Archive for the ‘Food & Wine Pairing’ Category

Belated Holiday Wine Highlights: My Top 3!

January 14, 2012

Silly, really, that it’s already the 14th of January, 2012, and I’m only just now getting to this post. But as I’m still reasonably certain the concerns of Y2K and Enron were in fact front and center only a few years ago, I guess it’s not too surprising.

Anyhow, I’d like to run down for you my three favorite wines from the various and sundry holiday dining experiences I was fortunate to enjoy.

First on the list? The 2002 Ridge Vineyards Nervo.

We had this during one of the many buffet-style indulgences that were laid out on our myriad holiday tables, and it was absolutely perfect with the various cheeses, spreads, breads, dips, salads, and other such niceties that adorned the counters. It’s got structure, spice, and herbaceousness to spare, and the low-yielding old vines offered a concentration that, while softened with bottle age, was still integral to the flavor profile. It was particularly delightful with a robust beet and goat cheese salad heavily speckled with fresh ground pepper.

Next on the list? A true legend, the 1984 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello.

And yes, that is a water pitcher masquerading as a decanter. Extraordinary times beget extraordinary wines, and extraordinary need begets extraordinary measures. So yes, I did indeed decant this wine into a glass water pitcher. And it was delicious! As to pairing? The only thing this wine paired with was our collective palates. No food, just the ’84. Heaven.

But the real star of the show? The breakout hit? The surprise hero? The dark horse, the miracle, the magician?

That’s right, the 1995 Ridge Vineyards York Creek! It was tremendous! I mean, just look at that cork!

I was under strict instructions not to cook the main holiday dinner this year, but I couldn’t resist making a mushroom gravy, which turned out to be fortunate, as gravy would have been the one thing we would have been short on (my people DIG gravy!), and I have to say, the 95 York Creek with a rich, umami-laden mushroom gravy? Happy Holidays indeed.

And so, what were YOUR top 3 wine tasting experiences from the holidays? Enquiring minds want to know!

What’s Up … Dinner!

January 13, 2012

If you’re a reader of this blog, you may remember a short series I presented last year, entitled “What’s Up Lunch?”. This was a series of posts in which I relayed stories about some of my successful and unorthodox lunchtime food and wine pairings. (You can find the original series posts here).

I hadn’t thought of the series in a while; not until a couple nights ago, in fact. The remindering impulse was an absolutely delicious pairing I enjoyed for dinner Wednesday evening. In the aftermath of this gourmandish exercise in oeno-culinary indulgence, I decided to not only resurrect the series, but to expand it to include dinners as well! And who knows, maybe even breakfast!

Anyhow, the dish I made was Garlic & Chard Soup with Sweet Potato. Basically, you cook down huge masses of organic chard in a light vegetable broth, whilst sautéing 8-9 cloves worth of diced garlic in olive oil (making sure to add the garlic to the oil BEFORE heating, so that the garlic not only cooks well, but also infuses the oil!). Once the chard has cooked down enough to allow for the inclusion of other ingredients, you add in cubed sweet potato (cubes about the size of small-to-medium dice), and both the garlic and the oil. Keep the soup at a low boil until the potato starts to soften. At that point, pour in a couple healthy splashes of wine (preferably the same wine you’ll be serving the dish with! That’s what I did …), a few good pinches of Herbs de Provence, and sea salt and ground black pepper to taste (my taste is hearty amounts of both!). At this point you turn the temp down, and let the soup simmer a bit. Once the boil is off, it’s then important to drink some of the remainng wine that didn’t go in the soup. At least a glass. After that, it’s time to prepare cheese. I’ve used a number of different cheeses in the past, and my favorite is probably Gruyère, but this time, I used yogurt cheese, which proved to be utterly fantastic, just the right amount of tang to counterbalance the richness of the soup. I like to cut thin strips of cheese, as they melt better, and make for a nice appearance as well. Anyhow, once you’re ready to serve the soup (i.e. it’s in the bowl!), you lay the cheese on top, and then you ideally serve just as the cheese is starting to show its first signs of melting.

And the pairing? Our new 2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Merlot! It was EXTRAORDINARY with this soup!

