The Boston Wine Expo is quickly approaching. The expo is a celebration of wine, food and culture. The Boston Wine Expo is one of the largest expositions of its kind in the United States. Wine tastings take place for the trade from 11:00 am until 1:00 pm on both Saturday and Sunday. On those days wine tastings for consumers are held from 1pm – 5pm. In addition numerous one-hour seminars are available.
The Boston Wine Expo includes numerous opportunities. For an additional fee attendees can choose from among many seminars. Possible seminars to attend include:
- Languedoc: The Frontier of French Wine
- The Secret Life of Pinot Noir
- The Biodynamic Approach to Winemaking
- Argentina’s New Terroirs
- Scotch Versus Irish Whiskey
- Central Otago: The Burgundy of the Southern Hemisphere.
Tickets for the wine tastings and seminars are available online.
Wineries from numerous countries will be represented at the expo. Look for wines from Europe, North America, South America, New Zealand and South Africa.
Exhibitors will include wineries, vineyards, importers, distributors and trade commissions. Other exhibits will include wine accessories, wine art, wine preservation, cooking schools specialty foods and more.
Many presentations by chefs will be taking place on two stages during the public wine tasting. Watch them demonstrate and create samples. They may even share recipes!
Attending the Boston Wine Expo would be a great activity for celebrating Valentine’s Day!
Cheers!
Kathy
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Extreme Wine Tourism
Different travelers may have different ideas as to what constitutes extreme wine tourism. My concept involves an opportunity to walk through vineyards, taste wines, tour the winemaking facility and then spend the night on the property and not have to walk far from the lodging to a restaurant. The restaurant and lodging are the two extreme criteria that separate many of the world’s wineries from the others. Are there wineries that offer it all?
Over the years Kathy and I have stayed at many of these extreme wine tourism sites. Some were small and very homey such as Ciban in Pavlov?ani, Croatia in the Croatian Uplands wine region. An Italian site we enjoyed was Comelli in Faedis (Ud) – Italy. In far Eastern Europe we enjoyed a multi-night stay at Chateau Mere in Telavi, Kakheti, Georgia. While at Chateau Mere we also had the opportunity to make some Georgian foods.
At home in the United States we have stayed at several properties that offer an extreme wine tourism experience. Perhaps the poster child of those would be Messina Hof in Bryan, Texas. They have beautiful vineyards where we helped to harvest grapes. The restaurant and bistro are steps away from the winery area and lodging. The lodging experience in the Villa is glamorous and restful. We were there on three occasions.
Messina Hof Villa is adjacent to tasting room, bistro, a restaurant, winery and vineyards.
Room in the Messina Hof Villa
Today, we experience Colonial Williamsburg in Virginia with an extreme wine travel experience at Wessex Hundred. Like Messina Hof, Wessex Hundred can also be the poster child of extreme wine tourism. The site includes the Williamsburg Winery, the Gabriel Archer Tavern and accommodations, some fit for royalty, at Wedmore Place. Although we have been to the winery on a couple occasions and ate in the tavern, we never spent the evening at Wedmore Place. The hotel is a member of the Select Registry of Distinguished Inns of North America. It offers modern amenities, but you also have the presence of Colonial Virginia.
Wedmore Place in Williamsburg is next to vineyards, a restaurant and winery.
One of the rooms at Wedmore Place, fit for royalty
While at Wessex Hundred we will taste the current selection of wines and have two multi-course meals prepared by the chef and paired with Williamsburg Winery wines. The Williamsburg Winery has a special place in our hearts. It is the first winery that Kathy and I visited well over a decade ago. We will also have an opportunity to taste ten sparkling wines in a blind tasting and evaluation. This activity blends well with our upcoming International Wine Tourism Conference in Reims, France in the Champagne region.
There are many other wineries throughout the world that offer the extreme wine tourism experience. Check them out, perhaps some may be close to where you live.
Cheers,
Terry