All Things Wine
Highlight That Special Bottle with Angelshare Single Bottle Cellar

Got that one special bottle to save for a special moment? Then dedicate it to its own wine cellar from Angelshare. The specialness of the bottle is emphasized by the sculptural design of the unit.
Angelshare Single Bottle Cellar | $396 at Compact Impact
By Robert | December 6, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Wines for Thanksgiving - Quick Links
From around the web, here's a few links to help you select this season's best wines for Thanksgiving.- Thanksgiving Roundtable - Holiday Wines [Food & Wine]
- What to Drink in November [Epicurious.com]
- 10 Top Thanksgiving Wines by Natalie MacLean [epi-log]
- A Time to Behold Wine's Beauty [LA Times]
- Thanksgiving Wine Recommendations: 2007 [Good Wine Under $20]
- Value Vino for Turkey (and Sides) Day [Serious Eats]
- Thanksgiving Wines Under $25 [NY Times]
- Countdown to Thanksgiving [K&L Uncorked]
By Robert | November 19, 2007 in All Things Wine, Holidays
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Riedel Tyrol Glasses for Thanksgiving Dinner
When many are gathered around the table this Thanksgiving, food will be passed, well wishes shared, and wine glasses knocked over. With Riedel's new Tyrol line of wine glasses spills can be avoided. The new design is a nice blend of their regular stemware and the "O" stemless series.Riedel Tyrol glasses l $32 at Williams-Sonoma
By Michelle Alderson | November 5, 2007 in All Things Wine, Tabletop Design
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Wine Bags from Bob's Your Uncle

I'm not sure who Bob is, but I really do like these wine bags he's designed. It's a nice alternative to the fancy velvet roped sack, which is just so "yesterday". And it gives new meaning to "paper-bagging" it. Also, when the bag has made its rounds - you know we all reuse our wine gift bags, come on - it is even recyclable. Thanks, Bob.
Wine Bags from Bob's Your Uncle l $12 at greengrassdesign.com
By Michelle Alderson | September 25, 2007 in All Things Wine
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50th Anniversary Riedel Decanter

How does Riedel keep doing it? Each decanter they design is just as or more beautiful than the prior. Celebrating the 50th anniversary of the opening of their factory in Tyrol, Austria, the Tyrol decanter is just another example of Riedel's excellence.
Riedel Tyrol Wine Decanter
I $156.95 at Wine Enthusiast
By Michelle Alderson | August 25, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Drink Links - Summer Wine Recommendations
- 25 Best Summer Wines [Food and Wine]
- Top 2005 Napa Cabernets [Vinography]
- Weekly Wine Buys [eRobertParket]
- Mark Squire's July/August Tasting Notes [MarkSquires.com]
- Wines with Grilled Foods [Epicurious]
- Crisp New Chardonnays [Sunset]
By Robert | August 21, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Winepocket

Gift your wine bottles with this wool felt wine bag.
Winepocket | $29 at Branch Home
By Robert | August 1, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Food & Wine's Summer "Best of" Wine Lists
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This month's Food and Wine Magazine has some great wine lists that are worth checking out.
- See their choices for the 10 Best Online Wine Shops
- Read if some of your favorite wines made their 25 Best Wines for Summer list
- And finally, see what wines they included on their 50 Wines You Can Always Trust list
By Robert | May 17, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Metrokane Vacuum Wine Decanter

On those occasions where you've decanted your wine but didn't finish it all off, then Metrokane's Vacuum Decanter will let you store your left-over wine to keep it fresh a few days longer.
Metrokane Vacuum Decanter | $70 at Kitchenzing
By Robert | May 14, 2007 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Wine Excursion Backpack Gift Basket

Have a great picnic for two with Wine.com's great "gift basket in a backpack" package. The Wine Excursion Backpack includes a California white wine, smoked salmon, cheese, and pistachio nuts along with wine glasses, plates, utensils and a corkscrew for two.
Wine Excursion Backpack - Gourmet Gift Basket | $99 at Wine.com
By Robert | May 9, 2007 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Easy Wine and Food Pairing

A new wine company with a funny name, called Wine That Loves, has been founded to let consumers know which food to pair with right on the bottles' label. Launching with the most common foods that Americans love, Wine That Loves offers five selections -
- Wine That Loves™ Pasta with Tomato Sauce
- Wine That Loves™ Roasted Chicken
- Wine That Loves™ Pizza
- Wine That Loves™ Grilled Steak
- Wine That Loves™ Grilled Salmon
The concept seems so simple, we wonder if it's a concept that's too simplistic for consumers. After all, 'two buck chuck" has its place, but do we really want to reveal our lack of wine/food pairing knowledge so upfront?
Need less to say, we haven't tried these out yet, and so let us know if you have and how you like it.
By Robert | April 27, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Pocket Corkscrew

Suck UK’s collapsible corkscrew makes it easy to uncork a bottle just about anywhere. Don’t let it’s miniature stature—3 inches—fool you, it’s sturdy enough to give a good yank-and-turn to any bottle you’d like to open.
Final Word: Good things come in small packages.
Pocket Corkscrew | £15 at Suck UK
By Bryce Longton | March 2, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Hayon Champagne Bucket and Bowl for Piper-Heidsieck

Turn heads with this striking Champagne bucket and bowl by Jamie Hayon for Piper-Heidsieck. If you want one, you should be willing to make the trek to NYC, Miami Beach or Chicago, where the collection is showing exclusively until April 2007. [Retail locations via NotCot]
Final Word: Iconic
By Bryce Longton | February 14, 2007 in All Things Wine, Tabletop Design
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Glass of Truth Winetasting Glasses

Let your grip unleash flavors in your favorite glass of vino with these unique glasses. Built to maximize taste—the warmth from your hand will bring out aromas in the wine, while the tapered mouth keeps the flavors in—these glasses are a crowd pleaser. $38 for two tumblers at NapaStyle.com.
Final Word: Don’t squeeze too hard.
By Bryce Longton | February 9, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Vinotagz ID's Your Wine Glasses

