Granholm vs. Heald

May 16 was the Tenth Anniversary of Granholm vs. Heald and it was a wonderful decision for all wine lovers in the states of Michigan and New York. The case was argued in the United States Supreme Court on December 7, 2004 and decided on May 16, 2005. Eleanor Heald and her husband were wine collectors and they also had a syndicated wine column that was carried in some of the local Michigan newspapers. Jennifer Granholm was at the time Governor of the State of Michigan and she was part of the political machine from Wayne County.

Third Party Shipper

What was going on in Michigan was that the wine distributing industry was curtailing the rights of individuals to secure wines for their personal consumption. If the distributors did not carry a wine brand, then the wine could not legally enter the state, and it is a very strong political lobby to this day. The state had granted allowances to Michigan wineries to be able to ship their product directly to consumers, because they were trying to build up the fledgling wine industry in the state, but they denied outside wineries from the same competition.

Michigan was regarded as a “Felony” state to wineries and they would not even attempt to ship wine to Michigan. I remember the old days, and how a winery owner explained to me, how to have wine shipped home. The winery could sell me wine, but they could not ship the wine. Once I had bought the wine, it was my own personal property and after it had left the grounds of the winery, the winery had no further interest in the product. I could then legally take the wine to third party independent shipper, one that handled and expedited wine shipments and I could have my property shipped back to myself after purchasing special shipping cartons for the conveyance of all the bottled liquids. I also took the further precaution of having them shipped to my place of business, had the packages marked as olive oil and then to ensure that an adult could sign for the shipment, if I was not there. Even then it felt only-quasi legal and that I was in effect skirting the law, which big political machines have been doing on the sly for years.

Direct Shipping

Since this case has been decided, I can now receive wine shipments at home, and basically all I really get is wine from my wine club, but I am glad that it is has become legal in Michigan. Some states are still considered “Felony” states because of the wording of the laws in those states. I still have to sign for a wine delivery, which is fine, one has to be an adult (Age of Majority) to buy wine, so having an adult sign for wine is understandable and totally acceptable. The good news is that the special wine crates are reusable and can be shipped empty ahead of time to where ever I plan on staying, to be filled up again, for another shipment home. The other good news is that just like this bad law is no longer in effect; neither is Jennifer Granholm the Governor of the State of Michigan.

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International Sauvignon Blanc Day

Another wine day that I missed when I was writing my articles was International Sauvignon Blanc Day. This is a varietal that seems to be grown everywhere and has a different personality based on where it is grown. This green skinned varietal is just as famous as a dry or a sweet white wine.

Pavillon Blanc du Chateau Margaux 1970

To give any talk about Sauvignon Blanc one must begin in France and in the Bordeaux region. Sauvignon Blanc is the varietal that is used in the white wines of the Medoc and they are known for their charming dry white wines. Of course in the same region over in Sauternes the same varietal is used in part to make the great dessert wines, so it is a very versatile grape just in France alone. One of the finest chateaus in the Medoc has made a white wine for years that has a loyal following. Pavillon Blanc du Chateau Margaux is a wonderful white wine made on the grounds of Chateau Margaux, but it carries an Appelation Bordeaux Controlee as only the red wines can carry the Margaux designation.

Orin Swift Veladora Sauvignon Blanc 2009 (A)

The grape has flourished beyond France and it has its ardent followers where ever it is planted. Down in Australia and New Zealand it is one of the mainstays of these islands and it has a unique crispness that is rightfully theirs. It is also grown in South America and has developed a taste that is also a bit different than either Australia or France. I would certainly be remiss not to mention how it flourishes as well in United States and has become a staple part of the wine industry. Whether it is called Fume Blanc or Sauvignon Blanc this varietal has been exploited from jug wines to great interpretations by crafted wine makers. Take for example the wonderful wine Orin Swift Cellars “Veladora” Sauvignon Blanc 2009.

