Archive for April, 2011

Judgment of Paris: Let the Anniversary Celebration BEGIN!

April 30, 2011

Elvis on Ed Sullivan.

Elvis Presley on The Ed Sullivan Show

 Jimi Hendrix playing The Star Spangled Banner at Woodstock.

Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock

 The publishing of Kerouac’s On The Road.

Jack Kerouac and Neal Cassady, on the cover of "On the Road"

 The publication of “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”

Alex Haley and Malcolm X

The staging of Ridgely Torrence’s “Three Plays for a Negro Theatre.”

Ridgely Torrence

The release of “Smells Like Teen Spirit”

Nirvana

 

American Music, Literature, Art. They would never be the same again. These are the moments that change forever the tides of our cultural history.

The production of well-made wine is an artisan enterprise. It is artistic, it is cultural. And like all things cultural, it changes. It is subject to whim and cataclysm both.

As Stephen Jay Gould posited decades ago, Darwinism, be it social or otherwise, is not necessarily a slow, steady arc of change. It is often stagnation and complacency, eviscerated and recalibrated by sudden, dramatic paradigm shifts that forever change the courses of development.

Thirty-five years ago this month, such an event happened to the world of wine, and specifically, to America. To California. We know this event now as The Judgment of Paris.

1976, The first Judgment of Paris

For a fuller run-down on what exactly this historic event was all about, please click here. The short version is this; in a blind tasting  in 1976, with a panel of some of the finest palates in the world of wine — a tasting that pitted the grand old houses of Bordeaux against what were then the upstart young turks of the Californian “new world” — the bulk of the top honors went to the Californians. A viticultural “shot heard around the world.”

Or was it? Had California truly “arrived?” The French response to the tasting (a response shared by many members of the viticultural intelligentsia) was twofold: a) the wines may have showed well, but they would never age, and b) it was a fluke.

Despite the fact that sales patterns changed almost overnight (suddenly, “fine wine” didn’t just come from Europe any more), the rumblings of doubt continued to be felt.

Finally, the question could lay unanswered no longer, it had to be addressed! So, in 2006, 30 years later, the reenactment was staged. To address the issue of ageability, all the original red wine vintages were tasted. To answer the “fluke” question, young Cabernets were tasted.

2006, The Reenactment

If you’re reading this blog, you likely know what happened. The 1971 Monte Bello, which had come in second behind Stag’s Leap amongst the California producers (and 5th overall out of the top 10) in the original tasting, swept the results, taking top honors at both the London and Napa tastings. And the 2000 Monte Bello won the young Cabernet competition.

So much for the debate. Questions answered, argument over.

Starting May 1st, and running through May 24th (the actual anniversary day for both tastings), we will be celebrating this historic happening, and specifically, the incomparably significant role the Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello played in these dramas. Here are the details:

–Judgement of Paris Anniversary–

May 24 marks the 5th anniversary of the re-enactment and the 35th anniversary of the original tasting. In celebration of these historic occasions, we are offering special pricing on our 2007 Monte Bello through May 24.

$125 through May 24 (regularly $145)

Special Member Pricing

Monte Bello Collector Members – $100 (750mL)

ATP & Z List Members – $115

Click here to purchase

Click here to learn about membership

Click here to learn about the Paris Tasting

We are proudly pouring the 2007 Monte Bello in our tasting rooms, and we invite you to share in this delicious taste of history.

Notes from Assemblage Monte Bello: The 1999 Monte Bello

April 29, 2011

Those of us of a certain age lived through the Clinton-era PC years, and digested our requisite dose of political correctness accordingly.

The wine industry did so as well, and one of the conventions to largely go the way of the dinosaur was gender’d analysis of wine; you rarely see wines described as “masculine” or “feminine” any longer.

As far as I am concerned, I am not too bothered by this, as I have to confess, the deployment of these terms was never an approach I was particularly fond of to begin with. There are far more imaginative and poetic ways to linguistically wrestle the intangible into coherence.