Unlike dangly little wine glass charms that can be confusing to claim after a glass or two--did I have the grape or the bottle charm?-- Vinotagz makes it easy and modern with their boxy wine glass rings. The abstractly patterned rings slip on through a slight opening in the squared circle, and store neatly stacked on the neck of a wine bottle. To make it even easier, the rings are made to be written on with ballpoint pens, wiped and reused. They even do double duty as napkin rings.
Final Word: Square is the new circle
By Bryce Longton | January 27, 2007 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine, Parties & Entertaining
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94 Points
94 points. In school it meant an A. On your credit card, it means practically nothing. In the wine world, however, it means a pretty good bottle of fermented grapes. Each wine that made this wine list has been given a 94 or higher by highly regarded publications like the Wine Spectator and Wine Advocate. With over 80 wines to choose from, ranging from $11.99 to $679, there’ll be something tasty in your price range.
Final Word: Cabs, Muscats, Zin’s oh my.
By Bryce Longton | January 24, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Wine Spectator's Top 100 Wines of 2006
The folks over at Wine Spectator have one of the toughest gigs around—culling 135,000 wines down to 100. Just imagine all the sipping and spitting they must have to endure over the course of the year. Now, finally, the results are in for their Top 100 wines of 2006, and you can enjoy the literal fruits of their laboring. All you have to do is click, and the wine will be delivered to your door.
Final Word: It’s a tough job…
By Bryce Longton | January 18, 2007 in All Things Wine
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Fast Chilling Wine Decanter
Rapid Cool, by Eisch, is not your ordinary decanter. Store it in your freeze to cool the anti-freeze/water mixture in its inner walls, then decant your wine to chill it at the dinner table from room temperature to about 45 degrees fahrenheit in just minutes.
Eisch Rapid Wine Cooler | $150 from Wineware
By Robert | November 14, 2006 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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A Moody Champagne Chiller
The Moodlight Champagne Chiller glows and changes color to your own programmed lighting scenarios through a control at the base. Safe and waterproof, the chiller charges up to six hours away from its rechargeable base.
Mood Light Chiller | $184 at Unica Home
By Robert | October 15, 2006 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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No Tip Wine Serving Tray
Glide easily through your mingling guests without fear of knocking over your tray of wine glasses with this Wine Tray from MuNiMulA. Available in 9 different extruded aluminum colors.
UU22 Wine Tray | $98 at 2Modern.com
By Robert | September 7, 2006 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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When two bottles are just not enough...
BuiltNY introduces a new three bottle wine tote to go with their growing neoprene bag line.
Three-bottle Tote | $29.99 at BuiltNY.com
By Robert | September 2, 2006 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Conversation Starting Drink Coasters
At a loss for words at a cocktail party? Bob's Your Uncle helps with their disposable coasters printed with irrevelant wine-tasting quotes. With quotes like " Plummy With Strong Thrusting Overtones", you're sure to find something to talk about with your fellow partiers.
Bob's Your Uncle Wine-Tasting Disposable Coasters | $8 at Greener Grass Design
By Robert | August 1, 2006 in All Things Wine, Parties & Entertaining
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Oenophiles... This one's for you

Unlike most traditional wine tours that come with the requisite showing of a temperature controlled barrel of a 95’ Cab—Cindy Newkirk of the Wine Yard takes it a step further, walking you through a step-by-step journey from an empty plot of land to a fruit-laden vineyard.
The vineyard has been in Cindy’s family for over a hundred years and she is steeped in wine culture. From the intricacies of pruning to pesticides Cindy is a wellspring of knowledge and explains things easily without relying on too much wine jargon. After the in-depth lesson on root stock, soil ripping and plotting Cindy takes you on a tractor-tour through the Steinbeck vineyard (no relation to the famous Steinbecks), and points out the differences in plots and plucks varietals for you to taste.
Located half way between Los Angeles and San Francisco, the WineYard is in Paso Robles—known as “Paso” to the locals—and it is an ideal spot for those craving an intimate wine tasting experience.
Paso, and nearby San Luis Obispo are both burgeoning cities with plenty to do and see. In addition to wine tasting (pasowine.com) and vineyard touring you can visit Hearst Castle, take long walks on the beach and if the season is right (from October through February) you can see the migrating Monarch butterflies at Pismo Beach.
By Bryce Longton | July 6, 2006 in All Things Wine, Education, Food & Wine Country Travel
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Daily wine deals now at Woot Wine
Online gadget retailer, "one day, one deal" Woot, has started a new deal site for wines at Wine Woot, where wine lovers will find a weekly wine selection at a deal. Seems like Woot fans started requesting more wine deals after Woot previously offered a Rinfrescante for sale. Plus, the fun of Woot is participating in its online community discussion about its daily deals, which Woot feels is similar to the diversity of opinion in the wine world. [via Springwise]
"Gadgeteers and oenophiles alike have strong opinions, so we let them sound off in our community forums. And because winemakers make marketing predictions far in advance of product release – just like electronics manufacturers – wine inventory is equally subject to overstock, excess, and end-of-life opportunities." - Woot
Shop: Wine Woot
By Robert | June 27, 2006 in All Things Wine
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Saving the environment by French Rabbit
By using recyclable packaging by TetraPak, French Rabbit is bringing a unique branding experience to your local supermarket shelves with these one liter (instead of the standard 750ml glass bottle) containers. Initially launched in Ontario, Canada in 2005, French Rabbit sold half their annual sales goal after just two weeks on the shelves. Four varietals from the Languedoc Roussillon region of France are available - Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Merlot at $9.99 retail.
Some ecological benefits of the Tetra Prisma packaging includes arriving at the bottling plant folded flat, saving on shipping weight compared to glass, protection from sunlight, and can be resealed with its screw top after squeezing out excess air. Also cools faster than wine in a bottle.
By Robert | June 8, 2006 in All Things Wine
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The New York Times Follows the Blog Trend with "The Pour"

It seems that just weeks ago Daily Olive posted a link to the newly launched food critic blog from The New York Times. Oh we did. Now, Eric Asimov, the chief wine critic for the publication, has also joined the blogging trend with his new blog titled "The Pour", which launched today.
Read "The Pour"
Eric Asimov's biography is available online
Read Daily Olive's post about "The Diner" in our Food News section
By Michelle Alderson | March 15, 2006 in All Things Wine, Food News
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WinePod: State of the Art Winemaking at Home
Mozaic's WinePod is the next step to at-home winemaking. Wirelessly to your home PC or Mac, the WinePod tracks your winemaking process and directs you to make necessary adjustments.
The WinePod's a computer-equipped, two-foot-high metal egg/vineyard that yields up to six cases per batch. Any grape will do, but if you buy from ProVina you can watch your fruit ripen on the vine on their Vineyard-Cam -- an inspiring process, provided your life's completely empty. Once you've obtained raw materials, simply flip the lid, dump them in, and the mechanical press will start mashing.
The computer wirelessly connects to your PC/Mac, and makes daily suggestions (adjust pH or temperature, add water, "drink me", etc.). If you run into problems, the Pod's networking software puts you in touch with professional winemakers and wine enthusiasts -- you can ask them questions, or send them grape porn.
Fermentation time depends on the varietal: Beaujolais can take four months, certain Cabernets up to a year, Fecal Raisin Mad Dog about as long as it takes Dominos to deliver the medium Meat-Lovers you're pairing it with. Of course, any machine that can produce velvety Pinot is going to be expensive -- but well worth it to become your own vintner without risking the INS bashing down your door.
via Thrillist
By Robert | March 10, 2006 in All Things Wine
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Pairing Wine with Food: It's OK to Have Fish with Red