Duckhorn Sauvignon Blanc

One of my favorite stories about Sauvignon Blanc took place in the historic French Quarter of New Orleans, where we have enjoyed several holidays over the years. Across the street from the hotel that we always stay at is the Court of Two Sisters and is one of the old fabled restaurants in an area that is famous for fabled restaurants. When I was looking at the wine list, I had to do a double-take, because one of the bottles of wine on the carte was listed at below retail pricing. When I asked our waiter if we could buy the wine unopened to take with us after dinner, he let us know that we were in New Orleans and most things are possible, so not only with dinner that evening, we also left with a six pack of Duckhorn Vineyards Napa Valley Sauvignon Blanc 1998. I mean how can you beat a great dinner and a great price on wines?

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World Moscato Day

I am a little late addressing World Moscato Day, which was May 9. I guess I had the good fortune to have so many articles written ahead of time that I forgot to look at the “Wine Lover’s Calendar” posted by the American Winery Guide. Moscato is probably the most popular version of the wine grape Muscat, which does seem to flourish world wide and there is around two hundred varieties of the Muscat grape, though only a handful are actually used in the making of wines.

St Sup Moscato

I have to admit that I am not a big fan of the grape, though we try to have it in the house especially for large groups when we are having parties. There is always a segment of guests who are not partial to dry wines and prefer something on the sweet side, so rather than disappoint our guests, we try to accommodate their desires.

That is not to say that I shun the Muscat grape, as we sometimes start off dinner at a restaurant with a glass of sparkling or frizzante wine; and often times it is a Moscato di Asti from Italy. It is a refreshing wine that has a festive air about it and it is not too heavy or cloying for the dinner afterwards. Then there are times when I will have the same type of wine after dinner, as my dessert course, if there is not something special either for dessert or in a special dessert wine. A good fail-safe choice is Brogo Maraliano “La Caliera” Moscato di Asti NV which I have had both before a dinner and afterwards.

La Caliera Moscato NV

I can also recall a time, when my Bride surprised me about some Moscato, as she claims that she is not a fan of sweet wines, even after dinner, though she will often at least taste my dessert wine to see if she is missing out on something special. When we made our trip to Napa Valley some years ago, we were doing some serious wine tasting and on some days we might stop at six or seven wineries, of course with a break for lunch and some more wine. We stopped at St. Supery and that winery became one of her favorites to this day, when we can find it on a wine carte. We ordered at least a mixed case and there were a couple of bottles of wine that she insisted we get. She fell in love with St. Supery Moscato 2001 and guarded it, like it was gold, until it was gone. I am sure that there will be more Moscato wines in the future, as one never knows what is on the horizon.

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Behind the Scenes at a Fashion Show

I have been a clothier all of my life and I have many great memories of those days. I even on occasion met celebrities in my professional career. There were times when we were asked to furnish clothes for fashion shows and this can be time consuming with no guarantees of any visible success, just intangible success. There were times when we did a show where the models were just volunteers of an organization and one never knew until the volunteers came in what to expect in regard to builds. I remember one time I did a show where all the models were professional football players and that was a real challenge, as some of them were huge and very difficult to fit, even with our extensive array of clothes and sizes. One show that I remember quite clearly was for a civic group and they had secured newscasters to be their models, there was a women’s shop that was supplying the woman’s clothes.

Bolla Soave 197-

The event was being held at the Raleigh House, which in its day was one of the finest halls in the metro Detroit area. The owner was a character in his own right and he used to get a lot of publicity for doing big catered dinners, and even some events that he did on his own dime. The menu for the event was fresh fruit, a relish tray, salad, a half roast chicken with stuffing, peas and carrots, a potato boat and Baked Alaska. It was a fine dinner, but my assistant and I had our dinners in an ante room off of the main room, as we were preparing for the chaos of the evening. I remember meeting the newscasters at the store to get them measured up for the event ahead of time and it was my job to get them dressed in a couple of changes for the show. When you get a group of people together even for a charity event, there will always be some prima donnas, and when they are in front of television cameras it can be magnified. Some of the models were gentlemen and in the chaos of changing would even offer to help hang up the clothes, and some just dropped their clothes on the floor, figuring the help would pick up after them. I do remember that evening well and I will say that one of the models was a perfect gentleman, in front of the camera and in person. Byron MacGregor was a Canadian anchorman and he was just a delight and it was no wonder that his recording of The Americans was such a great fund raiser for the Red Cross, and he passed away much too early in his life.

