscape of flavors.


from A Long Awaited Journey


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Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Wine News: What I'm Reading the week of 1/21/18


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Welcome to my weekly roundup of the wine stories that I find of interest on the web. I post them to my magazine on on Flipboard, but for those of you who aren’t Flipboard inclined, here’s everything I’ve strained out of the wine-related muck for the week.

2018 SVB Wine Report Videocast Replay
The annual state of the state.

Becoming a Master of Roussanne
A profile of Maggie Harrison

Richard Kunde, champion of Sonoma County wine, agriculture, dies at 75
Farewell Mr. Rootstock.

Bubbles Along The Willamette: Oregon’s Sparkling Wine Renaissance
More than 40 producers now, apparently.

DRC Winemaker Retires
A name most did not know.

Interview: Perspectives on Whole-Cluster Fermentation
Kelli White asks winemakers about whole cluster.

The Value of Value
Matt Kramer advocates for value wines.

Nebbiolo, the wine equivalent of winter’s woodpile
Mike Dunne on many forms of Nebbiolo.

Goldman’s No. 2 Allegedly Swindled Out of $1.2 Million of Wine by Assistant
Oops. That’s a firing offense for sure.

Kermit Lynch on Terroir and Why Wine Should Be Described in Human Terms
Kermit argues for a return to “comely young thing” as a descriptor

What you need to know about how oak barrels affect wine
Michael Austin pens his version of Barrels 101

Anson: Jesse Katz – Remember the name
Jane Anson profiles the young superstar

This Wine Auction Is Giving All Proceeds to Napa and Sonoma Fire Victims
Bordeaux steps up!

Experience Wine Beyond What’s in Your Glass
Ann Krebiehl says get into the vineyard.

How to Become a Wine Editor
An interview with Ray Isle.

Frantic Buyers Race to Bag Top Burgundy
Small quantities from tough vintages.

Jefford on Monday: Tenants and sharecroppers
Andrew Jefford explains a key aspect of French wine growing.

Wine magazine banned from New Jersey prisons
Is that the Wine Spectator in your pocket, or just a really big shiv?

Legendary Barbaresco Winemaker Bruno Giacosa Dies at 88
One of the greatest of all time.

Tree Huggers: The Tale Behind Italy’s Hot New White
Trebbiano Spoletino is the next thing in Umbria, says Robert Camuto

The History of Wine in 442 Podcasts
Levi Dalton profiled in the New York Times.

Silver Oak is building the state’s most eco-friendly winery
Sounds like quite the project.


from Wine News: What I’m Reading the week of 1/21/18


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I'll Drink to That: Ray Coursen of Elyse Winery


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Episode 442 of I’ll Drink to That! was released recently, and features Ray Coursen,the founding winemaker and owner of Elyse Winery and Jacob Franklin Wines. He is also working with the Purple Heart Wines project.

Ray Coursen arrived in Napa in the 1980s, but this interview goes much further back into Napa Valley history than that. Ray has made a habit of searching out conversations with the older generation of farmers and winemakers before him, and he shares many of those memories here. When was Petite Sirah known as “Pets”? When did phylloxera hit Napa for the actual first time? When did the old-timers blend Zinfandel into their Cabernet? Ray shares those answers. He also reflects on a changing landscape for wines sales, and the escalation of vineyard prices in the Valley. As he prepares to hand off his winery to his son, Ray wonders if his own son will be able to have the same opportunity. This interview is both a trip back in time and a look at the future of Napa Valley.

Listen to the stream above, or check it out on Apple Podcasts, on Stitcher, Google Play Music or check it out on YouTube.

IDTT is now also available on Spotify. Listen to this episode on Spotify.

