When my Bride and I go with The Wine Raconteur, Jr. you just must go with the flow. One evening before the holidays, the joys of a raconteur, we met him and his wife, along with his parents, for dinner and then a night of music, across the street from a biker club.

Upon learning where the music venue was, I took it upon myself to suggest a restaurant that would be close by, and have good food and wine, you understand how my brain works. We ended up going to El Barzon, which I have written several articles about. The restaurant is famed for having Italian and Mexican food side by side on the menu; and we all had excellent dinners. I also took it upon myself to suggest a white wine which would accompany the dinner choices. I chose a new wine for the others, that I was sure that they would enjoy, Sella & Mosca La Cala Vermentino di Sardegna DOC 2024. Sella & Mosca (Sella e Mosca) is the largest wine producer in Sardinia, featuring local varieties and “international” varieties. The winery was founded in 1899 by two Piedmontese businessmen. Their I Piani estate is one of the largest wine estates in Europe with five hundred-twenty hectares of contiguous vineyards. Vermentino di Sardegna DOC was granted in 1988 and covers the entire island. The history of Vermentino on Sardinia is vague as to whether it is from Liguria in Italy where it is known as Pigato, Provence and the Languedoc of France where it is known as Rolle or from Spain, where it is barely seen anymore. Internationally, the lion’s share of Vermentino is Italy. There is not a lot of information about the wine, outside of soft pressing, cold settling, fermentation, and short aging in Stainless Steel. The golden colored wine offered notes of citrus, white florals and minerals. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine crisp white wine displayed tones of tropical fruit, pear, apple, along with good acidity and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit, citrus, terroir and a trace of iodine.

After dinner we went to Ro Cham Beau, just a short drive away and right across the street from a motorcycle club that had been there for years. I told my wife, it was probably one of the safest locations in the Detroit. The club was just getting it all together, an anteroom on one side and an ad-hoc band stage with chairs on the other side. We went to see The Velvet Fluegeltones, a truly eclectic group of musicians having fun, using their own custom arrangements. There were two fluegelhorns, a flautist, a clarinetist, two bass guitars, an acoustical guitarist, an accordionist, a percussionist on the vibes and a drummer. It was The Tijuana Brass in Motown. The music was totally enjoyable, and I must admit that I was a bit concerned, but I was easily brought into the throng of fans that evening. The whole evening, I was thinking of tunes like “A Taste of Honey” and the theme song from The Dating Game from the Sixties and Seventies.

In the anteroom there was a make-shift bar, as I am sure the owners were still feeling their way about the makeup of the room. There were munchies, beer, limited mixed drinks and a couple of wines being served. We had Agricola La Portera Tardano Macabeo Carinena Spain 2024. Agricola La Portera was begun in 2017 by three friends to apply what they do elsewhere and apply for themselves as well. Their first wine was La Pinada and in 2019 they began Tardano, in a vineyard in Carinena, Aragon. At one point, Carinena had given its name to a variety, and dominated the area, one of the oldest appellations in Europe, with a DO status in 1932. Winemaking in the region dates to the Roman times. The vineyards are in high altitudes along the plains of the Ebro River, with a Continental climate and a rocky terrain. Macabeo is known as Viura in Rioja and Navarra as a versatile white grape grown on both sides of the Pyrenees, and in France it is known as Maccabeu. There are two plots encompassing four hectares in the Almonacid de la Sierra Vineyard at 650 meters above sea level, on calcareous and clay soil; and the vineyard was planted in 1983. After manual harvesting, the grapes undergo a soft and short maceration and fermentation is with indigenous yeasts. The wine is aged for twelve months in a mix of glass, concrete and neutral French Oak; glass is the traditional method of the region for generations. A deep golden yellow wine that offered notes of orchard fruit, citrus, spices and wet stones. On the palate this light-to-medium-bodied, well-balanced dry wine displayed tones of yellow apples, lemon zest, and tarragon blending with moderate acidity and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit, nuts and flint.


























