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James Laube's Blog Archives

October 2007


My Top 10 Wine Gadgets

Aside from a corkscrew, the two wine accoutrements I use almost as frequently are a decanter, for warming up and aerating chilled wines, and a funnel, which I use to return the wine to its vessel.

Which started me thinking about the essential wine gadgets every wine lover must have, and thanks to my tasting staff, here’s a list of things we use regularly and think you’ll find handy too. Read more


My Score From the Blind Tasting at Wine Spectator's Wine Experience

Depending on how you keep score, I either went four for seven or three for six or one for seven on Saturday’s editors’ blind tasting at the New York Wine Experience.

I didn’t have any trouble picking out the wine I submitted to this triple-blind tasting. Read more


It's Easy Being Blindsided When Tasting Blind

I’m preparing for our senior editors’ blind tasting Saturday morning by doing nothing. That’s right, nothing.

Each of us has been asked to choose a wine for this seminar, which is part of the New York Wine Experience.

Aside from the fact that each of us knows the wine we chose, this will be a double-blind tasting—we won’t know the grape type, appellation or vintage. Read more


Is Two-Buck Pinot on the Horizon?

How long before we see a Two-Buck Chuck Pinot Noir?

Maybe sooner than you expect. And maybe the sooner the better.

Two-Buck Chuck, formally known as Charles Shaw, is vintner Fred Franzia’s line of California varietal wines that sell for $2 a bottle in California and $3 elsewhere. Read more


Tasting the New Jonata Wines From Santa Barbara

Before he bought Screaming Eagle (along with business partner Stanley Kroenke), which placed him at the apex of the Napa Valley wine world, Charles Banks staked a claim in Santa Barbara County. Planting what amounted to be an experimental vineyard there in 2000 was, he said, “a total crapshoot. Read more


Tasting Continuum With Tim Mondavi

I had my second tasting of Tim Mondavi’s new wine Continuum last week and once again it impressed me for its elegance, finesse and complexity.

Mondavi stopped by my office in Napa to taste the wine with me and talk about his new venture, and you can see him in my video clip. Read more


A Rare Treat From Paloma

One of these days someone is going to put together a tasting of all of Paloma’s wines and I hope they can find and include the 2001 Cabernet Sauvignon.

Until Saturday night, I’d only had this wine twice. The first time was at a lunch with owners Jim and Barbara Richards when it was released, and it was a stunner. Read more


Cleavage Creek Isn't What You Might Think

The first time I heard of, and then saw, the Cleavage Creek label, I suspected it was the mischievous work of the frat boys from Animal House, and I decided to ignore it.

In the interim, the label changed hands and I’m happy to report that there’s more to the Cleavage Creek label than, well, you know. Read more


A Great Grenache from Santa Barbara

When you taste a Grenache as delicious as the 2005 McPrice Myers, it’s easy to imagine this grape achieving great things in California and I’d put this vintner on the “worth watching” list.

Myers’ passion is for Rhone-style reds and whites. Read more


California's 2007 Vintage Winds Down With Cool, Wet Weather

Friday’s steady rain made ducks, lawns and sturgeon fishermen happy, but not anxious North Coast vintners.

The weekend weather turned appreciably warmer and allowed vineyard crews to swarm through the vines in what one vintner described as “panic picking” in Napa Valley. Read more


The Night After Babbo

Monday night’s Babbo Barolo Blowout seemed impossible to top … until Tuesday night rolled around and we reassembled for dinner. (My colleagues Harvey Steiman and James Suckling both wrote blogs on the subject of Monday's dinner.)

This time the scene of the crime was Porter House, the great steak house in the Time Warner Center, where another half-dozen reds fell prey to sommelier Beth von Benz’s corkscrew. Read more


George M. Taber Tackles a Not-So-Old Question

No matter where you stand on the great debate over corks—love ’em, hate ’em, or still undecided—To Cork or Not to Cork: Tradition, Romance and the Battle for the Wine Bottle (Scribner, 2007, $26), by George M. Read more


A Wine Night Off upon Arriving in New York

I arrived in New York yesterday as afternoon turned to evening. It had been one of those long travel days. Up at 4 a.m., to Oakland International Airport for a 7:30 a.m. Jet Blue flight, then a 90-minute delay at the gate, with no air conditioning, which got old fast. Read more


When Tasting, Blind Offers Vision

Movie and book reviewers have it easy. They sit in the theater, or turn the pages, and report on their reactions. There’s no question about methodology, and each reviewer has the same experience of the work of art they’re evaluating. It’s not quite the same with wine. Read more


A Buttery Toast and a Fond Farewell to Barbara Eisele

I first met Milt and Barbara Eisele in the early 1980s at a hospitality lunch they hosted at their home for one of the early Napa Valley Wine Auctions.

The couple lived south of Calistoga, where they tended their namesake vineyard. They had moved to their Pickett Lane property in 1969 and were living their retirement dream: farming grapes in Napa Valley. Read more


More Thoughts on Tastings and Critiques

Brian’s string of questions from yesterday’s blog gives me a chance to expound on a couple of points.

My preference for “younger, fruitier” wines is a generalization. I do enjoy wines that are delicate, subtle and elegant. Read more


Sifting Though an Old Cellar

I visited with Barney Rhodes at his home in Rutherford on Friday. Barney will turn 87 this year and is in fair to good health. He’s an old friend and one of the great wine men of Napa Valley and beyond, a true connoisseur with an incredible cellar (actually two) who knows fine wine about as well as anyone. Read more



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