All of which makes it all the more strange that I should find myself thinking about gender when contemplating the 1999 Monte Bello. I can’t possibly say why, but for some reason, I have always had the sense that this wine is male. But no longer.

What follows is a completely true  ”I woke up in the middle of the night and wrote this on a scrap of paper by my bedside before immediately falling asleep again” story …

Which is to say, I woke up in the middle of the night last night, and wrote the following:

99cmb1
bulgarian
girl
in
Casablanca

And if you don’t believe me, here is the paper (I scribbled my note, oddly enough, around a poem entitled “Snails”, by John Witte, in The New Yorker!):

Anyhow, the point is, for some reason, it occurred to me that the 1999 Monte Bello is very much like the young Bulgarian woman trying to procure exit visas for herself and her new husband in Casablanca! Duh!

Meaning; as Annina Brandel (as played by the then 17-year-old Joy Page) is both so very young and yet so possessed of a certain gravitas, so too is the 1999 Monte Bello.

The 1999 Monte Bello ...

In the movie, Annina is asking advice of Rick (played by Humphrey Bogart) about whether or not she should do a “bad thing” in order to receive said exit visas from Captain Renault, the prefect of police (played by Claude Rains). She then speaks of her husband Jan, “He is such a boy. In many ways I am so much older than he is.”

And that is the 1999 Monte Bello! Young, beautiful, exotic, passionate and desperate in equal measures, and yet somehow, wise beyond its years.

Casablanca ...

Assemblage Monte Bello: What An Event!

April 28, 2011
 Still gasping for breath … still crazy after all these days …

And what an event it was!

From the food …

Cowgirl Creamery Co-Founder Sue Conley Sharing Her Wares!

 

Charcuterie from Fatted Calf (including special event-only Sausage and Pate made with Ridge wine!)

 

My hometown heroes! Gayle's Bakery brings the grains!

 

To the music …

The very excellent "Real Time" dropping swing like Gallieo dropped an orange!

and the setting …

And a cheers to you too, Mr. Man-Who-Noticed-I-Was-Taking-A-Picture!

plus the extra special guest hosts …

Bodhi holding court!

to the wine (can’t forget the wine!) …

No, MY Ridge wine is better!

it was just almost too good to be true!

But of course what TRULY makes an event like this so special is not just the beauty of the place …

"Monte Bello" indeed ...

 the chillaxedeness of the hang …

Chillaxedness ...

 or the extra-special Production Team Hosts …

Karen Schmidt, Director of Quality Control/Chemist, Monte Bello ...

 it’s YOU!

Whether you were in the Old Winery Barn tasting library wines and barrel samples …

Tasting barrel samples and library Monte Bello in the Old Winery Barn!

 or in the picnic area enjoying our wines with your friends and family over delicious picnic lunches …

Heyy Boo Boo, I think I see a picnic basket!

 or vibin’ to the jazz on the knoll …

Alphabetic Excellence: J,K,L =Jazz, Knoll, Love!

 you were great. Wherever you were, you were great. Even when you were parking your car on the ridge behind the vines …

Now, THAT'S a parking lot!!!

 you were great.

You were great to pour wine for …

Shun "Francisco" Ishikubo, Assistant Production Manager ...

 you were great to feed …

Omigod, cheese platter!

 and you were great to perform for.

There ain't no wrong notes on Marshall's piano!

 

Really. You were great. But I have to say, you may have worn us out!

Dang! My Ah So broke!

From all of us at Ridge, thank you so very much for attending Assemblage Monte Bello, 2011!

Assemblage Monte Bello Is TOMORROW!

April 22, 2011

We are so VERY excited to welcome you to the Assemblage Monte Bello event tomorrow! For a full host of details about the goings on, please click here, or here.

Important things to know:

–Ticket price is $40/person.