MI Redford Suburban League Autographed Book 1976

I remember getting a bottle of wine to have in the back room for dinner and perhaps to help with the “stage fright” for the models to bolster their attitude, since modeling was not their main career. I ended up with a magnum of wine, which is what they were pouring at the bar stations for the guests in the hall. It was just the right size for the evening. It was a bottle of Bolla Soave, one of the most known white wines from Veneto and made with the Garganega grape along traditionally with Trebbiano. Bolla is one of the larger producers of wine in the area. With all of the craziness in the back room of a fashion show, something as dignified as a glass of wine seems to make it a bit more bearable.

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MWWC #17: Epiphany

Epiphany in the religious concept is of the Magi and the manifestation of Christ on January 6, which is known around my house as Armenian Christmas. Epiphany in regard to the Monthly Wine Writers Challenge will use another definition, that of insight or revelation. Since I had the good fortune of getting to pick the word for this challenge, I figured I better write my article sooner then later, though I have already seen a couple of articles already. I might add that I can be rather nostalgic about wines, because I have had the chance to try a lot of wines over the years, and if you have even remotely read some of my articles I bounce around from the past to the present with no rhyme or reason. When I started college the Age of Majority had changed to eighteen and when I turned twenty-one, so had the Age of Majority again.

Ch Pichon Lalande 1964

I was not raised in a home where wine was a regular beverage, so I learned about it in my teenage years. In our house the beverage of choice and by that I mean, my Father, preferred and drank beer. Even though he was a naturalized citizen, he was born in Canada and to him beer could only be Molson Canadian. Of course we always had liquor in the house for company and back in the day, a liquor cabinet was really easy to maintain. We always had Seagram’s V.O. and Canadian Club (see what I meant about Canada), and then we always had Chevas Regal for my one Uncle. I had another Uncle that was in the Merchant Marines during the war, and on occasion he drank Bordeaux wines, but he was just as happy with a beer or a cocktail.

In my youth, part of the maturation process, I guess, was learning to drink and the follies that accompany that process. I remember that my friends would like to come and visit me, especially in the summer months, because my Father would hand each boy a beer to be enjoyed on our front porch, in Detroit every house had a front porch. His philosophy was that it was better for the kids to drink with some supervision, rather then having them sneak beers out of the refrigerator.

As I said, beer was the main drink of choice, and as we got older, we would all gather at the local park, park on the side of the road, roll down the windows, and we all would play the same radio station for some background music, while we sat at a park bench drinking some beers. As a kid of fourteen to sixteen hanging with the older guys was cool and it made me feel “older.” Sometime after my sixteenth birthday and I was able to drive, and the socio-political climate was not as tough on drinking, even for kids, I saw something that made me want to change my drink of choice. I was at the park one evening and now my friends were eighteen to twenty-one and we were having fun. A couple of picnic tables up from us, the same scene was being done, but this time by a bunch of guys in their thirties, and I thought to myself, this is not what I want to be doing for the next twenty or more years.

It was also the time that I started dating. Looking back I remember all the problems I would encounter going on a date. If we went out for pizza and a beer, I had to have twenty some pieces of identification (it seemed) and probably my priest along to vouch for me, and that wasn’t going to happen. As it was, I was attending a high school in Detroit that was not a regional school, it was what is now called a Magnet school, but back then you had to be invited to attend the school by your scholastic ability. The school was in downtown Detroit, so consequently all the students eventually learned about all there was to know about downtown. I remember the first time I took a young lady from school out on a date to a downtown restaurant. I didn’t have to tell her to dress up, because back then one dressed for dinner, especially downtown. I was also lucky that I had a moustache by the time I was in high school, and I have had it ever since, so I guess I looked a bit older and the suit helped as well.

