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‎07-09-2015 08:47 AM
Last night my friend came over. I told her I would buy the cab.
I bought a Columbia Crest, not sure of the year, and another one that was recommended. We opened the Columbia Crest because the bottle was prettier.
It was a very nice wine! I don't know how to describe it though.
‎07-17-2015 08:24 AM
The wine festival is tomorrow. I opted not to go due to the weather.
I really don't want to be on the wet roads, far from home with a bunch of drunk wine-os!
‎07-28-2015 05:02 PM
thought i would share two chardonnays i found that i LOVE ! very good very reasonable under $10
Calling All Angels 2013 Chardonnay [SAVE ME, SAN FRANCISCO WINE Co.]
pineapple notes, vanilla bean notes (the vintner is from the band Train)
Butterfly KIss 2014 Chardonnay [ Butterfly Kiss Wine Co,, Sonoma CA)
pineapple, pear and vanilla bean notes!)
‎07-29-2015 05:55 PM
Ashleigh, thank you for sharing! I'm doing a wine run on Saturday. I'll see if the store has one of those!
‎08-03-2015 01:46 PM
Ashleigh, my wine store didn't have either brand. I have another wine store I can try though.
‎08-09-2015 08:50 PM
I picked up a new wine yesterday. Lucky Goat Chardonnay. It wasn't my taste at all. I like creamy, full bodied wines and this was heavy on apple; very crisp and light.
I used it today to braise chicken and vegetables. Delicious!
‎08-12-2015 10:02 AM - edited ‎08-12-2015 05:39 PM
@ennui1 wrote:I love any opportunity to post my favorite article about why we should drink cheap wine.
http://www.slate.com/articles/life/drink/2011/11/why_you_should_be_drinking_cheap_wine.html
ennui1, I just started reading this thread. Thanks so much for this great article. I tend not to purchase that much wine except when I am in France. In France, lol, my diet goes on holiday while I am there and I indulge in three of my all time favorite foods that go so very well together: cheese, bread and wine. ![]()
I've always marveled at how much cheaper the wine is in France compared to the USA. The article makes it clear that expensive Sonoma Valley real estate and upselling are the culprits. I love inexpensive French coop wine from the south of France (Provence, Drome, and the department just to the west of them).
I love french dessert wines. Beaume de Venise, the syrupy and complex muscat grape, is wonderful (Provence department). And at one of the many summer weekend local wine festivals, I discovered Cadillac wine from Bordeaux. It's just next to the Sauterne and it tastes almost as good... but without the hefty price tag.
In a lot of the french countryside, the land is much more affordable and the farmers are making the best with their old equipment, so they aren't having to mark the wine up to pay for the latest technological inventions. Frequently, they each press their wine at the local coop facility which helps to keep prices down.
A friend of drank his way through Burgundy a few months ago, in a relatively affordable manner and responsible manner. ![]()
At the weekend summer wine festivals, for generally $10-15 you can buy a ticket that lets you taste all the local wines up for offer at the festival. There are usually 20-80 wines on offer and I like to try as many as possible!! I have to remember to eat a hardy meal before hand because, otherwise, the wine goes right to my head!
-- bebe ![]()
‎08-12-2015 01:28 PM
Hi bebe! Welcome to the wineaux thread!
Tell your friend, the one who drank his way through Burgundy, that I envy his life!
‎08-12-2015 01:42 PM
bebe, I actually did read through your post several times, but I got stuck on your friend.
I told my husband that for my 50th birthday, I want to go to France. He doesn't drink, so I will have a designated driver everyplace we go.
When I lived in LA, Trader Joe's had a very good French wine selection. I started learning about Pouilly-Fuisse wines but then I moved about 3 or 4 months into the journey.
80 wines in one weekend? I can do that! As a matter of fact, I would be in heaven!
‎08-12-2015 06:26 PM
@HonnyBrown wrote:bebe, I actually did read through your post several times, but I got stuck on your friend.
