Archive for the ‘Featured’ Category

Review: Restaurateur’s book has bitter aftertaste

Published by admin on May 11th, 2012 - in Featured

“Restaurant Man” (Viking), by Joe Bastianich: Joe Bastianich knows Italian food. The restaurant partner of celebrity chef Mario Batali and the son of Lidia Bastianich, the star of several public television cooking shows, he grew up around meatballs and marinara.

In “Restaurant Man,” Bastianich chronicles his life in the restaurant business, from working at his parents’ Italian restaurant in the New York City borough of Queens to his success as a winemaker and restaurateur.

Viewers of the reality television show “MasterChef” know Bastianich as the most jaded and acerbic of the show’s three judges. He’s much the same in his book except he’s now free to curse, which he does almost as punctuation.

Between expletives, Bastianich dishes dirt about the business: Some restaurants dilute expensive Parmesan cheese with less costly knockoffs, desserts are almost pure profit, and no bottle of wine costs more than $5 to make.

Bastianich also tells some interesting stories, particularly for diners who know the New York City restaurants he and Batali opened, including Babbo, Del Posto and Esca. He talks about spilling a drop of wine on the pope during a visit to New York in 2008 and former President Bill Clinton, who would “stop traffic” when he got up to use the restroom.

Mostly, however, Bastianich’s stories make him sound like a jerk. He says Mexicans are the hardest-working restaurant employees but Ecuadorians and Peruvians generally have “more culinary aptitude.” He once stole flowers from a church cemetery to bring to a legendary chef of Roman cuisine. He claims that if you tell him what restaurants you frequent, he has a good idea of how much money you make.

Readers also have to wade through some score-settling. Bastianich has less than nice things to say about one wine importer, a genius gelato maker and people in the fashion business. He trashes a critic who gave one of his restaurants a bad review, calling the man a “puffed-up real-estate columnist who moonlights as a restaurant critic.”

Of course, diners don’t care if Bastianich is a jerk as long as he delivers delicious food. And the starred reviews of his restaurants prove he does. But his memoir is different. It has a sour edge, a distinct bitterness, and readers may not have the appetite for that.

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/review-restaurateurs-book-bitter-aftertaste-155936293.html

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F. Korbel and Bros. to Sell Kenwood Vineyards to Banfi Vintners

Published by admin on April 3rd, 2012 - in Featured

After several months of strategic review, Gary B. Heck, President and
Owner of F. Korbel Bros., has agreed to explore the sale of Kenwood
Vineyards as well as its related assets in Sonoma County to Banfi
Vintners, one of the country’s leading wine marketers. Mr. Heck’s
decision to sell Kenwood will allow him to focus the time and resources
of his company on the best opportunities for growth with Korbel
California champagne and brandy which have been in his family since 1954.

“After experiencing the worst recession in 70 years, the California wine
business is emerging from this difficult period in good shape and it
seemed an opportune time to explore the sale of Kenwood Vineyards,”
remarked Gary B. Heck, President and Owner, F. Korbel and Bros. “This
will allow us to focus the company’s resources on its leading California
champagne and brandy business.”

“We are thoroughly impressed at the incredible achievements of Mr. Heck
with Kenwood, and hope to become a worthy custodian of this historic
brand,” said Banfi co-CEOs James Mariani and Cristina Mariani-May. “We
want the transition to be as seamless as possible.”

F. Korbel and Bros. acquired Kenwood Vineyards in its entirety in 1999.
At that time, Kenwood was producing less than 300,000 cases and under
the F. Korbel and Bros. stewardship, it grew to more than 550,000 in
2011. Founded in 1970, Kenwood has been recognized consistently as a
leader dedicated to producing premium wines that capture the best of
Sonoma County vineyard character. Included in the sale are the Kenwood
winery and trademarks, bottling facility and the Merlot and Zinfandel
vineyards at the winery. The sale of Kenwood Vineyards is expected to
close June 2012.

Gary Heck is strongly committed to being a major player in the sparkling
wine and brandy categories. The Heck Family will retain Korbel Champagne
Cellars and its related assets. Its 47-year marketing and sales
agreement with Brown-Forman will remain unchanged. Having a stronger
focus on Korbel will provide Heck’s company with greater investment and
growth opportunities in the future.

Banfi Vintners is a privately held family concern, founded in New York
in 1919 by John F. Mariani, Sr. and built into America’s leading wine
marketer for the past four decades by his sons, John and Harry Mariani,
fathers of Cristina and James, respectively. They founded the Castello
Banfi vineyard estate in Montalcino, Tuscany and Vigne Regali Cellars in
Strevi, Piedmont. In 2009 Banfi and Gruppo Italiano Vini formed an
equity partnership in Italy’s Bolla wines, and last year established the
Excelsior Wine Company, a joint venture sales and marketing firm with
leading Chilean wine producer Concha y Toro. The Marianis first foray
into US wine was with their 2010 purchase of Washington State’s Pacific
Rim.

“Our family is dedicated to the global wine business,” said Mr. Mariani.
“The next logical step in building on our success as brand builders is
involving ourselves with a significant California wine estate. We are
making a long term commitment to round out and complement our
partnerships in Europe, South America and Australia.”