–The ENTIRE grounds will be devoted to this very special event, including our gorgeous knoll, our tasting room, and our historic Old Winery Barn!

–Three of our absolute most favorite local artisan food producers will be on hand to present their delicious offerings: Cowgirl Creamery, Gayle’s Bakery, and Fatted Calf.

–Music will be provided by the very groovy jazz combo Real Time.

–And the wines!  Dig this:

*2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay (special pre-release!)

*2003, 2004, and 2005 Estate Cabernet (special library releases!)

*First assemblage barrel samples of the new 2010 Monte Bello

*1999 Monte Bello

*2008 Jimsomare Zinfandel

*2006 Lytton Estate Syrah

*2007 Monte Bello

Just a pair of double sawbucks
gets you in the gate, 
and there doth
your paradise await!

It’s My Party, I’ll Decant If I Want To!

April 22, 2011

Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday dear Ridge Blog
Happy Birthday to you…

And many more!

Yes, it was exactly this time two years ago that the very first posts went live on “4488: A Ridge Blog.” Hard to believe it’s been two years already, hard to believe it’s only been two years!

So, ask yourself, as you gaze into the whimsicalities of shimmering history, just what, exactly, was going ON way back in April of 2009?

A long, long time ago, I can still remember …

Well, for one thing, the communist party won an absolute majority in Moldova …

and the world’s first cloned camel, Injaz, was born in Dubai …

plus, auto giant Chrysler declared bankruptcy …

but perhaps most significantly, the Pitcairn Islands FINALLY abolished alcohol prohibition. Phew!

It was indeed quite the backdrop for a little old wine blog to be born against, but those heady days were certainly rich nutritional fodder for a newborn blog to dine on, as evidenced by some of the notably purple prosodidies that were running amok in those early days. For example:

“It’s earthy in a mushroomy sort of way, and definitely funky; but highly funky delicious! Its soft, smooth, concentrated triple-cream middle is wrapped in a rind that I can only describe as mouth-wateringly pungent; it was actually a perfect complement to the young cabernet sauvignon-based blend that is the Santa Cruz Mountains Estate right now; the youthful acidity provides a great counterbalancing cut to the warm, buttery triple-cream density, and the funky Mt. Tam Rind accents and draws out all the complex herbality currently available in the wine. I must confess, I was a bit woozy afterwards! Quite  a treat …”

 

“While I wait for the mixture to cool down, I have more Geyserville. This is the moment of truth; I’ve heard it said umpteenth times that one shouldn’t mix vinegar-based items with red wine. But if I just put a dollop of balsamic in the pie glass, and then I put those portabellos in upside down, so that that lovely mixture just seeps into those grooves and permeates the mushrooms inner flesh, and if I then heated the griller, and if I then put those mushrooms on that griller when it was hot, then that balsamic addition would get a little sticky, and a little sweet, and a little burny, and it would counterbalance the bite of the garlic, the viscosity of the oil, and the herbality of the basil, in such a way that I would be so, so happy. And the kitchen would smell so sexy. In fact, the whole house would smell so sexy. So sexy that, when I open and decant the special 97 Lytton Syrah that I’ve been saving I would almost become woozy.”

 

Wow, that was not one, but TWO woozies!

Anyhow, heady days indeed … I believe it was Shaw who once notably noted:

Youth is a wonderful thing. What a crime to waste it on children …

 

Well, it was a young blog then, it’s true, but I still like to believe, for the better or the worse, that the tides of youthful excess have not quite receded just yet …

“But I worry that we’re losing some of the visceral side of wine, the raw mojo funk passion of wine, the slinky, sweaty, groovy scratch-the-itch of wine. The drinking wine and reading poetry of wine. The syrah and jazz of wine. The boat and the moon and the wine of wine. The long slow sex of wine. The Howl of wine. The Dharma Bums of wine. The haiku of wine. The fonky fonky of wine.

I am worried about the cerebralization of wine.”

