Two Wonderful Reds

The joys of a quality wine shop like the Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan is enjoying the wines that are offered to you.  Some days it will be whites and rosés, sometimes sparkling wines, and other times it will be reds.  And I will say always, that there is a great chance of trying varietals and districts that you have never encountered.  It will always make you smarter for the future, when you are in a restaurant, because you can make wine assessments much easier, with the more knowledge that you have.

I had a chance to taste Daou Vineyards “Soul of a Lion” Cabernet Sauvignon Adelaida District/Paso Robles 2020, which is the Tenth Anniversary of this wine.  Daou Vineyards is famed for their Cabernet Sauvignon, and their Bordeaux-style blends; as well as Rhone styles and Burgundian style wines.  Their wine portfolio is divided into four tiers at different price points.  The top-level is their Estate Collection, which made from estate-grown fruit and “Soul of a Lion” is their flagship wine.  The estate was established in 2007 by brothers George and Daniel Daou, who previously had a successful IT business.  The initial purchase was for part of the Hoffman Mountain Ranch, and in 2012 they purchased the balance of the estate and now have two-hundred-twelve-acres of vineyards.  The Hoffman Ranch was the first modern commercial winery in Paso Robles after Prohibition.  It was established by Stanley Hoffman with the help of winemaker Andre Tchelischeff.  The “Soul of a Lion” was named for their father with the intention of making the finest Cabernet Sauvignon from DAOU Mountain. The wine is a blend of eighty-one percent Cabernet Sauvignon, thirteen percent Cabernet Franc and six percent Petit Verdot.  The wine was aged for twenty-two months in new French Oak.  A very deep purple wine with garnet reflections and offered notes of black fruit, tobacco, leather, florals, and a whiff of dark chocolate.  On the palate, this was a big wine offering great tones of black cherry, currants, cassis with secondary tones of figs, truffles, baking spices, ripe tannins, and limestone. With a nice long count for a finish evoking more black fruit, espresso, pepper, and terroir.  This wine could easily accept ten to twenty years in the cellar.

The wine to follow was also a show-stopper.  We enjoyed Dominus Estate Christian Moueix Napa Valley 2019 as I was curious to see how a new vintage would taste like.  Dominus is Latin for “Lord of the Estate.”  I am sure that Christian Moueix knew that he would be pressed to live up to that title.  Christian Moueix comes from a famed wine family from Bordeaux, France and among the many wineries that they own is Chateau Petrus (which alas I have never had) and Chateau Trotanoy both from the Commune of Pomerol.  He acquired the old Napanook Vineyard in Napa Valley and has made it his own.  The estate is based around the Napanook Vineyard which was originally planted in 1838 by George Yount.  Originally the estate was one-hundred-twenty-four-acres and ten more acres have been added over the years.  The estate is organic and they use dry-farming techniques, first used at Chateau Petrus, on a gravely-clay-soil with gentle sloping for natural drainage. Some of the common procedures that they use for each vintage are cluster sorting by hand, optical sorting of berries, gentle pump-overs to delicately extract aromas, color and tannins, and hand-racking barrel to barrel every three months.  The wine is a blend of ninety percent Cabernet Sauvignon, four percent Cabernet Franc, and six percent Petit Verdot.  The wine is oak, of which forty percent is new for about twenty months.  A deep ruby-red offering notes of black fruits, tobacco, jasmine, and spices. On the palate tones of black cherry and cassis are first, followed by currants, licorice and silk tannins and then ends with a long count finish of plums and graphite.  Definitely a good ten years in the cellar to make this wine truly memorable, even though most will enjoy it young.   

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Two From Emile Beyer

One of the joys of going into my local wine shop, the Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan, is that I never know what will occur.  If they are really busy, I know that I can always come back, rather than disturbing a private wine tasting session.  Even though the customer had basically made his choices, and they were great, the shop introduced us both to a couple of wines from Emile Beyer from Alsace.  Alsace, while now in France, has had a long and checkered history belonging both to the early French and early German territories. It is the only French region to grow significant amounts of Riesling, Gewurztraminer, and Pinot Gris.  The fourteen generations of the Beyer family date back to 1580. 

