Verterra Winery, Gaining Momentum and Quality

It was great fun to sit down with Paul Hamelin of Leelanau Peninsula’s Verterra Winery at Twisted Olive and taste through the new releases.  Paul also brought along some of the 2011 wines for review.  Overall the wines from this producer are getting better every year.  When wandering through Northern Michigan you would do well to stop at their tasting room.  The partners in the winery are Paul Hamelin, with a history in the pharmaceutical industry, and Skip Telgard of the Blue Bird Restaurant.  They both state the goal of creating wines that flatter food and in the 2012 vintage I assure you they have succeeded with whites.  Reds are still aging but I am in great expectation.

What is true across the board with the 2012 Verterra wines is a reduction in the residual sugar of the whites.  Most of the 2010 and 2011 offerings hovered in the range that was noticeable in the flavor profile.  Although this was in no way a flaw, it placed the wines with a different wine drinking group.  My opinion is that in 2012 nature gave them juice that needed a drier fermentation to achieve balance. It seems that the Verterra team agreed with me.

Here are my rather raw tasting notes:

2011 Verterra Pinot Grigio – Aromas of crisp green apple with some of the skin, tart apricot and lemon juice, white flower petals and some ripe peach  come into play, banana and honey, crisp bright and refreshing with a barely perceptible touch of residual sugar which rounds off the finish.  Approximate Retail $12/btl

2012 Verterra Pinot Noir Rosé - deeply pink to bright cherry in color which is admittedly very pretty…Nose of light honey, ripe strawberry, bing cherry pie, talcum and that youthful bubble gum note of post fermentation…Very fruit forward with a crisp raspberry finish, a little touch of white pepper, and then a watermelon driven finish. If you are a lover of Loire Valley Rosé d’Anjou this wine will make you smile as it is pleasantly not dry but not sweet either.  Approximate Retail $16/btl

2012 Verterra Pinot Blanc  - Nose of white pepper, wet stone, reminiscent of a wet slate patio, makes you think of grapes with grey skins, ripe banana, subtle white flowers, ripe yellow apple flesh, the youth of the wine really makes the nose pop, lovely crisp lime to green apple acidity.  I really love the style of this wine as it is the driest pinot blanc Verterra has made.  This wine is reflective of the unique ability that Northern Michigan has to make great pinot blanc based wines.  This is a must try!  Approximate Retail $24/btl

2012 Verterra Unoaked Chardonnay  - Aromas of ripe green apple flesh, canned pineapple, talcum and green banana…also a light apricot note and that same honey undertone consistent through all the wines…In the mouth it has a rich texture, lovely lime zest, unripe pineapple, even pineapple juice… long green apple and lime/ passionfruit finish.  Really nice.  Approximate Retail $18/btl

2011 Verterra Reserve Chardonnay  - Aromas of red apple, ripe pineapple, vanilla, cinnamon and then comes an apricot/passion fruit note, almond and hazelnut notes from aging on the lees, nice cut of bitterness in the nose, very European in fruit profile but still has a generousness that is inherently attractive to the lover of chardonnay from the USA.  Well done!  Approximate Retail $25/btl

2011 Verterra Dry Riesling  - Driven by lime juice and skin with tart pineapple and green apple..When tasted it offers green apple skin and apricot follows, light pink grapefruit, truly lovely.  Would be much better and more expressive it 3 to 5 years.  Hope someone has the patience to wait.  Approximate Retail $19/btl

 

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Flying Melon Cafe, Delightful Dining

Okracoke Island Lighthouse

On the remote little island named Okracoke on North Carolina’s Atlantic coast one assumes that high quality dining is a stretch.  The lore of the island is the history of Blackbeard’s piracy and the quiet easy days that mark its summers.  For Julie and me it was a nostalgic pilgrimage to the place of our marriage, but this time with kids in tow.  We hoped to help them understand why we chose to pledge our future together in such a unique and distant locale.  We expected an emotional day of memories but did not expect to find a remarkably charming restaurant.

On our last day of vacation instead of heading north out of Rodanthe towards Michigan we headed south to Okracoke.  We planned to stand in the same spot we once said, “I do,” and take the after photos that would pair to the before photos from 16 years ago.  We planned a little sight-seeing, a little reminiscing, and then a little lunch.  A simple plan without detail, it was vacation.  After enjoying the real purpose for the trip our stomachs finally could not be ignored and we considered our options.