I’ll Drink to That is the world’s most listened-to wine podcast, hosted by Levi Dalton. Levi has had a long career working as a sommelier in some of the most distinguished and acclaimed dining rooms in America. He has served wine to guests of Restaurant Daniel, Masa, and Alto, all in Manhattan. Levi has also contributed articles on wine themes to publications such as The Art of Eating, Wine & Spirits magazine, Bon Appetit online, and Eater NY. Check out his pictures on Instagram and follow him on Twitter: @leviopenswine


from I’ll Drink to That: Ray Coursen of Elyse Winery


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Friday, January 19, 2018

I'll Drink to That: Chisa Bize of Domaine Simon Bize et Fils


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Episode 441 of I’ll Drink to That! was released recently, and features Chisa Bize, who looks after Domaine Simon Bize et Fils in the Burgundy village of Savigny-les-Beaune.

Chisa Bize has a life with multiple chapters. In one, she is living in Tokyo, near her family and her childhood home, while working in a bank. In the next there is a chance meeting with a traveling Burgundian looking for currency exchange. An invite for the harvest period is proffered, and Chisa decides to take a chance on an adventure: she quits her job, and heads to Savigny-les-Beaune without further future plans in mind. At the beginning the welcome is kind, but the place is lonely, and she is unsure what will happen. A marriage and a baby boy soon join the picture, and Chisa is no longer lonely, or in the possession of much free time. While these whirlwind changes might be the crux of most stories, for Chisa they are just the beginning, and a series of unexpected turns then places her in charge of a historical wine domaine. Her development as a vintner and as a caretaker of key vineyard sites in Savigny takes up a large part of the discussion of this interview, and anyone listening who thought that they would never under any circumstance make wine themselves might listen to this episode and find more than one surprise.

Listen to the stream above, or check it out on Apple Podcasts, on Stitcher, Google Play Music or check it out on YouTube.

IDTT is now also available on Spotify. Listen to this episode on Spotify.

I’ll Drink to That is the world’s most listened-to wine podcast, hosted by Levi Dalton. Levi has had a long career working as a sommelier in some of the most distinguished and acclaimed dining rooms in America. He has served wine to guests of Restaurant Daniel, Masa, and Alto, all in Manhattan. Levi has also contributed articles on wine themes to publications such as The Art of Eating, Wine & Spirits magazine, Bon Appetit online, and Eater NY. Check out his pictures on Instagram and follow him on Twitter: @leviopenswine


from I’ll Drink to That: Chisa Bize of Domaine Simon Bize et Fils


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Vinography Images: Early Winter


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Early Winter
PAUILLAC, FRANCE: A cold winter dawn breaks to illuminates sleeping old vines and skeletal trees at Chateau Mouton Rothschild in Pauillac, a town in the Medoc region of Bordeaux. Mouton as it is affectionately known was not originally part of the First Growth designation in the 1855 Bordeaux Classification. Thanks to the advocacy efforts of its owner Baron Philippe de Rothschild, the estate managed something of a coup, and was elevated to First Growth in 1973, the only estate to have been so included in the modern era. Mouton is best known for its labels that have changed each vintage since 1945, and always feature the work of one of the world’s most famous artists.

INSTRUCTIONS:
Download this image by right-clicking on the image and selecting “save link as” or “save target as” and then select the desired location on your computer to save the image. Mac users can also just click the image to open the full size view and drag that to their desktops.

To set the image as your desktop wallpaper, Mac users should follow these instructions, while PC users should follow these.

BUY THE BOOK:
This image is from a series of photographs captured by Andy Katz in the process of shooting his most recent work The Club of Nine, a visual exploration and celebration of Bordeaux’s top Chateaux. The book is available for $60 on Andy’s web site.

PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality, limited edition print of this image please contact Andy directly.

ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Vinography regularly features images by photographer Andy Katz for readers’ personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images. These images are not to be reposted on any web site or blog without the express permission of the photographer.


from Vinography Images: Early Winter


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Monday, January 15, 2018

Wine News: What I'm Reading the Week of 1/14/17


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Welcome to my weekly roundup of the wine stories that I find of interest on the web. I post them to my magazine on on Flipboard, but for those of you who aren’t Flipboard inclined, here’s everything I’ve strained out of the wine-related muck for the week.

Going 10 Rounds with Eric Renaud
Helluva list to manage.

After the fires, the road back to Napa and Sonoma counties
The slow road to recovery.

