Friday, January 9, 2026
Blood Of The Vines - Making A Killing, Serial Style
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
We Should All Have Chardonnay This Good
The 2022 Grgich Hills Estate Grown Napa Valley Chardonnay carries alcohol at 14.1% abv and retails for $53. 2022 is the first vintage of this wine to be Regenerative Organic Certified. That's an organic system that seeks not only to minimize damage to the earth, but to regenerate the soil from which much of our food comes.
This wine has a yellow-gold tint to it. The nose brings some of that buttery popcorn aroma, which is joined by Meyer lemon, tangerine, lime, vanilla, and apricot. The flavors are delicious. Citrus, vanilla, pear, and a wealth of minerality make for a delightful drinking experience. The palate also features a tangy, food-friendly acidity. This is an elegant wine. Don't waste it on a ham sandwich. Make something nice for yourself.
Monday, January 5, 2026
Austrian Bubbles, Dry As A Bone
The 2021 Mint Furmint Extra Brut was made in the traditional method, just like Champagne, except there is no dosage. That's the addition of a sugary liquid which is part of the production of most sparkling wines. Mint is a single variety (Furmint) and a single vintage (2021). The grapes were harvested from vines which were planted in 2002. This bubbly was aged on the lees for more than 40 months. Alcohol sits at 13% abv and the retail price is $23.
This wine shows a nice, white froth which dissipates quickly, leaving a pale yellow-green color under the frizzante. The nose has lemon, lime, and stone fruit aromas. On the palate, intense carbonation and acidity put the mouth a-tingle. Flavors of apple and pear are draped in a bitter nuttiness, and the absence of sweetness is noticeable. This Furmint sparkler will pair with anything.
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Austrian Pink Pet-Nat Wine
Winemaker Phillip Zull has decades of experience in the region and a worldwide mission of learning which took him to places like Burgundy, New Zealand, and Oregon. His family works the land and harvests the grapes by hand. The vineyards are sustainable and they use no herbicides or artificial fertilizers on their vines. The vineyards around Schrattenthal are at elevations approaching 1,300 feet, with ancient, granite soils. Zull says he makes wine for life, not collectors.
The Zull Rosé Ancestrale Petillant Naturel from 2022 is a sparkling wine made with a single, slow fermentation under pressure. The grapes are 70% Pinot Noir and 30% Zweigelt. Alcohol is refreshingly low, at 11% abv, and the retail price is about $16.
This wine has a salmon pink color in the glass, and in the clear bottle. There is a hefty dose of pinkish-white foam on the pour. The nose is complex, shoring aromas of cherry, apple, Meyer lemon, and tangerine, all with an earthy minerality. The palate is sweet and delicious. Flavors of strawberry, cherry, peach, and quince are a treat, as is the zesty acidity. You can pair it with a mild cheese, a fruit tart, or a bag of potato chips, if you like. But it is really made for sipping, and is quite enjoyable that way.
Monday, December 29, 2025
It's Not Too Late For A Big Holiday Wine
The climate is cool in the daytime and cold at night, which is great for acidity. Aging took place in 50% new French oak barrels over 20 months. Alcohol is a hefty 15% abv and the retail price is $60.
This wine is inky dark, with no light getting through the glass. Black fruit provides the sweet part of the nose, while tar, earth, tobacco, and coffee cover the savory side. Blackberry and plum flavors are joined on the palate by earthy minerals and a brisk acidity. The tannins are firm and seem to eagerly await a pairing with some beef. It's a delicious wine, so if you're not pairing it with food, that’s okay.
Wednesday, December 24, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - It's A Wonderful Christmas
Pairing wine with movies! See the trailers and hear the fascinating commentary for these movies, and many more, at Trailers From Hell. This week, a Christmas extravaganza! We fill your stockings with movies about the holidays and wine pairings to go with them. Not a lump of coal to be seen.
The Bishop's Wife has Cary Grant as an angel. I know, I know. Typecasting. It's mighty handy to have an angel around to decorate the tree super fast. And that magically refilling bottle of booze is pretty sweet. I also could use that voice assisted typewriter, hoping that the spell check on it worked better in 1947 than it does now.