Today, Christian Beyer and his wife, represent the Fourteenth generation of the Beyer family in Eguisheim.  He is the current steward of the land that has been written about in documents going all the way back to Old French and Old German. Beyer makes three levels of wine: the “Tradition” line are wines meant to be consumed young, showing the true varietal character of the grapes of Alsace, “Eguisheim” which is a series of varietal wines produced from estate fruit and older vines, and “Terroir” wines those grown in single vineyard sites and Grand Cru rated vineyards.  The first wine that we tried was Emile Beyer Les Traditions Pinot Blanc Alsace 2021.  The winery is in the process of conversion to total sustainable practices.  The soil is clay and limestone.  The wine is a blend of seventy percent Auxerrois and thirty percent Pinot Blanc, with vines from ten to twenty-five years of age, coming from both estate and purchased grapes.  The harvested grapes are pressed slowly and gently, and the juice is allowed to settle, before a cool and long fermentation in Stainless-Steel tanks; the aging continues in the tank on the lees for several month.  A pale straw-yellow colored wine offering notes of fresh apples and white florals.  On the palate there were tones of fresh fruit with creaminess, wonderful acidity, bright and crisp, with dry finish beckoning for another taste.  It could easily be my favorite white of the year, for a go-to wine in the cellar, so refreshing and definitely food friendly.

We then enjoyed Emile Beyer Eguisheim Pinot Noir Alsace 2020.  Christian Beyer joined the family business after studying oenology in Burgundy and work professionally at Chateau Rieussec in Sauternes and Schloss Johannisberg in the Rheingau.  The “Eguisheim” collection was certified as organic in 2014.  The fruit is from estate vineyards, where the vines are forty-years or older and from limestone and marl grounds.  The wine is pure Pinot Noir and the fruit is manually harvested, and the grapes are gently pressed and undergo a long, cool fermentation in a tank.  Aging is done in a combination of one- and two-year-old barrels, and a neutral tank for almost a year.  The wine is a black-cherry color with bright garnet reflections and offers notes of first of vanilla and spices, and then red fruits; a nose that needs a few minutes to open up.  On the palate great tones of black cherry, layered in wood, with silky tannins and a medium count finish.   

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Fine Wine Source – August 2023 Club Selections

It feels like ages since, I walked into the Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan, after all of our side adventures, but it was time to get the club selections.  I am a firm believer in the selections that I get, they are some of the best values out in the market, as they have all been curated by the owner and his staff.  I am positive that he doesn’t even carry ten percent of what is available in the state, because, if it doesn’t get passed his cultivated palate, he will not suggest it to his client. 

The first wine of the monthly selection represents the Old World and this time it is Jean Sambardier Beaujolais Blanc 2019.  From almost the first century, grape vines have been growing in the region and from the Ninth to the Fourteenth Century the house of Beaujeu held sway separating the Maconnais from the Lyonnais.  After the fall, the monks returned as the stewards of the land.  The Sambardier family has been in the heart of Beaujolais since 1850 in Denice, south of Burgundy.  They have thirty-four hectares including Grand Cru designations, divided into fifty separate vineyard sites. Brothers Fred and Damien Sambardier are the current generation and they prefer the traditional methods without the enhancement of additional chemicals. While the region is famed for the Gamay, estates are allowed to grow fifteen percent white grapes, and here it is Chardonnay.  This wine is grown at a site known as “La Cote” on a south slope from Denice.  The soil is stony with marl further down.  The fruit is allowed to enjoy “over-maturity” and hand-harvested.  The wine undergoes cold Initial Fermentation and then is aged on fine lees, for about five months in Stainless-Steel vats and less than seven-hundred cases are produced. The wine is described as offering notes of white fruits, tropical fruits, white florals, and almonds.  On the palate there are tones of pear, tropical fruit, vanilla with balance and roundness.