There was the seafood and disguised fast food on the wharf with the view, the

Flying Melon Cafe, Original Location

quaint but slightly fancy option, respected Café Atlantic where we held our reception, and the unknown, but noticed, little place on the way into town.  It was the name and the noticeable late lunch crowd that caught our attention.  We all agreed, Flying Melon was our destination.

Our arrival was just before the lunch hours ended and it pleased me to see a welcoming smile accompanying the affirmation that we could still be seated.  Not every restaurant gives my family of seven that welcoming smile.  There were still four tables actively enjoying their lunch in the quaint, coastal atmosphere.  The room was light and airy with that unmistakable, but comfortable, look of budget meets dream.  The server handed us menus and the search for each selection began.

There were so many delicious sounding dishes ranging from eastern seaboard inspired seafood to pumpkin pancakes.  Each of us listed two or three things that we would like to eat with regret that we could not just order one of everything.  I seized the moment and ordered myself a Dogfish Head 60 Minute IPA, they offered great beer, and an irresistible fried green tomato BLT for all to share.  From the fun little wine list my wife ordered a glass of Albariño and the kids found artisan root beer.  Unfortunately the Albariño was flawed, but in a well-chosen display of hospitality the server took it away without question and replaced it.

At length we narrowed our lunch choices, sweet potato pancakes with real whip cream, blue crab cake sandwich, house made mac n’ cheese for the 3-year-old, an order of quiche, a fried shrimp po’ boy, and an old-fashioned burger.  After ordering I looked into the kitchen service window with a delighted smile on my face as I stared at the 8-inch stack of crisp bacon waiting for a worthy sandwich.  At that moment the fried green tomato BLT arrived and we immediately regretted not ordering two as it was fantastic blend of tart tomato, salty bacon, and that slightly sweet flavor of fresh toast.

In a timely fashion the rest of lunch arrived and we found each dish lovely.  Crab cakes dominated by delicate crab with just enough egg and breadcrumbs to barely hold it together.  The quiche was savory and delicate, my carnivore 15-year-old loved the burger, and the shrimp po’ boy was classic.  What unexpected but incredible sweet potato pancakes.  Although they sound heavy, they were fluffy and almost floated off the plate, which each pancake nearly covered.  The maple syrup and the fresh whip cream only added to the experience and left all of us begging for another bite.  To my delight my daughter shared generously.

We enjoyed every bite and were the last table to leave before they reopened for dinner.  Even so we never felt rushed or unwelcome.  Excellent dishes and their hospitality made us wish to linger but we acknowledged the hour, finished our dessert, bought a t-shirt, and headed north.

Flying Melon
252-928-2533
804 Irvin Garrish Highway
Ocracoke, NC 27960
They will be in a new location for the 2013 summer so call first.

Rudipalooza 2012 Cleveland, Great German Wine

What a treat to be a part of their great panel discussion that was organized by Matt Citriglia, MS and Rudi Wiest and company.  We are being treated with the personal attention of 6 great winery principles.

Flight One:

From the Ruwer we are checking out the wines of Karthäuserhof.

2010 Karthäuserhof Spätlese Dry – subtle dark rocky note with a lacy feeling in the nose.  There is green apple with the skin with a delicate white flower. Lovely honeyed nature to the nose but the flavor is steely, remarkably racy and there is a sea salt note that underscores all the flavor.  Very compact but very pleasurable with a long life ahead.

2005 Karthäuserhof Spätlese Dry – beautiful progress and development in the nose that causes it to express orange blossom, tangerine, pineapple core, light petrol note, and a wet slate patio note.  Same sea salt note that was in the 2010 but the wine is starting to open up and offer width.  Tart fresh apricot, tangerine skin, finish of ripe lime juice and zest mixed with the saltiness and  kaffir lime blossom.  So very stylish and delicious.

From the Nahe we are tasting Shafer-Fröhlich with Tim Fröhlich.  He uses all native yeast which is certainly a cause of some of these unique flavors.

2010 Bockenauer Felseneck Grosses Gewachs – soft fleshy apricot and peach note starts the aroma, minerality that seems more white than dark and then a subtle note of sea salt, unripe mango and cantaloupe.  Candied apple essence but hiding behind fresh lime oil and under ripe tangerine follows.  Long finish that is a razor’s edge balancing act of fruit and acid.  Nice wine!

2006 Bockenauer Felseneck Grosses Gewachs – First note from the nose is the honey and fuzziness of botrytis on some of the grapes.  Then comes a baked apple and fresh apricot note.  Gray slaty minerality to the nose that opens up to both tart apples and some baked fruit.  Light hint of searing foie gras that makes the wine seem very deep.  Flavor follows in every way in an edgy and powerful way with a pervasive slate mineral content.  Awesome finish.