Didn’t know we were releasing a 2009 Estate Merlot? Surprise! We are, and it will hit the ground running in April. Here are winemaker Eric Baugher’s label notes:

Ridge made a merlot from the Monte Bello vineyard in 1974, 1976, and from 1991 to 1997; this is our first bottling since then. In the excellent 2009 vintage, the Casa Grande parcel and the six-acre merlot section of 25 Acre were fermented separately, and combined for this limited release. Quarterly racking off the lees clarified the wine naturally, and maintained its freshness. Intense fruit allowed the use of seventy-five percent new american oak barrels, adding hints of spice. A variety known for its elegance, this approachable merlot will be enjoyable over the next decade. EB (3/11)

And the label itself …

Hey, where’d the soup go?

Yeah, that’s right. Right into Papa’s tummy …

In Praise Of A First Friday Past: Oh, What A Time We Had!

January 7, 2012

It’s 2012 now.

Twelve months, twelve First Fridays.

One done, eleven to go.

It was a beautiful evening on the mountain …

And First Friday was nearly afoot …

The nibbles were nigh …

Including my 2006 Lytton Estate Grenache-infused Marinated Mushrooms and Mixed Olive Tapenade

And the line-up …

…of wine …

… was ready.

All we needed, was you.

And then suddenly, there you were!

And we were very, very happy to see you!

Doin’ A Lil’ Home Cookin’ For First Friday!

January 6, 2012

New Year’s Resolutions. Yeah, I know.

But this is a good one.

This year, I resolve to always make at least one dish myself to serve at our First Friday events.

For this evening, our January First Friday, I am in fact preparing two dishes. Simple, straightforward, fantastic with wine, and delicious.

Marinated Mushrooms, and Mixed Olive Tapenade.

As of right now, the Marinated Mushrooms are not in fact confirmed. They may in fact become a tapenade as well, depending on how I feel about the texture when I taste them again just before the event starts. But for the time being, I am going with Marinated Mushrooms.

Getting Ready To Marinate The Mushrooms

The ingredients are pretty basic. A mix of white-button and crimini mushrooms, a heavy wrist’s worth of olive oil, dried basil and dried oregano, sea salt, red bell pepper, garlic, and the secret ingredient: 2006 Lytton Estate Grenache!
 

Marinating Mushrooms

 
Why the 2006 Lytton Estate Grenache? Well, partly it just tastes delicious, and pairs really well with these ingredients.
 

Slicin' Peppers ...

 
But also, it’s our new January ATP release, and as such it will be the featured wine that we pour tonight. So I thought it would quite groovy to serve dishes that were made with the wine we’ll be tasting!
 

Marinated Mushrooms!

Continuing on, I will now go on record as saying that Olive Tapenade is one of my very favorite things to eat, ever. Particularly on a slice of Watsonville Sourdough from Sumano’s Bakery. And particularly with a glass of Ridge wine.
 

Oooh, garlic!

 
My ingredients for this dish are also pretty straightforward, and not entirely dissimilar from the dish above.
 

Bless You, My Cuisinart ...

 
Green and black olives, dried oregano and dried basil, olive oil, sea salt, capers, and yes, 2006 Lytton Estate Grenache!
 

Olive Tapenade!

 
To be perfectly honest, I don’t cook many dishes that don’t have garlic, sea salt, herbs, and olive oil. Mexican, Indian, Italian, Mediterranean, whatever, they’re still going to have my core in there. And wine. Of course wine. One for the dish, one for the chef. One for the dish, two for the chef …
 
 

It Begins, A New Year Of ATP Releases!

January 5, 2012

With a new year comes a new calendar of wine releases, which is to say, this is a flat-out EXCITING time to be alive at Ridge Vineyards! I LOVE January!

And so, without further ado, how’s about we take a looksee at the new 2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Grenache? It’s the new January ATP release, so no time like the present to taste things out!

I’m going to take a slightly different tack with the tasting notes for this offering. As it’s a wine that lends itself very well to structural analysis, I’d like to use it as an opportunity to flesh out one of my favorite concepts; the idea of “architecture” as it relates to wine.

The idea is simple; the “structure” of a wine is the beams and girders of its formation, and if one is to analyze a wine via its architecture, one needs to identify and analyze its architectural components. This is not dissimilar from poetry scansion. To “scan” a poem is essentially to isolate, identify, and analyze its architectural components; its rhyme, its meter, its forms, its patterns, as a way forward towards understanding the total poem. Iambic? Trochaic? Anapestic? Dactylic? ABABAB? AABBCC? Spenserian or Shakespearean? Villanelle or Terza Rima?