F. Korbel and Bros. is comprised of Korbel Champagne Cellars, Kenwood
Vineyards, Lake Sonoma Winery, Valley of the Moon Winery and Heck
Cellars (brandy production facility). The history behind each operation,
whether dating back to the 1860’s or as recent as 2011, showcases a
commitment to producing varietal wines of excellence which reflect the
unique characteristics of the world-renowned appellations of Sonoma
County in addition to fine California champagne and brandy.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=50224227lang=en

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/f-korbel-bros-sell-kenwood-vineyards-banfi-vintners-010000964.html

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BARBARA MCMICHAEL | Globalization and grape expectations in ‘wine wars’

Published by admin on August 10th, 2011 - in Articles, Featured

Wine Wars — Mike Veseth

Rowman Littlefield — 244 pp — $24.95

 

When I am invited to a dinner party and I ask what I can bring, most of my hosts have learned not to suggest a bottle of wine. I don’t drink wine, I don’t know it, and I always resort to picking the bottle that has the most appealing artwork.

Given that dearth of experience, I certainly didn’t feel qualified to review a book about wine when one showed up in my mailbox.

But as I began to poke through “Wine Wars,” the latest from University of Puget Sound professor Mike Veseth, I became intrigued. I learned that I am in the majority of Americans who do not drink wine at all. In spite of us, however, the United States is a major wine producer, and on the brink of becoming the world’s largest market for wine in terms of money spent.

Veseth, an economist and authority on global wine markets, explores this conundrum and many others in a droll, informative manner. I never would have dreamed that I could be fascinated by how market trends and climate change are shaping the global wine industry, but by the end of the first chapter Veseth had me hooked.

He shows how increasing globalization has had a major impact on who produces wine and who consumes it.

He demystifies the difference between Old World and New World wines. In every supermarket section today you can see the distinction between European wines, which are labeled by wine-producing region (each of which has a dominant grape variety or specific blend of grapes — although this information is not necessarily displayed on the bottle), and wines from everywhere else, which are labeled in a more straightforward manner by brand and variety of grape.

In spite of the growing momentum around the globe for this more accessible way of marketing wine, there are “terroirists” on every wine-growing continent — terroir is the French term for the philosophy that every worthwhile wine is embedded in a particular culture and rooted in a particular soil. Every wine has a particular story to tell.

Veseth may not be a hard-and-fast terroirist, but he does tell some great stories. In this book, you’ll learn the various ways that missionaries and migrants promoted the spread of wine production across the globe.

You’ll learn how Prohibition in America and a prolific label known as Blue Nun in Germany had long-lasting and sometimes unexpected impacts on the wine industry.

You’ll be instructed in the sophisticated marketing strategies today of American and international chains such as Costco, Walmart, Aldi, and Tesco.

And while Veseth neglects to address the rising popularity of organic wines, he does give the inside scoop on Trader Joe’s famous “Two Buck Chuck.”

This book is a lively, globe-trotting treatise. To sum up using wine reviewers’ parlance: “Wine Wars” opens with a witty bouquet and a note of didacticism. On the palate it is well-balanced and juicy, and it has an optimistic finish that lingers. Cheers!

Article source: http://www.kitsapsun.com/news/2011/aug/03/barbara-mcmichael-globalization-and-grape-in/?partner=yahoo_feeds

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How to Pick a Good Wine

Published by WineAnimal on August 3rd, 2011 - in Featured

It is important to know that wines are labelled in two different ways by variety and by appellation. Wines are simply identified by the type of grape used to make them, Chardonnay or Merlot. Most people may think all high priced wines are good tasting or even the ones with the well known labels are in good standing. This is not true at all just like the low priced wines with well known labels, the high price wines with well known labels can be as bitter as bad vinegar or can be completely ruined from the cork. Picking that perfect wine every time is against the odds from even the most experienced wine lovers because there are so many factors that make the wine taste well or awful. For example, the number one rule that everyone goes by, drinking red wine while eating meats and heavy cream sauce and drinking white wine goes while eating fish and vegetables.

The only way to know that you are picking a good wine is to start sampling wine on a regular basis. Get to know the wine by serving the wine with your meals. Pay attention to how it smell, the colour, where it comes from and how it feels when drinking it. Does it taste dry or not, sweet or tart? Pay attention to how makes your food taste. Does it makes the food shout out or does it give a strange taste? Also, Pay attention to the label that way the next time you decide to purchase wine you will know that is the wine that you liked or disliked. Make sure to take notes because this will help you compare with other wines.

Trying a personalised bottle of wine has advantages and disadvantages, identical to buying wine from well known label. For instance, you might like to try to a personalised bottle of wine and want to know if it gives a certain meal that big bang, but later to find out that if make your great tasting meal the worst meal you ever had. Or you may find a good tasting wine that makes your meal the best tasting meal you ever had. This process could take years of experience because you need have to experience on how to store the wine properly and the right food that tastes great with your wine. You need to know from the start of what you are looking for in a wine not just for you meal but, to meet all expectations you are looking for.

Mithul Mistry is writing on behalf of ToxicFox, a specialist in Personalised Wine Gifts.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mithul_Mistry

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6434748

WineAnimals.com is live!

Published by admin on July 29th, 2011 - in Featured

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