Tall Ship Manitou

Every now and then I guess we become bona fide tourists and while up in the Traverse City area we almost abandoned wine for a three-hour cruise. The whole crew of us boarded the Tall Ship Manitou. The Tall Ship Manitou is a replica of an 1800’s “coasting” cargo schooner similar to those that plied the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean. This ship was built in 1983 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire and was finished by Vermont carpenters in Lake Champlain and eventually sailed to Traverse City. They have a couple of cruises each day and they also offer longer cruises and over-night excursions if one is interested. They also have a smaller sister ship that is usually hired out for private parties. The Tall Ship Manitou can hold fifty-nine passengers and one sits where one can on the deck, as there are no chairs, but one can also tour the galleys and bunk areas in the hold while out on the lake, and they also allow landlubbers to take to the helm, more for photo-ops, and I declined, I can just imagine reading the papers “The Wine Raconteur runs the Manitou aground.”


We were on the Ice Cream Cruise, which meant that once safely at sail, everyone was allotted a small tub of locally made ice cream to enjoy. Though to get to that point in the cruise there was work to be done. While the ship has a formal crew, they enlist the passengers to assist in the raising of the sails, which required quite a few hands pulling on the ropes to hoist the sails up, no electrical motors here. So, there were about ten volunteers for each sail and we all received special instructions to be careful of certain parts of the sails that may swing, so to prevent a “man overboard scenario.” Yes, I was part of the volunteer crew to hoist and to drop the sails, as we were approaching the port at the end of the cruise. The ship was large enough and the water was calm enough, that there were no signs of mal-de-mer among the passengers. With such a short cruise, we never left sight of the peninsula while we were in the bay.


Once we were finished raising the sails and could sit back and enjoy the cruise. Beyond the complimentary ice cream and water, any other amenities were for sale while we were sailing. I waited for crowds to disburse and I must say that beer and pop seemed to be the overwhelming beverages of choice. Of course, I found something more interesting to buy and to share with our group. The L. Mawby Blanc de Blancs Brut NV was a definite bonus. Larry Mawby is considered to be the “Godfather” of the Traverse City region winemakers and he takes winemaking very seriously. He now only makes sparkling wines, his M. Lawrence line is made using the Charmat Methode and his L. Mawby line is made in the traditional and time-honored way to make the bubbles. This wine is made entirely from the Chardonnay grape and it carries the Leelanau Peninsula AVA. Whole clusters of grapes are pressed and fermented in Stainless Steel. Then the wine is blended with reserve wines and fermented a second time in the bottle and aged “en tirage” before degorgement, the same way the big houses in Reims do it. What a wonderful way to spend a few hours drinking a very well-made wine, while on the water and enjoying the sights of the area.

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Amical

I was going to call this article “Return to Amical,” but somehow, I have never written about this restaurant and I can’t understand why. I first learned about Amical back in 1994 after they opened up, from customers of mine that lived in Traverse City and they described it, as the best place that the locals like to eat at. I can readily understand that sentiment, because back then, all of the attention was to the new places that were taking advantage of the waterfront of the area and there is a lot of coastal land there. Amical is located right downtown, which was not as much of a focal point as it has become in the last decade or two. As the demand for better and better food has hit the area, Amical has accepted the challenge and grown into the French style bistro that it is now and as the area has become more and more affluent I can see how the locals may still frequent it often.


The restaurant was packed when we got there and it is good that we called ahead as there were nine of us to have lunch and the sheer size of our group precluded us from dining out on the street, but they did make adequate space for us inside. Thankfully we were there the day after the film festival, so it was rather quiet as all of the tourists that had invaded the area were gone, but the parking still showed signs of what the festival had wrought. One of our nephews requires special dietary restrictions, and Amical like all fine restaurants was able to handle the requests without any problems. Since there was such a crowd there I will only discuss the meals that my Bride and I had, and it was very indicative of the rest of the choices on the menu. My Bride went very “local” and ordered the Smoked Whitefish Pate which came with scallions, cream cheese, capers and crackers and a few pieces of the house bread as well, which went well with her meal. The pate was excellent, I usually refrain from ordering that most of the time, because it can be rather bland, but there was some excellent flavor, so she was very happy. As for myself I went with the Cornmeal Dusted Shrimp which was served with a sweet corn risotto, corn puree, red pepper jam and arugula. The shrimp size was more than adequate, while not Jumbo, much bigger than the norm and cooked perfectly, as there is nothing worse than over-cooked shrimp. Nobody including all the teenagers left complaining that they were still hungry, so that is a good sign.


