Sunday, May 26, 2013

The Finalists in the 2013 Wine Blog Awards Are Announced


The Finalists in the 2013 Wine Blog Awards Are Announced

Best Blog Post of the Year
Finalists:

1- W. Blake Gray’s Darth Vader is My Lover: Revelations about Brettanomyces
http://palatepress.com/2013/01/wine/revelations-about-brettanomyces-in-wine/

2- Lilyelaine Wakawaka’s Escaping Convention: Calibrating to Stark Conditions, a Conversation with Greg Brewer
http://wakawakawinereviews.com/2013/02/07/escaping-convention-calibrating-to-stark-conditions-a-conversation-with-greg-brewer/

3- Katie Kelly Bell’s Adventures in Taste
http://www.forbes.com/sites/katiebell/2012/07/09/is-there-really-a-taste-difference-between-cheap-and-expensive-wines/

4- Ron Washam’s Blind Book Review–”How to Love Wine”
http://hosemasterofwine.blogspot.com/2012/10/blind-book-reviewing-how-to-love-wine.html

5- Alfonso Cevola’s Rape of the Veneto
http://acevola.blogspot.com/2012/12/the-rape-of-veneto.html

6- Ron Washam’s The Death of WIne Critics
http://hosemasterofwine.blogspot.com/2013/03/lo-hai-qu-on-death-of-wine-critics.html


Best New Wine Blog:
Finalists:

1- Chasing the Vine
http://chasingthevine.com/

2- What’s in the Bottle
Know what you're drinking & what to pair it with – by Roger Killen
http://rogerbkillen.com/

3- Screwed
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/forkintheroad/unscrewed/

Best Overall Wine Blog:
Finalists:

1- Hosemaster of Wine
http://hosemasterofwine.blogspot.com/

2- 1 Wine Dude
http://www.1winedude.com/

3- The Terroirist
http://www.terroirist.com/

4- The UK Wine Show
http://www.thirtyfifty.co.uk/uk-wine-show.asp

5- Steve Heimoff
http://www.steveheimoff.com/

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Bob Egelhoff visits

Bob Egelhoff was in town over the weekend. So, I stopped by and he had three wines he was showcasing. Bob is a consulting winemaker (and more) in the Napa Valley the last 15 years. He studied at University of California at Davis' viticultural program. From there, he started at Beckstofer wines. He was the wine-maker for Pahlmeyer and Merryvale among other,  high end, cult wines.

He started his own label in 2001 and produces his "Blue Label". We had the 2008 today: powerful spicy and significant tannins, but well integrated. Can't wait to have this in 5-7 years. $75

His red label, Walton, cabernet sauvignon was named after his wife's family. A little more approachable, but will last a long time, too. A mess of spices and softer, rounder tannins, but still well-balanced.

The Riesling is a rarety. Little is grown in Napa - less than 1% of all grapes grown there. He served the 2008 today. It has an earthy, minerally aroma. On first sip, the acid jars the tounge and starts the juices flowing, but, then this curatin a fresh fruit floats over the tongue. Hints of petrol, lemon and limestone. Very complex and delicious!