Dudley (what a name for an angel) is on Earth to help a bishop and those around him see a more spiritual side of life. He could have been the fourth Christmas ghost for Charles Dickens, except the studio loaned him out for this movie. All goes swimmingly until Dud falls for, you guessed it, the bishop's wife. The bishop is fixated on trying to raise money for a new cathedral. Fixated, until ol' Dudley's dates with wifey give him something more to worry about.
We'll pair a nice red wine, of course, with The Bishop's Wife. Talley Vineyards of San Luis Obispo County has a Bishop's Peak Pinot Noir, which sells in the nicer places for about $20. Throw in a box of crackers and you can have your own private communion.
The original film version of Dickens' A Christmas Carol was from the silent movie era. This one's a talkie. A Christmas Carol has been remade a number of times over the years, notably in 1951, with Alastair Sim in the lead role. It was filmed in black and white. Colorized later, for your protection. Sim was a great Scrooge, but has there been a bad one? He's simply one of the most imaginative characters ever created. My fave? Jim Backus, from Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol.
Dickens let Ebenezer Scrooge's nephew Fred describe Port to Bob Cratchit: "It's wine, Bob. A cheery, warming, goodly wine. A wine that'll race through your veins with little torches. It's port, Bob. The fifth essence of the Christmas spirit." Well, way to bring it, Fred.
Quinta de la Rosa's vineyards are on the slopes above Portugal's Douro River, and the grapes are crushed by foot. Ruby Port is usually the least expensive of the many different styles of the wine. The de la Rosa Ruby Reserve Lot No. 601 tends to be slightly drier than the norm. The fruit flavors are bold, while the acidity rips and the tannins exert their will, with little torches.
Most of us grew up with the 1946 Frank Capra gem, It's a Wonderful Life, as a holiday staple. That's because the film's copyright expired in 1974, making it a cheap piece of holiday property for local TV stations around the country. Movie goers and critics alike were less than thrilled with it in its initial release, but the constant viewings over the years brought around everyone except Scrooge.
Wonderful Life grabbed five Oscar noms, but couldn't pluck any trophies from the gift tree. I used to hang at The Shack in Santa Monica, where the owner regaled me, as I sat next to the video yule log, by hitting the cash register while saying, "Get me, I’m givin' out wings!" That, plus the free Jagermeister shots he poured for me, really endeared him to me.
No Jagermeister for this movie. No Jagermeister ever, please. George and Mary Bailey gifted some new homeowners with bread, salt and "wine, that joy and prosperity may reign forever." I don't know what kind of wine it was, but we might as well make it an icewine from upstate New York. Weis Vineyards (just down the road from Bedford Falls, no doubt) has a Riesling icewine for about $60. It's a tiny bottle, but it sure beats a flaming rum punch.
Monday, December 22, 2025
Primo Portugal
The grapes for this red blend are 100% Portuguese. The composition is 35% Touriga Nacional, 35% Touriga Franca, 15% Tinta Roriz, and 15% Tinto Cão. The grapes were fully destemmed for vinification. The wine was aged about three quarters in French oak barrels and about a quarter in cement tanks.
They say the vintage was nearly perfect, with timely rain in June and September that made for even ripening, while cool nights in August helped the aromatics and acidity. Alcohol sits at 14% abv and the retail price is $36.
This wine is very dark in the glass. Aromas of blackberry, plum, anise, cedar, and tobacco grace the nose. The flavor profile is at once fruity and savory. Dark berries meet earth and sweet spice, as minerals take on a peppery note. The mouthfeel is medium and the tannins are firm. A bracing acidity keeps things lively. There is a fantastic freshness to the wine, possibly due to the partial cement aging. Pair this wine with pork, as it's a natural fit.
Friday, December 19, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - More Movies You Never Heard Of
Gee, thanks TFH gurus. Dead Mail is one of the movies they figure you probably don't know anything about. They must be reading my mail, because it completely passed me by, too. Excuse me while I go watch it real quick.
Okay, I'm back. It's not so bad that people shouldn't have heard about it. If you like your horror with some black comedy and a twist of civil service thrown in, zip over to Prime and get acquainted. If you're off of Prime due to some sort of protest, try AMC Plus. If you really need the protest in your life, try avoiding Netflix. No, I mean that. Just try.