To “scan” a wine is essentially to do the same, to identify and analyze its architectural components — fruit, acid, tannin, herb/spice, alcohol — in the service of eventually understanding the wine in all its aesthetic totality.

That said, and as with a poem, scansion can only ever tell you a portion of the story. Beams and girders may a building make, but ’tis magic, love and soul that makes a home. So, in addition to offering a “scan” of the 2006 Lytton Estate Grenache, I’m also going to offer a culinary metaphor, in the hopes of conjuring some of the visceral and intangible mojo that lives within the imagined soul-core of any and every good wine. (Not a culinary pairing, mind you, but a metaphor, though the dish below would certainly taste quite fine with this wine!). That is to say, I am going to posit a dish that, for me, metaphorically evokes the taste of this wine.  Will that get us to the soul-core? Of course not; at the end of the day,  you must taste. There is no substitute. You too must hold Aladdin’s lamp, and wish to stay. And don’t let anyone take your lamp away.

So …

Un, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, here we go! (Cue random Cat In The Hat reference!)

2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Grenache

Fruit: Blackberry, Pluot, Pomegranate, Wild Mountain Blueberry …

Acid: Mild, Reserved, Erudite, Refined …

Tannin: Ultra-Powdery; Powdered Sugar & Talc …

Herb/Spice: Cigar tobacco, Black Pepper, Nutmeg, Chicory, Coffee Grounds …

Alcohol: Benign & Integrated, No Heat …

Metaphorical Culinary Summation: Powdered sugar-dusted chocolate zucchini cake drizzled with blackberry gastrique, served with mission figs and chipotle powder-dusted chocolate-covered hazelnuts, followed by a strong and bitter espresso, and a mild, hand-rolled cigar.

I Spy With My Little Eye … A 2006 Monte Bello!

December 30, 2011

I have been thinking about the 2006 Monte Bello lately. I remember it as a really fine and intense wine, but it’s been a while since I last tasted it. I need to fix that …

2006 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

The wine looks younger than young in the glass — a dazzlingly youthful presentation — with deep, rich purples and magentas plaited together in a luxuriant braid of viscously ambrosial succulence that atunes perfectly to the hearty berries and piquant umaminess of the bouquet. It must be said again, the youthful presentation is dazzling in its come-on. With some years of bottle age now at its disposal, the wine is still shy upon arrival, and takes a bit of coaxing to be drawn out. But as it emerges, a tremendous incrassation is enacted; oxygen working on wine, poetry working on life.

Mouthfeel is ever so slightly taut by comparison; architectural and tannin-driven, though the tannins themselves manage to be snowflake tender. The fruit is blacker at point-of-entry, near tenebrous in its intensity, yet with an eyebrow cocked. As the wine lands on the fat of the tongue, the viscidity spreads like ripples in a pond, laying lavish and opulent across the four-posts of the palate. There is the beginning of an herb and spice layer in development towards the middle of the journey southward, with an adumbration of clove, chicory, and pipe tobacco ghosting its silhouette upon the walls as the wine glissades onwards towards its finish.

The finish itself is the wine’s truest display of youthful circumspection; a demurement of coy promise sealed in a locked journal of poetic and impassionate angst. The hints are there, but the mystery is sealed. The wine closes off and leaves one with the tautness evident at first taste, though a shift from tannin to acid has upended the flavor paradigm somewhat. At first taste, I wanted a hard cheese —- high in salt, chalky in texture — to absorb the fruit, control and subdue the intensity, corral the plainsong wildness. Now, at final taste, I wish for Mt. Tam. Cowgirl Creamery, bless you your Monte-Bello-taming heart.

Cowgirl Creamery, Mt. Tam

 

And bless you, 2006 Monte Bello, it’s so very nice to see you again …
 
 

Ridge Vineyards 2007 Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache

December 5, 2011

Syrah: Dark, brooding, imposing. A certain sexy menace. Spicy yet controlled, saucy yet serious. A somber, shadowy figure; footsteps echoing in the alley, a hint of violence simmering just below the surface. A sensual phantom.

Grenache: Exotic, percolating, exuberant. Tough as nails yet fragile as lace. A brightly colored mural, celebrating the desires of the heart, the passions of the body. Musical, buoyant, predatorily delighting. A lascivious pirate.