When most people start pairing wine with food, two rules are followed: drink red with meat and white with fish. Nowadays there are so many different kinds of reds and white wines to choose from, you can mix it up. Pinot with a seared tuna? Sure. Just make sure the wine isn't overpowered by the food, and vice versa. "But there are limits", as a Chicago Tribune article points out. Find out more about pairing wine with food in the entire article.
By Michelle Alderson | March 9, 2006 in All Things Wine, Cooking, Food
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Wine Events in Chicago for St. Patrick's Day
This year, the famous St. Patrick's Day Parade in Chicago will take place on March 11. If you're not a beer drinker, may we suggest you go to some local wine events - after you've seen the river turn green and watched the parade, of course. If you're in town on March 17, you can catch more wine events. Don't worry: they don't dye the chardonnay green. March 11
St. Patrick's Day Wine Tasting
California Wine Extravaganza
A Tour of Italy
March 17
Wine & Cheese Uncensored
Syrah vs. Shiraz
By Michelle Alderson | March 7, 2006 in All Things Wine, Gourmet Food Events
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Enjoy Food and Wine Abroad
Some say that you can't really learn the language unless you live in the country. Food lovers may argue the same can be said about cooking. Face it, it'd be much easier to cook an authentic Italian meal accompanied by the perfect local wine if you were actually IN Tuscany. There are many reputable wine and food travel tours out there, but we know a good place to start your research: Gourmet on Tour. It has excellent reviews and several tours to choose from. Check it out and hopefully your next marinara sauce will be simmering in an Italian kitchen.
By Michelle Alderson | March 6, 2006 in All Things Wine, Cooking Schools, Food & Wine Country Travel
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Hip Wine Glasses: Stack 'em Up

Stackable wine glasses? It's new to us, but we think they're pretty cool looking. These stackable acrylic wine glasses from Crate and Barrel can spruce up any party. They come in green, blue (pictured), and clear and are much hipper than any plastic ones you can buy. And just a bit more sophisticated, don't you think?
By Michelle Alderson | March 3, 2006 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine, Parties & Entertaining
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Yuzu Wine: Sake or Wine?

