Andrew B. – BestWineGlass.com https://bestwineglass.com Where wine meets the best glass Wed, 17 Feb 2021 21:49:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.5 https://bestwineglass.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-BWG-logo-1-32x32.png Andrew B. – BestWineGlass.com https://bestwineglass.com 32 32 Early Autumn notes from Wine Country https://bestwineglass.com/2020/10/19/early-autumn-notes-from-wine-country/ https://bestwineglass.com/2020/10/19/early-autumn-notes-from-wine-country/#comments Mon, 19 Oct 2020 05:28:52 +0000 https://bestwineglass.com/?p=5825 Read more

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Wine sings its own song

Napa County restaurants are back open, a breath of fresh air to many concerned residents.  What happens after that?  One can’t tell, but everybody here in wine country is still making great wine, and people around the world are still drinking it.  Restaurants though?  Ouch, got slammed by this Covid-19 bug, big time!  But who didn’t?

Wine?  It’ll be just fine!  Sings its own song, presses its own company, especially that world class vino that makes that indelible mark on the soul.  Its trademark position in our brains?  “Sit back and relax now my self,”… or at least “you’d better enjoy this wine you paid good money for it.”  lol

Great wine enjoyment should be a relaxing ritual- from that little spark of joy we get when deciding to open a bottle- to the actual selection and cork popping- then pouring into a fabulous wine glass and observing color and nose before disappearing into that distinctive flavor profile and sultry perfection.  Works every time!

The harvest is happening

Harvest is going on here in wine country!  White wines are already in and fermented, and the red grapes are now coming.

The smoke from all the wildfires has cleared.  A great relief to everyone here!

On a sad note, red grapes are affected by the wildfires

One sad note though is that the red grapes have so much smoke taint that most are convinced there will not be any good red wine for 2020 from our region.  Seriously!  And now wine producers who buy the grapes from the growers are trying to figure out if the contracts need to be honored or not.  For example, a wine producer has a contract with a grower to buy 10 tons of the cabernet grapes, but right before harvesting they test for smoke taint levels and the results confirm that the grapes will not be usable for fine wine, (BBQ flavor will dominate) so then the wine producer doesn’t want to pay full price to the grower for the grapes, (or pay at all) so the grower gets furious because they have production costs to cover etc.  So as you can imagine, tensions are high!

The good news is there is no shortage of wine!

But there are lots of vintages and varietals from all over the world to drink, so check your wine glass cabinet to see if you need to purchase any wine glass styles that you’re missing, Bordeaux, Burgundy?  White Wine?  If so check out our small family owned business Bestwineglass.com for a fantastic selection and reasonable prices.

Cheers Everyone

Andrew B.

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Why are Those Grapes Still Hanging on the Vine? https://bestwineglass.com/2020/10/19/why-are-those-grapes-still-hanging-on-the-vine/ Mon, 19 Oct 2020 05:21:51 +0000 https://bestwineglass.com/?p=5821 Read more

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Rural Napa Valley: Country Roads, Nature and Vineyards

The northern end of the Napa Valley is pretty rural!  Most people think bougie glam when Napa comes to mind, but really, up here in Calistoga it’s mostly country roads and nature.  Vineyards of course  are plentiful, but they’re contrasted nicely by the volcanic mountain ridges that dominate the eastern skyline, and the soft rolling mountains in the west covered in oak and redwood trees.

I was driving along one of our country roads admiring the rocky cliffs above when I pass my uncle Larry’s property and notice he still has grapes on the vine.  Way past when he should!  But uncle Larry is by nature always doing something interesting:  probably invented the word eccentric for someone just like him I’m sure!  He makes some world class wine too, has a garage the size of Rhode Island with cars and parts strewn everywhere, raises three homeschooled teenagers who are always running wild somewhere on the property, and hosts, at last count, 10 dogs of various shape and size, (rescue mutts.)  To add to his mystique, late one night when we all drank way too many bottles of wine to count, he let slip that he helped prevent World War 3 with Russia when he was in the military during the 1980’s!  But now he’s all serious about the subject and won’t say another word.