Blended in equal measure, 50% to 50%. One of my favorite wines that we release. The Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache.

The 2007 vintage was bottled on November 20th, 2009. The very same day that a very famous Italian mountaineer by name of Lino Lacadelli passed away. Lacadellli was from a region in Italy called Veneto. Which happens to be where Asiago comes from.

So, I am going to get some Asiago on my way home, and I’m going to eat some while I drink a glass of the 2007 Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache.

Because Syrah and Grenache go together like rama lama lama lama lama ding de ding de dong.

My New Favorite Wine & Cheese Pairing!

November 30, 2011

Do you know Bellwether Farms? If you’ve ever had a private tasting with us before, you’ve probably tasted their Carmody; it’s been one of our favorite cheeses for quite some time. But I’ve recently discovered a new offering from the fine folks at Bellwether that has just about blown my mind. San Andreas.

I tasted it on its own first, and immediately thought, mature wine. Aged wine. Aged Monte Bello.

Cue the 1978 Monte Bello, one of the finest Monte Bellos ever, and showing so very perfectly right now. I tasted it on its own first as well. Perfect.

And then the pairing.

Complete palate freak out. Total perfection. Decadence. Nirvana. Revelation. Deliciousness. The deep mojo. The Ju-Ju. The HooDoo. The Guru.

I know it’s not everyday one goes opening a bottle like this, but the holiday season is upon us, and that calls for something special.

And this, is something special.

Library Monte Bello, and Bellwether Farms San Andreas.

Bert and Ernie. Yin and Yang. Martini and Olive. Buson and Issa. Peanut Butter and Jelly. Love and Happiness.

On How The Reigning Dark Viticultral Prince Of All The Lands Of Cyber Monday Is Roaming The Forest Of My Palate, Slaying All Pretenders To The Throne

November 28, 2011

On How The Reigning Dark Viticultural Prince Of All The Lands Of Cyber Monday Is Roaming The Forest Of My Palate, Slaying All Pretenders To The Throne

–or–

Check your e-mail inbox, because there is a VERY GOOD Cyber Monday offer from Ridge Vineyard waiting for you there!

Coincidentally (or perhaps not!), I wish to offer some tasting notes on the 2005 Ridge Vineyards Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah. But first, winemaker Eric Baugher’s notes, from back in 2007:

2005 Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah
100% Petite Sirah
Bottled August 2007

A long growing season allowed the York Creek grapes to achieve intensity at modest (by today’s standards) ripeness. We picked in late September; the tight, mature, brown-stemmed clusters were perfect for a natural-yeast, whole-cluster fermentation. Extraction of color and tannin was ideal by day six, and we pressed. The natural secondary (malolactic) fermentation was complete by late November, and the wine racked to air-dried american oak barrels for aging. These fifteen barrels–one-third new, one-third three years old, one-third four years old–were combined for a special, limited petite sirah bottling, something we have not done since 2000. After twenty months in oak, the wine has gained additional richness and spice, and tannins have softened. Remarkably complex, it is approachable now, but will continue to improve with five to seven years of bottle age. EB (5/07)

And as to my thoughts today …

If you’ve had the Ridge Vineyards York Creek before, then you’ve tasted Dynamite Hill petite sirah; it’s the block on York Creek that provides the petite sirah for this long-running Ridge zinfandel. On its own, I’ve always found it to be a sort of kinder, gentler petite sirah; it’s always had the varietally correct squid-inkiness, intense tannin architecture, and deep berry profile one would expect, but it’s always come wrapped in a fairly lively and multi-colored bow.

Digging into the nose of this particular vintage, I am immediately taken in by the array of complexities on offer; most notably, the distinct note of caraway. Fascinating! Add to that the singular appearances of buckwheat flour pancake batter, blackberry preserves, and a touch of Irish Stew, and you’ve got a truly provocative bouquet on your hands, and one that leans distinctly autumnal in its overall profile.

Front-palate hits full parade mode right away; nothing is reserved, the show is on, the trumpets are blaring, drums are thumping, legs are kicking. There is a wealth of tannin architecture laid out right away, between the girders of which hangs a dense tapestry of deep blue-to-purple-to-black fruit threads.

Mid-palate shows a little of that American oak-derived dill tone , and this actually tributaries its way nicely into the caraway stream hinted at in the aromatics; in these rushing rapids is also a wealth of black herb and woody stemness; black licorice and blackstrap molasses are most prevalent as well.