Our first bottle of wine with lunch was Dauvergne Ranvier Vin Gourmand Cotes du Rhone 2014. If I get a chance to order and there is a Rhone wine that will always be on my radar. This is a relatively new winery that was started in 2004 by Jean-Francois Ranvier and Francois Dauvergne. The wine is a blend of seventy percent Grenache and the balance was Syrah that was aged for nine months in Stainless Steel so there was a bit more fruit forward. My Brother-in-Law chose the second bottle and it was the Trivento Amado Sur Malbec 2014 from Mendoza, Argentina. This was a much heartier wine naturally from the Malbec and there was eleven percent Bonarda and ten percent Syrah. The three different juices were aged in French Oak for eight months, then blended and aged for an additional five months in Stainless Steel and were allowed to mellow in the bottle for another five months before release. These were only two of the many wines offered on a large two-page Wine Carte. For the life of me, I can’t realize how I had forgotten to mention dining here before.

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Crystal Mountain

Crystal Mountain is a resort in the northwest corner of the lower peninsula of Michigan and it is a year- round facility. It is not far from Traverse City and is a major ski resort in the winter and a haven for all sorts of summer activities. What makes it rather unique is that one can purchase chalets, houses and even suites that abound on the grounds and Crystal Mountain will assist in the rentals of the properties when the owners cannot use it. We had booked one of the chalets for our trip and when we got there, we found out that we had been upgraded for our visit, which we surmise was from our history of staying there, and we ended up with a wonderful suite that was actually owned by someone in the main lodge. It may have been one of the largest suites that we have ever had while away, when we haven’t rented a house. Beyond the normal amenities that one finds on vacation, this suite, like the chalet we were expecting had dishes, stemware, toaster, coffee maker and a microwave oven, as well as a DVD player in the living room and it had two large screen television sets. The king size bed almost looked like a full-size bed in the bedroom. We felt special for the days that we were up there.


Her sister and family from Kentucky were also up for holidays, but they rented a house, because of size of their family and some friends of their children that they also brought up for the week. This was a three-bedroom home with a full kitchen, furnished, on two floors, plus a finished basement, so they had plenty of room to relax and there was even a full garage. A great get-away “cottage.” It was an easy walk from the main lodge to where they were staying and we were going to have a barbeque with them one evening, since their house also had a large barbeque on the porch just off of the kitchen and dining area. My Bride in preparation had acquired all of the ingredients necessary for her Caesar Salad and the Kentucky contingent had brought up a huge tenderloin that they marinated before they left for the drive up. Did I mention that we all have large car refrigerators that are plugged into what used to be known as cigarette lighters back in the day? There was no way to properly barbeque the tenderloin as one piece, so we sliced it into about two-inch filets and we had a wonderful dinner.