I remember ordering the dinner for both of us, and since, a wine carte was also with the menu, I scanned the list for a respectable priced bottle of red wine, since we were both having steaks, after all what do adults eat, but steak. I ordered a bottle of Bordeaux Superior as I thought it meant a “superior” wine; I was very naive, but gutsy. The waiter took our order for the meal and for the wine as well, with no request for identification. May I say that we were both ecstatic, and how we didn’t start giggling I still have no idea. This was the introduction for me about wine, and since I was already a student in high school, it was easy to start studies about a new subject as well called wine. Let me say that the my studies in wine far out passed what I learned in Calculus and to this day I really have not had to call on Calculus, other than it did make me think a bit more logically, so I guess it was not wasted time.

I started drinking different red wines. I was trying Bordeaux, Bordeaux Superior, Medoc and Haute Medoc. I was asking questions in wine shops, while I shopped and tried at all times to sound like an adult, which is sometimes still hard for me to do. I mean wine was good, it had the same affect that beer did, and it was much easier to order without problems. Then one evening I had a “wine” epiphany that changed my whole outlook about the beverage and I discovered what the fuss was about that I had missed so far in my short life. The wine I had selected was a Second Growth, the first rated wine that I had ever tried. On the menu it was listed as Chateau Pichon Longueville, and I remember being as smart ass and asked if it was the Baron or the Comtesse; see what you can learn before ever tasting a wine. I mean here I was ordering my first bottle of wine from Pauillac, the fabled Commune of Medoc and it was Chateau Pichon Lalande 1964. The wine blew me away, as in the vernacular of the day. Even to a young kid like me, the sensory overload was amazing; the nose, the color, that first taste as I whistled in a last bit of air, and the finish that I could actually count numbers to, made me realize that wine had just surpassed a “date” thing and had developed a whole new meaning to my life. Instantly I had the understanding of why people raved about wine, maybe not in my neighborhood, and at that moment I realized why people had wine cellars and collections. It was my “wine” epiphany and there was no going back.

Ch Montgrand-Milon 1969

I also became a “snob” I guess because I started looking for wines and I quickly understood that even a wine that I had never hear of, by vestige of it coming from Pauillac or any of the other Communes was worthy of further investigation. I also discovered all the other areas of Bordeaux and how the varietals affected the taste of wine, and a few years later I discovered Burgundy and there was no stopping me. Thankfully I was only a “snob” for a couple of years, when I discovered that I still didn’t know anything and I had so much to learn. I am still learning to day and it has been so long since I had set foot initially in my high school building, and that building has since been razed and replaced by another institution still with the same name.

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A Quiet Mother’s Day

We normally do not like to go out for dinner on holidays, because we have found that the service tends to suffer, because of the hordes of people that only go out on holidays. Then there is the possibility that the menu may be a special one for the holiday, so rather than look for problems we usually stay home. There was a good size art fair in the one of the nearby communities and I thought that might be a nice way to spend an afternoon and then maybe stop at one of the many restaurants in that city. Unfortunately the weather did not look like it was going to be agreeable, since there was better odds that it would be raining. We had dinner on Friday night with our Son and his family for Mother’s Day and my Mother-in-Law was still in Louisville, so there would be no big family dinner. My Bride suggested that we go to the cinema and watch a film. It was her day and she wanted to go to a neighborhood theater in the next town, this is one of the few movie houses still intact, as compared to the mega-complexes that have become the norm, and alas this theater had succumbed to the financial needs and they retro-fitted the movie house so that it now had three screens where at one time there was only one screen. It is still a charming venue and we decided to get a quick bite before the movie.

Elsa Bianchi Malbec 2014

A couple of store fronts over from the movie house was a restaurant that we used to go to that had a very eclectic menu and featured jazz music, but alas the neighborhood could not support it properly (I guess) and it is now the Basement Burger Bar. They have a unique set up, they give you a menu, a two sided plastic covered sheet and a felt tip marker. You then build your own burger or salad from all of the choices offered and you make notations with the felt tip marker what you desire. There were several different choices for a burger, a myriad of toppings, choices of bread, and you even mark off the degree of wellness that you want the meat prepared, or on the other side were all of the choices to build a salad. We both ended up with a Kobe Burger, hers with Swiss and mine with Cheddar and we both had caramelized onions, very simple and neat.