The finish is still youthful to say the least, and tannins are still dominant, though there is a trickle of acidity that bobs and weaves around the pure rope of richness that runs straight down the center palate stripe.

All in all, a deeply unusual and complex spin on petite sirah, and clear proof this is a varietal capable of much more complexity that it often gets credit for. Your autumn-to-winter table will certainly be enhanced by the presence of this wine, and should you happen to go for something like, oh, I don’t know, duck cracklins and blackberry gastrique (more on this soon!), you might just achieve gourmand nirvana.

Things I’m Thankful For …

November 23, 2011

This is the third year in a row I’ve had the opportunity to write and present a “Things I’m Thankful For” post on this blog. Each year, on November 23rd, I have sat down in front of the typer and tried to find a way to express my gratitude for all I’m surrounded by, the blessings life has bestowed, the magic of it all. It’s impossible, but I’ve tried. And I’m going to do so again. It’s November 23rd, and this is what I’m thankful for (please note, there is likely to be some overlap with previous renditions!):

My missus, who did not so much save my life, as reinvent it for the drastic better. Who teaches me, everyday, why love exists. Who is perfect. She is who I was born to fall in love with. I am so thankful that she found me, and I her.

My daughter, who is proof that miracles do happen. The most delightful creature I’ve even known, my favorite person in the world. Who invents for me, every day, new ways to cry with happiness.

The chance to write this blog, because it means I get to write posts like this one.

The iPhone that Ridge gave me. Because while I am not, in any way shape or form, a tech evangelical, I do have to admit that Apple did a really, really good job with the iPhone.

Antonio Galloni. Because he gets Ridge, and he gets Paul Draper. Because he wrote, “Heretical as it may sound, I think the wines Draper is making today will prove to be far superior to the wines of decades past, many of which are rightly considered legendary.” Because this is true.

Grandparents, especially my daughter’s. Because this bond, this connection, this grandparent-grandchild relationship, is a friendship like no other, and a delight to watch in action. Because grandparents suffer from a most delightful strain of insanity.

Verizon’s cell phone service, circa 2008. For giving me a good connection when interviewing with Nicole Buttitta (VP of HR at Ridge) for the first time, from a truck stop in Wyoming.

Really awful looking old corks, in the necks of really old and awful looking bottle-necks, that somehow still protect really, really, really amazing mature wines. Lead-shrouded, moldy, juice-stained, and crumbling, but still doing their jobs to perfection.

Amy Monroe, Antonio Favela, Barry Campbell, Howard Hickok, Jane Occhialini, Jenny Merit, Karen Cai, Kim Korupp, Michael Riese, Nancy Tarng, Peter Yaninek, Sam Howles-Banerji, Samantha McMillan, Sonja Seaberg, Tara Einis, and Zani Nesvacil. Who have taught me that hackneyed corporate aphorisms like “”I’ve always found that the speed of the boss is the speed of the team” have within them the gold of truth, because I am of little to no worth whatsoever without the blessing of these fine people by my side. You know them as the Monte Bello Tasting Room team. I am proud to know them as inspirations; and more than that, friends.

Wine & Food pairing; specifically, Champys and Salt & Vinegar crisps.

Wine & Food pairing; specifically, Champys and other food besides Salt & Vinegar crisps.

The Owle Bubo.

Jazz Winemaking, as performed by Paul Draper.

Guests who do all the right things in the tasting room.

The 2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay.

Drinking 2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay in the fog while watching rabbits.

The Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting, which is one of the coolest tasting opportunities I’ve ever experienced.

The Vegetarian Lasagna from Bash Catering. To Chef Jaci Rossi and the Bash Catering team, a hearty congratulations; it’s very, very hard to make truly outstanding lasagna!

The 1995 Monte Bello, for so pleasantly surprising me by quite unexpectedly transitioning from one of the tightest, most angular, most intensely structured Monte Bellos ever, to this very poised, aromatic, beautific Monte Bello that I am looking at right now, feeling very, very thirsty.

People who don’t chew gum.

Really good wine bloggers.

People who believe me when I tell them Jazz, Haiku, and Winemaking are intimately related.

People who write me e-mails about all the amazing ways our wines have been a part of their stories: births, deaths, weddings, anniversaries, reunions, etc. These e-mails remind me that what we do really is something special; we produce that which ritualizes that which you will remember forever.