In the April issue of Bon Appetit, you'll find a mention of yuzu wine and a bright blue bottle of Kiuchi Yuzu Wine (similar to what is pictured here). What is it, exactly, you may wonder. Yuzu fruit is a rare Japanese citrus, which offers a complex flavor of lime, lemon, grapefruit, and mandarin orange. Yuzu wine is simply fermented yuzu juice. Still confused? Bon Appetit writes "think Riesling crossed with sake". You can find out more about yuzu wine at the Kiuchi Brewery website.
By Michelle Alderson | March 2, 2006 in All Things Wine
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A Wolfgang Puck Oscar Menu: Choose the Right Wine for Braised Food
Wolfgang Puck and epicurious.com have collaborated on a very well-done Oscar party menu. "Wolfgang Puck's Oscar Party" offers ideas for food, drinks, decorating, and more. The main course consists of Wine-Braised Brisket of Beef, which calls for one bottle of red wine. It doesn't specify what kind of red wine, so Daily Olive has a word of advice: cook with wine that you would drink. Wine Spectator agrees and a recent article in the magazine also explains what wines to use in all kinds of cooking. The key is to enhance the flavor of the fish, chicken, or beef, not to overwhelm it.If you like his Oscar recipes, you can buy Wolgang Puck cookbooks at ecookbooks.com.
By Michelle Alderson | March 1, 2006 in All Things Wine, Cooking, Parties & Entertaining
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Wine and Cheese: A Fondue Oscar Party
Every year people gather to observe an American celebration: The Oscars. This year, instead of the usual appetizers, may we suggest something a lot more fun and delicious: melted cheese, followed by melted chocolate? The tradition of dunking cubed bread into melted cheese (a.k.a fondue) is a perfect way to gather around the couch to watch all those fabulous people thank each other for being fabulous. And they look fabulous. Probably didn’t eat melted cheese before the show. Unfortunate souls.
Find out what wine to serve with fondue in Daily Olive’s wine section.
Related Links:
- Find out how to fondue
- The Food Network lists several great fondue recipes for both cheese and chocolate
- Browse fondue books at ecookbooks.com
- Fondue pots can be found everywhere nowadays. For an inexpensive choice, shop at target.com. For those looking for the fancier versions, you can check out surlatable.com
- To buy cheese for the big event, go to igourmet.com
- For more information about the Oscars go to www.oscar.com
By Michelle Alderson | February 28, 2006 in All Things Wine, Cheese, Parties & Entertaining
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Pairing Wines with Fondue Cheese
Pairing wine with cheese can be a tricky endeavor. To guide you, we found this helpful excerpt from www.wineskinny.com:“Big, full-bodied reds are our first choice – from Cotes-du-Rhone to Chateauneuf-du-Pape, Bordeaux to California Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon. If you’re going the California route, try to find wines that don’t overdo the rich vanilla oak, as they will overwhelm the fondue flavors. Also try Chianti and Barolo.
For a white wine choice, full-bodied Chardonnay works like a charm, as do the wines you’ve used in the recipes – Rieslings, Chenin Blancs, etc.”
By Michelle Alderson | February 27, 2006 in All Things Wine, Cheese
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Top 10 List of Do's and Don't When Combining Cupid and a Cup of Beautiful Sake on Valentines
[via TrueSake.com] Herewith is a TOP TEN List of the Do's and Don'ts when combining Cupid and a Cup of beautiful sake:
- If you will be "Hot Tubbing" on V-Day make certain to serve a sake that is best consumed at room temperature. Why? Cold sakes make your body work harder in heat and can be funny on the tummy, and hot sakes will make you too hot in the soup.
- If you plan to take sake to bed, don't worry man! It's not red wine and won't stain the bedding if things get kicking and screaming (did I just type that?)!
- If you plan to serve Champagne or Sparkling wine DON'T. These have sulfites added, whereas Sparkling Sake has been "slightly pasteurized" and is a cleaner buzz!
- Body shot? That is so old school. Why not try the old "Lover's Chair"? Take your lover, remove her clothes, sit her very erect (no leaning back) in a chair and make her put her legs tightly together. Ahh and here is the fun yet tricky part. Hand your lover a glass of cool sake (cold enough to make goose bumps) and have her pour it down her neck between her ummmm breasts (does my mom read this Newsletter?) and watch as it races down her body, to her tightly closed knees, where the recipient shall drink from her kneecaps, which should be touching. This is called something else other than Lover's Chair, but I must first get a cable show before I say the real name. (Also for the guys detours often happen so improvise!)
- Giving chocolate this V-day again? BORING! Why not mix it up by giving your valentine your favorite chocolate and a killer bottle of desert sake called Kijoshu. This 8-year aged sweet sake was made for chocolate and they go together like Donnie and Marie (does that sound incestuous?). Okay then they go together like France and cigarettes, fish and chips, Emelda Marcos and shoes etc. Point being the deep richness of this sweet sake works so well with anything chocolaty. It has the color and feel of a Port and hints of Sherry-like qualities. Amazing and so unique!
- Beer is great. No questions. But when was the last time you drank a sixer and then started making out. You probably A) smelled like a brewery B) burped like a sailor and C) felt bloated like a traveling-for-2-weeks-piece of luggage. So don't even go there. Forget the brewski on the 14th and stick to the cleanest burning fuel that doesn't bog ya down, blow you up, or stink ya all over. Sake is recommended by 9 out 10 doctors for "making out," and is covered by most insurance carriers. Be smart. Be Sake.
- If you are officially proposing to you lover on Valentine's Day, don't put the ring in the bottom of her wine glass. Do you how many times the gal has swallowed the ring? Countless times. This would be worse if you hid the ring in the bottom of cloudy/milky sake known as Nigori Sake. Bad idea! But, and this if for the very desperate, if you were intending to propose and forgot the ring (or lost it you idiot) then try this fail-safe impromptu engagement secret. When you twist off the cap of unopened sake a perforated separate piece of metal comes off. This little round piece of metal, which is usually gold or silver, looks just like a.... you know.... a ring! Tadah the perfect "he was so cute putting this little sake ring on my finger" moment. Guys you can thank me later!
- How do you know when things at dinner are starting to turn for the better? You look at your date on V-Day and notice that she is starting to flush a little. Man! You think. She is really starting to get hot for me. WRONG! The real reason your date is starting to turn the color of the fake red heart on the V-Day card that you gave her an hour before is that the histamines in her red wine are kicking in. Her face and body are having a reaction to the surge in histamines often found in big red wines. So before you yell "Check Please" think about pouring sake instead of the Red Death that could get you in a ton of "presumptuous" trouble.
- Of course wines and beers have some great names that do so well on Valentine's Day but they can never compare to the names of sakes. For example how about pouring a bottle of "Drunken Heart" or "Dreamy Clouds"? Not bad heh? How about whipping out a bottle of "Venerable Virgin" or "Beautiful Boy"? There is always "Midnight Moon" or "Star-Filled Sky." Perhaps you would prefer "Root of Innocence" "Southern Beauty" "Mirror of Truth" "Fair Maiden" or "Heaven of Tipsy Delight." Point being if you are feeling strong enough pour a bottle of "Man's Mountain" and let nature take its course.
- This Valentine's Day take a "Sake Bath." First get an "Ishobin" (1.8L) bottle of sake, drink a large portion for dinner then take the rest to your bath. Run some hot water and then place your lover sitting in the tub. Take the remains of the bottle and pour it on her/his head and then have them do the same to you. And then wait for the steam and heat to kick in. Oh so steamy!
This excerpt has been reprinted from February's True Sake newsletter written by Beau Timken, owner of True Sake: America’s first sake retail store located in San Francisco, CA. Beau is a professional sake taster and sake sommelier. Visit his website True Sake.com to learn more, and shop for your perfect bottle of sake to ring in the new year.
Technorati Tag: Food and Drink
By Robert | February 13, 2006 in All Things Wine, Valentine's Day
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Food & Wine Classic in Aspen


After ski season is over and the snow melts, foodies and wine lovers from all over will be heading to Aspen for the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen. Sponsored by Food & Wine magazine, the three-day event will feature tastings and cooking demonstrations, and will include chefs Mario Batali, Emeril, Bobby Flay, Wolfgang, and more.
The event will be held June 16-18, 2006. Go to www.foodandwine.com for more information.
By Michelle Alderson | February 9, 2006 in All Things Wine, Chef News, Cooking Schools, Education, Food, Food & Wine Country Travel, Gourmet Food Events
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Ordering Wine Off the List Is Not for Amateurs
Do you ever go to your favorite restaurant and wish they had a selection that would better pair with the food you are ordering? Maybe it's time to ask. According to an article in the Los Angeles Times, some restaurant sommeliers have a "secret stash" for special customers. The great news is that it doesn't take money to get what you want: It takes a knowledge of wine and a sommelier that is willing to share. Find out more about these well-hidden treasures in the article "Just as You Suspected: Sommeliers Have a Stash".
By Michelle Alderson | February 8, 2006 in All Things Wine
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Find your local beer spot with Beermapping.com
Want to know your local beer spots. Beermapping.com uses Google's mapping technology to map out local beer spots from pubs and bars, to micro-breweries, to shops. Cities include Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, NY, Washington DC and more. And yes, Milwaukee is next up to get "beermapped".
Via: Saute Wednesday
By Robert | January 31, 2006 in All Things Wine
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San Francisco Hosts Zinfandel Wine Event

Starting tomorrow in San Francisco, Zinfandel lovers will be able to taste wines from over 300 participating wineries at the 15th Anniversary Zinfandel Festival. For wine and food lovers, you can also attend the Good Eats & Zinfandel. Forty-nine zinfandel wine-makers team up with restaurants so you can sample the wine with your favorite eats. The festival lasts four days, January 25-28, and is located in the beautiful Marina District. For more information, go to www.zinfandel.org.
By Michelle Alderson | January 24, 2006 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Country Travel, Gourmet Food Events
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Valentine's Day Wine Trips