I don't know if Australia's postal system generates as much humor as the one in the U.S., but Henry's Drive Wines makes a Shiraz called Dead Letter Office, so I guess the answer is "yes." It tastes a lot like Syrah, because that's what they call it down under. It's a $26 wine. Try shipping it for $26 by USPS.
The Admiral: Roaring Currents is a 2014 South Korean film, one of the many which did not receive an Academy Award for Best Picture. The South Korean director who did win mentioned that he would proceed to drink until dawn. That is something, I am told, directors are sometimes given to do, whether or not they win an Oscar.
Admiral Yi Sun-sin has just 13 battleships against a 300-ship Japanese fleet in the Battle of Myeongryang. So this is a movie you've never heard of, as well as a movie the details of which you cannot pronounce. Perhaps it pairs with a Scotch whisky, most of which no one can pronounce, either, like Bunnahabhain. Or an ornery beer, like Westvleteren 12. Let's get sweet with a German Riesling classified as Trockenbeerenauslese. In fact, let's get crazy and uncork Dr. Hermann’s Erdener Treppchen Riesling Trockenbeerenauslese Goldkapsel. It's crazy because you're going to have to pick up the $800 tab for this bottle. Trockenbeerenauslese, by the way, is the way Germans call for the sweetest of the sweet Rieslings. They are even thirstier by the time they get the word out of their mouths.
From 2022 comes The Son. This drama stars Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, and Anthony Hopkins, so you know it's worth a look. Top notch directing and writing also comes into play.
But, don't spring for an extra streaming platform just yet. Despite the high-level talent involved, it missed the mark with its audience. Actually, I hear it did receive a ten-minute ovation at the Venice Film Festival, but the critics were less than enthusiastic about the film. That's gentle phrasing for "they hated it." To say the scribes wouldn't have urinated on it had it been on fire is understating the case. The reels could have been aflame right next to the popcorn machine and the critics would have proceeded to the restroom ten feet away.
The story about a depressed teenager and the heartache he causes for his split family probably rings too true for many folks. Also, it was released at a time when people weren't really going to the movies, post-Covid. Maybe that's why it’s one of those films you've never heard of. But we're here to pour a glass for movies well-received and not-so-well.
Son of a Son is a California winery run by a fourth generation farmer. Christopher Ferrara's Red Blend uses Italian varieties (Sangiovese, Aglianico, and Barbera) grown in Paso Robles and sold for about $25.
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Wednesday, December 17, 2025
A Taste Of Old Vienna, With Bubbles
The non-vintage Stift Klosterneuburg Gruner Veltliner Brut is a sekt, the German and Austrian word for sparkling wine. It is made in the traditional method, just like Champagne. Its alcohol level is 12.5% abv and it sells for around $25.
This sparkling wine pours up frothy, with a white set of bubbles which dissipate quickly. The nose brings a ton of apples, pears, and minerality. The palate is quite refreshing, with lots of acidity and carbonation. Fruit is the star in the flavor profile, and the mouthfeel is clean, light, tingly, and just a bit peppery. There is just a trace of toast, but you won't mistake it for Champagne. It's just as much fun, though.
Monday, December 15, 2025
For A Good Time, Call For An Italian Wine
One of the wine's importers reports that "Giovanna Maccario is the daughter of one the pioneers of viticulture in Western Liguria, already bottling Rossese wines in the early seventies.” She has been making wine and tending vineyards for two decades.
The grape is Rossese di Dolceacqua, called Tibouren in Provence. Due to drought in 2022, Maccario only produced 5,000 bottles of this gem, rather than the usual 25,000. It was fermented in stainless steel tanks. Alcohol rests at 13.5% abv and the wine may cost you upwards of $50 due to its limited production.
This wine has a nose full of cherry and herbal notes, with a hint of bell pepper. The palate brings red fruit and a savory streak of earth and black pepper with it. There is a strong acidity, and firm tannins for a food friendly wine.
Friday, December 12, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - More Movies You Never Heard Of
Pairing wine with movies! See the trailers and hear the fascinating commentary for these movies, and many more, at Trailers From Hell. This week, we give you what Santa probably can't. More movies about which you were completely oblivious. Santa can take care of the wine pairings, but I'll steer his sleigh in the right direction.
Gee, thanks TFH gurus. Dead Mail is one of the movies they figure you probably don't know anything about. They must be reading my mail, because it completely passed me by, too. Excuse me while I go watch it real quick.