We had brought up some wine to have in our room, had bought more wine while we did some tastings at three wineries and I had brought a couple of wines that I wanted to try, that I had wrote about, but had not tried yet. The two wines that we brought for this meal were from Costco, America’s largest, but limited wine purveyor. The first was a bottle of Jean-Claude Boisset Pinot Noir Bourgogne Les Ursulines 2015. Boisset began as a family owned estate in 1961 within the walls of the historic Ursulines Convent in the Nuits-Saint-George area. They have since prospered and grown and have an extensive portfolio of Grand and Premier wines, as well as village-level and Bourgogne wines, and they were the first negocient to go on the big board with the stock market. This wine while on the basic level has a lot of good people behind it, and it was aged for fourteen months in French Oak on the lees, before bottling. While not stellar it was a very good Pinot Noir and it worked well with our dinner. The other bottle that we tried was Kirkland Signature Rutherford Meritage 2015. Rutherford is almost the center of Napa Valley and the largest AVA within Napa, so a Meritage can’t be all bad. This wine is a blend of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Petit Verdot, Cabernet Franc and Malbec. A little different wine, but it followed the Pinot Noir very easily and it delivered the taste that we were all looking forward. Afterwards we had some chilled Chardonnay that my Bride always has and we sat around a fire pit that was also on the grounds. I stayed as long as I could, but I was the only one that the mosquitos were making a meal of, no matter where I positioned myself around the fire pit.

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Villa Marine Bar

While we were up in the wine country, we took a side excursion to another village that we have been to before. We went to Frankfort, Michigan which sits on the Betsy Bay. There is quite a marina just off of Lake Michigan and the main street runs for about six blocks with an assortment of restaurants, taverns, inns and little shops. We also had a chance to walk along the beach, which I have to say is more invigorating to my Bride than for me. Frankfort reminds her of her youth at her family’s cottage up in Canada.


We also stopped and had a bite to eat at Villa Marine Bar. The last time we were in Frankfort, we were meeting up with friends and The Caller had gotten there early and he enjoyed some drinks sitting out on the back terrace overlooking the marina. Now, it was our turn to check it out. The back terrace was on the main floor, but because of the hill that sloped down from the main street, we were on the second floor in the back of the building and it was a beautiful way to relax and enjoy the day. The menu was decidedly bar food and we kind of figured that out, so we weren’t planning on anything special, just a nice setting. My Bride had the Barbequed Pulled Pork sandwich and I had the “Polish Reuben” which was charbroiled kielbasa with Swiss cheese, sauerkraut and Russian dressing on Marbled Rye bread. The companionship and the vista made up for the menu.


We also went for something cold to drink and we had some chilled wines. My Bride had the Four Vines Naked Chardonnay 2015 from the Santa Barbara County part of the Central Coast of California. I think that they call the wine “Naked” because it is un-oaked, which for years an oaky wine was the norm on the West Coast. This was a bottle of pure Chardonnay that aged on the lees for six months in Stainless Steel for a crisp unfussy taste, which on a hot day was delightful. I had a Portuguese Rosé which in my youth was where all that types of wine were noted for, think of Mateus. The Caves de Cerca Famega Rosé 2016 had just a touch of sweetness to be enjoyable with a pretty soft color. The indicative blend of grapes for this wine would be Tinta Roriz, Touriga Franca and Tinta Nacional, which are the three most popular grapes for this region outside of Albarino. The funny thing is that every time that I have this type of wine, I think back to the Sixties and Seventies and most men would not order it out in public, because it was not a “manly” drink, but you know what? I enjoy the flavor and taste of a chilled Rosé.

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Back to Beulah

Cold Water Creek Inn was beckoning us back after three wineries in the Leelanau Peninsula. We were going to be staying much closer this trip to the northwest corner of Michigan and staying at a resort. Beulah is a very quaint village right on the shores of the large inland Crystal Lake. This whole part of the world has not only become the playground for Michigan, but it has also been discovered by Illinois. What used to be considered a sleepy area has been rediscovered and there is a strong desire by the vacationers to be less genteel and rustic and now to be a playground for the foodies. While the area has been dominated for wine lovers, they have also brought their desire for food with them. Hence, how we come to Beulah. My Bride who knows this part of the world much better than I, has been there often, usually for supplies as she likes to have her hotel room stocked with a larder, in case the Fifth Army needs provisions. I have discovered it, because through Social Media, an alumnus of mine who is a Master Chef had moved up to this area for his wife and has been hired by Cold Water Creek Inn to direct the culinary part of the Inn from just basic foods that the locals have loved for years, but to attract the new breed of travelers that are looking beyond classic Michigan Perch and Planked Whitefish.