Currently I am in San Francisco, tagging along on my husband's business trip. It's a nice perk. Tomorrow we head to Sonoma for wine tasting. That said, I have to say, that since Sonoma and Napa were my first real wine-tasting experiences, these regions have become my favorite. Especially for cabs and chardonnays. I really like what they produce up there. And I am very lucky to be able to live close enough to enjoy a visit often.
For those who can't make it to California this Valentine's Day, don't worry, I found a few other outings out there. Well, I found many, many wine country adventures available for the romantic holiday, but could only list a few that caught my eye:
Austin
Who knew Texas had a nice wine country? If you can't make it to Texas, maybe you can check out this article in The Austin Chronicle. It's helpful and fun.
Long Island
LongIslandWineCountry.com offers a "Sideways" tour this February. It'd be great to compare a Pinot from the East Coast to one highlighted in the movie.
Washington
Chocolate and red wine? Who could resist. Find out more at North Sound Wineries.
By Michelle Alderson | January 12, 2006 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Country Travel, Gourmet Food Events, Valentine's Day
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Veuve-Clicquot La Grande Dame Wrapped in Emilio Pucci
Fashion designer, Emilio Pucci, has designed a pattern just for a neoprene sleeve for Veuve Clicquot Champagne Bottle. Available only with a Veuve-Clicquot La Grande Dame 1996 Champagne, we looked high and low for this bottle, and finally found it at at Sherry-Lehmann Wine.
Veuve Clicquot Emilio Pucci Gift Set | $199 at Sherry-Lehmann
By Robert | December 28, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Choosing a Great Party Wine
Bringing a bottle of wine to a party is always a tough decision for me. At a cocktail party, I always think that spending too much is just wasted on a crowd of mingling guests who just want something to drink, but then I wonder about the appearance of showing up with $5 bottle of wine as a host gift. Plus, there's the pressure of making a creative choice (more often wasted on a crowd drinking from plastic cups). I'm sure I'm not alone in this dilemma. Well, Food and Wine helps choosing a bottle easier with their recent list of 10 Great Party Wines.
By Robert | December 26, 2005 in All Things Wine
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New Year's Day – The Historical Use of Sake
The tradition of drinking sake on New Year's Day
What if I told you that all of your ills and bad lucks to come would go away if you offered somebody a cup of sake? What if I told you that you could make amends for all of your "transgressions" if you offered a cup of sake to a stranger? And what if I told you that you could become as rich and famous as you so desire if you offered a cup of sake to somebody other than yourself? Hmmmmm I am saying that most of you would say show me the bottle!
The history of sake is not as crude as this, but it has always been a mainstay when praying to the gods. Sake has always and will always be an offering of sorts to those greater than ourselves for anything from producing a banner crop this year to having that boy that you always wanted. Most every religion in Japan incorporated the use of sake to make offerings and to bless things, lands, people etc. Sake was and will continue to be the elixir that defines a country's morays and traditions, and it has both an ancient and modern usage.
Continue reading "New Year's Day – The Historical Use of Sake"
By Robert | December 23, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Wine Gift Basket Idea: Mark Oldman's Secret Wine Collection