The New World this month is represented by Lucas & Lewellen Vineyards “Queen of Hearts” Pinot Noir Santa Barbara 2019.  Louis Lucas, a third-generation grape grower, and Superior Court Judge Royce Lewellen met in 1975.  Louis was a well-respected grower who had been supplying premium wine grapes for reputable Napa and Sonoma wineries for decades. Royce Lewellen was a passionate wine enthusiast with a vision for the future of the Santa Barbara County wine industry. Over the next twenty-five years, the Lucas and Lewellen families would grow in a deep friendship that would serve as the foundation for Lucas & Lewellen Vineyards, a Solvang, California based winery with four hundred estate acres situated among three of Santa Barbara County’s separate and distinct climate zones, three major wine labels, two popular tasting rooms in downtown Solvang, and a state-of-the-art winery.  The fruit was harvested from two of their estate vineyards: Goodchild and Los Alamos.  Some of the vines are around forty-years of age, brought over from Europe and are planted both on hilltops to clay and gravel river beds.  The fruit is hand-harvested.  The tasting reviews mention the wine offers notes of strawberry, raspberry, and cola aromas.  The palate is described as tones of bold ripe strawberry, lively acidity and silky tannins.      

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Manzanos 1955

Imagine my delight when I was in my local wine shop, the Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan, and it was the first time, that I ever had a wine, one year younger than myself.  I have had a few wines that were older, the majority have been younger.  A very unique situation and most enjoyable.  I had a chance to try Familia Fernandez de Manzanos “Manzanos Red Wine 1955 Spain.”

Bodegas Manzanos is a large wine producer in Spain, founded in 1890 and is now run by the fifth generation of the Fernandez de Manzanos family.  They are in the top three of Navarra and the top five in Rioja for production and they own ten wineries.  The original winery for the family is in the Rioja Alta zone back in 1890.  The newest generation has been going through all the facilities on all the properties.  Around 2020 they discovered a cache of bottles under canvases, forgotten and untouched since they bottled the wine 1961 Vino Tinto, so probably 1964/5.  They originally must have thought that the wine could use some additional maturation time in the bottle, and it was forgotten about in a hillside cellar.  Each bottle was opened and tasted to determine if it was still good.  Then the bottles were emptied into a Stainless-Steel vat.  The decision was made to rebottle, recork, and relabel the wine.  That wine was labeled Familia Fernandez de Manzanos “Manzanos Red Wine 1961 Spain” as the designation of Rioja was not internationally known as it is today. 

History sometimes has a way of repeating itself.  A hidden cellar was discovered with three hundred some bottles of a 1955 vintage.  They contacted the Rioja Association who oversaw that each bottle was opened using inert gas and checked to have no flaws, poured into a Stainless-Steel vat.  Then new bottles, new labels and they ended up with about one-hundred pristine bottles of Familia Fernandez de Manzanos “Manzanos Red Wine 1955 Spain.” Some background on the wine.  This wine is a blend of Tempranillo and Garnacha (Grenache) from vineyards of predominantly alluvial and clay-ferrous soils.  The fruit was harvested in the manner of the mid-Twentieth Century tradition of hand-picking in small baskets.  The aging was done in old oak barrels.  This wine offers a window into how Rioja wines were from that era.  I was fortunate to have been invited to taste the wine from a couple of sample bottles that were offered and of course, the Fine Wine Source bought the entire shipment.  The wine still had a nice garnet color with bright highlights to it, in the glass and it offered notes of dried fruits, spices, cocoa and an unmatchable nose of tradition and age.  On the palate there were tones of dried fruit, totally different from fruit-bombs that are the rage these days, and blended in with layers of sous bois (a descriptor that I seldom use, but for this wine, I guess it is imperative, and it is used to convey a wet forest floor – earthiness – an ethereal term) and old tobacco.  This was not a spring chicken, and I had the good fortune to be at the store on another visit, and I believe the entire lot of the ’61 is gone, and there is one bottle left of the ’55.      