We were so enamored with the quality of the dinners that we had the last time that we were there, that we had to make a return trip, as we are part of that new breed that is interested in great food. I mean just because we are away from the city, doesn’t mean that we have to settle for a second -rate dinner. The regular menu that can be found in the very large restaurant and tavern part of the Inn is very classic in a Michigan manner. In fact, I can go out on a limb and state that the basic dishes have probably been elevated in quality and style and still will keep the regular clientele ecstatic, but the specials of the night, and some of the specials that I have seen posted are worth the four-hour drive. That evening the specials were both fish dishes, one was Wild Salmon and the other was Ecuadorian Swordfish. My Bride immediately opted for the Salmon, so I chose the Swordfish. I have to say that neither of us have had great experiences with Swordfish in all of our travels, I think that the meat was either too well done and hence very meaty or it tended to be very oily, so I was the test case. The two dishes were both served with a sauce or glaze of pineapple, butter, lemon zest, cilantro, lemon juice and parsley and it was delicious. The big surprise and a most pleasant surprise was that the Swordfish was superb and it was not dense. My Bride could not get over the fact that I had the better of the two dishes and that was way out of character for her, because she is extremely Salmon-friendly.  We finished the dinner with a wonderful freshly baked cobbler, the Chef is a man for all seasons.


Of course, we both had white wine for the evening. I had the Chateau Fontaine Chardonnay 2015, a local wine of the area with a Leelanau Peninsula AVA and we had enjoyed this wine the last time we were at the restaurant and it is one of the few wineries that we have not had the pleasure of stopping by and do a tasting. Chateau Fontaine grows not only Chardonnay, but also Pinot Grigio, Gewurztraminer, Riesling, Pinot Noir, Merlot and a few others as well. This wine was aged for eight months in Stainless Steel and I really enjoyed it, the both times that we have had it. If I think back to the early days when I first really started exploring wines, I would have passed this wine immediately because of where it came from, but that is not the case today. In hindsight, I think that this wine would have been better for my Bride, but it worked well for me as well. My Bride had the Maso Canali Pinot Grigio 2016 from the Trentino region of Italy. This winery is rather unique in that they only make and offer one wine, so they pay a lot of attention to this singular wine of theirs. Something special about this wine is that after harvest, they allow a small portion of their crop to continue and these late-harvested grapes are laid out on racks for eight to ten weeks to concentrate the natural sugar and then all of wine is aged on the lees for one month then blended together for a very nuanced and dare I say, a more full-bodied Pinot Grigio. It was an excellent wine and I think it would pair very easily with most fish and seafood, not to mention some other dishes as well. After dinner, we saw the Chef again and he also introduced us to the owners of the Inn and we had a nice conversation. We were in a bit of a quandary, after having had our second wonderful meal at the Cold Creek Inn, how do we show our appreciation for the Chef and his culinary artistry. Mere cash would seem gauche and tacky, so the Chef and I went out to our car and went through the wine that we had bought that day at the wineries that we had visited and I gave him a bottle of the best wine that we had found on the trip, a bottle of the Boathouse Vineyards Merlot 2012 with our blessings. He later informed me that the owners were so impressed that they were going to get some of this wine to put on their wine list as well. Wine is an integral part of some great memories that I always try to impart.

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Bel Lago Vineyards

Bel Lago Vineyards is another Michigan winery in the Leelanau Peninsula and in Italian it means “beautiful lake” and that is what Lake Leelanau is. The winery was founded in 1987, but there had been vines planted back in the 1980’s. They own thirty-seven acres and there are over one hundred varieties planted including Pinot Grigio, Chardonnay, Cabernet Franc, Pinot Noir, Gewurztraminer and Riesling. They have also planted some Cold Hardy grapes like Auxerrois, Siegerrrebe and Cayuga White. The winery offered twenty-two wines and five ciders when we were there.