Karl Kaiser, cofounder of Inniskillin wines, remembered
Canada loses a pioneer.

An Interruptionist Seeks To Change U.S. Wine Distribution
An interesting business idea. Let’s see if it actually works!

Incredible collection of wine hidden in a top secret cave hidden beneath a rock face somewhere in Europe is tipped to sell for £1million at auction
Right out of a Bond movie….

Sommelier Roundtable: Your Predictions for 2018
The Spectator rounds up some prognostications.

There’s nothing wrong with being a little sweet on wine
People say they don’t like sweet wine, but they’re usually lying to themselves.

Mountain View Wine Thief Set To Age 3 Years In Prison
Lock him up! Lock him up!

Russian man rams armored personnel carrier into shop, steals wine
When you’re really, really thirsty and all you have is a spare Russian tank…

Sommelier writes her way through wine country
A nice profile of Kelli White

The Simple Life
Robert Camuto on the Marche

Thomas fire, California’s largest on record, finally 100 percent contained
Only now, folks. After a month. That’s how huge it was.

The Relationship Between Sensory Characteristics and Emotion in Consumer Wine Preferences
I smell bacon fat and I cry.

This Ex-Banker Has Wall Street-Sized Ambitions as a Wine Critic
A profile of Galloni

Fighting In Washington On Track To Harm California’s Wine Industry
Labor is going to make or break California wine.

Are anti-cork sentiments softening in New Zealand and Australia?
Jamie Goode sees more corks down under.

Silicon Valley Bank wine business forecast warns of slowing sales growth
But not a reversal.

Why Napa is Shifting Fast From Blended Wines to Single Vineyard Expressions
By blended, they mean from multiple sites, rather than multiple grapes.

Three Takeaways from the Gomberg, Fredrikson & Associates – 2017 Review
What the data say….

Bernard Magrez Attacked in His Home
Robbery gone wrong

Tax Changes Hit Wine’s Alcohol Levels
A lousy side effect of the new tax law: less transparency.

Anson: The women who shaped Bordeaux
Let’s hear it for the girls!

Q&A with a pinot pioneer: Calera’s Josh Jensen reflects on changes
Laurie talks with Josh.

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: Defender of the Consumer Palate and Your Right to Choose
A profile of Tim Hanni

Champagne Gives Thanks for a Vintage Crop
Another decent year in Champagne.

The ’90s Magazine That Courted Wine’s Early Counterculture
Zach Sussman finds out about WineX

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: Grapegrower, Innovator, and Always One Step Ahead
A profile of David Parrish

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: Wine Business Educator and Influencer
A profile of Ray Johnson

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: Crafting Wine and Legacy in Washington
A profile of Chris Upchurch

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: A Pillar of Oregon’s Wine Tourism Industry
A profile of Wayne Bailey

Wine’s Most Inspiring People 2018: Pioneer and Champion of Hillside Grapegrowing
A profile of Stu Smith

Fires burned the legacy of California’s historic ‘wine king.’ This winery wants to rebuild it.
A fascinating piece of history.

Boozy wish list for 2018: More screw caps, less wax
Esther Mobley isn’t asking for so much…


from Wine News: What I’m Reading the Week of 1/14/17


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Sunday, January 14, 2018

Get Set, Go!


Biodynamic consultant Andrew Beedy and Troon winemaker Steve Hall on the spot selected for our compost program.

Biodynamic consultant Andrew Beedy and Troon winemaker Steve Hall on the spot selected for our compost program.

This is the spot that will become the most important place of the vineyard. We’ve chosen the spot for the compost piles.

There is a day that dreams, plans and goals become a reality. On your mark, get set, go! As we crossed the starting line this week, we were firmly aware that we were starting a marathon, not a dash. This week we took our first steps to converting Troon Vineyard to organic and biodynamic agriculture. We have our eye on 2020 to achieve our first organic and biodynamic certification, but that will not be the finish line. In agriculture, there is no finish line.