Gunderloch wines are represented by Johannes Hasselbach

2010 Nackenheimer Rothenberg Grosses Gewachs – Pink grapefruit zest with lime intensity that follows underneath.  There is a light white pepper note like a fresh grapefruit under the first blast of fruit.  Apple blossom with a steely note underneath, so uniquely spicy in the nose.  Very intriguing!  Magically delicate and racy with a lacy texture that just dreams through the mouth and lingers for over a minute.

2005 Nackenheimer Rothenberg Grosses Gewachs – Mango, black pepper, petrol, sugared guava, chalky note, then a hint of honey.  The mouth is so much richer in texture than the 2010 and has a near Alsace feel with a hint of botrytis adding depth to the wine.  Noticeable alcohol comes through but over all this is inspiring wine.  Crazy long finish of toasted hazelnut, honey and dried mango.

Flight Two:

Ziliken is representing the Saar and Dorothy Ziliken is here personally.

2011 Saarburger Rausch Spätlese – Lime juice sweetened with agave nectar and then a honey note, elegant and racy in the nose, lime blossom and even a little white lilac, slate patio after a rain, slight herbal note perhaps fresh thyme.  Beginning of lime juice with lots of agave syrup but last briefly and gives way to unripe pineapple, ripe passion fruit, orange flesh and red apple with the skin wine.

2003 Saarburger Rausch Spätlese – Focused nose on dark slate with a white pepper spice and even a hint of allspice.  Green apple with the skin on, lime skin, fresh apricot are all equal in the nose.  Neat note of white grape juice in the mouth with a light bitterness of a chalky like taste.  There is an integrated note of lees and is followed by honey, passion fruit and ruby red grapefruit.  Wonderful chamomile note in the finish.

From Mönchhof we are joined by Robert Eymael

2010 Ürziger Würzgarten Spätlese – Spiced white pepper note with lots of tarragon, slate note with passion fruit, baby powder and dusty note.  Lean beginning with a full middle and then a cleansing tons of depth.  How I would like to taste this wine in 15 years!  So very spiced and intense.

2006 Ürziger Würzgarten Spätlese – Botrytis is the driving force of this wine at this point in its life.  Once the lightly bitter, honey note passes it shows passion fruit, candied grapefruit, and then lees and spice.

From Fritz Haag comes Oliver Haag.

2010 Brauneberger Jeffer Sonnenuhr Auslese #6 – lean herbal chamomile note that leads to pink grapefruit, passion fruit and green apple.  Linear blast of tartness that balances out the obvious sweetness to a point that just begs for a second sip.  Unbelievable balance of acid to that level of residual sugar!  Passion fruit juice cocktail drives the fruit and then gives way to ripe pineapple and honey.  Chamomile tea and honey then comes through in the finish.  Wow, this is crazy good wine.

2003 Brauneberger Jeffer Sonnenuhr Auslese #6 – Grapefruit oil and petrol come through the immediately, lime blossom, lime zest and oil, tangerine skin and juice as well.  The light bitterness of botrytis comes through in the mouth but there is less balance in this vintage.  Sweetness is more obvious than in the 2010.  There is a blend of flowers, chamomile, peach and peach pit in the finish and the finish lasts for several minutes.

Two Buck Chuck Tasting

TWO BUCK CHUCK TASTING – MARCH 2012
by Wayne Belding MS

Wayne Belding, MS
At Large Contributor

While shopping at a Trader Joe’s I was gazing at the impressive amount of floor space devoted to Charles Shaw (aka Two Buck Chuck) wines, all for sale at $1.99 a bottle. It’s pretty amazing that wine can be made, bottled, labeled and shipped for a price that low. So, I decided to give them a try. It was only a $12 investment for a half dozen varietals, so the risk was low. My impressions were mixed, but there are some extraordinary values in the group.

All California Appellation

2011 Pinot Grigio:
Simple nose of lemon and peach, suggestion of oak. Nondescript on the palate with peach fruit initially, little middle and a weak finish. Cleanly made.

2010 Sauvignon Blanc:
Hints of grapefruit and grass at the nose. Clean flavors with lemon and grapefruit plus herbal nuances and just a bit of layering on the mid-palate. Shows Sauvignon character. Well done for $2.