Okay, I'm back. It's not so bad that people shouldn't have heard about it. If you like your horror with some black comedy and a twist of civil service thrown in, zip over to Prime and get acquainted. If you're off of Prime due to some sort of protest, try AMC Plus. If you really need the protest in your life, try avoiding Netflix. No, I mean that. Just try.
I don’t know if Australia’s postal system generates as much humor as the one in the U.S., but Henry's Drive Wines makes a Shiraz called Dead Letter Office, so I guess the answer is "yes." It tastes a lot like Syrah, because that's what they call it down under. It's a $26 wine. Try shipping it for $26 by USPS.
The Admiral: Roaring Currents is a 2014 South Korean film, one of the many which did not receive an Academy Award for Best Picture. The South Korean director who did win mentioned that he would proceed to drink until dawn. That is something, I am told, directors are sometimes given to do, whether or not they win an Oscar.
Admiral Yi Sun-sin has just 13 battleships against a 300-ship Japanese fleet in the Battle of Myeongryang. So this is a movie you've never heard of, as well as a movie the details of which you cannot pronounce. Perhaps it pairs with a Scotch whisky, most of which no one can pronounce, either, like Bunnahabhain. Or an ornery beer, like Westvleteren 12. Let's get sweet with a German Riesling classified as Trockenbeerenauslese. In fact, let's get crazy and uncork Dr. Hermann's Erdener Treppchen Riesling Trockenbeerenauslese Goldkapsel. It's crazy because you're going to have to pick up the $800 tab for this bottle. Trockenbeerenauslese, by the way, is the way Germans call for the sweetest of the sweet Rieslings. They are even thirstier by the time they get the word out of their mouths.
From 2022 comes The Son. This drama stars Hugh Jackman, Laura Dern, and Anthony Hopkins, so you know it's worth a look. Well, don't spring for an extra streaming platform just yet. The critics were less than enthusiastic about the film. That's gentle phrasing for "they hated it." To say they wouldn't have urinated on it had it been on fire is understating the case. The reels could have been aflame right next to the popcorn machine and the critics would have proceeded to the restroom ten feet away.
The story about a depressed teenager and the heartache he causes for his split family probably rings too true for many folks. Maybe that's why it's one of those films you've never heard of, and maybe it would be best left that way. But we're here to pour a glass for movies good and bad.
Son of a Son is a California winery run by a fourth generation farmer. Christopher Ferrara's Red Blend uses Italian varieties (Sangiovese, Aglianico, and Barbera) grown in Paso Robles and sold for about $25.
Follow Randy Fuller on X and BlueSky
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Wholehearted Nebbiolo
This wine has a nice medium ruby tint in the glass, with a bit of brick red in the pour. The nose has plum and blackberry aromas, along with those of tobacco and purple flowers. The palate has a grip that won't turn loose, extremely firm tannins and wholehearted acidity. The overall impression is that of a savory wine that begs to be paired with steak, the fattier the better.
Monday, December 8, 2025
Peel Me A Pelaverga
One of my recent wine club selections was the 2023 Cantina Massara Pelaverga di Verduno. Yes, Lou finds the best wines for his wine club. If he selects it, I know I'll like it.
The Italian Pelaverga grape variety is pretty rare. Only about seventy-five acres of it are still under cultivation, and Lou says only eleven growers even bother to cultivate it. All of those growers are located in or near the Piemontese commune of Verduno.
Only grape growers in Verduno are allowed the privilege of putting their denomination on the label: Pelaverga di Verduno. Outside of this area, a Pelaverga grower would have to call it simply a vino rosso. These growers do grow Nebbiolo grapes and make very fine Barolo wines that get all the glory, says Lou. But Pelaverga is considered a special grape in Verduno, part of the area's heritage that deserves to be preserved.
As a side note, Lou describes the origin of the grape's name, with an apology for anyone who might be offended. I'll just say the name stems from the Italian "pela," which means "to peel," and "verga," which translates as "rod." Let your imagination run wild.
The 2023 Cantina Massara Pelaverga di Verduno comes from the chalky, sandy soil of three different vineyard sites in the village. Steel tank vinification takes eight days, and the wine stays in the tank to age for six months. Alcohol sits at 13.5% abv and the wine sells for around $35.