Wine Berzerkers. Which is pretty self-explanatory.

Pizza.

Three-day old Geyserville out of a flat-bottom glass, with pizza. Mushroom and Olive pizza. And Geyserville.

Our vineyard and winery teams. Watching them during the 2011 Harvest reminded me all over again about what Sam Howles-Banerji refers to as their “awesomeness.”

That Kyle Theriot and Will Thomas have joined the vineyard teams.

Lytton Springs. The place, the people, the wine.

People who understand it’s important to wear cool shoes when tasting wine.

Drinking the new 2008 Buchignani Ranch Zinfandel (which, in my estimation, is the most delicious vintage since the ’04) while wearing ankle boots.

Parents who understand how to go wine tasting with their children.

The way a properly set tasting looks before anyone has arrived. The shimmering glasses, the ordered plates, the small hills of freshly sliced bread, the cool perfection of the cheeses, the crisp diamond sparkle of the water in the glasses, the wine bottles standing at attention, awaiting their deployment …

My almost-three-year-old-daughter’s hysterical one word wine reviews …

My wife’s preposterously expensive taste in wines, and that fact that two-day-old Ridge wine still consistently appeases her …

My boss, Ryan Moore, who does not regurgitate hackneyed corporate aphorisms like “”I’ve always found that the speed of the boss is the speed of the team.” Who does occasionally deploy tidbits of corporate-speak, but always with a twinkle in his eye and a twist at the corner of his lips. Who consistently forces me to come up with new and ever-more hyperbolized ways of explaining just how great I’m doing. Like stupendaliscious, or outer-galaxial.

That my co-workers keep having cool babies.

Haig’s. The greatest hummus in the world. Perfection in pairing with our chardonnays. When experiencing a line-up of excellently selected and staged food & wine pairing selections, one might be tempted to deploy a hackneyed aphorism like “No member of a crew is praised for the rugged individuality of his rowing.” Except that when Haig’s is involved, one must conclude that the rugged individuality of the rowing is indeed deeply praise-worthy.

People who don’t wear cologne or perfume.

Carignane. Especially the John Olney kind.

The 2011 Ridge Vineyards Holilday Packs. Especially the Estate Cabernet vertical, for being so good. And, oddly enough, especially the Dusi vertical, which has suprised me immensely by being truly delicious. Not because they’re not good wines; they are. But because I personally like them so much. Because I am not normally a drinker of this style. But these are really, really, really good.

The fact that my post on this blog with the somewhat laughably lunatic title of  ”Zoot! And Poetry, And Wine, And Jazz, And Steve Martin, And The Muppets, And Jack Kerouac!” remains one of the Top 5 most viewed posts of all time.

Honest people. People who say true things. Like, “Champys should only be drunk from Coupe glasses.”

People who drink Champys from Coupe glasses. Because these are people who obviously have perfect aesthetic taste. And are accordingly inevitably the sorts of people who will also appreciate the opportunity that our new Historic Vineyard Series release represents. People who drink solo-varietal Cabernet Franc. And Champys. From Coupe glasses.

People who, like my father, fell in love all over again with Merlot after seeing Sideways. People who, like my father, have refused to buy Pinot Noir ever since, even though it’s kind of silly, and certainly self-defeating. People who, like my father, deserve  admiration for having principles like this. People who, like my father, remind me of aphorisms that are not all hackneyed, like this relevant one from Mark Twain: “Principles have no real force except when one is well-fed.”

That we are fortunate to oft be well-fed.

People who remember that not everyone in the world is well-fed; that in fact, far too many in the world have never, ever experienced being well-fed. And accordingly, I am thankful for people who not only remember this, but work to correct it. Or at minimum, at least walk the world with appreciation, as opposed to arrogance.

Humble winemakers like Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, and John Olney. Who are good enough to be arrogant, but aren’t.

Humble assistant winemakers like Shun Ishikubo and Muiris Griffin, who are good enough to be arrogant, but aren’t. Who are also good enough to be head winemakers, but choose instead to be part of something beautiful.

People who don’t wear skinny jeans.

People who understand that wearing skinny jeans while drinking good wine makes puppies cry.

People who listen to wine podcasts. Because that is serious dedication.

People who know that there are far better things to pair with red wine than chocolate.