The winery produces anywhere from 17-20.000 cases of wine per year, but not all the wine that is produced carries the Leelanau Peninsula AVA, because not all is Estate Grown, and some of the wines carry a Michigan AVA and I even tried one that had an American AVA. The Auxerrois “Lot 1514” is a multi-vintage blend in neutral oak barrels, aged just long enough to maintain the fruitiness of the Auxerrois and some of the fruit was brought in from Washington State. Also in the white wines, we tried their Pinot Grigio 2014 which was aged Sur Lie in Stainless Steel and it was a good everyday Pinot Grigio. The Pinot Grigio & Chardonnay NV had a little more body from the added Chardonnay grapes and was easy to drink. I found the Semi-Dry Riesling 2015 to have a sweeter aftertaste than I expected from a Semi-Dry.


The two reserve red wines that we tried were much better, but they both carried the Michigan AVA designation. The Cabernet Franc 2013 was aged for thirty-six months in French Oak and had some body and heft, but as my Bride pointed out, the Cabernet Francs that we had encountered in the Niagara-on-the-Lake area of Ontario, Canada far exceeded this wine. The other wine that we tried was their flagship wine Tempesta 2013 which was predominately Cabernet Franc blended with Merlot, Regent, Lemberger and Marquette which was aged for thirty-two months in a mix of French and American Oak barrels. I thought this wine had the most personality and the Cabernet Franc did carry this wine.

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Boathouse Vineyards

This was a first for me, a winery that can be visited by car or boat, as the tasting room is located on the waterway connecting North Lake Leelanau with South Lake Leelanau. Michigan is the pleasure boat capital of the country with all of its coastal areas and marinas. Boathouse Vineyards has capitalized on this and it was a new winery for us to visit. If you haven’t discovered it by now, I guess I am rather gregarious and when I am at a winery I like to take notes and my Bride and I were handed over to none other than Dave Albert, an ex-auto guy (go figure in Michigan) who decided to be in the wine business. What a pleasure it was to talk with him, his passion for what he is attempting is marvelous. He has developed twenty-one acres (ninety-nine percent vinifera) and of that acreage half is devoted to Pinot Noir, Cabernet Franc and Merlot. Not only was there a crowd of people tasting, there was a small concert going on outside between the tasting room and the docks, it was like one big party.


Boathouse Vineyards is not a large winery, but they are dedicated to making the most of what they have. They were offering seventeen different wines and two ciders the day that we were there. Even with the crowd Dave was answering all of my questions and offering more wines for us to taste. He is a great business man and is using French Road Cellars for the winemaking. While French Road Cellars sounds like a competing winery, they are in fact the first custom-crusher in Michigan and they are aimed to assist the new wineries that are developing each year in the area, and they are planning to eventually to be a twenty-thousand case facility, and this is a rather common business in other parts of the country.


Did I tell you that we were having fun, I can tell you that my Bride was getting quite animated, and that is a sure sign that she is enjoying the moment. We started off with some white wines, first the Pinot Grigio 2016 which had a nice soft color, but a little light on the nose. Then I requested to try the Dry Dock Riesling 2016 and my Bride gave me a funny look, because she is not partial to the Riesling wines that she has tried from Michigan, and she was even impressed by this Estate Grown wine that was dry in a more Continental style with a delightfully long aftertaste. I had to try the Seas the Day 2015, because the name alone tickled my sensibilities and it was a blend of Muscat, Chardonnay, Auxerrois and Pinot Gris and it was sweeter than I prefer, but not overtly sweet and well balanced to my taste. The last white wine, we had was suggested by Dave and it was the Boathouse Bubbly 2016 and it was an off-dry Riesling that had been aerated, it was interesting, but not my glass of wine. Dave then switched us over to the red wines and we started off with Sunset 2014 which was non-oaked and each vintage will be different as it is a blend of all the left over red wines, and this one was Cabernet Franc, Merlot and Regent. We tried the Pinot Noir 2013 made from Dijon Clones and aged for nine months in French Oak and I found that this persnickety growing grape made a lighter wine, but as the vines mature, I think that they may bring more nuance to the wine. The Cabernet Franc 2012 was the wine that my Bride was chomping at the bit to try and this wine was aged for nineteen months in French Oak and it was delightful and well balanced. The winner of the day and it may be the dearest bottle of Michigan wine that I have ever bought and it was well worth the bottles that we took home with us, was the Merlot 2012. Can you say awesome and surprising, it was a perfect bottle of Merlot and almost made me forget where I was, after nineteen months in French Oak this wine won me over, and after looking over the tasting sheets, I guess it won others over as well, as it received the Gold Medal from the San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition. We may not cruise back there by boat, but I guarantee that we will be driving back there for a return visit and more space in the trunk of the car.