This wine has a light ruby red color. Its nose is bright and elegant, with aromas of pomegranate, cherry, and an herbal note that smells a bit like rosemary. The palate shows cherry, raspberry, and spice aromas, all cloaked in a delightful earthiness. The acidity is racy and fresh. The finish lasts awhile, and brings in a note of cherry candy.
Friday, December 5, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - Wilder Than Ever
Pairing wine with movies! See the trailers and hear the fascinating commentary for these movies, and many more, at Trailers From Hell. This week, wild times with Billy Wilder. We’ll have a wine pairing for each of these three films, too.
Wilder co-wrote and directed Fedora in 1978, a production by the West Germans and the French. It's nice when we can all get along and make movies. The title character is a famous and beautiful movie star who has retired to her own private Idaho, actually a Greek island. Word gets out that she has killed herself. Rumor has it that she did herself in, naturally for an actress, in the most dramatic way possible. She threw herself in front of a train.
The lug who loved her years before can't believe it, and he does a little digging. Apparently, it's not illegal to dig on Corfu. And here comes the ol' switcheroo. The big ball of confusion that unwinds and gets everyone all tangled up in it. It wasn't Fedora who killed herself, it was… it was…. Aah, why spoil it for you. Watch for yourself and see what becomes of the broken-hearted.
Valter Kobal is the fifth generation of winemakers in his family. They have persevered through the decades, through WWII, through communism, and now make their own wines in Slovenia, as Fedora Wines. Their output includes Chardonnay, a red blend of Merlot, Cabernet, and Refosco, and wines made from varieties indigenous to Slovenia, like Zelen and Pinela, most of which sell for around $36.
Avanti!, from 1972, stars Juliet Mills and Jack Lemmon. The script for the romcom was written by Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond, so there is that pedigree to consider. If you don't think it's funny enough, welcome to the club. Wilder reportedly didn't care for the finished product and claimed he didn't write it as a comedy in the first place. So, there.
Wine plays a tangential role in the movie. A deadly auto accident that serves as the film's linchpin happens at an Italian vineyard, and the owners prove to be unhappy that their vines were damaged by the crash. Colorado's Avanti Winery comes to mind, but wouldn't you rather have a nice Ligurian Vermentino? I thought so.
Witness for the Prosecution was directed in 1957 by Wilder, and he also had a hand in writing it. The script was based on the Agatha Christie play, which is what biz insiders call "stealing from the rich." Christie even said it was her favorite film adaptation of any of her works.
It was a good enough movie to garner six Oscar nominations and a handful of Golden Globe noms. Stars like Tyrone Power, Charles Laughton, Marlene Dietrich, and Elsa Lanchester turned in magnificent performances, but alas, Sayonara and The Bridge on the River Kwai dominated their categories. Lanchester did win the Globe for her role as Miss Plimsoll.
When the critics like a movie, it can be a tough sell to the public. Not in this case. Tickets flew out of box offices like it was a tickertape parade. The movie's ad campaign read this way: "You'll talk about it, but please don't tell the ending." Okay, I won't. But you'll be shocked when Laughton's character is revealed in court to be a cross-dresser. Oops. I did it again.
Aptos Vineyard, in the Santa Cruz Mountains, has a courtroom-related wine called Alternate Juror. I can relate to this because I was once an alternate juror myself. There is little in this world as unsatisfying as being an alternate anything. This Pinot Noir sells for $54, which is the least I would pay to avoid being the 13th angry man.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
A White Blend From The Rhone Valley
The 2022 Michel Chapoutier La Bernardine is a Châteauneuf-du-Pape wine. La Bernardine is the name of the house in the middle of the vineyards. The wine is made from Grenache Blanc, Grenache Gris, Clairette, and Roussanne grapes, which were vinified in oak and steel, while aging took place in stainless steel tanks. The alcohol content is 13.5% abv and the retail price is $65.
This wine has a beautiful golden color in the glass. Citrus, apricot, almonds and a floral note define the nose. The palate brings steely acidity and citrus flavors. The acidity is bracing, and the finish is long and delicious. Pair La Bernardine with white meats or seafood of any kind. It also goes nicely with a soft cheese.
