There haven't been many updates to The Cork And Cap for a while. However, I think we might just get it going again!
In the meantime, you can follow The Cork and Cap on Twitter at http://Twitter.com/TheCorkAndCap. Cheers, and happy 2012!
Friday, January 6, 2012
Monday, March 22, 2010
Muscat Love
Sokol Blosser with one of its best wines: 2009 Willamette Valley Early Muscat. A great day thanks to Jackie's membership party, Dobbes Family Estate tasting room, and awesome weather. This is another reason why I love Oregon! (Thanks to Melissa for the cool photo.)
Labels:
Dobbes Family Estate,
Muscat,
Sokol Blosser,
wine,
wine tasting
Thursday, March 11, 2010
120 bottles of wine on the wall...
I am finally getting around to blogging about my wine making adventures. My sister is getting married in October and she asked if I would make wine as the favors for everyone attending the wedding. Me, being the loving sister that I am, said, no problem, I'd love to...and then I realized what I signed onto. 120 bottles, labeling and coordinating transporting. Because yeah, I live in Oregon and my sister lives in Wisconsin. Hang on tight, it's a bumpy ride!
We decided to make lighter, sweeter, more fruity wine. Those attending her wedding may not be the wine snobs like my friends (I swear, all you have to say is 'Pinot' and all of our hearts start racing!) so we wanted something that would please the majority of the attendees. So we settled on a Pomegranate Zinfandel, Peach Chardonnay and a Mango Citrus Symphony (white wine). And for the first time, I made three batches at the same time. Each one had their own personalities and they kind of became my children who lived on my kitchen floor for three months. I even nicknamed each one based on their personalities. Pomegranate Zin became Pudgy Paula Z (Paula for short), Peach Chardonnay became Baby Peach and Mango Citrus Symphony became McNinny.
Before I begin my little story, I want to first give a huge THANK YOU to my dear friends who were with me for most of the way: Melissa, you just rock! Katrina is now the 'queen racker' in all the land. And Justin was definitely the elbow grease in the operation! A big, big thank you for all your time and effort...and for all your celebration as we accomplished each step along the way. You made it so much fun!
Ok, so let's get started. I had to borrow some equipment from fellow brewers (beer and wine) to get my three-batch operation running. When I usually get a batch going, it's a cinch...and I figured, well, if you multiply it by 3, what's the big deal? Hmm... I do not have any pictures of this step because I thought I could handle it all by myself. I usually put the chemicals plus water in a 6 gallon bucket, add the juice, stir, top with yeast and let it party in the corner for a while. But since I asked my friends for carboys, not buckets, I had to pour all the dried chemicals plus about 2 gallons of juice and 4 gallons of water through a 2" diameter hole....needless to say it was a headache. I decided to mix up the batches and then siphon it into the carboys instead. McNinny didn't start off well. When I siphoned her into a carboy, I didn't realize that it had only a 5 gallon capacity, so it went all over the floor. I think it scarred her because she became so apprehensive throughout the entire process; never sure of herself and ready to take the leap into the next phase. Baby Peach was fantastic. She blended together and did what she needed to do perfectly! And Pudgy Paula was kind of a glutton. She just couldn't get enough. I had to about 5 gallons of water to balance out her sugar content and it almost overflowed a 6 gallon carboy. Needless to say, she was going to make her presence known just by shear mass!
So for two weeks the kids partied in the corner, feasting on sugar and off-gassing like a geriatric crowd at a chili dinner. It was a very cold January in Portland so I had to raise my heat to keep the party going (Steph, you will be receiving my utility bill...j/k). At two weeks, it was time to measure sugar levels. For the amount of gurgling that was happening, I was sure the I was a great parent and host and they ate more than their share of sugar. But levels were not quite there....another week of party time. I measured again and the sugar levels had gone down but still were not where they quite needed to be. We racked Baby Peach and Paula to filter them out a bit...another week of party time.
Finally we just said, enough, you are done! The sugar levels were still a tad high but it meant that they would be a little sweeter and lower alcohol levels. Considering the group it was serving, this was fine. So we added in more chemicals to stabilize them...no more gas allowed. We do not need corks popping!
We let them nap for another two weeks. In the meantime, I needed to prep bottles. Through some bribery, I rallied my friends to help scrape labels off of 12 cases of bottles in two parties. Thank you to Nathan, Katrina and Justin for the use of your bathtubs! All I have to say is eww.... And to Melissa, Mercedes and Andy to helping out as well. They are pros at scraping glue! We got 6 cases done in an hour! We do hire out our services for a price (usually Mexican and vodka does the trick!) There was one fatality in the process. I broke Melissa's bottle brush while trying to clean the insides. I'll replace it, I promise!