Morande Pionero Pinot Noir 2013

The Basement Burger Bar had a nice selection of craft and popular beers as to be expected; they also had a nice selection of wines by the glass or by the bottle and not your typical choices. The varietals were expected, but the labels were not the local brands and that was refreshing to see. My Bride had a glass of Elsa Bianchi Malbec 2014 from San Rafael, Mendoza in Argentina. This is a single vineyard wine from the Dona Elsa Estate and it hit all the notes that a Malbec should be and not overly oakey. I chose a glass of Morande Pionero Pinot Noir 2013 from the Casablanca Valley in Chile. There have been some winemakers taking a chance growing this more fickle and demanding varietal in the valley, because of the cooler climate that is found there and there has been some success. The first sip that I had of this wine was a bit non-committal and then it started opening up and it was actually a nice glass of wine to go with my burger. We were both happy with our quick meal, but it is not what I would call “fast food.”

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Dearborn Farmer’s Market

Dearborn for the last hundred years or so has been thought of as the home of the Ford Motor Car Company and rightfully so, so the thought of a Farmer’s Market may sound incongruous. It really is not as far fetched as it sounds, I can remember for years seeing acres and acres of soy crops planted on vast stretches of Ford land in the middle of Dearborn. Henry Ford was a firm believer in soy, and I know at least once he was photographed in a suit made from the fiber of the soy plant. Agriculture plays a bit part of the exhibits at the Henry Ford Museum and also at Greenfield Village, two of the greatest tourist areas in South East Michigan and located in the City of Dearborn.

Flying Otter Noiret NV

A friend of mine that is with the Dearborn Chamber of Commerce through social media invited me to attend the opening day events for this market and I was able to oblige. Alas my friend was sequestered in a Chamber meeting, so the most I could do was wave and also to a couple of other members that I knew. As I wandered around the different booths or stalls that were set up by restaurants, honey makers, agricultural plants and an assortment of other vendors I discovered a winery. I always have time to have a tasting or two, when it comes to wine. One never knows what one may find that may be interesting.

MI Flying Otter Handbill

Flying Otter Vineyard & Winery is located in Adrian, Michigan about an hour and half away from Dearborn. As a Michigan winery it is relatively young and new and I was not aware of them, but then there are always new wineries to discover from all parts of the world, and one cannot always just keep drinking the same wine. I also think that it would be very boring if I kept writing about the same wines over and over again. Flying Otter uses cold-hardy varietals in their vineyards and if you go to the their website you can even read how they tried some and later pulled out some plantings to be replaced with others, as Michigan can have rather severe winters. They were offering five different wines to try; two whites, two reds and a dessert wine. They offered a Riesling which was a moderately sweet wine and then they had a white called Northern Lights. Northern Lights is made from Chardonel and Traminette grapes. Chardonel is a hybrid developed in New York State which has similar winters and is a cross between Seyval Blanc and Chardonnay. Traminette is also a hybrid of Joannes Seive and Gewurztraminer that was developed in 1965 and has the spiciness of Gewurztraminer. Northern Lights is what would be termed a semi-dry white wine with some crispness. The first red wine that I tried was actually a Rose called Sexy Devil and it is a blend of red and white wines. Sexy Devil is a mix of Seyval Blanc, Traminette, Frontenac, Chancellor and Noiret; these are all cold hardy hybrids and a real bonus for The Century Club counters. The other red wine that I tried was a bottle of Noiret, which is a cross between earlier hybrids and Steuben and I really liked this wine, as it had a nice peppery spice to it and I bought a bottle to let my Bride try what she missed. The last wine that I tried was a dessert wine called Cherry Pie and it is a natural for Michigan. Cherry Pie was a blend of Montmorency Cherry juice and Seyval Blanc and it was very pleasant and not a cloyingly sweet wine, which it could very well have become in lesser hands of a winemaker. All in all I enjoyed this surprising wine tasting and if I get a chance to be out in the direction of Adrian, I think it deserves a stop by.