Monday, December 1, 2025
Revisiting An Encounter From My Early Wine Life
Who is the "M" of M. Chapoutier? There have been several, and they just keep coming. Marius, Marc, Michel, Mathilde and Maxime have all made their mark on the Chapoutier brand in one way or another. When I first became serious about wine, Chapoutier was one of the names I was first acquainted with, and I am happy to revisit it now and then.
Les Meysonniers was vinified in concrete vats, and 90% of the wine was aged in them. The remainder was aged 12 months in barrels. Alcohol sits rather low at 12.5% abv and it sells for about $20, maybe less.
This wine has a medium-dark ruby color in the glass. The nose is what I always look forward to in a Syrah. The big cassis note, the faint earth note, the slight herbal note. The combination of mint, eucalyptus, dirt, and funk provides the perfect backdrop to that dark purple juice. The palate is as big and bold as one might expect, maybe bigger and bolder. Dark fruit flavors are buried in a savory mound of earth and herb. The tannins are firm. I’m going to make a rib eye steak before this bottle becomes empty.
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Friday, November 28, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - Occult Killers
1990's The First Power is a modern noir film in which a Los Angeles cop searches for, and finds, the Pentagram Killer. An anonymous tipster helps him reel in the bad guy, but it turns out the executed man was a Satan worshipper. Now they have to contend with a spirit who can inhabit other living people. Just when you thought the problem was solved, up springs one that's even worse.
No prisoner has been put to death in California for nearly 20 years, so there’s no telling how many future Satan spirits are currently residing on Death Row. I'm guessing a lot, probably.
The critics had few kind words for the film's sloppy logic, but the people who keep the movie business humming had plenty of dollars to plunk down for admittance to the show. They say the late rapper Eazy-E liked the film, so there's that. Gotta have some entertainment when you get tired of feuding with Dr. Dre.
Black Sea Gold is a Bulgarian winery where red and white wines are sold under the name Pentagram. If you can navigate their website, then you know more about the Bulgarian language than I do. I think the wines are fairly inexpensive, but the shipping has to be a killer.
In 1987's Prince of Darkness, a container of liquid is found to be, basically, Satan in a bottle. The Bad Genie. Instead of three wishes, you get three ways to be taken to the dark side.
The film was written and directed by John Carpenter, and had Donald Pleasance in the lead role as a priest. The liquid devil has been floating in that container for seven million years, kept secret by the Church. When the decision is made to keep it away from the Vatican, it's brought to Los Angeles. Thanks a lot.
The scribes hated the movie. One writer said it deserved, like Satan, to be shut up in a canister for seven million years. Instead, it now lives on Prime Video.
Australia's Coward and Black Vineyards makes a Cabernet Sauvignon called The Black Prince. Unlike Satan, it is said to offer a nose of blackberry pie with soft, supple tannins, for $35.
If you speak Italian, you may know 1975's Deep Red as Profondo Rosso. The only Italian I speak is "più vino, per favore," and I can say that only because I just googled "more wine please" in Italian.
Deep Red (Imma stay in my English language lane) stars David Hemmings as a musician who investigates a string of murders. Don't ask me why a musician is doing a cop's job. I just hope the cop isn't playing a sax on a street corner somewhere.
It's one of those things that strike me about Italian film. Weird happenings don't draw anyone's attention. Arguments about unrelated events seem to pop up out of nowhere and disappear just as quickly. Anytime a car is moving, it's like a chase scene. And even if it's called a giallo film, it's still just a slasher flick to me.
It may be just a slasher flick to me, but it was a regular War and Peace to someone. The original script reportedly ran more than 500 pages. I'll pause here for the audible gasp from every studio reader in Los Angeles. Never fear. Writer/director Dario Argento cut it down to a mere 321 pages. Despite the heft of that screenplay, the movie clocks in at just over two hours running time. That must have made a mess on the cutting room floor.
Cascina CÃ Gialla Barolo is a full Nebbiolo, deep red wine from Piedmont. If you're lucky, maybe you'll find a Black Friday deal with the $35 price "slashed" to $30.
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
An Unusual Grape, An Unusual Wine
This wine is dark in the glass, with light barely getting through. The nose is dark as well, and when I sniffed it I got a blast of Cassis. The black currant and black berry aromas are forceful and a bit funky. Earth, tar, and cigars also play into the profile. The palate keeps the darkness rolling. The black fruit and forest floor are as brooding as one could wish. And the tannins …they are alive and well. Big acidity adds to the tingling mouthfeel. I've seen other reviewers say that this wine is not everyone's cup, but those who shy away from it must not enjoy an adventure, because that's what this wine is.