We had already taken some steps forward as we had received our L.I.V.E. and Salmon Safe sustainable certifications, but we have now committed to biodynamics as our vision for the future of Troon. Our first big step was to secure the services of Andrew Beedy ([http://ift.tt/2B0Bky3]). Andrew’s speciality is designing a complete plan that looks at your property as a whole, not just as a vineyard. Andrew has spent his entire life immersed in biodynamics as he was born on a biodynamic dairy farm in Pennsylvania. He attended a Steiner elementary school that was attached to a biodynamic farm. As a teenager, he worked on an organic farm in England. After university, he moved to California, where he worked with his mentor, the famed biodynamic consultant Alan York, who also was the biodynamic consultant for our neighbor, Cowhorn Winery, here in the Applegate Valley. Today, Andrew’s clients span the entire nation coast-to-coast.

After walking for hours with Andrew through our vineyards and our entire farm property, you can feel your perceptions began to change as you start to look at your farm as a whole rather than as simple blocks of vineyards. This extends beyond our property lines as you understand that the Applegate Valley itself is included in a whole farm, holistic plan for farming.

With conventional agriculture you identify problems and then apply various applications. Many, many of these applications are nasty indeed. While they may solve one problem, the collateral damage they cause slowly, but surely kills your soils. Soil is the plant’s foundation, and dead soils cannot produce great wines. When you farm biodynamically you eschew these chemicals, which means you have to deal with the threats to your plants before they appear. In other words, biodynamics is all about prevention. A healthy plant can better resist diseases and pests than one living in dead soils relying on chemical fixes to deal with each and every problem.

Our new compost piles will be the heart and soul of the vineyard as this is how we will be bringing our soils back to life. One way I like to explain biodynamics is that it is organic agriculture with probiotics. It is the bacteria and fungi surrounding a plants roots that allow it to take nutrition from the soil. Conventional agriculture destroys this natural system. The power of biodynamics is that it brings the microbiome of your farm back to life, which brings your soils and plants back to life.

I will be chronicling the process of bringing Troon’s soils back to life here on this blog. Over the next weeks, we are evaluating our soils and the microbiome of our vineyards, and we will be carefully monitoring and documenting the changes in our soils and vines as we practice biodynamic farming over the next years. It is a story I am very excited to be sharing. It is a process that will change our farm, our vines, our wines and us.

It will be a steep learning curve. Could anything be more exciting?

Here is a link to the Demeter Biodynamic Farm Standard for certification.



from Get Set, Go!


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Saturday, January 13, 2018

Napa Luxe


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What is the defining characteristic of a wine region? The answer depends on who you ask, of course, but typical responses often range among the many distinctive aspects of the wine world: geology, topography, oenology, or even culture. The Mosel has its steep slate soils, Châteauneuf-du-Pape has its distinctive blend of 14 grapes, Chile’s Maule Valley has its twisted old vines of País and Carignan. And what of California’s Napa Valley? Beyond an affinity for Cabernet Sauvignon, an argument could convincingly be made that Napa has become known simply for luxury.

Perhaps this is why the recent news that Colgin Wine Cellars had sold a 60% interest to the luxury-goods giant Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton was met with an inaudible shrug after the initial volley of press releases and news briefs. Colgin, owned by Ann Colgin and her financier husband Joe Wender, is a tiny producer perched on top of Napa’s Pritchard Hill (as seen above) whose roughly 4,000 cases each year sell to mailing-list customers for upwards of $500 per bottle.

With this purchase, LVMH adds Colgin to its already impressive list of wine properties that include Newton Vineyards in Napa (which it acquired in 2001), as well as Krug, Moët and Dom Pérignon champagnes, substantial portions of Chx Cheval Blanc and d’Yquem, and Bodega Numanthia among others.

LVMH is not the first luxury house to buy into Napa. St Supery winery was purchased in 2015 by the owners of Chanel, who also own Chx Canon and Rauzan-Ségla in Bordeaux.

In many ways, for an already premium wine region, such purchases represent Napa’s apotheosis. Short of the inexorably rising prices commanded by the region’s wines, there exist few, if any, rungs on the ladder of fame beyond this kind of acquisition. This latest purchase joins a bevy of other high-profile buyouts this year by industry giants such as Gallo and Constellation Brands and French businessman François Pinault’s Artémis Group.