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Another Fine Meal at Walloon Lake Inn

I have to admit that I always accuse my Bride of being repetitious in her selections, but I totally agreed that we had to have dinner while we were up north at the Walloon Lake Inn.  It began as a quaint country inn on the shores of Walloon Lake, back in 1891.  Originally called Fern Cottage, it was a haven for the travelers, who enjoyed northern Michigan by carriage, train, or steamboat. In 1981, it became the Walloon Lake Inn, as a “bed and breakfast” and a restaurant.  In 2014, there was a total renovation and it became the current Walloon Lake Inn. 

We ended up being seated at the same table, overlooking the water, as well as all the diners out on the patio.  My Bride started off with her usual, but it was not the same; she had a Caesar Salad with Romaine lettuce, croutons, but with Heirloom cherry tomatoes, a Parmesan crisp and Caesar Salad.  I had Scallops and Pork Belly with Mexican street corn and Hazelnut Molé. For her entrée she surprised me and had the Seafood Risotto with Scallops, Shrimp, a Vegetable Risotto with an herbed butter wine sauce.  I had the Braised Short Ribs with Whipped potatoes, roasted Brussels Sprouts and Butternut squash, Fennel and Carrot slaw, and a house made demi-glace.  She really doesn’t give me too much grief about having Braised Short Ribs, because after she made them a couple of times, she decided that it was better for the restaurants to go through all the effort, instead of her.  We shared a Crème Brulee with Cappuccinos afterwards.

Walloon Lake Inn

I was studying the wine carte, trying to find something that I thought would work for both of us, and she kind of hinted that she wouldn’t mind a red.  I went with a bottle of Stephane Aviron Julienas Vielle Vignes 2017 imported by Frederick Wildman and Sons, Ltd.  Stephane Aviron has adopted an almost radical return to tradition in Beaujolais; insisting on sustainable viticulture, old vines minimum of forty years, and classic Burgundian techniques.  He wants his Cru Beaujolais to emulate a fine Burgundy.  He has shifted away from recent Beaujolais practices.  Julienas is one of the Cru Beaujolais districts and are on the northern part of the region.  They have historically been regarded as being heavier and more full-bodied, but also have the potential of being the most short-lived of the Cru designations.  They have had vineyards there for more than two-thousand years and the village is named after Julius Caesar.  It can be found that Beaujolais allows a small portion of white wines to be blended with the Gamay grape, but this wine is pure Gamay.  The fruit is harvested from two areas of Julienas “Vayolette” and “La Prat” and these parcels have soil that this is a mixture of granite with clay and limestone.  The grapes are vinified separately until the final blending and bottling.  Whole bunches are fermented and then macerated in temperature controlled Stainless Steel for about nine days.  The wine is aged for twelve months in large, neutral oak foudres of fifty hectoliters.  We had such a good time, that I forgot to take a photo of the wine in the glass. The wine had a nice red color and offered notes of cherry, strawberry, and herbs.  On the palate the wine offered tones of ripe fruit, soft tannins, and a nice finish with some terroir.  It was definitely not the run of the mill Beaujolais and I think it had the perfect amount of bottle age. 

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Walloon Lake Winery

Through social media, I ended up meeting the winemaker Matt Killman, who is a fan of Cold-hardy grapes, and is at Walloon Lake Winery.  My Bride and I had just left one winery, on our way to this winery and then we had dinner reservations.  A piece of cake, as they say, as every destination was not far from each other.  The best laid plans… as the old saying goes.  We were driving along part of the route of the Michigan AVA called the Tip of the Mitt.  You may not be aware, but Michiganders can identify the lower peninsula by showing the back side of their hand, and if you think of a mitten on that hand, you see where the reference to the top of the mitt(en) comes from.  We have driven this route often, but this time when we got to Charlevoix there was a massive traffic jam, as they were having their Venetian Festival.  As I had promised to meet Matt, we doubled back and drove around the lake or inlet.  A beautiful drive, but very time consuming.