Filtering was the next adventure to be had. In this process, you need to run all the wine through two sets of tubing and eventually into a little contraption that holds the filter where it spits out the beautifully clear wine. Paula and Baby Peach were real troopers. They went through once and looked beautiful! I was so proud of them! But again, McNinny was apprehensive. We didn't rack her like we did the others during sugar eating process and she has just been more sensitive than the other two. So I filtered her two more times. She took forever to filter, just trickling through the filter contraption...but finally, she was ready!
Last weekend was the big weekend of bottling. What a whirlwind! We started by bottling Baby Peach. She was a sure winner and had a great track record of being such an easy going child. I controlled the wine going into the bottle while RinaRacker 'the racking queen' pumped the wine from the bucket. Nathan was in charge of topping off all bottles so they were consistent. I bought these corks that had trees on them. Since the wedding was in Oct, I thought we'd try to be festive with trees, instead of cheesy Italian words or grapes. Melissa had a heck of a time getting them soft enough. If they aren't soft, they won't go into the bottle cleanly and it looks like you're bottling moonshine...not exactly wedding drink of choice. But she and Justin mad it work and they turned out fabulous. Because I didn't have all the bottles sanitized, we had to constantly change out which batch was bottled until we had enough bottles ready. In the end, and about 5 hrs later, we had 7 cases of wine ready for the wedding. I am so proud of us! Pudgy Paul really came through with 3 cases while Baby Peach and McNinny each had 2 cases.
And how did they taste? Of course, fantastic! Pudgy Paula Zin has a rich sweetness that ends with a zippy spiciness that makes you smile. Baby Peach is always a winner. She is like sweet nectar that balances out the dry chardonnay beautifully. And McNinny? Did she pull it off? I think so. I think she is little more complex than Baby Peach. She is also sweet at first but the citrus comes and socks you in the back of the mouth just to say 'hi'. Definitely a fun wine!
But 7 cases does not equal 120 bottles does it? Sigh, no it doesn't. So I will be making another two batches; one Pomegranate Zinfandel and one Peach Chardonnay. Alas, the Mango Citrus Symphony has been discontinued...maybe on the account of her apprehension to do her thing and become wine with the confidence you need? I wonder? But she is tasty and I hope she does make a comeback in the future. She is worth another look.
We decided to make lighter, sweeter, more fruity wine. Those attending her wedding may not be the wine snobs like my friends (I swear, all you have to say is 'Pinot' and all of our hearts start racing!) so we wanted something that would please the majority of the attendees. So we settled on a Pomegranate Zinfandel, Peach Chardonnay and a Mango Citrus Symphony (white wine). And for the first time, I made three batches at the same time. Each one had their own personalities and they kind of became my children who lived on my kitchen floor for three months. I even nicknamed each one based on their personalities. Pomegranate Zin became Pudgy Paula Z (Paula for short), Peach Chardonnay became Baby Peach and Mango Citrus Symphony became McNinny.
Before I begin my little story, I want to first give a huge THANK YOU to my dear friends who were with me for most of the way: Melissa, you just rock! Katrina is now the 'queen racker' in all the land. And Justin was definitely the elbow grease in the operation! A big, big thank you for all your time and effort...and for all your celebration as we accomplished each step along the way. You made it so much fun!
Ok, so let's get started. I had to borrow some equipment from fellow brewers (beer and wine) to get my three-batch operation running. When I usually get a batch going, it's a cinch...and I figured, well, if you multiply it by 3, what's the big deal? Hmm... I do not have any pictures of this step because I thought I could handle it all by myself. I usually put the chemicals plus water in a 6 gallon bucket, add the juice, stir, top with yeast and let it party in the corner for a while. But since I asked my friends for carboys, not buckets, I had to pour all the dried chemicals plus about 2 gallons of juice and 4 gallons of water through a 2" diameter hole....needless to say it was a headache. I decided to mix up the batches and then siphon it into the carboys instead. McNinny didn't start off well. When I siphoned her into a carboy, I didn't realize that it had only a 5 gallon capacity, so it went all over the floor. I think it scarred her because she became so apprehensive throughout the entire process; never sure of herself and ready to take the leap into the next phase. Baby Peach was fantastic. She blended together and did what she needed to do perfectly! And Pudgy Paula was kind of a glutton. She just couldn't get enough. I had to about 5 gallons of water to balance out her sugar content and it almost overflowed a 6 gallon carboy. Needless to say, she was going to make her presence known just by shear mass!
