The three pictures shown above, are from an order that was placed this past week. Wine and flowers have never looked so good! We are changing the face of traditional gift baskets. Fresh flowers with hand-picked wines, packaged for high visual impact & appeal. Your options are endless. Call us at The Greenery if you have any questions. 8 6 0 - 4 4 3 - 6 8 1 7
A GREAT LINE UP:
Jim Morrison, our Washington Bureau Chief and moderator of our weekly tasting, and his team at the wine store have a fabulous tasting planned for you.
The list of wine is just below a few items of interest.
·Saturday was a lot of fun. If you happened to be at the "Family Wine Tasting" organized by Kerry you know what I am talking about. Remember all you have to do is ask - and you can have one too. It's your club house.
We are available for private dining events, wine classes, private wine tasting parties, full blown wine dinners, cooking demonstration dinners, you name it. Jim Morrison, Chef Daryl Goldstein, and the entire staff are ready to service the perfect special event for your friends, family, or office. For more information just give us a call: 8 6 0 - 4 4 3 - 9 4 6 3
·People have been asking for "collections." Pre-selected groups of wine - a better way to try new things. "We want to experiment." - OK.
Our new Wine Collections are here. And we add select spirits to the mix too.
Click on the picture below and then scroll down to see what we have for you.
But we don't stop there. We will work with you for a customized touch, creating a learning experience that will leave you giddy.Click on the picture below and then scroll down to see what we have for you.
· Wednesday April 9 - 6 p.m. Vintage French Wine Dinner
Featuring flights of 2005 White Burgundy and Bordeaux.
The wines of Christian Moreau, Oliver Leflaive, Chateau De Pez, and Tourelles de Longueville will make it a night of indulgence not to be missed.
"Open Seating" format - The biggest names in Burgundy & Bordeaux - $100 plus tax & service.
· Wednesday April 16 - 6 p.m. Cult Wine Dinner Series - "Open Seating"
Each year the names "Clio" and "El Nido" sit at the top of the "Best Of" lists. They are very difficult to find and always scored by the big reviewers and magazine's high in the 90's.
The 2005 vintage is no exception. Robert Parker: "Clio 95 points, El Nido 98 points."
Join us for a dinner that will give you bragging rights, truly a night to remember.
$125 plus tax and service.
Those of you that have attended our "Cult Wine Dinner Series" in the past know that they are, with out a doubt, over the top. Seating is very limited because the availability of the wine is painfully scarce. We are one of the very few shops in the United States that receives an allocation of these wines. The winemaker himself said "these are the best grapes I've tasted in ten years."
Please reserve early - 8 6 0 - 4 4 3 - 9 4 6 3
Dave's Fave
Special Monday Tasting
Domaine du Grand Breviande Chinon 2006 $12
Last week Eric Asimov wrote a great little piece about Chinon in The New York Times and gave this house the nod for "Best Value." Normally when a wine gets a "Best Value" in The Times there's no point in looking for it because it all sold fifteen minutes ago. In this case, there was no point looking because the vintage he was talking about sold out four months ago. Too bad. The good news? The 2006 vintage is here! Will the lovely herbal wildberry tones of 2005 return? Will the Cab Franc be tamed or too Franc? Can you stand the suspense? No! Come quick, try it Monday!
P.S. Their "Best Value" was listed at $13 - we sell it for $12. Aww S N A P!
1 - Trapiche Broquel Chardonnay 2006 $15
If you've come to any of our Argentina wine dinners you'll remember the tremendous single vineyard Malbecs from Trapiche, (the new gift packs are in by the way). Their commitment to producing the greatest Malbec in Argentina is impressive. They have created wines that stand on the shoulders of their vinocultural ancestors of Bordeaux and Cahor. Yet the wines are distinctly Argentine and reflect the terroir of specific vineyards and dedication of individual farmers in Mendoza. With that said, I often overlook some of their more affordable daily drinkers like the Torrontes at $8 a bottle, or this fascinating Chardonnay. Why fascinating?, Well, they have again given a nod to classicism, while creating a wine that is distinctly "Hecho en Argentina". There are typical Chardonnay flavors and even the steely minerality I associate with Burgundy. The wine sees the judicious use of oak, yet is not "oaky". The barrel time has served to integrate the wine, without interfering with the freshness and vivacity of the fruit. Furthermore, the warm climate has created a lush and viscous wine without the butteryness of California Chardonnay. So again, very Argentine. It is great to see that Argentina, with our friends at Trapice leading the way, has found it's own voice, and is singing it's own song. With an understanding of typicity, they have still created wines all their own.