Anyways- I was driving by his place, mid-January, and I noticed he still had an acre of grapes hanging on the vine!  I was like WHAT THE HECK IS HE UP TO?  Because no one else still has grapes out: the rest of the county harvested way back in October!  I set to thinking about it because I always like trying and figure him out!  So while I’m headed down his long ass gravel driveway I contemplate the possibilities.

Effect of Napa Valley Wildfires in 2017

The last time he had grapes out longer than he should was when a crazy wildfire rolled through here in 2017, Tubbs Fire, and the whole northern end of the Napa Valley got evacuated.  And as fate would have it, that was right toward the end of harvest and tons of big red grapes were still on the vine.  Then those grape’s sugars peaked and should’ve been harvested but nobody was around to do it, so those grapes ended up being sold for vinegar later in the year.  He lost two acres of wine grapes that year but he didn’t care, said that’s the natural way of a farmer!

What’s a Grapevine Disease?

But maybe this year his vines got phylloxera or another of the 50+ grapevine diseases?  When phylloxera or the other diseases hit, the grapes can still grow but the flavor isn’t worth a damn, and yields go way down so growers don’t even bother with the fruit.  The only solution is to replace the grapevines, crazy expensive.  Napa Valley alone has replaced over half its vines the past 30 years because those bugs are nasty.  I considered this option for Uncle Larry’s grapevines but their leaves never got too red and looked healthy all season, so I tried to think of another reason why he still had grapes on vine mid-January.

Napa Valley Dessert Wine?

Dessert wine!  Of course!  He won’t be able to make ice wine because it doesn’t get cold enough here to hard-freeze those grapes into tiny raisins.  But dessert wine in Napa Valley is popular: vintners let the grapes stay on vine months longer than normal so the sugar levels skyrocket.  Then they harvest and ferment, and because there’s so much sugar winemakers have to stop fermentation at the right point so the alcohol level doesn’t get too high- and that means lots of sugar and sweetness left over to balance those nice firm acids- thus dessert wine!  Maybe he’s leaving his grapes out long enough so they might catch that Noble Rot, Botrytis fungus, which contributes amazing flavor to a dessert wine, and elevates the value of a wine ten fold.  (*see French Sauternes or Hungarian Tokaji)

Dessert wines also get special treatment when drinking and have very specific glassware to capture all the aromas and taste profiles.

Napa Valley Cabernet is the Bomb!

So I ran out of time because the driveway ends, and I arrive at his modest country house which rests on a hill overlooking the property below.  And there he is chopping wood with an axe and dressed in an old tie-dye shirt.   He peeks up at who’s approaching and sees my truck then waves with a sideways grin.  I laugh because he’s a spontaneous guy and always has a trick up his sleeve.  I pull up and carefully hop out the truck,  greets me with a big hug.  We pull aside to chat and I can’t help asking, “So what’s up with grapes still dangling by the road Unc?”  He turns toward the direction they still hang and grins.  “Ol Pete contracts them now for surplus, but his harvest on his own property gave him more than he needed this year. Still paid me but said I should keep um!  So I’m gonna try my hand at making some Madeira!  Wanna help?”  I smack palm to forehead!  Maybe Port but Madeira??  It’s basically a fortified wine like port but literally gets seasoned to age like it would on a “ship voyage across the Atlantic 500 years ago!” It’s called the estufagem process: basically hot and cold again and again until full on wine abuse!  In the old country of southern Europe families keep barrels of Madeira in their house attics for decades and decades to properly age it!  Of course uncle Larry is gonna try to make some, it’s the weirdest wine of them all!  He grins a familial kindness at me and says, “Hey, it’s after noon somewhere right?  Whatchyu say we go downstairs- just bottled the 2016 Cab??”  I sure like that idea and nod, follow him into that infamous wine cellar and he hands me a Riedel glass, and now I’m smiling sideways because “tasting” with uncle Larry means only one thing!  I’m about to get straight up Cabernet bombed!

Cheers!