I told my husband that for my 50th birthday, I want to go to France. He doesn't drink, so I will have a designated driver everyplace we go.
When I lived in LA, Trader Joe's had a very good French wine selection. I started learning about Pouilly-Fuisse wines but then I moved about 3 or 4 months into the journey.
80 wines in one weekend? I can do that! As a matter of fact, I would be in heaven!
@HonnyBrown@ , lol, I was lured over to the Kitchen forum by @VaBelle35 Le Crafty. She' knows that I have a weakness for all things cheese, so she left me a notification of her For my fellow cheese lovers, a moment of silence thread. -- She knew that resistance would be futile.
I noticed that you had started a Wine thread and so I thought I'd check it out. I only have a very basic knowledge of wine: I know that it goes really well with cheese and bread. ![]()
HB, I hope you get to go to France for your 50th birthday. I think you'd love it. And that your husband is you designated driver is so great!!
I speak just barely passable french and the french people are wenderful to me.
The thing to remember is that unlike the states, the french people feel that they are the custodians of a great civilization. Old school manners are de riguer. If you approach french people with respect, they melt and can be charming.
Americans are known being mystified that other cultures (in their own countries) don't speak english, and I think this presumption infuriates the french to no end. When friends are visiting France, I always suggest they approach a French person with the following phrase: Excusez moi, Monsieur/Madame, puis je parle en anglais? (which translates to: Excuse me, Mr./Madame, may I please speak in english?). Outside the very interior of France, most french people do speak eaglish. And if they are asked politely, then they are happy to oblige. ![]()
France is a great place to indulge because the the wine is good and the good wine is generally affordable.
lol, it was actually 80 wines in one afternoon between 1pm and around 6pm. I started at a small wine festival (maybe 15-20 different wines) at no charge. Then I graduated to a larger festival later at around 3pm in the afternoon. This was in Provence which is in the south of France just next to the Riviera. A lot of the old towns are hilltop towns. They were built on hilltops to that they would be easier to defend from outsiders.
I had quickly learned that, a lot of times, they keep the really good stuff at the top of the hill, so I started up there. It also makes it easier to walk downhill after a couple dozen tastings.
I had had a good sized lunch earlier in the afternoon so that It would take me longer before I got tipsy. While I actually don't drink wine/spirits very often, for some strange reason I have a huge tolerance. lol, it's generally wasted on me. In any case, I tasted and tasted for 3-4 hours before getting back down to my car. I think they had 60-70 different wines. . And I do mean just a taste of each wine (for the most part) because otherwise I would have gotten drunk.
When I reached my car, I realized that I had had too much to drink and that the only responsible thing to go was to just go to sleep in my car and sleep it off. I don't drink and drive. At about 11pm that evening I woke up to giggles. A young couple was leaving and were giggling at me sleeping it off in the back seat of my car. At that point I realized I was fine and I drove back to where I was staying. lol, I must have looked quite a site.
I loev France and have been there a good number of times. Occasionally I have been able to spend a month in the summer driving around France. When I do, I'll spend a lot of time going through guide books and planning a very general route. -- It's the best. I've always been very independent and I really like to travel alone in France. As I'm sure you have figured out, I have a chatty personality and I'm only alone for as long as I choose to be alone. I'm never at a loss for friendly folks to chat with. ![]()
The French countryside is beautiful. It's even more exquisite than the paintings that the French impressionists have painted. No joke, I'll get in my car at 7-8am in the morning and drive from town to town until 8-10pm that evening. I stay at youth hostels (which I love, great atmosphere and very interesting people), or local pensions. I always bring a tent and sleeping bag in case everything's closed up when I settle down for the evening. In typical french fashion, they have luxe campgrounds which are open 24/7.
I love french cheese and I'm happy to go an hour or two out of my way to go to a great cheese shop or to try a particularly good cheese. It's all part of the fun and the journey.
HB, you've got to get to France... if only for the wine... and soooo much more!!!
-- bebe ![]()
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