In 1954, Bob and Dorothy Dennis and their newborn son Tim, began the Dennis Farms, a small dairy operation on forty acres.  In 2012 Tim was thinking about retiring and was researching Cold-hardy grapes and Dennis Farms Vineyard began.  They had their own greenhouse that was built earlier and from there, they started planting in 2013; Marquette, Frontenac, Petite Pearl and Sabrevois for red wines and Frontenac Gris, Frontenac Blanc, and La Crescent for white wines.  They also use locally grown grapes from the area.  In 2014, they began building a tasting room, using lumber from their own property as well as stones found on the grounds as well. In 2018, they built their own crush-pad and Walloon Lake Winery was coming to fruition.  They are part of the fourteen wineries that make up the Petoskey Wine Region.  They are also part of the large Tip of the Mitt AVA, which is the latest federally recognized designation in Michigan in 2016 and encompasses 6 counties in the northern Lower Peninsula.

The drive getting there, because of the unexpected detour and the demands for our dinner reservations created a very abbreviated tasting, and I still apologize for it.  I did have a chance to try three wines.  The first wine was Walloon Lake Winery Sunshine Daydream Tip of the Mitt 2021.  A dry blend of Frontenac Blanc and Frontenac Gris fermented on the skins and aged on spent yeast cells.  Frontenac Blanc is a genetic variant of the red Frontenac grape and was released in 2012.  Frontenac Gris is a pink-berried mutation of Frontenac and was released in 2003.  The wine was produced using a “low intervention style.”  This coppery-rose colored wine offered notes of tropical fruits and bit of foxiness.  On the palate tones of citrus and tropical fruits with an acidity and a short finish “dryness” which I how I would term it.  The second wine was Walloon Lake Winery Rosie Rosé Tip of the Mitt 2020.  This wine is a dry Marquette rosé wine and named after the winery’s mascot Rosie, a Mini-Aussie.   Marquette is a cousin of Frontenac and a grandson of Pinot Noir and is a French-American hybrid introduced in 2006.  This pink-hued wine offered notes of tropical fruit and florals.  On the palate there were notes of cherry, black fruit, tropical fruit, and a tinge of pepper.  The last wine that I tried as my Bride had by then started paging me and honking from the parking lot was Walloon Lake Winery North Arm Noir Michigan 2021.  This was a dry Marquette wine that was ruby-red in color and offered notes of dark fruits, tobacco, and pepper.  On the palate this wine had tones of cherry, currants, and pepper with suggestions of oak.  We will have to try to get back there and try the wines in a more leisurely pace.             

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More Wines at Bos Wine

One of the best pleasures is when I get a chance to be with the winemaker, as my Bride and I had the chance, at Bos Wine in Elk Rapids, Michigan.  I had the pleasure of meeting David Bos; a couple of times and my Bride met him once at another tasting.  The problem was, is that David is a great raconteur and a proud steward of the lands.  He was so captivating that I literally forgot to take notes, it was the perfect one on one with the wines.  And if you are in the area, you must stop by at his tasting room, and even if David is not there, his staff is completely capable and knowledgeable and will make you totally comfortable.  Also, when you are there, you have to try his Charcuterie Board, one of the best that we have had and well worth the price.  There were crackers, cheeses, olives, two types of peppers, ham and salumi; the salumi is made locally for him and they use his wine in the production.