2 - Terre Rouge Vin Gris D'amador 2004 $14
Terre Rouge is one of my favorite Californian wineries for the simple reason that they essentially make French wines, only they make them in California. The Tete-a-Tete is Cotes du Rhone-esque, and the Noir is a ChateauNeuf du Pape a' la west coast baby. So it came as no surprise that their rose reminded me of Tavel, one of the great rose regions of the world. Prodominately Mourvedre, with Grenache and Syrah in suppoerting roles, the wine is robust and rich with pronounced strawberry and cherry, and a little spice. And It IS NOT SWEET. A quick lesson on wine; when you crush a red grape, Cabernet, Merlot, Mourvedre, you get a white juice. What makes red wine red is the color, tannins and phynols that are extracted from the skins by the white juice as the skins soak in the juice. This process is called Maceration. Extended maceration, red wine. No maceration, white wine (ie. Blanc de Noir). Short maceration, rose. The wine can then be fermented dry, whereby the yeast is allowed to eat all the sugar, fructose, and produce alcohol. At some point there is enough alcohol to kill the yeast and it dies leaving behind a relatively small amount of residual sugar. If you stop the fermentation, the sugar remains undigested, the wine therefore is sweet. The point of all this is that Rose is not inherently sweet, and just because Beringer makes a ubiquitous cherry soda called white Zinfandel, doesn't mean we should ignore rose, with it's long and noble history. I'm going to go out on a limb here and say spring is coming, it's time to start drinking rose.
3 - Oliver Leflaive Cuvee Margot Bourgogne 2005 $24
The never ending search for affordable Burgundy continues. The Margot is a light bodied and "open" Pinot Noir. In other words the wine is not tight or closed, we can taste right into it and into the soil from whenst it came. There is a classic nose of loam, forest floor and leather, which raises from soft fruit and a gunflint minerality almost never found in simple Bourgogne rouge. This wine came to me at the height of my interest in eating ducks and mushrooms. The flavor of those foods providing perfect harmonics for the darker earth tones of the Margot. I left a half full bottle out on the counter one night, and when I came to, I mean woke up the next day I figured the wine would be shot. Yet, it was not . In fact the wine had become even more generous and had not lost any of it's complexity, or intensity. There is a lot to see here in this wine, it may not be for everyone, but it sure is for me.
Luigi Baudana Barolo 2000 $40
From the 4.5 hectare estate of Luigi and Fiorina Baudana and the excellent 2000 Piedmonte vintage. You may remember Wine Spectator absurdly referring to the 2000 vintage in Piedmonte as a "100 point" or perfect vintage, (I like to refer to the 2001 as "more perfect"). Perfect or not, it was a very good year in Piedmonte, and estates like Baudana made great, great wine. I have described Barolo as a mosaic, a beautiful whole made up of thousands of tiny parts. The wine is well knit and proportionate, all flavors being balanced against each other. The interaction between fruit and acidity, the tannins of the grapes in concert with the tannins of the barrels, the nose of rose petals against truffles and tar, all happening at once with power and subtlety. So why this Barolo? Three reasons. One, the 2000 vintage is one of the most perfect vintages ever! Two, this wine will be eight years old in the fall, making it the the rarest of things, a mature wine, a well aged wine, a wine with bottle age that was meticulously cared for by people with more patience than you and I. And Three, this wine was clearly priced before our recent issues with the Euro. So you've got to ask yourself, when is the next time I'll be able to buy a $40 mature Barolo from a perfect vintage?
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