Reports of the health benefits related to alcohol consumption - particularly wine consumption - seem to pop up regularly. Here's another one, which appeared recently in Wine Spectator magazine.
A German study has found that light to moderate drinking seems to help stave off the effects of dementia, even in people older than 75. According to the article, "on average, the daily consumption of alcohol reduces the risk of dementia by nearly 30 percent compared to nondrinkers. Additionally, the risk is another 30 percent lower for people who drink between one or two servings per day."
These are the findings from a three-year study of 3,200 patients. Although the sample is small, the researchers put a lot of credence in the numbers, and so does the medical community. The magazine says the International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research found the results of the German study convincing. The Forum also notes that "Happy people with many friends have the most opportunities for social drinking and, in this study, alcohol consumption was significantly associated with factors that are protective for the development of dementia: better education, not living alone and absence of depression."
Despite these issues, the study shows the risk of dementia to be lower among light to moderate drinkers, and lower still among those who drink wine.
A German study has found that light to moderate drinking seems to help stave off the effects of dementia, even in people older than 75. According to the article, "on average, the daily consumption of alcohol reduces the risk of dementia by nearly 30 percent compared to nondrinkers. Additionally, the risk is another 30 percent lower for people who drink between one or two servings per day."
These are the findings from a three-year study of 3,200 patients. Although the sample is small, the researchers put a lot of credence in the numbers, and so does the medical community. The magazine says the International Scientific Forum on Alcohol Research found the results of the German study convincing. The Forum also notes that "Happy people with many friends have the most opportunities for social drinking and, in this study, alcohol consumption was significantly associated with factors that are protective for the development of dementia: better education, not living alone and absence of depression."
Despite these issues, the study shows the risk of dementia to be lower among light to moderate drinkers, and lower still among those who drink wine.




A couple of tasty food samples were provided along with the wines. Arancini - Italian rice balls - were provided to those tasting. They paired beautifully with the Viognier, and when adorned with the duck Bolognese sauce, went well with the Sangiovese. Executive Chef Greg Stillman and Sous Chef Vincent Logan (pictured) are to be commended for turning out a large quantity at high quality. Logan told me early Saturday afternoon, "We did 800 of the Arancini, and we're running out. So Greg's in the kitchen working on another batch."


The L. Mawby Cremant Classic is made from 100% Leelanau Peninsula Vignoles from the Cremant Vineyard. It's an impressive wine, with frothy white bubbles, sweet citrus notes and almonds on the nose, lots of nuts in the flavor profile and a pleasant lemony feel on the palate. It shows a very pleasant sensation of ginger beer on the finish. The grapes used in making this wine - and the other three I'll mention - are hand-harvested and whole cluster pressed. Only the cuvée - the initial, gently pressed juice - is used in making the Cremant Classic. It retails for $22.
L. Mawby Blanc de Blancs - like the Cremant Classic - is also produced in the méthode champenoise. It's a non-vintage sparkler of 100% Chardonnay from the Leelanau Peninsula AVA. Only the cuvée is used and it is bottle fermented and aged a minimum of 24 months. This wine sports a nutty nose with lemon-lime citrus notes and a yeasty feel on both the nose and palate. It's bright and festive, and retails for $19.
The M. Lawrence Sex is a rosé bubbly made from 75% Pinot Noir and 25% Chardonnay grapes. This one is a tad sweeter, getting a Brut dosage of 1.4% RS. Again, only the cuvée is used, but this wine is produced using cuve closefermentation - receiving its second fermentation in a closed tank.
Fizz is also under the M. Lawrence label, and it's their sweetest sparkling wine. Produced from 75% Pinot Noir and 25% Chardonnay grapes, Fizz differs from the other three L. Mawby wines I tasted, in that the tailles juice is used - the second fraction of juice pressed, after cuvée - and it's finished with a Demi-Sec dosage, 3.5% RS.

The 1200 growers in Toro produce wines which have a much darker fruit expression in than those found in in Rioja. Most of the wines tasted at this seminar were between 14% and 15.5% in alcohol content. Toro has whites made from Verdejo and Malvasia. Garnacha is also employed here, but the reds are all about Tinta de Toro, and this tasting was all about the reds.
The Wines:


Biltmore Reserve Chardonnay 2009 North Carolina
Biltmore Estate Château Reserve Blanc de Blancs 2008 North Carolina Méthode Champenoise Brut



Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve 2007 Napa Valley
Sauvignon Blanc 2009 Napa Valley

