Another busy Monday at the office
I dont want you all to think it's all fun and games and steaming bowls of cafe-latte.
I set to taste through 40 or so wines with journalist and Master of Wine candidate, Rebecca Murphy. Today was a pretty good day. For one, we only had one corked wine. Not bad for this many wines. I will list the wines at the end of the post for anyone who is so interested.
These were wines sent up from the warehouse so that they might be considered for some mention in newspapers and other printed and electric wine news.
Afterwards I went back home to the Bat-Cave in the '56 Bel Air. This might have looked like fun, but it was WORK! (i.e., the wine tasting; the drive home was loads of fun!)
BUBBLY
CHARLES DE FERE CUVEE
CHARLES DE FERE RESERVE
CHARLES DE FRERE DRY ROSE
MONT-MARCAL BRUT ROSE NV
TALTARNI BRUT TACHE VS
GRUET BRUT ROSE
WHITE - MISC
ABBAZIA DI NOVACELLA - KERNER 05
ITZAS MENDI – TZAKOLINA 2005
SAUV BLANC
LOS CARDOS ‘DONA PAULA’ SAUV BLANC 2006
SOUTHERN RIGHT SB WALKER BAY (SOUTH AFRICA) 2006
PASCAL JOLIVET ATTITUDE SB 2004
CHARDONNAY
VINCENT BOURGOGNE BLANC 2005
STE GENEVIEVE PEREGRINE HILL CHARDONNAY (TEXAS) 2005
HAMILTON RUSSELL CHARD WALKER BAY (SOUTH AFRICA) 2005
ROSE’
LOS CARDOS MALBEC/ROSE 2006
RED WINE
2005 BEAUJOLAIS
CLAUDE GEOFFRAY –CHATEAU THIVINS – COTE DE BROUILLY 2005
GEORGES DUBOEUF JULIENAS 2005
GEORGES DUBOEUF CHATEAU DES CAPITANS JULIENAS 2005
GEORGES DUBOEUF MOULIN A VENT FLOWER 2005
GEORGES DUBOEUF MORGON DOMAINE MONT CHAVY 2005
GEORGES DUBOEUF MORGON JEAN DESCOMBES 2005
RED – SPAIN
ARENA LOCA UTIEL-REQUENA 2004 TEMPRANILLO/CAB/ETC
CACERES RIOJA RESERVA 2000
RED- PORTUGAL
TINTA DA PARROTES ALENQUER DOC 2001
TINTO DA ANFORA ALENTEJANO VR TINTO 2001
RED- FRANCE
LA VIEILLE FERME RED 2004
PAUL JABOULET CDR ROUGE PARALLELE 45 2003
PAUL JABOULET CROZES HERMITAGE “LES JALETS” 2001
RED - ITALY
SANTI VALPOLICELLA “SOLANE” RIPASSO 2001 (CLASSICO SUPERIORE)
SARTORI VALPOLICELLA “MONTEGRADELLA” 2003 (CLASSICO SUPERIORE)
BANFI COLLEPINO SANGIOVESE/MERLOT TOSCANA 2005
FEUDO MONACI SALICE SALENTINO 2003 (DOC)
CANTELE PRIMITIVO (SALENTO IGT) 2004
SPORTOLETTI ASSISI ROSSO DOC 2005
VAL DELLE ROSE MORELLINO DI SCANSANO DOC 2003
GIACOSA BARBERA D'ALBA 2004
NEW WORLD PINOT NOIR
STE GENEVIEVE PEREGRINE HILL PINOT NOIR (TEXAS) 2005
CONO SUR PINOT NOIR RAPEL VALLEY CHILE 2006
MALBEC
LOS CARDOS MALBEC MENDOZA 2005
MERLOT ( NEW WORLD)
CLOS DU VAL MERLOT NAPA 2003
SAGELANDS MERLOT COLUMBIA VALLEY 2003
CAB MERLOT BLENDS ( SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE)
NEIL ELLIS CAB SAUV/ MERLOT STELLENBOSCH 2003
TALTARNI 3 MONKS CABERNET/MERLOT VICTORIA 2001
CABERNET SAUVIGNON (NEW WORLD)
TERRAZAS CAB SAUV MENDOZA 2004
SEBASTIANI CAB SAUV SONOMA 2004
CLOS DU VAL CAB NAPA 2003
SAGELANDS CAB SAUV COLUMBIA VALLEY 2002
Tonight, over a wonderful bottle of 
When I was in 

Over near Blanco Texas, harvest is long over. The hill country fields are sunburnt and ready for cool. Today it reached almost 90F ….It is November!
So a quick run over to 








Years ago a buddy of mine, now a Master Sommelier, and I went to Italy. My friend, Guy Noel, fell in love with Carmignano from Capezzana. In fact the wine led him to love. For him, memories of the wine remain long after the flame of love burned out.

Words written years ago. Gone is the black rooster. Gone are the candles.
more on the Mud Angels:
It was 50 years ago, in 1956. Back to that 


Today I went to a friends wine shop. Salesmen from the various companies, in a frenzy to ship their products, had made a mess of the wine set. A colleague and I worked to re-adjust the selection so that all the products would be shown in their best light. It's what I call my “rising tide lifts all boats” theory of setting a store. We spent the day there.
I have just finished getting what I hope is the last of this kind of e-mails that I don’t want to get anymore. They went like this:





The Italians I saw there on my last stop were loving the wine shop and the restaurants. Not just for American tourists. The Italians were digging on it big time. For a virtual peek, 




On a recent trip to Tuscany and the area around Montalcino, people were using their hands. The American Italian Chef, Damian Mandola, raising his left hand in a conductors approach to orchestrating a meal at his hillside villa. The industrial giant, Lionello Marchesi, in a moment of confidence with his winemaker and then in a show of gratitude for all he has been given. Banfi’s leader, John Mariani, explaining with his hands an approach, one that changed the face of sleepy little Montalcino and propelled it from one of the poorest hill-top towns in the 1970’s, to now, one of the wealthiest ones. Starting with the hand.
The hand tools that work the grape harvest. My friends, The Losi family, thought it odd that I’d stop and make a picture of their brooms and shovels, stained with the blood of Jove.
The hand made noodles. Both my grandmothers made them, as my mom does and sisters too. My aunt Amelia had a little apartment with electric burners. She could out cook Batali in that kitchen.
Paula Lambert-i, in her kitchen in Montalcino, feeding 12 people from a single pan. Herbs and vegetables from the back yard (again), no one went to bed hungry. Or thirsty.
And while sometimes living in Italy seems like jumping out of the frying pan and into the fire, ask most Italians. They may leave home in the physical sense, but they will be living on Mars and hanging out the hand-made casalinga for the afternoon meal. It’s meals like those last week and 34 years ago, that make for great memories.