We continued our tasting with Wishflower Michigan 2021, a blending of Pinot Gris, Pinot Blanc and Riesling; co-fermented with fruits harvested from Leelanau Peninsula and Old Mission Peninsula.  The Pinot Gris is from Brigadoon Vineyard on Leelanau Peninsula, while the Pinot Blanc and Riesling are from Ten Hands Vineyard on Old Mission Peninsula.   A very pretty yellow wine that offered notes of white fruits and white florals.  On the palate high acidity perks up the taste buds with tones of green apples, lemon, and ginger and with a touch of tartness with a nice finish.  Then we had a chance to try two different Riesling wines and both from Old Mission Peninsula.  The Bos Wine Riesling Old Mission Peninsula 2021 featured fruit harvested from two different vineyards that David consults for and were vinified together as one.  This was a straw-yellow colored wine that offered notes of citrus, and white florals.  On the palate this wine had good acidity, and offered tones of nectarines, balance, and a touch of spice.  The “All that is Gold” Riesling Old Mission Peninsula 2021 also is made from fruit harvested from Ten Hands Vineyard.  The fruit was allowed to ripen a bit longer, and the wine also enjoyed extended lees contact.  The pale-golden-yellow wine offered noted of citrus and honeysuckle.  On the palate a richer texture and body with tones of apples and a tinge of orange and some terroir. 

Then we enjoyed a couple of reds, and David has said that he enjoys getting people that are hesitant about trying red wines from Michigan, and these are his first two Michigan reds, as I have also had some of his reds from California.  The first was Bos Wine Blaufrankisch Old Mission Peninsula 2021.  Blaufrankisch, also known as Lemberger and Kekrankos is grown widely in Austria and Hungary, as well as some of the Eastern European countries; it is also found in the Mid-west of America and the Finger Lakes of New York state.  This fruit is from Vineyard 15 on the north-end of Old Mission Peninsula and is owned by Vinnie Johnson who was on the Detroit Pistons basketball team and his number was “15.” One third of the fruit was whole-cluster crushed, and the balance was destemmed, but not crushed, as the berries were allowed to break down naturally during punch-downs.  The wine was pressed and aged for fifteen months in used oak barrels.  A bright garnet colored wine that offered notes of black cherries and spice.  On the palate, good medium bodied wine with structure showing tones of fresh fruit, and some pepper.  The last red wine and wine of the tasting was Bos Wine “Interlochen” Michigan 2022.  This wine is a blend of Marquette, Blaufrankisch and Pinot Noir.  Marquette is crossed hybrid in 1989 from the University of Minnesota and introduced in 2006.  It is a “cold-hardy” grape developed for the northern states.  This garnet-colored wine offered notes of black fruit, leather, and spices.  On the palate a well-balanced easy drinking wine that offered tones of cherries, currants, blackberries, and pepper.  It was sad to finish the session, but we were on the road again.  The wines can’t taste themselves.         

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David Bos and Bos Wine

My Bride and I were in Elk Rapids, Michigan and having a tasting with David Bos, winemaker of Bos Wine.  I first met David at, of all places The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan and then my Bride and I met him at a “Farmers Market” behind Frame Restaurant in Hazel Park, and that is another series of stories that I haven’t gotten to.  We first met in 2019 and in the ominous year of 2020 my Bride and I were in Louisville, Kentucky having dinner because such niceties disappeared in Michigan and we had as our opening bottle, the Bos Wine Ode to Fume Napa Valley 2015 with their tagline of “Love is a smoke raised with the fume of sighs” by William Shakespeare and an homage to Pouilly-Fume of the Loire.  David Box who started in Michigan went to California and has now returned to Michigan.  He attended Hope College with dual majors of Religion and English, discovered some quality wines and took off to California without a job, but with determination.  He started with a job at Grgich Hills and eventually became their vineyard manager.  He arrived there at the most opportune time, as they were converting to biodynamic farming and there are over three-hundred-fifty-acres to work.  He said that he considers himself to be a farmer, who makes wine.  The winery began in 2010, in Calistoga, but when he found this building in Elk Rapids, he knew that his boutique wine label had finally found a permanent home, with a garden and a red barn in the back.