 

That one was from just a few days ago. Still pursuing the great fonky fonky in the sky …

Anyhow, the point is, this blog is celebrating a birthday! Two Years Old! And … oh… good lord … I just realized what that means … it means … that this blog … is about to enter …

THE TERRIBLE TWOS!

In all seriousness, thank you to all at Ridge for giving me the wondrous opportunity to be the host of 4488: A Ridge Blog, and thank you to everyone who takes a bit of time to stop in for a bit of a read. It’s been a delectable two years, and I look very forward to many more to come!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

On an oddly semi-related note, if you ever want to suss out the differences between BING and GOOGLE — I mean, definitively suss them out – then just come to me, because I can lay them on you in very clear fashion. Dig this; if you enter “wine birthday” into BING, you get the following (in the #3 spot at the top of the “images”  search list), a pic of a goofy looking 21st birthday wine glass …

But if you enter ”wine birthday” into GOOGLE, what you get in that same #3 spot, is this …

A bemused and possibly intoxicated cartoon penguin in a hat.

But most importantly, as I sit here writing primarily by the lovely light of a Capitola moon, it’s a new year for this blog, and I am grateful.

So I’ll leave you with the lovely Irish mantra that is currently lilting from my speakers — near-chanted in craggy incantation by the rustically beautific hobo bard that is the very great Sean Tyrrell — “The Rising Of The Moon”:

We can live within God’s garden,
if we tend it with our care
We can understand the meaning
and the motives of the fair

Though we stumble thru the darkness
trying far too much too soon

Let’s all stand up and be counted
at the Rising of the Moon …

 

And do you know what’s so very, utterly lovely? There is no pomp, no circumstance; it’s just a very kind and gentle night. And I’m in a flannel shirt that once belonged to my Grandpa, and I’m sitting in my rocking chair in my less-than-well-lit-corner, and I’ve a flat-bottomed glass full to the indulgent brim with 2008 Carignane, and I’m writing.

Just writing, and drinking wine. Which is all I truly ever really wanted to do.

 

 

Paul Draper on “Pre-Industrial Winemaking”

April 19, 2011

Simply can’t resist the temptation to share this; personally, I think it’s just brilliant, and one of the best, most relevant contemporary treatises on all things related to –pick your term(s) de riguer– “natural” winemaking; “non-interventionism”; “sustainability”; “minimum impact”; “biodynamism”; etc.

Of course I’m biased, but then again, there are more than a few reasons why Paul Draper enjoys the reputation that he does. I hope you enjoy what he has to say here  …

PRE-INDUSTRIAL WINEMAKING AT RIDGE

There is a lot of buzz in the wine world these days about “natural” winemaking, a term which seems to mean different things to different people. Is it organic and/or biodynamic grape growing? The refusal to use additives and processing? Minimal intervention in the winemaking process? It is such a confusing and, to some, a negative term, that we prefer something more accurate to describe what we do at Ridge.

The UK’s foremost wine critic, Jancis Robinson, has said that over 90% of the wine produced in the world today is “industrial.” Taking off from that statement, our winemaking at Ridge for the last fifty years can best be described as “pre-industrial.” In 1933, after thirteen years of Prohibition, there was only a handful of winemakers trained in pre-Prohibition traditional techniques who were young enough to come back to their old jobs. Those winemakers, at historic Fountain Grove, Larkmead, Nervo, La Cuesta, Simi, and Inglenook —to name a few, produced a number of truly great cabernets and zinfandels. In the 1970s, I was privileged to taste a broad range of those wines when they were thirty-five years old and older. The majority were still showing beautifully, and I found several of them to be as complex as the great Bordeaux vintages of the late 1940s. These were pre-industrial wines.