Award-winning wine writer Mark Oldman has put together a great collection of lesser-known wines based on specific chapters in his new book, “Oldman's Guide to Outsmarting Wine”. Give friends and family Mark’s “Secret Alternatives Wine Collection” gift basket from wine.com, that includes six bottles of new wine discoveries plus a copy of Mark’s “Oldman’s Guide”.
Mark Oldman's Secret Alternatives Collection
| $99 at Wine.com
By Robert | December 4, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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For Your Next Wine Tasting Party from RedEnvelope.com
Turn your next wine party into a first-class event. Wine bottles are slipped into faux-suede wine bags with charms labeling them one through four. After tasting each wine, guests write their descriptions on scorecards. Even if no one correctly identifies the wine, engaging conversation is guaranteed, and everyone will leave with a better grasp of the facets of wine tasting.
Wine Tasting Party Kit | $75 at RedEnvelope.com
By Robert | November 21, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Wine Tasting: You Like What You Like and That's OK
One very important thing I learned from my husband when he began his now four-year teachings of wine tasting is this: You like what you like. This was proven at a recent wine club I hosted. We brown-bagged five wines, ranging in price from $10 to $50. Many guests selected the $10 wine. You'd assume they would have preferred the more expensive wine, but we all agreed: Everybody has their own taste and that's just fine.
In the November 17, 2005, online edition of the the New York Times, writer Eric Asimov concurs with my counterparts in his article titled "Wine of the Times: Eternal Question Not Really Answered." In the article, panel members also blind tasted some wines and discussed their favorite Thanksgiving wines. One thing was conclusive, consensus was rare.
Read full article: Eternal Question, Not Really Answered
By Robert | November 18, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Handmade Wines from Winemakers Around the World by Oriel
Oriel commissions winemakers from around the world to create a limited quantitiy of truly handmade wine that is special to their region. Assembled all under one Oriel label helps keep overhead low and wines affordable. Oriel also offers quarterly memberships that include 6 bottles of handmade wine per quarter, special event invitations, and more. Founder Memberships offer more privileges including a concierge service and access to wineries around the world.
See a sample wine spec for 2003 Courant Cotes du Rhone by winemaker Louis Barruol.
Oriel | Official Website
By Robert | November 17, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Zinfandel Picks and Other Wines for Thanksgiving
Choosing wines for our Thanksgiving feast is never an easy choice for us at Daily Olive. It should be so easy, but it comes with lots of anxiety. Andrea Immer, at epicurious.com, gives us her wine recommendations for Thanksgiving. Starting with Zinfandels, she also gives her white wine choices preferring Gewurztraminers, and great port and sherry selections for dessert. Finally, she reminds us that Beaujolais could also be great choices with Thanksgiving turkey.
Wines for Thanksgiving | via epicurious.com
By Robert | November 4, 2005 in All Things Wine, Thanksgiving
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Decant your wines easily with the Wine Funnel
Need a quick and effective way to decant your wine? The Wine Funnel aerates your wine into e into eight separate streams helping smooth out its tannic flavor and improve the taste. European design also includes a stainless steel filter to catch bits of cork and sediment.
Wine Funnel | $20 at UncommonGoods.com
By Robert | October 29, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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A Retro Wine Rack - The Wine Knot
The Wine Knot is designed by New York based design firm called Mint. Made of birch and walnut plywood, the Wine Knot is a different take on the standard boxy wine rack designs out there.
Wine Knot Wine Rack | $100 at GreenerGrassDesign.com
By Robert | October 25, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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6 Tips for Hosting a Sake Tasting Party
Join the growing trend of throwing a sake tasting party. Beau Timken, owner of True Sake, shares his advice on hosting a sake tasting party.
I often get asked what is the best way to entertain with sake and how can we hold a sake tasting that is both fun and educational? The answer is simple really. Just get some sake and get some mouths.
Seriously having a sake shindig is quite like having a wine tasting except people may have less confidence in their sake understanding. But the bottom line is that it is all about people and their likes and dislikes. So the best way to approach a sake tasting adventure is to think about making almost everybody happy. (Some folks will never be happy – so screw them.)
Herewith are some scenarios and methods for having a sake gathering that will leave its mark and make you look like a hero.
Continue reading "6 Tips for Hosting a Sake Tasting Party"
By Robert | October 17, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Winesceptre Keeps Wine at Ideal Drinking Temperatures
Winesceptre is a new product that will keep your open wines chilled at the right drinking temperature. Adopted for use by French sommeliers, using Winesceptre will keep wines at a steadier ideal serving temperature than placing the bottle in an ice bucket (too cold), or sitting at room temperature (too warm).
Made of high grade stainless steel - the same as used in wine tanks, a chilled Winesceptre is inserted into a pre-chilled bottle of wine to keep the wine at a perfect serving temperature over an extended period of time. The design also allows you to continue pouring wine without removing Winesceptre from the bottle.
Order directly from Winesceptre.com.
Technorati Tag: wine
By Robert | October 16, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Rosendahl WineTube Wine Rack
The WineTube Wine Rack is an elegant and modern solution to wine storage. With the rack holding the neck of the bottle, you can easily view the wine labels at a glance.
Rosendahl WineTube Wine Rack | $79 at Tabletools.com
By Robert | October 14, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Taste Test Your Wine with a Clef du Vin
Using a Clef du Vin, or "wine key", helps simulate the passage of time on a bottle of a wine. Dipped in a glass of wine one second for every year of aging desired, the metal alloy speeds the oxidation process changing the wine's taste, in effect mimicking the effect of cellaring. Wine collectors will use the Clef du Vin to predict how well a bottle may age helping them decide which wines are worth keeping and when their ideal drinking age will be.
Clef du Vin Pocket Wine Tasting Tool | $99 at WineEnthusiast.com
Perfect Christmas Gift for a wine lover--Clef du Vin Wine Tasting Tool built into a classic Chateau Laguiole Corkscrew
By Robert | October 4, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Tips on Hosting a Port Tasting Party
As the weather gets cooler, a port tasting party is a great way to warm up and get cozy. Here's some quick tips on hosting a port tasting party (via WineSkinny.com).
Port makes an outstanding choice for a winter wine tasting. Cold nights, a cozy fire, good friends, fabulous port. What else could you want out of life?
If you are new to port, here are a couple of basics: Tawny port is usually ready to drink, because it's had all the aging it needs before it's bottled. Typically, it has a reddish-brown color and a mature, nutty, dried-fruit flavor that matches beautifully with foods that feature blue cheeses, nuts, certain grains or dried fruits. Vintage port, on the other hand, is bottled after only a couple of years in the barrel and needs quite a bit of aging to soften bitter tannins and to integrate the often harsh spirit into thickly textured, luscious wine.
Continue reading "Tips on Hosting a Port Tasting Party"
By Robert | September 30, 2005 in All Things Wine, Parties & Entertaining
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Three Wine of the Month Clubs from K&L Wines
When you purchase a Wine of the Month Club package from K & L Wine Merchants, you'll be assured that you'll get a great deal and some excellent wines. Reviewed by many as one of the internet's best wine retailers (Inc.com, Time, Wall Street Journal, Forbes to name a few), choose from three wine clubs--Best Buy Wine Club, Premium Wine Club, or Signature Red Collection.
Order your Wine of the Month Club directly from K&L Wine Merchants online.
By Robert | September 28, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Visit "Sideways" Wine Country without the Crowds
The movie "Sideways" brought mixed blessings not only to the folks and wineries in the Santa Ynez Valley, where the movie was set, but also to the people who visited. Where there once was a peaceful getaway location to a lesser known California wine country, now there's lots of traffic and lots more people.
Los Angeles Times food writer Ann Herold writes about her experiences in Santa Ynez to find the road less traveled, and some smaller wineries that maybe are better than the Sanford's and Fess Parker's. All in all, she uncovers a more peaceful way to enjoy your weekend trip and Pinot Noirs in "Sideways" wine country.
Read "Unsideways: The Tour | Secrets of the Santa Ynez Valley" via LA Times
By Robert | September 21, 2005 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Country Travel
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Autumn California Wine Country Bike Tours
Fall weather is the perfect time to enjoy a bike tour of California's wine country. Offered by Backroads, a 25 year old active travel company, enjoy a six day wine country tour that runs through Napa and Sonoma Valleys, through Healdsburg and Bodega Bay.
Wine Country Bike Tour | via Backroads.com
By Robert | September 16, 2005 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Country Travel
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Crystal Wine Duck Decanter by Ravenscroft
Ravenscroft Duck Wine Decanter, made of lead-free crystal, is hand blown to give your wine maximum aeration.
Ravenscroft Crystal is the embodiment of old-world European craftsmanship and a modern understanding of how the composition and shape of a wine glass can significantly enhance the tasting experience. Our designs, developed out of the deepest respect for great wine, are hand crafted in nearly 30 different styles. Each style is the result of thousands of years of glass making trial-and-error, and is individually crafted to enhance both the bouquet and taste of the wine or spirit for which it was made.
Ravenscroft Crystal Duck Decanter | $68 at CalVines.com
By Robert | September 16, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Luxurious Leather Wine Tote
Two special wine bottles will travel in style with this leather wine tote from Mulholland Brothers--made by hand in San Francisco.
Endurance Two-Bottle Wine Carrier | $220 at eBags.com
By Robert | September 9, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Relax in a Wine Barrel Folding Chair
Made from salvaged California winery wine barrels, Whit McLeod has designed and constructed a folding chair out of 100% white oak barrel staves. Each chair is numbered and branded with the name of the winery where the barrel was used.
Order online directly from Whit McLeod Chairs.
By Robert | September 7, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Survey: What's Your Favorite Restaurant in Napa Valley?
Here's our first reader survey!
If you have a favorite Napa Valley restaurant you love, share your experiences with other Daily Olive readers. Leave your comments below.
By Robert | September 1, 2005 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Reader Surveys, Restaurant News
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2003 Shaping Up to Be a Vintage Year for Port
A couple months ago over dinner with friends, we started our dessert course with a few rounds of port. With luck, we were in the company of experienced port drinkers and their selections have opened our palates to the wonderful world of port. Now, we look out for any information to learn more about port wines and here's a few links to get started with.
- 2003 Vintage Ports to Save - More Ports in a Storm via StarChefs.com
- The Origins of Port via TheWineMan.com
- Port Wine via Wikipedia
Read more in All Things Wine
By Robert | August 29, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Prepare for Your Northern California Wine Country Trip
Looking to travel to Northern California wine country? Spending a weekend in Healdsburg, Napa Valley, & Sonoma? Two new books help you plan your wine country trip this coming fall. Published by Chronicle Books, check out "The Wine Lover's Guide to the Wine Country: The Best of Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino" and "Sonoma: The Ultimate Winery Guide"
to prepare for your trip.
via LA Daily News
By Robert | August 9, 2005 in All Things Wine, Food & Wine Country Travel
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Get Hip with Stemless Wine Glasses
Over the recent months, we've been seeing more and more stemless wine glasses--in wine shops, restaurants, style magazines, and online wine sites. It's a bit different and that's probably why we like it. Next time you entertain, serve your favorite chardonnay or cabernet in a stemless wine glass. You'll be certain to start a conversation.
"The tumbler glass concept is really new for the industry,' said Maximilian Riedel, 27, who only six months ago launched his family company's line of stemless wine glasses.
Read "Stemless glasses are the new way to drink wine" via Yahoo India.
Shop Riedel O Line Stemless Wine Glasses at WineEnthusiast.com
Read More: All Things Wine
By Robert | August 3, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Start Your Wine Cellar with These 60 Bottles
Starting to enjoy wine enough to think about starting your own wine cellar collection? Canadian wine writer, Tony Aspler, offers some great guidelines to starting your own cellar. Along with his tips, he also suggests a list of 60 wines to start your cellaring.
Read Tony Aspler's Tips on Starting a Wine Cellar.
By Robert | August 1, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Seattle's Top Wine Seller is Not Your Ordinary Retailer
Seattle friends of ours told us of Garagiste Wine, a unique wine retailer that's unlike any other retailer in the city. Tucked in an industrial area with irregular hours, Garagiste also happens to be one of the top wine sellers in Seattle. What's more, they have a national following for founder Jon Rimmerman's email recommendations of collectible, limited production wines.
Sign up for Rimmerman's mailing list at GaragisteWine.com.
Read "Seattle retailer Garagiste has national cult following" via The Seattle Times
Read more wine articles in All Things Wine at Daily Olive
By Robert | July 28, 2005 in All Things Wine
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History of the Wine Barrel