By the time my Bride got out of the car into their garden out back, as we entered into the home base and tasting room, she was already in love.  She hadn’t tried a wine yet that day, but she was a happy camper, I tend to notice things like that about her.  We went in and then were immediately walked back out to the garden to enjoy the first glass of wine, as we waited for David to get there.  We were enjoying Bos Wine Methode Agricole Michigan 2020 is made with Valvin Muscat and is a “Pet-Nat” type of wine.  Methode Agricole is a farming method that minimizes risk to the environment without sacrificing economic production.  Pet-Nat is short for Petillant Naturel “naturally bubbling” and is respected as authentic craftsmanship of small quantities of wine.   The wine uses natural yeasts and does not undergo a second fermentation (like Champagne) and some refer to it as Zero Dosage, because there is not added sugar.   There is less bubbles and pressure and the bottle uses a cap closure like a bottle of beer, so make sure that you have a “church key.”  I liked the wine, as it is not bone-dry as most sparkling wines seem to be aiming for.  The wine has a bit of a funky nose, the best that I can describe it (you know me with descriptors) and the wine is a bit cloudy or hazy, a by-product of the production method.  A very easy drinking wine that brings some of that magical brioche taste at a moderate price, and it is a fun wine for groups.

David Bos and the wine industry go back a long way. The longtime specialist vineyard consultant and Michigan native is finally realizing a dream of opening a winery with his wife, Jackie in his home state. They bought a 10-acre farm between Traverse City and Elk Rapids where they live with their two children and plan to grow grapes organically. Meanwhile, they’re buying Michigan grapes from vineyards Bos consults with, and making their wine at a custom crush facility in the area. Our first official wine for tasting in the tasting room, along with David was Bos Wine Chardonnay Old Mission Peninsula 2020 and the fruit was from Ten Hands Vineyard.  I didn’t ask, as we were so busy chatting and letting my Bride get enthused, but I will venture to say that this wine went through Fermentation and a short aging period in Stainless-Steel.  The soft golden-yellow colored wine offered notes of apples and white florals.  On the palate this was crisp and had balanced acidity while offering tones of green apples and a medium finish that offered some “wet stone” terroir.

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Frankie Valli at Interlochen “Oh What a Night”

During the sister’s getaway up in the wine country of Michigan, we had a chance to buy tickets to see Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons at Interlochen, at the main Kresge Stage.  Four of us went, and the others went out for dinner that night. I might add that this was the real deal, we didn’t go see a production of “The Jersey Boys.”  Francesco Stephen Castelluccio or Frankie Valli is the front man for the Four Seasons since 1960.  Though almost at the beginning of the show, he paid homage to the most famous Jersey Boy, and that is Francis Albert, when he sang Cole Porter’s “I’ve Got You Under My Skin.”  At 89 years of age, he entertained and sang for two hours straight.  He had a full band behind him, and he allowed almost every one of the musicians there moment in the spotlight.  The audience from the youngsters to the oldsters that predate my Bride and me, were swaying and singing to more songs that they made famous.

We were all having a wonderful time at the Interlochen Center for the Arts, its official name of the twelve-hundred-acre campus on two lakes near the community of Interlochen.  It is a non-profit corporation which operates arts education institutions and performance venues.  It was established in 1928 by Joseph E. Maddy.  We have been to two of the theatres there, once to see a student production of The Music Man, and now for this concert.  The assortment of productions that one can see at Interlochen rival almost any other fine arts center around.  One would also be amazed to see the names of graduates in an assortment of the arts. 