2010 Chardonnay:
Relatively neutral nose of peach and apple. Nondescript, slightly sweet flavors of apple and peach with vanilla-oak tones. Some mid palate fullness. Slightly hot finish. Cleanly made.

2010 Shiraz:
Light ruby color. Blackberry and black cherry fruit aromas with herb and vanilla hints. Clean on the palate with blackberry and blueberry flavors plus vanilla, herb and spice hints. Very good for $2.

2010 Cabernet Sauvignon:
Medium ruby color. Blackcurrant and blackberry fruits on the nose carry through to the palate followed by green pepper, tobacco and spice hints. Cleanly made and shows Cabernet character. Very good for $2.

2010 Merlot:
Medium ruby color. Black cherry fruit plus herbs and vanilla at the nose. Noticeable residual sugar on the palate. Cherry fruit plus a stewed vegetable note make this a lesser wine. Cleanly made but lesser quality that the other reds.

Two Fun Wines in the Found Not Lost

As I was purchasing a client’s summer supply of wine I ran across rosé from Austria.  Definitely did a double take and instinctively grabbed the bottle off the shelf because first it was dry pink wine and second I had never tasted it.  The wine was from Loimer in their Lois line.  This line is economical and that is rare in the world of Austrian wine.  Loimer’s website reveals that this is 100% Zweigelt which is one of the standard Austrian red grapes.  When vinified into red wine it is lightly spicy, enjoyably herbal and filled with forest berries.

This is what I found in the rosé:

The wine is very lightly pink with a brassy note and the delicate color is a prelude to the delicate flavor.  Wild strawberry, white strawberry, and nuances of raspberry are blended with a touch of white pepper, tart red apple and a surprising citrus note that lies somewhere between lime and guava.  If you like tart this wine is for you as it offers razor-sharp acidity.  I suggest you drink it with a meal more so than alone to temper the tartness.  Cool experience as Zweigelt Rosé has never passed my door before.

Right after I picked up this wine a long time favorite caught my eye…there is a reason I shop at Galley Gourmet.  Forgotten, or slightly ignored, Italian white grapes have created a soft spot with me.  Finding a new one is a thrill for sure but finding a wine maker who is exceeding all expectation with a grape I already know is even better.  In this case please meet Marchetti because he makes the best Verdicchio that I have tried.  Marchetti leaves some of the harvest for an extra dose of hang time and in the process creates the Tenuta del Cavaliere Verdicchio dei Castelli di Jesi Classico Superiore.

Here is what I found in this remarkable Verdicchio:

Candied lime mixed with ripe pear, perfect peach, and the realm of apple options are present in the nose and taste.  The texture of the wine borders on unoaked chardonnay but is not cloying or creamy.  The wonderful melange of fresh fruit is comparable to fruit salad and the silky texture is cut by the tropical citrus note that drives the finish.  Really delicious wine and it was $21.99, what a steal!

 

Mentorship Part II

Mentorship is so many things and takes various forms based on the two people involved.  Mentorship inside the Master Sommelier program is technical, emotional and somewhat eternal.  While I worked toward the goal of passing the Master Sommelier exam my mentor was Madeline Triffon.  She advised, challenged and tempered me into a more professional candidate over the course of 9 years.  However that mentorship did not end when the pin was placed on my lapel, it continues to this day.

There are 5 very special people here in Aspen whose lives have now become intertwined with mine.  My privilege has been to offer similar direction to them as my mentor offered me.  While here in this stressful setting I offered emotional stability and encouragement, but before this point it was sometimes critical and corrective.  Guiding their tastings, or pointing out a chink in their service armor was part of the growth process and was not always warm and fuzzy.  Now like a proud parent watching their children, I stand aside and let them soar, crash, or stumble.

My joy is in their attempt, not their success.  Their desire for excellence and to achieve the seemingly unachievable is what makes me proud to be a part of their lives.  Their desire to soar above the crowd inspires me to continue my own growth.  Their desire to serve reminds me of my own responsibility to do the same.  I think that we all embody this principle:

“To whom much is given, much will be required”

So if one of you very special people happen to be reading this, know that what I have is yours.  May we all be the very best we can be.

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Joy and Sorrow in Mentorship

Here I sit in the unbelievable purity of Aspen, Colorado at the end of day two of the Court of Master Sommeliers Master Sommelier examination.  Surrounded by the beauty of the mountains and the amazing light offered by high altitude has so much in common with the pursuit of these candidates.