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A Moving Day

Moving can be very traumatic and thankfully we are not moving to a new home. The moving that I am referring to was not nearly that dramatic; my Bride’s department was moving from one floor to another floor in their building. Since my Bride had recently had some surgery I did not want her to do a lot of lifting and she called me with a timetable that she had in mind for the move. When I got there she was boxing up her files and everything else that had to make the move and she was a bit upset as the location that she was going to had not been vacated and she had boxed some of the goods in anticipation of just transporting open boxes. After I found this out, I had to repack several of the boxes so that they could be sealed with her name on all of the boxes, and there were several of the boxes that I had to create some special boxes for the move and that made her happy. Of course she also thought that I had lost my mind, because she was loading a large cart with boxes, and as quick as she was loading the cart, I was unloading it. I told her that we have to transport certain boxes first, since they were going to be stacked for a day or two and we had to make some semblance of order while they were stacked in temporary storage. This did make sense to her and she claimed that is why she wanted me to do the move with her. It took three trips with the cart to get all of the boxes moved and piled so as not to create a mess where they were being stored.

Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc Viognier 2013

My “payment” for all of this work was a dinner, but since we were both dressed casually in denim, there were plenty of restaurants that I did not want to go to, but I said that I wanted to try someplace new. Her boss made a couple of suggestions, all of which I heartily approved of, but since our attire was more for moving, I had to pass on all of the choices offered. I was also tired from all of the work, and I wanted to go someplace casual that hopefully was not too far off the beaten track on our way home. Then my Bride remembered a restaurant that she had been touted about, that we had never been to and it met our criteria for the evening. The restaurant was in a strip mall and I must have driven by it a hundred times without even noticing it, I guess I am not too observant at times. We went to Peterlin’s Restaurant & Bar in Farmington, Michigan. I was surprised at how large the restaurant was and how large of a staff that they had for a neighborhood eatery. The main part of the restaurant was being used for a very large party, so we had dinner in the bar side, and outside of seeing so many different television monitors which is disconcerting to me, we sat down for dinner. The menu was very extensive and then when you added the extra sheet with all of the day’s specials there was a lot of studying to do. My Bride had an Asian influenced salad with chicken, something that she does not make at home, because it is not my cup of tea. I chose for an entrée a dish that had two breasts of chicken done with a Mushroom-Chardonnay Sauce with wild rice and vegetables. The portions were more than ample, and I must say that the food was excellent and very reasonable for the price.

Il Conte D'Alba Stella Rosa Bianco NV

When we were seated I was still overheated from all of the moving and I was looking for a white wine to chill off with. As I was looking at the wine choices I saw a listing for a Pinot Grigio from California, and the wine below it was from Italy, and your poor Raconteur was a bit frazzled still and I ordered the wine without really reading the entry. I had ordered a glass of Il Conte D’Alba Stella Rosa Bianco NV from the Piedmont region and when I tasted the wine I realized that I had ordered a Moscato based “semi-sweet” wine that was frizzante or semi-sparkling. The wine was a bit sweeter than I had planned on drinking, but it was pleasant enough and it allowed me to cool my internal system down. My Bride started off with a split of Moletto Prosecco Treviso DOC NV from Veneto and she was happy that it was chilled, but I thought it was a little light even for a Prosecco. Since the wine was from Veneto it could carry the prosecco name for the varietal, whereas from other regions the varietal would have been Glera. After the Prosecco she had a glass of Chateau St. Jean Chardonnay 2013 from the North Coast of California which was a good safe wine. The wine I went with afterwards was a Pine Ridge Chenin Blanc Viognier 2013 and this was the wine of the evening, we both agreed after tasting. It was a pleasant wine with just enough Viognier, though I am enough of a fan of that varietal that I could have had a straight Viognier and I would have been happy as well. This blended wine had the fruit harvest from two different areas; the Chenin Blanc came from Clarksburg and the Viognier came from Lodi. Now that I know where the restaurant is, when we need a fast dinner, we may stop there again as it is not far from our home.

Moletto Prosecco DOC Treviso NV

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A Nice Little Visit

The other day one of our son’s and his family stopped by for a visit and it was a nice quiet time. Two of the three grandchildren came with our son and his wife for dinner. My Bride is her typical style was all excited and she planned a little dinner for the group and it was a small enough affair that we could make it more intimate and we sat in the breakfast room.