Of course, I have to mention that I went and bought some drink tokens to take back to the seats, and the beer tent and also the wine tent were doing a good business.  I noticed that Black Star Farms of Old Mission Peninsula and Leelanau Peninsula was a major contributor and advertiser for the school.   Black Star Farms is rather unique in that it has vineyards and tasting room facilities on both peninsulas, so that they are kind of surrounding Traverse City which is kind of the focal point for all of the wineries in the area.  In 1998 Black Star Farms purchased Sport Valley Farm which was a one-hundred-twenty-acre equestrian facility, and the stylized black star was part of the architectural décor in the main house.  In their Twentieth year, they were honored to receive the 19’th Annual Canberra International Riesling Challenge (CIRC) -Best Wine of the 2018 Challenge and only the second time an American wine came out on top.  My Bride and I had a glass of Black Star Farms Arcturos Pinot Gris Michigan 2021.  The wine carried a Michigan AVA, because eighty-two percent of the fruit was from Old Mission Peninsula and eighteen percent was from Leelanau Peninsula. The soft straw-yellow colored wine offered notes of citrus and white florals.  On the palate there were tones of citrus, and melon, with balance acidity and a medium count finish of fruit and some terroir.  The wine, if I had to choose, leaned a bit more Alsatian compared to Northern Italy.  The wine was fruit forward, but was still on the dry side.         

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A Concert at Boathouse Vineyards

After we left Boathouse Vineyards, we went back to our cabin for dinner and to see the other sisters that didn’t come with us.  The enthusiasm for the winery was tremendous, and since they were having an outdoor concert the next night, everyone wanted to go there.  Those that had already been there wanted to go back, and those that hadn’t were looking forward to some wine and music.  When we got there, the owner and the staff recognized some of us, and they offered me a table on the verandah overlooking the grounds, the outdoor music stage and the piers that allowed boaters a chance to moor.  Nobody immediately took a photo of the table that we sat down at, but they all froze for a minute, as the name on the reservation that was on the table was the maiden name for all of the sisters. 

Getting back to the wines, since that is the underlying theme of all of my articles since May 2012.   Dave Albert also wanted to show me his newest wines, and his new label design.  He had been using French Road Cellars, a third-party custom-crusher in Michigan, that assists wineries, especially in the early years.  Dave told me that he finally spent the money and was going to do all his winemaking on premises going forward.  This was the reason for the new label design, and we had a chance to try his new wines:  Boathouse Vineyards Rosé Leelanau Peninsula 2022 and Boathouse Vineyards Pinot Blanc Leelanau Peninsula 2022.  The Rosé was made from Cabernet Franc and they used both whole cluster and direct pressing and the juice was left on the skins long enough to get the right hue, as per the winemaker.  Then the wine was aged in Stainless Steel to maintain the fresh fruit, and the total time from harvest to bottling was about eight months, with no chemical enhancements added (sugar, acid, or color).  The coppery-pink colored wine offered notes of strawberry and pepper.  On the palate there were tones of strawberries, pepper, and soft tannins balanced and crisp with a short finish of fruit.  The Pinot Blanc and the Rosé both came from the Amore Vineyard.  From harvest to bottling this wine was finished in about nine months.  The grapes were whole clustered pressed and the wine was fermented in Stainless Steel barrels and a Stainless Steel “egg” and it received regular batonnage, which is the stirring of the lees and any expired yeast cells creating a more “creamy” wine.  The wine was a soft-straw-yellow color and offered notes of stone fruits and tropical fruits.  On the palate a very refreshing “creamy” wine that had tones of tropical fruits, high acidity, and a nice crisp finish.    

And the concert was excellent, a young man who graduated from Hillsdale College and he said that he performs about two-hundred-fifty-shows a year as a singer, keyboard, two styles of guitar playing and the harmonica.  He performed both his own works, as well as others like Chapin, Joel, and John.  He performed for about three hours without a break.  We were up on the verandah and the others grabbed some Adirondack chairs and a large umbrella and were right across from the stage.  There were people sitting on their boats, who came and bought some bottles of wine and watched from the water.  Others sat out on chairs and I was observing that there was a definite mix of generations enjoying the evening.  As for our group, we were noshing on some cheese and crackers from the winery’s deli.  If you want to know, at our table the Pinot Blanc was two-to-one against the Rose.  Down in the grassy section the Pinot Noir was the big hit.  The sisters all had a great time, and that was what it was all about.    

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