Not that long ago I stood in their shoes full of hope, nerves and drive, and this week has surfaced many of those deep memories.  Watching their performances and their anguish reassures me that it is worth the struggle needed to finish the marathon that is the Master Sommelier Diploma.  Our examination team of uber talented professionals is surrounded here by a generation of dreamers who will through their journey incrementally change our industry.  That greatly encourages me.

One of my joys is to assist these dreamers in their pursuit of flight into the professional rarified air not unlike the air at 8200 feet in Aspen.  As I walk the halls here  it fills me with joy to stop and chat with any one of the 5 sommeliers who have come to me for guidance and training.  My mentorship to them transcends the work of the diploma and has become deep friendship.  Their joy in success in mine and their tears in disappointment are mine as well.

As the new documentary “S0mm” plainly states, this is “The hardest test you have never heard of,” and it separates those who merely dream from those who do.

 

 

A Great Riesling and Two Killer Sylvaners

Molly Sweeney of Rudi Wiest Imports was kind enough to drop by with some killer wines this week.  Of course killer wines and Rudi Wiest are synonymous so if you have not found this portfolio you should.  In this post I am going to introduce or remind you of three superb wines from Germany and then in following posts there will be a few more.

Just as a beginning note two of the wines reviewed here are designated as Grosses Gewachs, or Great Growths.  These are historically great vineyard sites, which are required to be dry. These are most often harvested late in the fall when the grapes have ripeness levels akin to auslese level, sweet wines.

Sylvaner is a much maligned and overlooked grape from Germany. Grape has been grown in Austria and Germany for several centuries and so the origin of the grape is not as obvious as something like Cabernet Sauvignon.  It is likely a cross of two older vinifera (indigenous European) vines.  Typically the grape shows a smoky, slate driven integration to the ripe apple, stone fruit and flowers.  When well made it is a wonderful wine.

Franken, in Germany, is the world’s most important region for this grape but unfortunately has fallen out of favor somewhat.  Traditional flask shaped bottles emerge from this region to aggravate those stocking shelves and intrigue shoppers looking through retail selections.

Hans Wirsching is one of the great, established producers of Sylvaner. It was really cool to taste the estate level next to the intensity and style of the Grosses Gewachs bottling.  The estate trocken, dry, retails for $17 to $20.  Here are my impressions of the wine:  A nose of peach, apple, lemon curd, white pepper, and sweet white flower petals is followed by white pepper spice on palate, slatey minerality, lots of peach apricot, and peach pit.  It has moderately long finish of fruit, flowers and pleasant acidity. Delightful…

Now for the quite amazing Hans Wirsching Grosses Gewachs bottling from the Kronsberg vineyard in Iphöf, 2009.  Here are my notes on this marvelous wine which retails for $54 to $60:  Nose is lightly smoky, has definite black rocks, subtle green apple skin, unripe pear and lemon peel, and leads to tastes that are a rich blend of mineral and flowers with ripe green apple, pear flesh and even a little cantalope and honeydew, wonderful!

For those of you who have a negative few of riesling because of your aversion to residual sugar wines, please find this wine.  Germany produces many fully dry, sugar free wines, and we are now seeing more of them than ever.  Germans drink mostly dry wines and so the great ones have stayed at home.  Thanks to Rudi Wiest, and some others, these wines are now making it into our U.S. markets.

von Buhl is a legendary producer of riesling and other varietals from the Pfalz wine region.  This area has a very warm, almost Mediterranean summer and has the predictable ability to ripen grapes perfect for dry wines.  von Buhl tends toward wines that give up a bit of primary fruit in favor of a richness that mimics wines with bottle age.  The von Buhl Deidesheimer Pechstein Riesling GG, Pfalz 2008 will retail between $51 and $58 and here are my notes on it: Ripe pineapple and baked apple greet your nose, maybe a little botrytis note as well.  Then comes beeswax, lime candy, and passion fruit puree; a very compact flavor with an oppulence that develops through the wonderfully tart finish.  Lots of passion fruit and lime with tart red apple and then mineral, lavender, and clean mushrooms.  Just incredible potential in this wine…would love to try it in 15 years.

 

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Sushi, Sushi…Pay Attention Do It My Way

Exploration of restaurants everywhere I go is one of the great aspects of my job. Normally the exploration reveals some fun dishes, interested servers and even a great wine or two.  Sometimes however the moment is less than stellar so I shrug it off and keep going.  Rarely do I ever post a “negative” comment but this time I am making an exception.

Beverly Hills seemed like it should have been ripe with great choices for lunch and perhaps it was but we felt like sushi.  A well-respected iPhone app gives recommendations from chefs for restaurants in the GPS area, and Sushi, Sushi showed up on the list.  It was a close walk, so off we went.

