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Stuffed Mushroom Recipe with Merlot

Weekends are great times to try a new recipe. Why not try a stuffed mushroom recipe that calls for three tablespoons of  Merlot?  The following recipe is from Contessa Wine Cellars located in Coloma, Michigan.

Contessa Wine Cellars Italian Stuffed Mushrooms With Merlot

Ingredients

1 lb large regular mushrooms or baby portabellas (fills 16-20 large mushrooms)
¼ stick butter
½ small onion finely chopped
½ lb Italian sausage
¼ c Italian bread crumbs finely crushed
1 c Italian cheeses finely grated (parmesan, Asiago, Romano)
3 T Contessa Wine Cellar’s Merlot

Directions

  1. In frying pan, sauté onion and Italian sausage until sausage is done. Drain excess fat.
  2. Melt butter in saucepan and set aside.
  3. Combine bread crumbs with onion and sausage and pour butter over and mix well.
  4. Add cheeses and mix again.
  5. Place in washed and dried mushroom caps arranged on a baking sheet.
  6. Bake at 375 until cheese is browned and melted.

Wine: Serve with Merlot a soft pleasurable complement to this appetizer.

Recipe provided by Contessa Wine Cellars, Coloma, Michigan

Is stinkbug-tainted wine in your future?

In Maryland as well as Northern Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania, we are experiencing a stinkbug invasion. On sunny days, these insects that are aptly named can cover screens. The stinkbugs do like grapes and present a challenge to harvesters and winemakers this fall. When hand harvesting one can easily shoo them away. However they can locate the lugs and settle in amongst the grapes. They may also hide within a cluster of grapes and may not be noticed by a harvester. Mechanical harvesting may indeed collect stinkbugs.

What happens if they make it to the winery? If the winery has a sorting table, observant sorters can remove them. Otherwise it is on to the destemmer, crusher, press and fermentation bin. According to Wines and Vines, Dr. Joe Fiola, extension specialist in viticulture and small fruit at Western Maryland Research and Education Center in Keedysville, Maryland determined that it only takes five stinkbugs in a 25-pound lug of grapes to affect the aromas and flavors of the juice. Increase that number to ten stinkbugs per lug and it is very noticeable.

Of course one will have to wait and see what the effect will be on the wine. Having smelled stinkbugs, I won’t relish the aroma in a wine.

Cheers,
Terry

More About HR 5034

At the end of the week, I checked out the updates on HR 5034. This bill gives one the sense that this will be the demise of many wineries. It seems the law would reinforce individual states rights to decide whether in state and out-of-state alcohol shipping would be allowed or disallowed with no recourse to the federal government.

Numerous wineries are dependent upon being able to sell wine out-of-state. What will happen to the small, boutique wineries if out of state wine shipping is disallowed? Some are suggesting that they will have to close. While large wineries can usually find a distributor to work with many small wineries cannot. Can the US afford to have wineries close and add more workers to the unemployment roles?

As I frequently voice, wine is a legal beverage, why shouldn’t I be able to purchase wine from a winery out side of the state and have it shipped to me. As a resident of Maryland, I feel that my rights as a citizen are limited since wine is a legal beverage.

Today I checked out the HR 5034 on govtrack.us website, A Civic Project to Track Congress, and discovered at the bottom of the HR 5034 page people can write in a short question and receive an answer. So far only one question has been asked and it dates back to June 2010 but it is reflective of what might happen if HR5034 is passed. In substance the question is about how, if passed the HR 5034 bill would affect an individual who wants to purchase rare whiskies. The answer: Answered by a visitor on Jun 18, 2010 7:21 PM – Under the passage of this bill, it would depend on the state in which you live. This bill allows the primary authority to regulate interstate shipping of alcohol to remain in the hands of the states, as opposed to the federal government. If you currently live in a state that allows direct-to-consumer shipping, you should not be affected.”

Shouldn’t citizens of the US be treated equally? I don’t purchase rare wines but I have enjoyed wines that can only be obtained at a winery or online. Since wine is a legal beverage why shouldn’t I be treated the same as every law-abiding citizen in the US?