Read the rest of the story on JancisRobinson.Com.

This article is my monthly column at JancisRobinson.Com, Alder on America, and is available only to subscribers of her web site. If you’re not familiar with the site, I urge you to give it a try. It’s only £8.50 a month or £85 per year ($11/mo or $111 a year for you Americans) and well worth the cost, especially considering you basically get free, searchable access to the Oxford Companion to Wine ($65) and the World Atlas of Wine ($50) as part of the subscription costs. Click here to sign up.


from Napa Luxe


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Vinography Images: Gravelly


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Gravelly
MARGAUX, FRANCE: Skies flecked with white clouds hang above clay soils flecked with gravel at Chateau Margaux. Margaux is one of four original Premier Grand Cru classé wines according to the famous 1855 Bordeaux Classification. The estate is located in the commune of Margaux on the left bank of the Garonne estuary in the Médoc region, in the department of Gironde.

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BUY THE BOOK:
This image is from a series of photographs captured by Andy Katz in the process of shooting his most recent work The Club of Nine, a visual exploration and celebration of Bordeaux’s top Chateaux. The book is available for $60 on Andy’s web site.

PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality, limited edition print of this image please contact Andy directly.

ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Vinography regularly features images by photographer Andy Katz for readers’ personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images. These images are not to be reposted on any web site or blog without the express permission of the photographer.


from Vinography Images: Gravelly


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Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Wine News: What I'm Reading the Week of December 31, 2017


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Welcome to my weekly roundup of the wine stories that I find of interest on the web. I post them to my magazine on on Flipboard, but for those of you who aren’t Flipboard inclined, here’s everything I’ve strained out of the wine-related muck for the week.

Women and the Wine Industry
Karen MacNeil FTW.

Do Celebrity Wines Sell?
Yes, but if you want to learn more, read this.

Embrace the Wine Critic — They Matter
Tom Wark follows up on Jamie Goode’s article.

The Mystery of the Missing Wine Faults
Oliver Styles wonders why tasting notes don’t include wet band-aid.

The When and Why of Amontillado
And the crowd goes… silent?

Jefford on Monday: Wineism – towards a political philosophy of wine
I’ll vote for that platform.

The Hidden (Affordable!) Gems of Burgundy
Food and Wine recommends…

Terroir Alert! Champagne Is Expanding and Tempers Are Popping
More bubbly.

If You Do Anything in 2018
Matt Kramer recommends you drink this… book.

SF Chronicle’s Winemaker of the Year
I heartily applaud this one.

Winemakers to watch
The SF Chronicle picks this year are great

The Devastator: Phylloxera Vastatrix & The Remaking of the World of Wine
Kelli White on one of the natural forces that has changed the wine world.

Will Natural Wine Make It in the Mainstream?
Nice conversation, but it ended before it really got going.

Getting to Know Cava’s New Category
Amanda Barnes pauses in her journey to explore Cava.

China Gets Its Wine On
The excitement is palpable

How to Make the Most of a Trip to Wine Country
Simplistic advice, but a good start.

The Future of Oregon Wine: It Ain’t Pinot
I tend to agree.

7 Wine Resolutions for a Better 2018
Not so much resolutions as “don’t make my mistakes.”

9 resolutions to take you deeper into wine in 2018
Generally good advice.

Prominent New York Wine Merchant and Sommelier Dies Suddenly
Tragic loss.

17 Wine Resolutions for 2017 from Top Sommeliers
A few good ones in here.

To Oak or Not to Oak; Exploring the Wonders of Chablis
A primer.

Somms Spill on Nights from Hell
Oh Saber Bomb.

These 12 wines are the best bargains of 2017: They’re cheap without tasting like it
Dave McIntyre recommends.

Powering Forward
A great profile of an amazing guy.

L.A. wine pros share a few Champagne and sparkling wine picks for New Year’s Eve
OK, so a but late for NYE, but enjoy anyway.


from Wine News: What I’m Reading the Week of December 31, 2017


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