Year after year, I've witnessed the Italian wine paradox in America. Producers, consorzi, and government wine agencies trace the same familiar circuit: New York to Chicago to San Francisco, ending up in sunny LA or Miami. Meanwhile, cities like Houston, Dallas, and Austin get bypassed. Flyover country. BBQ country. Cowboy country. Translation: No country for Italian wine.
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Flying Over the Future: Why Vinitaly Can't See Texas
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Flooded with Memories
Earlier, the night before, we sat at a table on the top floor of a building downtown, overlooking the Pacific ocean, eating salmon and drinking French Chablis. Or rather I was. My friend had eaten before I got off the plane. He was content to watch me while sipping on a cocktail, something with bourbon, an Old Fashioned or Manhattan. I’m bad at remembering that sort of thing.
I’d really wanted a Puligny Montrachet, my guilty indulgence. But I don’t think they had one by the glass, and if they did, it would have probably been $50 for three ounces, or something to that effect. So, Chablis it was. I thought to myself, “I’m in California, I really should me drinking California wine, shouldn’t I?” I would tomorrow, with my friends wife.
But the bike ride.
Sunday, January 11, 2026
Wine Doesn't Miss You
When someone you love dies—a mate, a pet—there's a hole. They don't stop loving you, but they're gone. The loss is indescribable.
Wine is different.
Does wine love you back? Does it miss you when you stop drinking it? No more than the chatbot misses you when you close the browser.
But for a long time, I couldn't parse the animate from the inanimate connections and emotions associated with them.
Sunday, January 04, 2026
From the Sixes: A Surprising and Encouraging Start to 2026
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| The three wines that began 2026 so well |
I used the day as an opportunity to liberate some of my older wines. Seeing as the new year ends in a “6” I opted for wines from years ending in “6,” namely 2006 and 1996. Three wines were picked.