Winery Events for Columbus Day Weekend

Check out this weekend’s events. I have included Friday and Monday since this is Columbus Day Weekend. Links are provided for your ease of use to verify dates and find hours.

Have a wonderful weekend!

Cheers! Kathy

Ferrante Winery & Ristorante, Ohio
Fri, October 8
Music/Tom Todd
Sat, October 9
Music/Yesterday & Today
Sun, October 10
TROLLEY TOUR
Music/Ron Sluga

Barrel Oak Winery, VA
Fri, Oct 8
The Grapes Crush
Demetrios & the Gladiators
TGISunsets
Sat, October 9
The Grapes are Crushing at BOW
Pack BBQ: Really, Really good Burgers….
Music/Random Neural Firings
TGI Sunsets

Sun, October 10
Columbus Day Weekend Harvest Celebration
Pack BBQ: Really, Really good Burgers….
Music/ Renee McCollough
Mon, October 11
Columbus Day Weekend Harvest Celebration

Pearmund Cellars, VA
Fri, October 8
Relax and Thank God It’s Friday (TGIF)

Three Fox Vineyards, VA
Sat, October 9
Alpaca Lunch
Sun, October 10
Open Mike Day

Del Fosse Vineyards and Winery, VA
Sat, October 9
Wine Club Member Appreciation Day
Concert with Abbey Road

Thornton Winery, CA
Sun, October 10
The Rippingtons with Special Guest

Tarara Winery, VA
Fri, October 8
Music on the Deck/Tommy Rothman
Sun, October 10
Paddle and Wine
Music on the Deck/Josh Burgess

Lorimar Winery and Vineyards, CA
Sat, October 9
Grape Stomp & Harvest Fest
Sun, October 10
Music/John Vester/Classic Rock Guitar

The Lizard and the Wine

Kathy’s earlier post about a frog in a wine bottle reminded me of a bottle of wine we saw at Naylor Wine Cellars in Stewartstown, Pennsylvania. Dick Naylor collects unusual wines and had a bottle from the Orient. The Ha Kai Chiew had a lizard or baby alligator in the bottle. I’m not certain if people drink this or just keep it as a conversation piece. Although I’m rather open-minded when it comes to trying a wine, I’m not standing in line to try the Ha Kai Chiew.

Have you had any unusual items in your wine?

Cheers,

Terry

The Frog and the Wine

Decanter.com recently published an article about a woman who has decided to sue a winery. She claims that there was a dead frog in the wine bottle that fell into her glass when the wine was poured.

It’s when reading something like this that I’m glad I have visited numerous wineries, over 550 in four years. Many of these visits have included winery tours. We’ve viewed the large wineries where the wine bottles are washed, filled, corked and labeled by machine. How would a frog enter a wine bottle under those circumstances? We’ve also visited the small wineries where the bottling is done by hand. The winemaker or designated staff member fills the bottle adds the cork and label by hand. In this case it’s a hands on operation where the individual is with the bottle of wine. How would a frog enter the bottle accidentally?

Such a circumstance would hurt the reputation of any winery and therefore it seems highly unlikely that anyone would purposely add anything unwarranted to a wine bottle.

If the woman’s lawsuit is proven to be legitimate I hope she is compensated with a just amount, however if this is a scam and hurts the reputation of the winery I hope that she needs to repay for the losses to the winery.

However as The Wine Curmudgeon wrote in his blog, “Which brings the Wine Curmudgeon to quote Shakespeare (since this happened in Britain) from Henry VI, Part 2: “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers.”’

How do you feel about this incident?

Cheers! Kathy

Writing a Haiku for Regional Wine Week

I decided to take the haiku challenge offered by the website Drinklocalwine. The website has asked for submissions of haiku that have something to do with drink local wine. Drinklocalwine.com was organized by Jeff Siegel and Dave McIntyre. Be sure to check out the website.

I don’t ever remember writing a haiku while in school. So it was with some trepidation that I decided to write one. However it was fun and soon I had six written. Okay it was fun, although it did remind of writing a Twitter tweet where one is limited to 140 characters. To write a typical haiku, it consists of only three lines. The first and third lines should only be five syllables while the second line is seven syllables.