Monday, November 24, 2025
Garnacha With An X
This wine is tinted straw yellow in the glass. The aromatic nose features aromas of peach, apricot, and Meyer lemon, most noticeably the lemon. There is a fair amount of lanolin salinity to it as well. The palate is loaded with lemon, and carries a ton of acidity along with some refreshing salinity. The finish is very long and keeps the savory aspect of the wine in mind. Pair it with shellfish
Friday, November 21, 2025
Blood Of The Vines - Trekkin' To The Stars
Pairing wine with movies! See the trailers and hear the fascinating commentary for these movies, and many more, at Trailers From Hell. This week, we have three wine pairings for movies which allow us to seek out new grapes and great acidity; to boldly drink where no one has drunk before.
No doubt you remember William Shatner as Star Trek's Captain Kirk. You may find his venture into wine interesting. Shatner had a wine tasting podcast about ten years ago. His Brown Bag Wine Tasting episodes were one-on-one videos in which he sat down with another celebrity to talk about that person's life and do some blind wine tasting. It lasted two seasons, not even long enough to put some age on a bottle of Riesling. "Dammit, Jim, I'm a rocket scientist, not a wine taster!"
1979's Star Trek: The Motion Picture is the first big screen version of the Star Trek story. All your faves from TV are here, on a mission to save the Earth from some sort of dangerous cloud. I'm glad they got the A-team on it. Everyone was holding their collective breath, waiting to see if the engine in the refurbished Enterprise would turn over. It did, and the director yelled, "Action!"
That's when the trouble started. Someone forgot to write any action scenes for the movie, so the cast doesn't have a whole lot to do. Hard-core Trekkies shelled out their Romulan dollars to see it, though. The movie's first weekend box office was a record setter.
There's a collection of Star Trek themed wines, featuring bottles like Klingon Bloodwine, the Wrath of Khan Cabernet, and the United Federation of Planets Andorian Blue. The website says the vineyards are located on "rolling hillsides near one of the oceans of planet Earth." Drink long and prosper.
Battle Beyond the Stars is a 1980 space opera. Of course, the term space opera refers to stories told in outer space in the same way horse opera refers to westerns. There are no arias, coloraturas or librettos here, but every movie set has to have a prima donna on it somewhere.
The movie reworks the story of The Magnificent Seven, which itself reworked The Seven Samurai. So this tale has come from ancient Japan, through the American West, and into outer space. Try doing that with Citizen Kane.
The film provided big breaks for James Cameron, John Sayles and Bill Paxton, although Paxton's contribution was working on the set as a carpenter. Early days, yes.
A futuristic movie deserves a futuristic wine. Future Perfect Wine is located in Los Olivos, and they make wines from some of Santa Barbara County's best vineyards. Their 2024 Dry Riesling hails from Kick-On Ranch Vineyard in the Santa Ynez Valley and sells for $45. Give it a few years and hope for that petrol emotion.
In 1972's Silent Running, Bruce Dern plays a sort of eco-astronaut in charge of several space-domes filled with earthly plant life. Trees and such have been killed off on their home planet, so a Noah's Ark of flora is sent to house what little is left.
The domes are attached to cargo ships. Naturally, when corporations decide they need to make more money, more money is made. The orders are given to scrap the bio-domes and return to carrying cargo instead. Our econaut bristles at the idea, and tries to save the domes. He reprograms the little robots to help him. This makes me wonder how long it will take these little robots wheeling around the sidewalks of Los Angeles to be reprogrammed as carjackers or stickup robbers. You know it's coming. We can't have nice things.
The efforts to save Earth's plants are noble, although largely ineffectual in the end. The shot of a robot tending to the domed forest with an old watering can is heart-wrenching. It makes me want to go out and water my own plants. Afterward, a glass of wine.
Michael David Winery's Zero Gravity Cabernet Sauvignon is made from Lodi grapes, using yeast strains developed on the International Space Station. It's amazing what grape juice can do in outer space. Expect to pay $26 for a bottle of this out-of-this-world Cab.
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