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Reunion 2017

Woodrow Wilson Junior High School had their Seventh reunion and this one had Deja-vu written all over it. Most people have high school reunions, but in Southwest Detroit we celebrate our Junior High. I am not sure how many have gone to all seven of the reunions, but I know that I have. The first one was kind of an ad-hoc affair where we met at a bar and it was a good time. The second one was an organized affair that one thinks of, for a reunion, but our reunions are open-year parties; so, we have had graduates from the Fifties, Sixties, Seventies, Eighties and Nineties, until the school was changed to an academy. The third reunion I had the honor of being the chairman, but I was blessed to have a great group of people assisting and the groundwork was set for the years that followed. The reunion besides being a great way to see people that one grew up with, there have been teachers that have attended some of the events, we have had live music at times courtesy of the professional and semi-professional musicians that have walked the halls of the school and on a more solemn note there is a break in the good times, and the attendees take one of the helium balloons that adorn the tables as centerpieces and write the name of a friend and former graduate that is no longer with us, and the balloons are sent up to the heavens after a prayer.


Since the inception the entrance price was twenty-five dollars, and for that one received the entertainment, food, beer, soft drinks and sometimes wine. The food is set up buffet-style with salads, breads, vegetables and starch and a choice of three entrée choices. The dinner choices this year was roast beef, mostaccioli with a meat sauce and “city-chicken.” “City Chicken” for the uninitiated is a skewer of veal and pork cubes that have been breaded and then baked and finished off with a gravy, it may be a Michigan dish for all I know, but I remember having it as a kid at some of my friend’s homes. There were a couple of sheet cakes for dessert, one frosted with the school upon it, and the other extolling the theme of Southwest Detroit. Afterwards one of our grads offered to take photographs of the attendees, and even with the attendance down there were plenty of group photos. Many were done by individual years, but alas, my classmates had prior commitments and we usually had the largest group, so the few of us that did attend were grouped with all of the Sixties alumni. Our photographer worked all evening and she did a tremendous job, as she even had time to take individual sittings, couples and then there were even some groups that wished to moon the camera. We also had a volunteer videographer who has been posting his work for the last couple of years, including some fun videos where one-person morphs into another person, and I feel sorry for the young lady that had to morph into herself from me and my moustache.


There was more Deja-vu as there was a repeat from the second reunion where a group had a magnum of Gallo Moscato and they were not aware that it did not have a screw-cap closure, so as they were hunting around for a corkscrew they were sent my way, as everyone surmised that I would have one, which of course I did. I handed them my waiter style corkscrew from my pocket and they had never used one before, so I did the honors, after all, who would want to see anyone parched on a summer day? Another example of Deja-vu is that I do stick out like a sore thumb, even with my dark indigo denim trousers, because I have my hat and a sport coat, alright I admit I wear a sport coat like a young lady carries a purse, because it is the only way to have everything that I might need without having bulging pockets on my trousers. The final Deja-vu is that I bring wine to the event, and nobody is surprised at that. It was a warm summer day/night and I decided to have a Sauvignon Blanc and I traveled with a wine glass, because it just wouldn’t work with a plastic or Styrofoam tumbler. I had a bottle of Quintessence Pouilly Fume 2015 from the Upper Loire Valley of France. This is one of the areas where Sauvignon Blanc really shines and shows off the typical flint and limestone of the terroir of the region, alas this wine was a pale representation of what I was hoping for. I also found out afterwards that it is imported by Bronco Wine Company and they are known for their popular priced wines without a lot of nuance, but they fit the niche market that they have developed. It was in my cellar, but I don’t recall purchasing it, but it did the job that I wanted, namely a nice chilled white wine while I enjoyed the festivities. Here is looking forward to the Eighth Reunion.