Try it and see what haikus you can come up with for Regional Wine Week! If you are visiting local wineries or enjoying a local wine write about it and send a link to Drinklocalwine.com

Below are the six haikus I had fun with.

Cheers! Kathy

Wine local focus
Winery visits surely
Enjoy fun, friends, wines

Wine month is here now
New York, Texas, Virginia
Drink local wine soon

Numerous styles
Virginia in the East has
Reds, whites, and fruit wines

Texas vineyards now
Boasts hundreds acres of vines
Room for more today

New York’s nine terroirs
Offer a variety
From Cab to Riesling

Bright green vineyards now
Laden with purple ripe grapes
Harvest time is here

Wine Festivals for October 9-10 Weekend

There is much work taking place in wineries now and throughout harvest season. While you won’t taste this year’s northern hemisphere  2010 vintage, many wineries have released their 2009  and older vintages. (An exception is Beaujolais which is released the same year it is produced.) Travel to festivals where many of the released wines can be enjoyed. For the weekend of October 9-10, 2010, there are festivals in California, Florida, New York and Virginia. Dates, locations and links are below. If you can’t visit one of these festivals visit a winery in your backyard for a great experience!

Cheers! Kathy

California

October 9, 2010
Yuba City, California
California Beer & Wine Festival

October 8-11, 2010
Santa Maria Valley -California
Celebration of Harvest

October 9, 2010
5th Annual Sierra Madre Wine & Jazz Walk
(Benefits City of Hope, Cancer Research & Treatment)
Sierra Madre, California

October 9, 2010
San Francisco Magazine’s FALLFEST
San Francisco, California

Florida

October 8-10, 2010
Panama City Beach, Florida
Seafood, Wine & Music Festival

October 10, 2010
Boca Raton, Florida
1st Annual Boca Raton Wine & Food Festival

New York

October 7-10, 2010
New York, NY
New York City Wine & Food Festival

Virginia

October 9-10, 2010
Fredericksburg, Virginia

Fredericksburg Area Wine Festival

October 9-10, 2010
Williamsburg, Virginia
Ciao Italian Festival

October 10, 2010
Culpeper, Virginia
Taste of Culpeper

October is Wine Month in Texas, Virginia and NY

Wine friendly states like to have a certain month designated as Wine Month. Earlier this year the governor of California designated September as wine month.

At least three states have designated October as Wine Month: Virginia, Texas and New York. So what’s a wine lover to do?  Below are just a few ideas to consider.

  • Try a wine from one of these states that you haven’t tried before
  • Purchase a bottle of wine from each state and have an at home tasting party with family and friends. Take notes and see what the consensus is about the wines.
  • Have a blind tasting and see if you can determine which wine came from which state. The winner can receive perhaps a corkscrew, stemware or gift basket.
  • Travelers can visit wineries in these states. If you are going to spend two or three days in a state use the itineraries provided by Wine Trail Traveler to help get you started. Discover these suggestions at Trip Itineraries.
  • During the month of October order wine online from any of these states. Remember that some states are wine friendly and support wine shipping and others do not. Wineries will be helpful to let you know if wine can be shipped directly to your home. (Maryland state law makes it a felony to ship wine to your home.)
  • For those who like a little more information, delve into the terroir of these states to discover what affect this has on the wines.

If you live in or will be visiting Texas, Virginia or New York, experience the local foods and enjoy!

What are you doing to celebrate Wine month in New York, Texas and Virginia?

Cheers, Kathy

Barrel Oak Winery Supports Numerous Charities

Barrel Oak Winery located in Delaplane, Virginia is a friendly winery that offers wine and food experiences and quality wines. The winery is both children and dog friendly. In addition Barrel Oak supports numerous charities. These are frequently titled under PAWS FOR THE CAUSE. This category can feature events including a Benefit for Golden Retriever Rescue, Education and Training, Benefit for Pug Rescue, Benefit for Westie Rescue and Benefit for the Fauquier Domestic Violence Shelter.

Check out the calendar of special charity events as well as food and music events. The calendar is located on the Barrel Oak Winery website.

Cheers! Kathy


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