I am slowly but surely going to get some of the past adventures that I just have not had the chance to write about. Raconteurs always have stories buried, just waiting for the moment to boor a captive audience.

My Bride, I must admit is the music aficionado, I am happy with the music of the Rat Pack, classic Broadway musicals that have you dancing and singing as you leave the theatre and of course the music of the sixties. My Bride loves all genres, she loves operas and ballet, orchestral concerts, jazz and goes way beyond my choices, which she also enjoys. We went to see The Wine Raconteur, Jr. as he performed with the Henry Ford College Big Band playing classical, jazzed up and stylized Christmas Music. We sat at the table where his parents were holding court, and we have had a long history with his family as well. Our boy was the ad hoc emcee, as well as the creator of the evening. He found corporate sponsors, caterers and a venue that appreciated the additional attention as they were amid renovation construction.

The Henry Ford College Big Band has been an entity for ages, and some of the musicians have been with the group long since after they graduated from college. They have travelled with the band for concerts across the United States, but they have also performed in Europe, which is really quite heady for a local and at one time a community college. They lost “The Big Guy” who really pushed this group of dedicated alumni to go beyond the local gigs, and I think at one time they felt rudderless, but others took up the challenge and the baton with the intention of keeping the group intact and maintaining goals and keeping the energy on high voltage.

While we were noshing before and in between sets, my Bride was cajoling the bartenders to create her a Spanish Coffee and she was finally happy after a couple of attempts. As for me, I found wine, of course I did, to allow me to eventually write another article, see how devious I am. I enjoyed several glasses of Napa Cellars Cabernet Sauvignon Napa Valley 2022. Napa Cellars sits on the original five acres where it was established in 1976 along Highway 29 in Oakville. They still use the geodesic dome commissioned by the founder Charlie Woods. The wine is made by the winemaker Joe Shirley, and the fruit comes from a variety of vineyards in the Napa Valley including Atlas Peak, Oak Knoll and St. Helena and this wine is pure Cabernet Sauvignon. The grapes from the assorted locations were brought for processing and underwent a twelve-to-twenty-four-day maceration period. After fermentation, the wine was aged for twenty-one months in ninety-six percent French and four percent Hungarian Oak barrels. This deep-dark ruby colored wine offered notes of black cherry, blackberry, plum and cassis followed by toasted oak, vanilla, mocha and cloves. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed the dark fruits, baking spices, as well as traces of cinnamon and black pepper blending with supple tannins and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit, graphite, and some bright acidity.


























