I'm not a fan of Trader Joe's Two Buck Chuck . But I do like finding good wines for under $20. Or under $15 on occasion.
Tonight, we had a "Awesome Aussie Blend" (those words appears right on the bottle). It was called "Vin" by Vin Hunter. $12!!!!! Are you kidding me?? 2004 vintage, a Heinen's limited release. We paid $12. Thank you Heinen's wine man. I feel lucky once again to live in Cleveland. Very nice with our pork briscuit. (We subscribe to the theory that white wine is good when your out of red wine so we pretty much drink red with anything.) This was a blend of merlot (50%), shiraz (30%) and cabernet sav. (20%). Can't go wrong. It was so good, we didn't have any wine left to go with our almost nightly dessert -- a piece of dark chocolate (min. 72% cocoa).
That reminds me, Heinen's is awesome for wine, especially if you're an amateur like me. Wonderful wine buyers happy to help you. And they have tastings all the time. For a quarter on the weekend, you can try three or four wines and learn. They also have regular wine events. Only problem is, when we have a good wine, we're left wanting more... Actual time of post: about 9 p.m. Apparently, I opened the window earlier so it registered that time. I'm still learning about this blogging stuff... :)
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Blend
Last night's wine: C
We had a $20 (reg $25) bottle of 2006 (way too young) Blackstone Rubric Reserve from Sonoma. It was a blend of cabernet sauvignon, merlot, syrah, cabernet franc, petite syrah and tannat. I usually love blends of cabs and syrahs but this was just ok. Not very good with the lamb chops we had for dinner. Decent by itself (considering the price and vintage) and pretty good with dark chocolate (but it's hard to go wrong pairing red wine with chocolate). We should have listened to the adage: Drink no wine before its time. It needed to sit. The plum fruit was just starting to come out. I'd try it again in a year.
We had a $20 (reg $25) bottle of 2006 (way too young) Blackstone Rubric Reserve from Sonoma. It was a blend of cabernet sauvignon, merlot, syrah, cabernet franc, petite syrah and tannat. I usually love blends of cabs and syrahs but this was just ok. Not very good with the lamb chops we had for dinner. Decent by itself (considering the price and vintage) and pretty good with dark chocolate (but it's hard to go wrong pairing red wine with chocolate). We should have listened to the adage: Drink no wine before its time. It needed to sit. The plum fruit was just starting to come out. I'd try it again in a year.
Labels:
Alexander Valley,
Blackstone,
chocolate,
Rubric,
Sonoma
Saturday, August 23, 2008
First Post
This is hard. The first post. And the wine I had last night was swill. And it was white.
I'm reading two books right now (three if you count the Insight Guide to Italy), but I'm not far enough along with them to comment. The one I'm reading for book club is Garry Wills' Why I am a Catholic. This is really out of character for us. We usually read classics or novels with some type of interesting historic or cultural backdrop. This book came up because Linda's granddaughter was going to be baptized Catholic and she didn't know much about Catholicism. She started quizzing me about my religion and I couldn't help much. I mentioned I bought this book awhile back (when I was having trouble understanding why I was a Catholic) and never read it but thought it might provide some interesting insights. We'll see....
The other thing I'm reading is The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Peformed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, a play by Peter Weiss. That's my first assignment this semester in 16th Century Literature. Francis X. Ryan, SJ (hmmm, wonder what the X stands for) admitted starting a course dealing with Tudor literature with a play from the 20th century is rather odd. (I thought so but, then again, all my John Carroll professors have done similar things. We studied every playwright but Shakespeare in my Shakespeare class.) Anyway, Dr. Ryan says, "the play highlights the vast ideological difference between what concepts and beliefs we take for granted and those which were foundational values of 16th century England -- obedience, for instance. This will be the fourth class I've taken at JCU, working toward my MA in Creative Writing -- just for fun. I have a real job. Two classes I took right after college -- about 25 years ago -- also transferred. So I think I have another 5 or so to go after this. I didn't think I'd be anxious to finish because I'm doing it for the joy of reading and discussing literature and the opportunity to learn from other writers. But suddenly, I want to be done. I think if I was retired, it would be a different story. But the demands of work make the demands of school a little less "joyful." Was this a terrible first post?
I'm reading two books right now (three if you count the Insight Guide to Italy), but I'm not far enough along with them to comment. The one I'm reading for book club is Garry Wills' Why I am a Catholic. This is really out of character for us. We usually read classics or novels with some type of interesting historic or cultural backdrop. This book came up because Linda's granddaughter was going to be baptized Catholic and she didn't know much about Catholicism. She started quizzing me about my religion and I couldn't help much. I mentioned I bought this book awhile back (when I was having trouble understanding why I was a Catholic) and never read it but thought it might provide some interesting insights. We'll see....
The other thing I'm reading is The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Peformed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, a play by Peter Weiss. That's my first assignment this semester in 16th Century Literature. Francis X. Ryan, SJ (hmmm, wonder what the X stands for) admitted starting a course dealing with Tudor literature with a play from the 20th century is rather odd. (I thought so but, then again, all my John Carroll professors have done similar things. We studied every playwright but Shakespeare in my Shakespeare class.) Anyway, Dr. Ryan says, "the play highlights the vast ideological difference between what concepts and beliefs we take for granted and those which were foundational values of 16th century England -- obedience, for instance. This will be the fourth class I've taken at JCU, working toward my MA in Creative Writing -- just for fun. I have a real job. Two classes I took right after college -- about 25 years ago -- also transferred. So I think I have another 5 or so to go after this. I didn't think I'd be anxious to finish because I'm doing it for the joy of reading and discussing literature and the opportunity to learn from other writers. But suddenly, I want to be done. I think if I was retired, it would be a different story. But the demands of work make the demands of school a little less "joyful." Was this a terrible first post?
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