Like many sushi places it was small and dominated by the sushi counter which I found quaint.  What I did not find quaint was the pervasive fish market smell in the air.  I am amazed that normally sushi bars do not smell like fish.  We were placed in front of one of the sushi chefs at the counter and my companion at lunch and I searched through the choices for what we wanted.  A little big eye tuna sashimi, Hamachi, king crab roll, some miso soups and the lunch began.  A wooden platform of a plate was placed on the bar above our base level table and the chef began to place items on it.

I reached for my tuna with my chopsticks and the chef looked up and said, “No chopsticks, use fingers, have towel!”  I thought to myself, “Wow, he totally corrected my behavior, but shrugged and thought well I guess I am aware of the ‘eat with your fingers’ rule.”  I put down my chopsticks and picked up the tuna and dipped it in my soy sauce.  Now the chef looked up and said, “No soy sauce! Put already.”

At this point it was past novel and a bit of the “Twilight Zone” feeling.  I would like to say that we were more successful at avoiding his stern commentary the rest of the meal but we were not.  From this point on he decided we were  just two  stupid or uncultured to understand how to eat at his counter and he gave us instruction as each item was served.  His final rebuke came as my kampachi had sat on the board too long for his taste, “Eat faster, going bad!”

If the sushi had been amazing it would have all gone under the bridge but alas it was only average.  On top of it all I felt less than well the rest of the day.  Chefs may recommend this sushi bar but I do not.

I Hate Cork, Except for Fly Rods and Sandals

Romance, embodied in the removal of the beloved cork from  a favorite wine with that pleasantly soft pop is rampant.  So many wine drinkers sincerely  express feelings of anticipation and excitement in this ritual and are completely shocked by my expressed hatred of cork.

Indeed I understand, even empathize with the emotions that surround the opening of a hopefully great bottle of wine.  In the distant past I have even beat the drum to keep cork as the premier closure for wine bottles, but the more bottles I opened the more disillusioned I became.  You see in any given year I find 1 out of every 10 bottles with a cork flawed by cork taint.  The flaw is trichloroanisole or TCA, or the newly derived bromine based compound.  Often described by the wine geeks of the world as “corky” or “corked”.

Just this week a very excited sommelier at Epic Roadhouse in San Francisco brought over a wine she hoped would intrigue us.  Joining me were Master Sommeliers Tim Gaiser and Peter Granoff and she wished to treat us.  Well much to the dismay of all the treat of an older bottle of Château Musar Blanc from Lebanon was just another reason to hate cork.  Then the 1978 Boal Madeira for dessert was tainted as well.  Yes that is two wines out of four!

In 2009 I was hosting a CRUSH Michigan charity dinner at a collectors home where the two central courses were luxuriously  joined to 1986 Château Mouton, 1986 Château Lafite, 1996 Château Petrus, and 1995 Masseto.  A killer line up of other worldly wines except all but the Masseto had one corky bottle out of the 3 for dinner.  Thousands of dollars in wine ruined, and completely unlike what the winemaker lovingly placed in the bottle many years before.  Then similarly a magnum of Petrus 1985 was opened in 2011 for our honorary chefs as a treat, it was corked as well,$10,000 down the drain.  Sadly these are only two examples of the now tens of thousands of dollars of once great wine that I have thrown away because of the cork.

In short the tragic nature of great wines being ruined by the bottle closure is ridiculous.  What other industry will tolerate a 10% or more loss in product and still be in business?  The answer is only the wine industry and it is simply, because the wineries do not get these flawed bottles dropped off at their doorstep.  Sadly, a great majority of wine drinkers are just unhappy with the wine not realizing the flaw.  They may not return the bottle but they likely will not buy it again.

Another eye-opening reality is that on average a bottle of wine lives two hours after purchase.  If you are going to open the wine in two hours then what difference does it make how they sealed it!  This being reality let’s move to a better concept.  Think back to a time before glass bottles and we find amphorae sealed with beeswax, pine resin, and straw.  That was the standard closure of the day but we would not even consider that now.  Cork is the standard closure now but we have better options.

On any given retail shelf one can now find bag in the box, tetra pak, stelvin (twist off), glass stoppers , plastic cork, composite cork, and traditional cork.  I assure you that twist off and the glass stopper method far exceed cork, and composite cork, in guaranteeing that what the wine maker worked so hard to create is exactly what you are getting.