People who pair sautéed mushrooms and garlic with red wine.

People who know you can pair red wine with Indian food.

People who understand that, despite the schtick, ZZ Top is actually a really good band.

People who know that Motorhead has their own wine now, and still don’t drink it, even though they really like Motorhead.

That Rex Stout’s immortal literary creation, the detective Nero Wolfe, insists on the use of Tarragon Wine Vinegar in his kitchen instead of sherry.

Good Poets. Because in this day and age of shallow superficiality, cultural devaluation, and emotional disconnect; in this age where protective irony and deliberate obfuscation rule the emotional day, we desperately need people who are still trying to connect our heads to our hearts for us.

People who understand what wine and poetry have to do with one another.

Really, really ridiculously hyperbolized wine tasting notes.

All wine writers who have not used the word “millenial” in the past year, if there are any.

Cecilia Aguilar, Chris Seguin, and Mary Devine; the dictionary definitions of Customer Service. And really nice people on top of that.

Cellos.

David Gates.

Coated tannins.

People who use terms like “coated tannins” in their tasting notes.

That I was invited to attend the Monte Bello Assemblage tasting, the greatest wine experience of my life.

Cellar Tracker, and the admirably obsessed people who use it.

Zen.

That Elliot Nett and Jason Shelton are now esteemed full-time members of the Lytton Springs hospitality team.

People who drink wine both in formal wear, and naked.

Old men who keep their belts below their bellies, as opposed to above.

Whoever first described my approach to clothing as “hobo chic,” because it’s given me a way to explain away comments about my clothing.

Ties with subtle wine stains.

Wine stains that look like the profiles of famous classical composers.

Tasting Rooms that do not play baroque classical music or Santana.

People who are willing to let themselves love, because this is the bravest thing of all.

Having someone to love.

Having something to love.

People who, when asked “Don’t you want something to love?,” answer “Yes.”

That I have had the chance to love almost every single vintage of Monte Bello going all the way back to 1964.

The things people say to one another while drinking wine, like, “You know, socks are a really great idea,” or “Pass me another crostini,” or “Ayn Rand was wrong,” or “Has it ever occurred to you that some of our best memories involve autumn?” or “Wow, that is an amazing Syrah,” or “I love you too.”

And so many other things also, like Bud Powell, and Laura Chenel’s Melodie, and solid-color carpets and the people who love them, and co-fermenting Viognier with Syrah, and the Haiku of Issa, and Ah So Cork Pullers and the people who use them, and pacifists, and the Optima font, and typewriters from before 1960, and books, and wearing PF Flyers and a suit, and anyone who doesn’t have a mirror in their bag, and really weird and cool wine stores, and France, and fractured limestone, and grape sorting tables, and people who don’t iron their jeans, and very worn-in bandanas, and firefighters, and people who really aggressively swish while wine tasting, and the fact that spittoons are used by both oenophiles and cowboys, and romance, and candles that don’t have scents, and owls, and wine bars that don’t play house music, and restaurants that always bring out the vintage that’s on the menu, and Thai restaurants who understand that if you can’t make green papaya salad properly you shouldn’t be a Thai restaurant, and Italian restaurants who understand the same thing about gnocchi, and people who know first-hand that thirty-year-old cab goes really well with japanese-style barbecued okra, and friends of any kind, and people who don’t call me Chris after I’ve introduced myself as Christopher, and the movie Casablanca, and Ah So Cork Pullers and those that have them, and Watsonville Sourdough, and the days when one doesn’t have to cut one’s toenails, and dew, and that lunatic fringe cadre of loyalists who re-wrote the zinfandel rules, and sweet potatoes, and the taste of a wine spill being licked off the stomach of a lover, and December, and people with awful handwriting, and the paintings of Pissarro, and college radio, and really fine wine.

And most of all, I am thankful to Ridge Vineyards. By your dedication to me, and mine to yours, my family is happy, healthy and safe, and my heart is, accordingly, intact. Thank you.

And to you all, may all the best of everything be yours, and may you always have cause to be thankful.

To share a glass of wine is to share the experience of love. May you all be, feel, and share true love this holiday season.

To all at Ridge, please know I am so thankful for you.

And to every person, place or thing I have neglected to mention in this post, please know I am praying for ten thousand more years of writing “Things I Am Thankful For” posts, so that at some point, I might thank everything.


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