With the end of Prohibition, the University of California at Davis stepped in to fill the need for winemaker expertise in this country, and began, year by year, to reinvent winemaking as an industrial process. In 2010, in Issue 30 of The World of Fine Wines, arguably today’s top wine publication, Master of Wine Benjamin Lewin describes how all too many California cabernets are made today:

“The move to harvesting grapes with brutally high sugar levels has led to some ingenious ways of adjusting alcohol levels…When you have a must that is simply too high in Brix, you add some water to bring the sugar level down to a level that will ferment, then you bleed off some juice as fermentation begins to mitigate the effects of dilution. Some winemakers add acid to musts of high Brix before adjusting concentration; this is called the acid whip.”

The style of red wine this approach produces—generally referred to as the “international” style—can involve use of reverse osmosis; the addition of Ultra Purple, a 2000 to 1 concentrate; and chemically sterilizing the wine with Velcorin (Di-methyl dicarbonate.) Because it is being made around the world, California should not be singled out. The wines can be heavy, rather than fresh. When tasting 2007 cabernets recently, Eric Asimov of the New York Times noted:

“…we were disappointed to find so many uniform, monochromatic wines with little finesse…Instead of complexity, the rule seems to be all fruit, all the time, with power deemed preferable to elegance.”

At Ridge, we felt from the beginning that these modern, increasingly industrial, wines lacked the complexity, the sense of place, and the ability to age and develop that the pre-industrial wines demonstrated. So we looked back to the 19th Century—to techniques used in the finest California wineries such as La Cuesta, and in the Bordeaux châteaux of that era. In a synthesis of past and present, we have taken the pre-industrial techniques and applied them in conjunction with the best, least intrusive modern equipment. We’ve been told that we have the most sophisticated analytical laboratory of any winery our size. Given our minimal use of SO2, we depend on lab analyses to alert us to any problem long before it could be perceived by tasting.

We’ve employed these winemaking techniques at Ridge for fifty years, with the goal of making the best, most site-specific wines possible. The starting point is having great vineyards. We were blessed by having the 125-year-old Monte Bello vineyard, abandoned after Prohibition, and its now-sixty-year-old cabernet vines, replanted in the late 1940s. Searching for the best, most expressive sites, we made our first zinfandel in 1964 from eighty-year-old vines. In 1966 we made our first Geyserville—from vines that are now one hundred and thirty years old—and have made it every year since. 1972 marked our first Lytton Springs, from vines planted in 1902. Over the following years, we found that those two, out of more than fifty old-vine zinfandel vineyards we have worked with, were producing the highest quality wines—most complex and consistent in their individual character. In 1990, we took over the Geyserville vineyard on a long-term lease with right of first refusal. In 1991 and 1995, we acquired the eastern, and then the western, portion of the vineyard lands first planted by “Captain” Litton in the 1870s. They, with Monte Bello, make up our three estate vineyards. Farming them sustainably, we attempt to carry the soil, the microclimate— everything affecting the site—into the wine, and to gain a true sense of place. Today, the three provide 75% of the fruit we use, and they will soon be organically certified. That means we use cover crops, integrated pest management techniques, mechanical weed removal, and composted grape pomace in place of pesticides, herbicides and synthetic fertilizers.

Because taste is the overriding factor behind our harvesting decisions, we pick when the grapes are ripe, but not overripe. All our grapes (estate or purchased) are hand-picked, which allows for sorting in the vineyard.

Our winemaking philosophy includes fermenting entirely with native yeasts from the vineyard, rather than cultured yeast strains; extracting color, flavor, and tannins from the grapes without use of commercial enzymes; determining—by tasting for tannin extraction during fermentation—how long to continue pump-overs; allowing malolactic fermentation to occur naturally, without inoculation; achieving wine clarity through settling and racking; making major winemaking decisions, including blending, based on tasting rather than a pre-determined recipe.

Through years of experience, we have found that minimal additions of sulfur are essential to avoiding the ever-present risk of wine oxidation or spoilage, which destroys the individual vineyard character of the wine. We add a small amount of SO2 when the grapes are crushed, after malolactic fermentation, and very small amounts at quarterly rackings, rigorously maintaining the minimum effective level for each wine.