Gonzalez Byass Finca Constancia VdlT 2007

It was not a fancy, but she still put out some cheese and crackers along with some charcuterie to nibble on while dinner was being prepared. The adults were in the kitchen and the two children were of course deep in trance with their electronic gadgets, such is life in modern times. My Bride went big and of course made too much food, but it worked out anyways. She did a quick marinade on a whole tenderloin and while that was cooking, she made mashed potatoes, mixed vegetables and spinach. She is a firm believer of having vegetables and starch along with the meat for a balance diet; and of course there is a salad as well. After dinner we had a cherry pie and ice cream, of course I would venture to say that cherry pie is the State Dessert of Michigan or it should be, of course there have been an ample amount of cherry orchards that have been replaced with vineyard, but there is no complaints from me.

Sterling Chardonnay 2011

We started of with a bottle of Sterling Vintner’s Collection Chardonnay 2011 which was in the refrigerator. This is a fine every day Chardonnay from the Central Coast of California and we always have a couple of cases of Chardonnay on hand, and always at least one bottle being chilled. This time of the year with the days finally getting warmer, a chilled glass of wine is a great way to start the dinner off properly. I selected a different wine for the tenderloin that I thought would be interesting from Spain. We opened up a bottle of Gonzales Byass Finca Constancia VdlT Castilla 2007. VdlT means Vino de la Tierra and this was from Castilla La Mancha and this area includes Europe’s largest delimited wine zone La Mancha, the wine carries the VdlT designation because it allows the wineries some leeway, by allowing them to use varietals that are not indigenous to the region. This particular wine was a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, Tempranillo, Petit Verdot, Graciano and Cabernet Franc. This wine is from a relatively new vineyard and the fruit is hand picked and aged from six to twelve months in a mix of American and French Oak barrels. It was very enjoyable and even with the mixture of grapes; it had a definite Spanish flavor to the wine as compared to Claret. The Castilla La Mancha region has a very long growing season, so the fruit normally matures to its fullest by harvest and I did not think that it was fruit forward, as so many wines seem to be these days. Of course our guests seemed to leave much too soon, especially for my Bride, but it was a most pleasant day.

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Another Surprise Memory

The other day I went down to grab a bottle of wine from the cellar to bring up for dinner and it was in an awkward spot in the rack. After I pulled the wine that I wanted I decided to look at what was glued on the wall that this bottle was hiding and it brought back a pleasant memory. If you aren’t aware when I built my wine cellar, I had paneled the walls with the old wooden wine crates and then when I ran out of them, I then painstakingly glued individual wine labels on the other walls to serve as a form of wall paper in the room, even though most of them would never be seen. This label brought back a memory from another buying trip when I was in Chicago years ago.

Romanee St Vivant MareyMonge DLRC 1974

It was my second time to have dinner at the legendary Pump Room in the old Ambassador East Hotel. Back in the day the Pump Room was one of the few restaurants whose name was recognizable and it meant Chicago, just like the London Chop House meant Detroit. The walls featured photographs of all the celebrities who had dined there over the decades and everybody gawks, no matter how many times they have been there. I remember starting off with a shrimp cocktail, when jumbo shrimp were really jumbo, followed by the house salad. The entrée that evening was a duck dinner that was wonderful and by that time, I was quite the fan of duck and I still am to this day.

IL Pumproom MB

Of course with an entrée of duck, I always think of a Pinot Noir, and I chose a spectacular bottle of wine that evening, one that I probably could not afford today in a restaurant, in fact I would really have to think twice about the cost even at retail for the cellar. I had a DRC Romanee-St.-Vivant Marey- Monge 1974. This is a fabled four acre plot that was owned by the family of the widow of General Marey-Monge and was part of the Domaine de la Romanee Conti, and about a decade later the family sold the property to the DRC. They used to lease out part of the property and I once had a bottle of it that I have already written about, but by this time it was all strictly DRC production. This is one of the Grand Crus of Romanee Conti, and it exemplifies what every wine from the Cote de Nuits wishes it could be. All I can say is thank God for such great memories and the chance to enjoy some of the true nectars of the Gods.

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