
Finally, Mike Rowe does a dirty job that doesn't involve animal waste.
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Unfiltered
Dirty Jobs visits a winery, a dead whale under a Tuscan vineyard, yet more overpriced Champagne-related stuff you don't need and a wine perfect for Britney
Posted: Wednesday, March 07, 2007
• If you were watching Dirty Jobs on the Discovery Channel last night, you saw host Mike Rowe take on several dirty jobs in and around the Starmont winery in Napa, alongside vineyard manager Remi Cohen and winemaker Sean Foster. Rowe picked and sorted Syrah grapes, pumped juice, scooped stems in a dumpster, dug 8 tons of grape skins out of a tank and cleaned it, pumped fermenting wine into barrels and finished off the day with a tasting trial in the lab. "Certainly he lightens the energy in the middle of the hectic harvest," said Cohen. "But he actually really does the work. He's a hard worker, so I'd hire him." As much as we look up to Rowe, as you could probably tell from our own videos on the dirtier side of winemaking, we don't really envy him at all. When we get done with a wine video, we drink wine. But his next segment after visiting Starmont took him to a Kansas cattle ranch where, among other things, he had to clean out a grain silo. And most of his tasks at farms usually involve cleaning up farm waste. So we'll stick with wine, thank you very much. But cheers to Dirty Jobs for finally doing winery dirty work as only they can.
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| Tuscany was a prehistoric water park where Shamu performed. |
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| Don't wear shorts on the loveseat in the summer. Looks sticky. |
• If you love the wines of Burgundy, you're probably also a fan of camembert, the cheese with the signature stink. But it looks like camembert may soon lose its character, we're sorry to say. According to reports in the French media, Claude Granjon, the deputy director of a cheese-making cooperative in d'Isigny-Sainte-Mère, Normandy, said the co-op intends to ditch age-old cheesemaking traditions and will begin to use modern microfilters to remove bacteria from the cheese. The decision, he said, comes on the heels of several recent food scares and a growing public perception that the microbes in camembert, which also give it that signature stinky-feet "aroma," may be harmful to your health. Along with losing the smell, Granjon said the decision will likely lead to the Appellations d'Origine Controlée revoking use of the name d'Isigny-Sainte-Mère on the cheese labels.
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| Oops is also the word you utter when you have one glass too many. |
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