Occasionally, if we have a wine lot (or an entire, assembled wine) with excessive tannin, we may fine it gently, using fresh egg whites. The egg whites precipitate to the bottom of the tank or barrel, improving balance by removing a portion of the tannin, and by further integrating the wine. When the whites have formed a firm layer, we slowly rack the clean wine off this sediment. Pad filtration then removes any remaining trace of egg white. We avoid membrane sterile filtration, a process which—to a minor but noticeable degree—affects flavor and complexity.

Tasting the zinfandels throughout their time in the cellar allows us to select those lots that best express each vineyard’s character, and combine them as the vineyard-designated wine. Lots with less intense individuality are then combined—based on blind tasting—into our one multi-vineyard wine, Three Valleys.

For the Bordeaux varietals, which are all grown on the Monte Bello vineyard, the approach is somewhat different. After years of experience, we have found that the parcels can be divided roughly in half based on the style of wine each has produced in past years. One group is more approachable, and develops its full complexity earlier; from these, we select the Estate Cabernet Sauvignon. The other, though balanced and enjoyable as a young wine, begins to develop its full depth, complexity, and superb quality with a minimum of ten years’ aging. The Monte Bello is selected by blind tasting from these parcels. The first assemblage for both takes place in early February, following vintage. A second, that considers press wine and lots that were not yet stable in February, takes place in May. Thus, from one vineyard, we make two wines—distinct in style, but sharing the vineyard’s individuality.

In summary, Ridge bases grape-growing in each vineyard on long experience with the site, while simultaneously making use of the most recent advances in vineyard management. Pre-industrial winemaking begins with respect for the natural process that transforms fresh grapes into wine, and the 19th-Century model of minimum intervention. When you have great vineyards that produce high quality grapes of distinctive individual character, this is not only an environmentally and socially responsible approach, it’s also the best way to consistently make fine wine.

–Paul Draper, 3/2011

Thank you Paul, a much-needed summation, in my humble estimation.

Live Virtual Tasting: Footage Now Available!

April 18, 2011

We very recently presented a live virtual tasting of our new Spring Releases, with winemakers Eric Baugher (VP of Winemaking/Monte Bello) and John Olney (VP of Winemaking/Lytton Springs) weighing in on the new vintages. Moderated by David Amadia (VP of Sales and Marketing), the tasting took place out on the beautiful knoll here at Monte Bello (To see behind-the-scenes pics from the shoot, please click here), and was truly a unique happening.

The event went out streaming live online, but you can now view the archived footage on our website, by clicking here.

If you’d like to experience the gentlemen above discussing new vintages of Estate Chardonnay and Cabernet, plus Geyserville, East Bench, Ponzo, and Paso Robles, as they field questions from online viewers, than you won’t want to miss this!

And speaking from personal experience, as one who has been regularly tasting and showing these new releases, it’s a tremendous roster of offerings, and I think this video can only serve to continue heightening the excitement around the new crop.

Enjoy!

Wine Exports Since 9/11?

April 18, 2011

Are you interested? The folks at VinVino TV were, and while in Dusseldorf for ProWein, they took an opportunity to talk with our very own David Amadia (Vice President of Sales & Marketing) about said subject.

(Video below, which I highly recommend!)

I’m not sure I’ve ever met, nor had the privilege of working with, anyone who can speak to the “business” of wine more effectively; but mind you, this is a skill made all the more intriguing by the fact that David represents a producer (that being us) that is decidedly not a “mainstream” Californian producer; meaning, while he may work the “business” side of the tracks, he of necessity possesses and flexes an innate understanding of all that sets Ridge apart. His conclusion to the interview is particularly intriguing, and I encourage you to give it a watch. Enjoy!

You can view the video by clicking here.

Wine Below The Belt

April 15, 2011

I think quite often about wine. I ponder on it. Wine, the world of wine, the culture of wine, the history of wine. Sittin’ and ponderin’. About wine.

