Football fans are looking forward to the Super Bowl - and wine lovers who like football - may want some help in finding a suitable wine that pairs well with pigskin.
Here are some wines with football pedigrees.
Former NFL coach Dick Vermeil makes wine in Napa Valley. Calistoga, to be exact. That's where his great-grandfather lived and made wine, and where Vermeil grew up. Vermeil has coached teams to a college national championship and a Super Bowl victory in the NFL, so maybe cracking a bottle of his vino will mean good luck for your team.
As the president of the San Francisco 49ers, Carmen Policy helped build Super Bowl champions. Now he presides over his wine label, Casa Piena in Napa Valley. With a heavy-hitting Cabernet Sauvignon, Policy's team color is now purple.
The former quarterback for those 49er championship teams, Joe Montana, also has a wine still available - Montagia - although he sold the Calistoga winery in 2009.
Former Redskins defensive standout Terry Hoage runs Terry Hoage Vineyards in California's Paso Robles area. He concentrates his efforts on Rhone varieties.
Michigan Wolverine fans will want to stock up on Bo's Wine, named for the late Bo Schembechler, who coached the Wolverines for 20 years. Schembechler is memorialized by a Merlot and a Savignon Blanc, both selling for less than $20. A contribution from the sale of each bottle is made to the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center.
Former New England Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe has a Washington state wine called Doubleback. His Cabernet Sauvignon has just released its first vintage.
Former Bears linebacker Dick Butkus offers his Legends 51 Cabernet Sauvignon - a wine which contributes 100% of its sales to the Butkus Foundation.
"Iron" Mike Ditka has a manly brand on the market - Kick Ass Red - which utilizes grapes from Mendocino, California.
The New York Jets commemorated the opening of their new stadium with the release of a - California - wine.
Gary Eberle was a Penn State Nittany Lion in his collegiate career. His Eberle Winery is one of the finest in Paso Robles, a wine area he helped establish.
The image above is a hand painted wine glass called "Football Widow" - it sells for $20 at Etsy.com.
Here are some wines with football pedigrees.
Former NFL coach Dick Vermeil makes wine in Napa Valley. Calistoga, to be exact. That's where his great-grandfather lived and made wine, and where Vermeil grew up. Vermeil has coached teams to a college national championship and a Super Bowl victory in the NFL, so maybe cracking a bottle of his vino will mean good luck for your team.
As the president of the San Francisco 49ers, Carmen Policy helped build Super Bowl champions. Now he presides over his wine label, Casa Piena in Napa Valley. With a heavy-hitting Cabernet Sauvignon, Policy's team color is now purple.
The former quarterback for those 49er championship teams, Joe Montana, also has a wine still available - Montagia - although he sold the Calistoga winery in 2009.
Former Redskins defensive standout Terry Hoage runs Terry Hoage Vineyards in California's Paso Robles area. He concentrates his efforts on Rhone varieties.
Michigan Wolverine fans will want to stock up on Bo's Wine, named for the late Bo Schembechler, who coached the Wolverines for 20 years. Schembechler is memorialized by a Merlot and a Savignon Blanc, both selling for less than $20. A contribution from the sale of each bottle is made to the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center.
Former New England Patriots quarterback Drew Bledsoe has a Washington state wine called Doubleback. His Cabernet Sauvignon has just released its first vintage.
Former Bears linebacker Dick Butkus offers his Legends 51 Cabernet Sauvignon - a wine which contributes 100% of its sales to the Butkus Foundation.
"Iron" Mike Ditka has a manly brand on the market - Kick Ass Red - which utilizes grapes from Mendocino, California.
The New York Jets commemorated the opening of their new stadium with the release of a - California - wine.
Gary Eberle was a Penn State Nittany Lion in his collegiate career. His Eberle Winery is one of the finest in Paso Robles, a wine area he helped establish.
The image above is a hand painted wine glass called "Football Widow" - it sells for $20 at Etsy.com.




Close to 50 wineries were pouring their wares and the event was populated primarily with Napa Valley wines from somewhat small producers. As you may expect, there was a lot to like at the LMU campus.
August Briggs Cabernet Sauvignon, Monte Rosso Vineyard 2007 - Briggs said he loves this vineyard. Huge pencil lead edge.
Others in the group opted for brewski. The Hornin' Nettie Madge Black IPA from 

Petit Manseng 2008 







This is the final article in my 
La Fenêtre’s Joshua Klapper talked about picking fruit in the same way a gambler talks about the time his team beat the spread on the last play of the game. Klapper was absolutely riveting as he spoke of determining when grapes were ready to be picked. “Throw all that scientific junk away. Look at them! Listen to them! The grapes’ll tell you when they’re ready!” His tone softened somewhat when he recounted how - with the pickers working on getting his grapes into trucks - he saw other winemakers roll the dice and leave their fruit on the vine another day. The weather that day would prove to be hot enough to ruin a substantial amount of that fruit. Those winemakers did not listen to their grapes. La Fenêtre’s 2008 Sierra Madre has a wonderfully smokey, floral nose and a dark, brooding presence in the mouth.
Wes Hagen, the winemaker at Clos Pepe Vineyards, was drawing a crowd again this year. His way with a story and easy manner with strangers turn him into a people-magnet at wine events. He vacated the table for a while, and enough of his adoring throng dissipated so that I could have a few pours with his second-in-command. The Clos Pepe vertical tasting of the last four vintages of Pinor Noir showed the ‘08 and ‘09 to be bright, fresh and well scrubbed, while their older brothers were very interesting indeed. The 2007 Clos Pepe is fantastic, with an edge that is almost like citrus. The ‘06 vintage has a minty aspect to fall in love with.