When you've gone to visit wineries, of course you'll see the cellars and all those wine barrels stacked up on racks. Ever wonder how barrels came about for holding wine? Here's a article about this history of how barrels became used for winemaking.
Read full article "History of the wine barrel" via CorkForce.com
Related Articles:
How to read a wine label
Compare wine prices online
By Robert | July 26, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Wine for Women - a new book by Leslie Sbrocco
A majority of wine consumers are women, and Leslie Sbrocco has written a straight forward, easy-to-read book for them in Wine for Women: A Guide to Buying, Pairing, and Sharing WineYou can also find her on PBS and CNN, plus through her regular column in the San Francisco Chronicle.
Website - www.lesliesbrocco.com
By Robert | July 9, 2005 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Japanese Sake Only Specialty Store
We have friends who travel often to Japan and bring us back special bottles of sake. Since then, we always wondered if there's a place in the market for a specialty sake shop. Well, we've found one -- True Sake -- located in San Francisco. They carry only Japanese sakes and the owner, Beau Timken, has an extensive background in sake tasting and all it's background. With taste testings, and his own True TasteMatch sake taste templating system, looks like Beau is doing all the right things to introduce us to the finer points of sake.
By Robert | April 8, 2005 in All Things Wine
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2005 Top Wine QPR
These days there's lots of talk of a wine's QPR, or quality-price-ratio, that rate the best wines that can be had at the best value for the dollar. At the Wine Lovers Page, here's their list of Top Rated QPR Wines for 2005.
By Robert | February 6, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Movie 'Sideways' - Raising Up Pinot Noirs
If you've seen the movie 'Sideways', you probably came away with an interest in Pinot Noirs like many other fans. Across the country, wine stores and restaurants have reported a rise in the purchase of Pinot Noirs. Here's a few stories from around the web about the new popularity of Pinots driven by 'Sideways'.
Sipping Sideways | Time.com
After 'Sideways', Pinot's stock is up | NY Daily News
A Connoisseur's Guide to 'Sideways' | Slate.MSN.com
The Sensitive Guy's Grape | Boston.com
Wineries Bask in Their 'Sideways' Cameo | MSNBC.com
Related: Find Wines Online with Wine Searcher | Wine Grape Varietal Table
By Robert | January 28, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Shop and Compare Wine Prices Online
Sure, you've probably used one of the Internet's many shopping sites to compare prices for your latest household purchase, but have you seen a shopping site for wines? We have.
Use Wine Searcher's online search site to find your specific bottle of wine from over 4,000 internet wine merchants. You'll see all the merchant information plus their prices. It's a great way to shop for that hard-to-find vintage and compare prices at the same time.
Start your wine search at Wine-Searcher.com.
By Robert | January 7, 2005 in All Things Wine
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Gift for Wine Lovers: Wine Grape Varietal Table
Wine Grape Varietal Table is a beautiful wine reference poster that shows you all the different grape varieties in a easy to read chart. Printed like a fine art print, this poster is a perfect gift for a wine lover, and hangs nicely in your tasting room or wine cellar. It is packed with information about grapes worldwide and comes with a printed reference book, The Wine and Grape Indexes.
Visit delongwine.com for more information.
By Robert | December 10, 2004 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Talking Turkey & Wine
From our blogging buddies, thefoodsection.com, here's a great post about wine choices and Thanksgiving turkey with input from other bloggers.
By Robert | November 23, 2004 in All Things Wine
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Wine Pairings for Thanksgiving Turkey
From the Food Network, here's a great listing of wine choices for Thanksgiving dinner. From cheap to expensive, from elaborate dinners to simple, you'll find a wine here to go with your Thanksgiving turkey dinner.
Sponsored Link: EuroCave - Premium wine cellars imported from France
By Robert | November 18, 2004 in All Things Wine, Thanksgiving
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"Wine for the Confused" Starring John Cleese on the Food Network
This Sunday, the Food Network brings us John Cleese and his British accent in "Wine for the Confused" to help us get less confused about wine and a few chuckles as well. I have a feeling that Cleese's classic humor, known from his hit "Fawlty Towers" and work with Monty Python will be a watchable entertaining hour of Food Network television. For airtimes, click over to the Food Network site.
By Robert | October 16, 2004 in All Things Wine
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Looking for a Cocktail Recipe?
CocktailDB catalogs over 4000 cocktail recipes and mixes, and probably is one of the larger cocktail recipe databases online. You can search by drink name or by the ingredients in your desired drink. There's also a Mixalator page where you can search for or create your own drink by picking features that you want in your cocktail. The choices range from complexity level, strength, taste characteristics, to time of day.
By Robert | October 15, 2004 in All Things Wine, Cookbooks
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How to Read a Wine Label
The label on a bottle of wine undergoes more regulatory and creative scrutiny than perhaps any label on any other commodity. After a design is created and selected, the label must pass muster from the government agency that controls wine production as well as the various government agencies controlling importation and sale in every country where the wine is distributed. [More]
By Robert | October 1, 2004 in All Things Wine
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Looking for a Wine Tasting Event in Your Area?
We found a great wine website with a comprehensive list of wine tasting events in regions all over the world. Calling themselves "The Largest Wine & Spirits Calendar in the World", you'll be sure to find a local wine event in your area at LocalWineEvents.com. They even have a wine event email notification that will alert you to upcoming events in your requested regions. Happy tasting!
By Robert | September 23, 2004 in All Things Wine, Gourmet Food Events
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2004 American Wine Awards by Food & Wine
Food and Wine Magazine presents its 8th annual American Wine Awards. Did your favorite California wines make their list? Food and Wine names the Best Wines under and over $20 plus Best Wine Importer, Best New Wine Shop, Most Promising New Vineyard, and Winemaker of the Year.
Read their full article online.
By Robert | September 15, 2004 in All Things Wine
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Dom Perignon Champagne Teams with Architect Richard Meier
Architect Richard Meier has designed a sleek limited edition carrying case holding six bottles of 1995 vintage Dom Perignon. Priced at $2000 and with only 250 of these cases available, the beautiful package makes for an ultimate gift for the art and champagne lover.
By Robert | December 24, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Great Read: True to Our Roots by Fetzer Vineyard's Paul Dolan
CEO Paul Dolan has written a book talking about the principles that have guided him in his leadership of Fetzer Vineyard since 1992. This is an inspirational read revealing how personal principles and commitment led a successful winery to use the land and resources wisely while enhancing the lives of its employees, and the community and industry in which they work.
Available wherever books are sold and thru Amazon.com.
By Robert | December 11, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Holiday Wine Gift Baskets

