Blog Index
James Molesworth
A Sit Down with Cave de Tain l'Hermitage's Julie Campos
Posted: 12:33 PM ET, 06/11/08
I sat down with Julie Campos this week, managing director of Cave de Tain l’Hermitage. The cave is a large cooperative, totaling 360 individual growers and over 2,700 acres of vines.
The Cave represents 58 percent of the production of Crozes-Hermitage, 49 percent of St. Read more
Bruce Sanderson
Catching Up With the Henriots
Posted: 05:50 PM ET, 06/10/08
Recently I had the opportunity to sit down with Joseph Henriot and his son Stanislas, of Champagne Henriot. We discussed a lot of issues, from corks to Burgundy and Beaujolais, where they have just purchased Château Poncié, to the future of Champagne. Read more
James Laube
Dry Creek Valley's Wines Should Be Better
Posted: 01:27 PM ET, 06/10/08
Most wine regions are defined by either a grape or a style. Last week, as I rode my bike through picturesque Dry Creek Valley, my thoughts turned to what I consider this Northern Sonoma appellation’s dilemma.
It doesn’t have a signature grape nor wine nor even winery. Read more
Harvey Steiman
New American Pioneer Heads West
Posted: 11:51 AM ET, 06/10/08
Larry Forgione, one of modern American cuisine's true trailblazers, has decided to leave New York to take over a restaurant at Wynn Las Vegas. An American Place is scheduled to open in September at the 2,700-room hotel tucked away off the Tower Suites lobby in what currently houses Tableau. Read more
James Laube
The Top 2006 Barrels at Napa Auction Are Exceptional
Posted: 02:26 PM ET, 06/09/08
Oprah created quite a buzz when she arrived at Friday’s Auction Napa Valley barrel tasting. I asked her to do a quick interview and tasting on camera with me, but she politely declined, saying that she wanted to taste a few wines before going on camera (at least with me). Read more
James Suckling
Thoughts About Minor League Bordeaux
Posted: 12:28 PM ET, 06/09/08
A couple of weeks ago, I was having a simple lunch with a friend at my house in Tuscany and I decided to go down to my cellar and try some of the older crus bourgeois and petite château Bordeaux that I had lying around. These were just odd bottles that I had had for years in my cellar. Read more
James Suckling
A Hot Summer’s Night in Havana
Posted: 04:35 PM ET, 06/06/08
Wow. When it gets hot, there is nothing worse than a warm glass of red wine. It almost makes me gag. I would rather drink a cool glass of water than a tepid red. Or worse, a hot red. It’s happened to me so many times, and restaurants are probably the worst offenders. Read more
Harvey Steiman
Yet Another Twist
Posted: 03:10 PM ET, 06/06/08
The crowd that hates screw caps is going to love this one. My ears perked up the other day over lunch with an Australian vintner when he said that his inexpensive (but pretty good) Thirsty Lizard Sémillon-Sauvignon Blanc tasted better out of the TetraPak than it did from a regular bottle under screw cap. Read more
James Molesworth
Celebrating the Big 1-0 at Adour
Posted: 11:28 AM ET, 06/06/08
At its height, with its gilded walls, stunning floral arrangements and hushed elegance, Lespinasse was for me the city’s most beautiful dining room, a quiet, languid retreat away from the buzz that this city tends to generate over shallow flavor-of-the-month French bistro wannabes or "power lunch" midtown spots. Read more
James Laube
Friday and Napa on My Mind
Posted: 10:34 AM ET, 06/06/08
The party scene shifted from Sonoma (I wrote a blog on the Wine Spectator "Bring Your Own Magnum" party in Sonoma earlier this week) to Napa on Wednesday night, and so did the mindset. Read more
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