Enjoying our first home cooked dinner in the new place. — 9 years ago
Just arrived home after a long week away and my truly better half had this open and waiting for me. Instantly, stress turned to SMILES! This is drinking really well right now. Crushed black and blue fruit, cedar, fresh tobacco, bay leaves, earthy minerals, ripe tannins and some black pepper. Not typically a huge Cade fan, but this Howell Mountain bottling shows a nice sense of place. So much better than when I tasted it on release. Thank you @Diana L for slowing down a hectic week. 🍷 — 9 years ago




I had this at a tasting at Hall. Probably the best Pinot Noir I have had. Drinks more like a Cab. I will be having a few bottles shipped home. — 11 years ago
The weight is very sexy, tropical fruits, pineapple, lemon, honeydew drip with good acidity, it's got a touch of warm creme and nice oak accents, every thing in its right plaaace, right place. Delightful — 11 years ago
Smooth, drinkable - would pair well with anything. Had with a wonderful Italian meal.
Ruby wine club notes: The Cavallotto family claims sole ownership of the beautiful Bricco Boschis cru in the Castiglione Falletto district (also home to Azelia), where they have been growing Nebbiolo since 1929 and bottling their own wine since 1948. These richly structured wines place emphasis on elegance and longevity, attributable to excellent vineyards in the Bricco Boschis and Vignolo crus and traditional long maturation periods in large Slovenian-oak casks. After meeting and tasting with Winemaker and owner Alfio Cavallotto, I was incredibly impressed with his wines and thought his Dolcetto was one of the best I had tasted all year. This wine offers the crunchy red fruits for which Dolcetto is known for, with an element of licorice, and sandalwood. This Impressive effort will pair with just about anything, but it is highly fashionable with pasta and grilled meats. — 12 years ago
Jean Van Roy's amazing story of Zwanze 2013. When we started renovation works in the cellars of the brewery two years ago, much to our surprise we came upon the remains of some very old walls. In agreement with the medievalists of the city of Brussels, the works were stopped in order to allow archaeological excavations to take place.
Shortly thereafter we were astonished to find out that Cantillon brewery had in fact been built on the ruins of the very ancient Abbey of Cureghem! According to the medievalists, this religious community was well-known during the middle ages for its fowl fed on draff and, more specifically, for its dish of stuffed Cureghem capon, which was served with a beer brewed at the abbey and apparently drew pilgrims from all over Europe.
Yet it was truly a heavenly surprise when the excavations uncovered the cell of the abbot, Father Faro. In the small room the archaeologists found quite a few old reference books, one of which contained the original recipes for the beers brewed at the abbey several hundred years ago. We didn’t hesitate for a second and decided on the spot to recreate one of these mythical beers.
This beer, which will be our Zwanze for 2013, therefore bears the name of its illustrious place of origin, Abbaye de Cureghem (Cureghem Abbey). Cureghem was formerly a village established many centuries ago on the banks of the Senne, the river running through present-day Brussels. The area was very heavily industrialised during the 19th century and, among other things, became home to many breweries. Today, it is part of the municipality of Anderlecht.
Since beers commonly referred to as “abbey beers” are not, or not any longer, products of spontaneous fermentation, we decided to brew a top fermentation beer, from a technical point of view in any case. The yeasts were selected in collaboration with Institut Meurice, a post-secondary college in Brussels specialising in biotechnology. Brewed in March 2012, our “Cureghem” beer fermented four weeks in stainless steel tanks before being blended with 10% lambic and pumped into 400-litre barrels of various origins. After maturing for six months, the beers were blended and put into casks or bottles to undergo re-fermentation and reach 7.2% ABV (Alcohol by Volume).
Inevitably, a top fermentation beer brewed in a spontaneous fermentation environment will be affected by the wild yeasts in the air, and this is certainly what happened in our case. For our Cureghem, the cultured yeasts were clearly the main factor behind primary fermentation and I think that the wild yeasts in the beer will instead play an increasingly important role as the product ages. However, despite the addition of the lambic to give it a little “extra something” in terms of character and ageing characteristics, this Zwanze cannot in any case be considered a spontaneous fermentation beer.
The long fermentation period coupled with the presence of wild yeasts lends this beer a solid character with a dry finish that lingers on the palate, while the combined use of fresh and aged hops yields both freshness and bitterness. Moreover, the different malts used give this year’s Zwanze a coppery colour along with a touch of caramel and candied fruit that provide body. Clearly, this is not your standard “abbey” beer but, perhaps, it is representative of what these beers were one or two hundred years ago — 13 years ago
How do I even begin to comment on the privilege of lapping up the last drops of a life's work? Puffeney's 52nd vintage, his final potion. The wine that made me aware of the Jura, that first sparked sensation of time and place, a wine that exists equally in bottle as it does in brain. When you find yourself paused mid-step on the walk home, paralyzed by the distant sound of a youthful pianist stretching their hands across blessed white and black keys. Recognizing the tension that folds over their shoulders in tandem with the all encompassing lightness of body that accompanies practice. There is something so real about the way they are playing, without too much fluidity, they stop and start again and somehow that's better than an unstopping song. There is no performance here. What is it about the walls, windows and air between you that deliver these wafts of sound in such a pleasurable way? How does the space aid the aesthetic? You keep standing there, basking in this auditory coat, and for a sliver of time you want nothing. You want no one. You have everything. This pianist will never meet you, nor you them, yet there is partnership, a unity, an offer and reception. An electrical circuit you have both worked to complete. You want to cling tightly to this moment and you find yourself searching for evidence to make you present. The sky was blue, the pavement was wet, I was just about there, I was happy. But all of this is already phrased in the past tense, the moment has already slid away from you. You pick up your forgotten step and continue forward, dizzy from experience, left with only a stamp in your mind that you can picture but never fully revisit. Little death. — 8 years ago
A great spiced ale from OMMEGANG brewery in Cooperstown NY, home of the baseball Hall of Fame. Recommend both! Great complexity and balance! 8.2% abv. — 10 years ago
At last the sun shines in a cloudless sky and drinking today is reserved with Nicolas. At Bottega and we talk on the patio there and choose a Flowers Pinot Noir brought and opened by Massimo the sommelier . We drink that quickly and then choose a Bovio Barolo from La Morra in 2007. The Bovio tastes like how it feels to listen to Nicolas describe his most recent work in Emola Amity. We drink this slowly. It has been made sturdy. It has a taste of work done. The flavor of August to November. Working with Oregon Pinot for four solid months straight through, Nicolas explains, morning to morning, healthy doing all the work , every big and little thing, widely working all the grapes along to a 2015 wine. It tastes like that but only in 2007 in La Morra. Strengthened.