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Dispelling The Fog: What Goes Into a Fine Wine? https://bestwineglass.com/2020/01/13/living-consciously-2/ Mon, 13 Jan 2020 05:07:34 +0000 https://bestwineglass.com/?p=5817 Read more

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Dispelling The Fog: What Goes Into a Fine Wine?

New Blog Writer

Having grown up and still living in the Napa Valley,  I’ve been asked to write a few things for this blog on the successful BestWineGlass.com website,…. so here we go!

I’ve been in the vino biz most of my adult life and have watched the Napa Valley grow from a bunch of mom n’ pop establishments to major players in international stock portfolios. Amazing transition!

Essential aspects of wine making

Anytime I host wine aficionados, I always like to introduce them to the essential aspects of wine making, the actual nuts-n-bolts of how it’s developed, so they’re in touch with the real, which isn’t the winemaker’s cult-status, who said it was good, or the ratings of the wine, but things much more basic and simple so connoisseurs can create their own perspective about what actually is FINE WINE.  (*like who knew small mountain vineyards in Napa County often need  brown bear preventitive  fencing ($$) because a couple of those 400 lb+ beasts can devour a ton of ripe grapes- literally.)

It begins with climate

So,… there are many things which go into making world-class wines, and I hope to cover some later, but one essential ingredient they can’t do without, the difference that defines basic table wines from world class ones, well that’s hot days and cool, moist nights! (*here in summer growing season we average 50 degree evenings and 90 degree Fahrenheit days.)

The Napa Valley Region of the USA has the perfect soil and climate for growing wine grapes

Not just the importance of soil

Grapevines really are quite promiscuous little creatures, and like a dog they’ll take to just about any dirt as long as it drains! But when making FINE WINE, the kind that makes hearts flutter and inspires dreams,….. dirt aside, those world-class wines only THRIVE in places with a Mediterranean Climate!  That’s easy to remember right? Greeks and Romans drank wine and they’re in the Mediterranean!  And most folks know that, but the reason WHY world-class wines only thrive in those regions requires more understanding.

The skin of the grape makes a difference!

It all comes down to grape skin vitality, each tiny little berry, and how to keep that skin healthy!  We’ve all bitten a grape in half and looked inside so know a grape has that thin skin which encapsulates the juice membrane. And believe it or not,… that juice has almost no flavor on its own, it totally relies on the skin to provide it nutrients and flavor. So all the flavor it gathers over the course of an entire growing season comes from nutrients exchanged with the skin.

Each grape counts in the flavor of a glass

Now a glass of wine contains the juice of about 150 grapes,…. so maximizing the flavor of a single glass of wine relies on enhancing the flavor of each individual grape! And if you haven’t heard this before,….. skin health is everything! Grapes need moisturizer, there I said it!  And the best brand out there is cool, moist evening air!  (In Napa Valley the ocean is only 30 miles away which provides the fog we need.)

Hot days and hot nights dry out the skin

Say a grapevine is grown in a dry area, with hot days and hot nights. And if watered that grape vine will grow and produce, and you can still make good table-wine from it, but over the course of the growing season the grape skins begin to dry out because it gets NO moisturizer in the evening, no cool moist air.  Those grape skins just half way through the growing season will slow in cellular activity;  inhibited in contributing nutrients, so the intricacy of nuanced flavor will not develop.

The health of the grape skin is of critical importance to the final product

But if grown where the grapes are moisturized religiously every single night– the grape skins will stay healthy for the entire growing season and that maximizes the flavor profile of each grape which is to become the wine. Ultimately creating those wines we drink and just say WOW!

Fine wines need the right glass

And just like the contours of the Earth defining where the cool moist air will flow, the shape of a wine glass determines how the nose of a wine will be experienced. A cheap ol’ wine glass is designed to sell, a quick copy of a general shape. But a hand crafted wine glass with centuries of experts shaping them, including scientific research on the flow of smell, they’ve developed glassware that like rolling fog along the valleys finds the most direct way to reveal all the wine has to offer. And some wines, the really special ones, have that ambrosia we certainly don’t want to miss.

Cheers

Andrew

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