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Boskydel Vineyard

Bosky means “befuddled with drink, inebriated” as once explained by Bernie Rink the proprietor of Boskydel Vineyard in the Leelanau Peninsula. I had to visit this winery, the first bonded winery, in the area and I read that the winery is going to retire. The Leelanau Peninsula and the adjoining Traverse area are now teeming with wineries in the state of Michigan, but in 1976 there was only Boskydel. The view from this difficult and off the beaten track destination was excellent, but there are some that call Mr. Rink, the Wine Nazi ala Jerry Seinfeld, for not wanting tour busses of visitors stopping to taste wines at his small and eclectic tasting room. He has been called a curmudgeon and I guess when one is in their nineties, that is a well-earned title. I wish that he had been present at the tasting room when we were there.


The tasting room reminded me of what I can imagine the early days of Napa were like, before it became a tourist destination. Posters and knick-knacks that vie for attention from the small tasting bar. Another throw-back to the old days, is that the tastings were gratis and that was very refreshing and a change of pace. Boskydel produces about five to six thousand gallons of wine per year from their own estate. They specialize in Cold-hardy grapes, the French-American hybrids created for colder climates, even though the area shares the same latitude as some of the greatest wine production areas of the world. The day that we were there, one of the sons was handling the tasting room and he was taciturn and not prone for any conversation, which made the moment not as memorable, but I can appreciate the fact that he could just be sad that they were closing down, and I get that.


The winery was offering several wines and some deep discounts on case purchases. The wines offered that day were Vignoles 2015, Soleil Blanc 2016, Seyval Blanc 2016, De Chaunac 2013, Roi des Rouges 2013, Rosé de Chaunac 2013 and Rosé du Cru 2013. We would have tried them all, but since we were not paying for the tasting, we felt that it was rather gauche. I will mention two of the wines that we tried as these are grapes that one does not usually encounter. The De Chaunac 2013 was described as ‘semi-dry,” but I would call it more semi-sweet and that is what I expected, from other Cold-hardy red wines that I have tried. It was very pleasant and I think that it would pair very well with more casual dinners or just by itself and some friends. The Roi des Rouges 2013 had more personality and a bit of spice that I found very attractive. This wine is a blend of Marquette, Noiret and Geneva Red, which was developed at Cornell University and was originally named GR7. The Noiret is what gives the wine the peppery spice flavor that I have found to be enjoyable and would pair very well with some zestier dishes or once again by itself. We left the winery with some wine and with some glasses as keepsakes from the very first winery in the Leelanau Peninsula.

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Bear with Me

This is just my way of giving an apology to the other bloggers, as I have been away on holidays. While I did take my laptop and my phone, I neglected my normal daily duties of keeping up with the writings of the others which is not my usual practice. It appears that between my holiday and then scrambling with my attempting to create a cash flow when I returned, it has been eighteen days since I have seen the working part of my blog from my publisher. I am in the process of catching up.


I wrote a couple of weeks of articles in anticipation of our latest trip, as I do like to keep a steady list of my ramblings out there. I was just remiss that I could not handle all of the responses and readings like I would normally do. There were too many places to visit and too many people to be with, so all of my Social Media endeavors had to take a back seat. I thank my Bride for allowing me some time to get some things accomplished and I will be back soon to a steadier stream of activity, but wine, friends, family and food do get my attention, so I don’t want anyone to think that I was snubbing or ignoring them. I also wish to thank those that kept up and approved of my writings without the quid pro quo, you are the best.

 

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