To me it tastes like talking about my lovely wife. And to say I wish I had the money to buy some good land to build her a home closer to the sea. It tastes like what it would do to me to see her there in that hand built home, very healthy and very alive and perfectly situated, at ease, contented in her place, made.
Fulfilled with the taste of maturity and youth together, us together. A wine bent off the vine by two people only.
The Bovio was in a perfect mood, like a friend listening and sharing his life with me. Life in the sun on the patio. The only two there is except for Massimo. These things can taste like that. — 11 years ago
We have enjoyed the Good Earth over the past several years visiting Niagara and the Beamsville Bench. A great place for a nice meal, and also home to some seriously tasty Riselings! This Medium Dry from 2009 doesn't disappoint. The initial nose gives hints of what is to come, petrol and fruits! The color is a pale lime yellow and the flavor just keeps going! The sweetness is nicely balanced with sharp acidity to truly reward your mouth! The finish is quite long and brings memories of wine country in the spring! Delightful! — 11 years ago

The usually tight tannic punch has faded and melded with the usual Washington velvet, a dark abyss of blackberry, plum, black cherry, it's in a nice place, I honestly wanted the kick in the mouth, but it's more elegant than you would expect. And I'm okay with buying her dinner, cause she delivers! She wore the long dress, thought I'd be looking at a short skirt, but this long dress is taking me home, thanks! She got feisty after she opened up & she delivers impressed! Give it 1hr and she will sing in your ear! — 12 years ago
🇺🇸there's no place like home. #samadams — 12 years ago
Wine is in a nice place. A fun blend at 58%zin/40%carignane, a smidge of petite sirah at 2% and favorable 13.7% ABV. Sadly my last bottle but worth the wait. Easy floral nose and vanilla flavors complementing the soft carmelized finish from the generous amount of carignane. Big hit with varied dinner group over tri tip and grilled veggies. — 13 years ago
Dark, clear garnet purple. Heady nose of cranberry fruit leather and cigar box. Echoed on the medium-bodied palate with bright medium plus acidity and chalky medium plus tannins. Long, black cherry finish. Definitely has a few more years left (2021?), though it’s in a great place right now. At home anywhere you might serve a decent Burgundy, but a rich seafood paella seems like a natural. — 8 years ago
Intense and full of fruit, very nice bottle at the Chinese place — 9 years ago
Downhill rain on rocks caught in clay some slipping others sliding others clinging to the native terroir tugging to time as sand a water drench cleansing and polishing captured neatly in a cluster of grapes finding their place against wood mellowing brightness just enough for an unctuating memory as she French kisses her way home mixing, making the moment the memory sharing her earth in her essence - and at only 12.5% we'll do this more than once clean, crisp but circulatory - charging...🕶 — 10 years ago
Just popped the top and within a few minutes of me playing, swirling, sipping, observing, it is beginning to show its true color and related characteristics. Good spice on the nose peppering and prepping for the rush of tight cherries coupled with black and blue berries begging to let lounge a bit longer finding its place in the decanter before a turbo twirl or two and a slow pour into a pinotesque bowl and related smokestack begging for twisting, turning and jitterbug spinning until dizzy enough to lie down and slow dance across one's palate clinging front back and center with tannins still pulling a cheek biting pucker then drifting home but not before leaving its memory layer languishing linear and long. A Gamay gift from Beaujolais...🍷💙🌀 — 11 years ago
I enjoyed this wine. Surprisingly golden color with good minerality that is typical of the Côtes du Rhône region. Smooth and crisp. I'm sure my tastebuds were somewhat influenced by having purchased this wine in Provence in 2013 (for a song) and then bringing it home to drink, but one's enjoyment of wine can always be influenced by a sense of place, n'est-ce-pas? — 11 years ago
Meaty, spicy, complex leather, dried rose petal, spice box, Forrest floor, pine needle, mushrooms, seared beacon. Effortless flowing tannins glide and coat. Dry and delicate, persistent, elegant. Seems to capture that place between youthful and aged. Well along in age but not tired in the least. — 12 years ago
This great wine and a haunted old Odd Fellows orphanage and retirement home to boot. This winery was at a very unique location and the vineyard owner was really interesting to talk with. Apparently you can also find him and this place on a recent episode of Ghost Stories! — 12 years ago
The second to last tasting of our trip was at a little place in a "strip mall" in Sonoma. The Pinonwas incredible, and this was the last wine I purchased to complete my case of 12 bottles I shipped home. — 13 years ago
Bob Schroeck
Vintage 2013. Drank on 4/14/2018 celebrating new home on Boardwalk Place — 8 years ago