Sometimes I am very happy. Things in wine are good.

Other times, I get concerned. Right now, I am concerned. I am concerned about the cerebralization of wine. Not the so-called “stuffiness” of wine, not the “putting on airs-ness” of wine. Not the “pinky-in-the-air-ish-ness” of wine, the “uptowness” of wine, nor the “art-gallery-ish-ness” of wine. I am concerned about the cerebralization of wine.

Meaning; I am concerned that we might be over-thinking too much about wine, that wine is all in our head anymore, that we’re losing wine from our bodies, our hearts, our guts, our soul.

Don’t get me wrong, I LOVE the rituals of wine; the perfectly buffed glasses, the exactly cut foils, the spotless labels, the decanting, the aerating, the swishing and swirling, I love it all. I love winespeak; the hyperbole of the tasting note, the rhetorical excesses of sensory analysis, the ageability debates. I love it all.

But I worry that we’re losing some of the visceral side of wine, the raw mojo funk passion of wine, the slinky, sweaty, groovy scratch-the-itch of wine. The drinking wine and reading poetry of wine. The syrah and jazz of wine. The boat and the moon and the wine of wine. The long slow sex of wine. The Howl of wine. The Dharma Bums of wine. The haiku of wine. The fonky fonky of wine.

I am worried about the cerebralization of wine.

So, I wish, right now, to get as far away from my head as possible. So naturally, I am thinking about my feet. Specifically, my shoes. Wine below the belt.

What sort of shoes do I wear, and why? And what does that have to do with my drinking of wine? Or perhaps more appropriately, what does it say about my drinking of wine? What is the metaphor of the ankle boot?

I believe all great art emerges from the intersection of technique and instinct; craft and mojo; high-brow and low-brow. For example, I like to wear suits. With these:

My viticultural Three Musketeers. My PF Flyers. Fonky Fonky.

I am also obsessed with ankle boots. There are certain times, like when one is either awake or asleep, when one should not be without a bottle of wine, and a pair of ankle boots. These days, Chelsea Boots are my kicks du jour.

Of course, one does have to occasionally posh it up a bit for a special wine event. In which case, Brogues are the only way to go. Without question.

But one must get dirty too. Wine is dirty. It’s farming. It’s made in tanks and barrels. It’s country. I may work the Hospitality side of the tracks, but I do it on top of a mountain, mister and sister, so don’t think I don’t get dirty …

I don’t often sit around and think about my co-workers feet.

Usually, I think about wine. Or books about wine. Or movies about wine. Much of the time I am tasting wine. Or writing about wine. Or writing about writing about wine.

But lately, I’ve been thinking about my co-workers feet.

Have you ever asked yourself, what kind of footwear do wine people wear? I am asking this question of myself. What do my co-workers wear on their feet, and what does it all mean? It’s like a spiritually maddening koan. What is the sound of one hand clapping? What is the metaphor of the ankle boot?

Much to the grinningly bewildered chagrin of my colleagues, I have been taking pics of their kicks. Here is what I found:

Ridge Vineyards clearly has the fonky fonky. Dip trip, flip fantasia.

“These boots are made for walkin’, and that’s just what they’ll do. One of these days these boots are gonna walk all over you.”

“You can do anything, but lay off of my blue suede shoes.”

“She wore red shoes by the newstand, as the rain splashed the nickle, spilled like chablis along the midway.”

“I want to put on my my my my my my boogie shoes. And boogie with you.”

I am no longer worried about the cerebralization of wine. Things in wine are good.

Would You Believe?

April 13, 2011

“If I could, would you?”

  

  

“If you believe in magic, don’t bother to choose
If it’s jug band music or rhythm and blues”

  

  

“If you believed they put a man on the moon
If you believe there’s nothing up my sleeve, then nothing is cool”

  

 

 “Do you believe in life after love?”



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