Holiday wine gift baskets are suitable for gift giving to many different people on your gift list. There are a wide variety of wine and gourmet gift baskets that are appropriate for business associates and corporate gifts, thank you baskets, and the wine or food lover in your family.
Wine gift baskets are available online at:
Wine.com | Wine Enthusiast
| iGourmet
|
Wine Messenger
By Robert | December 7, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Holiday Gift Guide: Pocket Wine Guide for Your Palm Pilot
Wine Enthusiast's Guide for your Palm Pilot turns your handheld into an up-to-date wine guide. Get wine ratings by region and year with reviews to help you conveniently select the ideal wine for your occasion.
For more details, visit Wine Enthusiast Wine Guide - 2003 Edition
By Robert | December 6, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Holiday Gift Guide: Brew Your Own Beer at Home with The Beer Machine
Brew your own beer at home? The Beer Machine makes it easy. Fitting inside your refrigerator, you can make your own homemade beer in just 10 days. This could be the ideal Christmas gift for the beer loving guy who loves cooking and tinkering around the house. Beer mixes from around the world are available from light to dark ales, lagers to honey beers to porters.
Click here for The Beer Machine
By Robert | November 27, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Choosing Wine for Your Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner
Looking for wine choices to go with Thanksgiving dinner? Here's a selection of turkey and wine pairing links from our friends at thefoodsection.com.
By Robert | November 24, 2003 in All Things Wine, Thanksgiving
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Online Wine Classes from Wine Spectator
Wine Spectator School offers on-line wine courses for the beginner to the experienced wine drinker. How do they do it? Well, each course includes multimedia presentations with class materials and course work that is downloaded and printed. After you've completed the course, you'll finish with a tutored tasting following a supplied tasting guideline. All you need is to purchase a range of wines that you studied in your class from your local wine shop.
Wine Spectator School even offers a free sample course so you can try out their online class format. Classes start at $49, and currently feature a course on California Cabernets.
By Robert | October 30, 2003 in All Things Wine, Education
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Bidding on Wine Auctions at WineCommune.com
If you are familiar with eBay, then you'll feel right at home bidding on WineCommune.com for your favorite wines. This site is dedicated strictly to wine and auctions include wine ratings by Robert Parker. Be a bidder or seller, and you'll find it all here from special bottles to cases, from France to South Africa, California to Australia.
Take a look around, and you just might catch the wine auction bug.
By Robert | October 29, 2003 in All Things Wine
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Free St. Supery Meritage Label Poster
For a limited time, you can get a free poster of all the St. Supery Meritage label illustrations over the years. Just pay five dollars for shipping and handling.
Visit the St. Supery website to get the poster.
By Robert | October 24, 2003 in All Things Wine
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Jerry Garcia's Art and Wine
Greatful Dead's late singer Jerry Garcia's art has inspired Clos du Bois winery to launch J. Garcia wines featuring his art on the labels. The initial release includes three wines--2002 Sonoma County Chardonnay, 2000 Sonoma County Merlot, and 2000 Sonoma County Cabernet Sauvignon.
Official J. Garcia Wine Website
J. Garcia available online at wine.com.
By Robert | October 7, 2003 in All Things Wine
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Got Wine Smarts? Get WineSmarts!
Play The Adult Trivia Game All About Wine
Designed as a stylish and useful addition to any coffee table, WineSmarts makes a great gift for someone who has just tasted their first glass or teaches their own wine class. You can use these question-and-answer cards by yourself, like traditional flashcards, to learn more about wine and test your knowledge. Or get competitive and use the cards as a party game.
Click here to order online thru Wine Enthusiast.
By Robert | October 5, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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Everyone's Favorite Corkscrew
Le Creuset's Lever Model Classic Screwpull has been a classic elegant corkscrew for wine lovers since it was introduced 20 years ago. Designed by an aircraft engineer and inventor, the Stainless Steel model makes a great gift.
Also, recently named in Food & Wine Magazine's 125 Reasons We Love Wine.
Available thru:
Amazon | Sur La Table
By Robert | October 2, 2003 in A Food & Wine Gift Guide, All Things Wine
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