So for two weeks the kids partied in the corner, feasting on sugar and off-gassing like a geriatric crowd at a chili dinner. It was a very cold January in Portland so I had to raise my heat to keep the party going (Steph, you will be receiving my utility bill...j/k). At two weeks, it was time to measure sugar levels. For the amount of gurgling that was happening, I was sure the I was a great parent and host and they ate more than their share of sugar. But levels were not quite there....another week of party time. I measured again and the sugar levels had gone down but still were not where they quite needed to be. We racked Baby Peach and Paula to filter them out a bit...another week of party time.
Finally we just said, enough, you are done! The sugar levels were still a tad high but it meant that they would be a little sweeter and lower alcohol levels. Considering the group it was serving, this was fine. So we added in more chemicals to stabilize them...no more gas allowed. We do not need corks popping!
We let them nap for another two weeks. In the meantime, I needed to prep bottles. Through some bribery, I rallied my friends to help scrape labels off of 12 cases of bottles in two parties. Thank you to Nathan, Katrina and Justin for the use of your bathtubs! All I have to say is eww.... And to Melissa, Mercedes and Andy to helping out as well. They are pros at scraping glue! We got 6 cases done in an hour! We do hire out our services for a price (usually Mexican and vodka does the trick!) There was one fatality in the process. I broke Melissa's bottle brush while trying to clean the insides. I'll replace it, I promise!
Filtering was the next adventure to be had. In this process, you need to run all the wine through two sets of tubing and eventually into a little contraption that holds the filter where it spits out the beautifully clear wine. Paula and Baby Peach were real troopers. They went through once and looked beautiful! I was so proud of them! But again, McNinny was apprehensive. We didn't rack her like we did the others during sugar eating process and she has just been more sensitive than the other two. So I filtered her two more times. She took forever to filter, just trickling through the filter contraption...but finally, she was ready!
Last weekend was the big weekend of bottling. What a whirlwind! We started by bottling Baby Peach. She was a sure winner and had a great track record of being such an easy going child. I controlled the wine going into the bottle while RinaRacker 'the racking queen' pumped the wine from the bucket. Nathan was in charge of topping off all bottles so they were consistent. I bought these corks that had trees on them. Since the wedding was in Oct, I thought we'd try to be festive with trees, instead of cheesy Italian words or grapes. Melissa had a heck of a time getting them soft enough. If they aren't soft, they won't go into the bottle cleanly and it looks like you're bottling moonshine...not exactly wedding drink of choice. But she and Justin mad it work and they turned out fabulous. Because I didn't have all the bottles sanitized, we had to constantly change out which batch was bottled until we had enough bottles ready. In the end, and about 5 hrs later, we had 7 cases of wine ready for the wedding. I am so proud of us! Pudgy Paul really came through with 3 cases while Baby Peach and McNinny each had 2 cases.
And how did they taste? Of course, fantastic! Pudgy Paula Zin has a rich sweetness that ends with a zippy spiciness that makes you smile. Baby Peach is always a winner. She is like sweet nectar that balances out the dry chardonnay beautifully. And McNinny? Did she pull it off? I think so. I think she is little more complex than Baby Peach. She is also sweet at first but the citrus comes and socks you in the back of the mouth just to say 'hi'. Definitely a fun wine!
But 7 cases does not equal 120 bottles does it? Sigh, no it doesn't. So I will be making another two batches; one Pomegranate Zinfandel and one Peach Chardonnay. Alas, the Mango Citrus Symphony has been discontinued...maybe on the account of her apprehension to do her thing and become wine with the confidence you need? I wonder? But she is tasty and I hope she does make a comeback in the future. She is worth another look.
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Syrahs Shiraz for the Oscars
To celebrate the Oscars, Jackie hosted a party at her house with a blind wine tasting theme of Syrahs or Shirazs. So we all brought different wines and ranked the wines we thought tasted best.
The places of Syrahs/Shirazs represented right to left in pic Australia (A-Yellowtail 2008), Chile (B-RaYun 2008), Argentina (C-Gouguehaheim 2008), Southern Oregon (Dobbes Syrah V-2006), California (Virgin 2007).
The winner of the blind tasting test was Napo! 5 out of 5 of the wines. Runner up with 3 of 5 was the rest of the crew (Jackie, Mercedes, Andy, Katrina,n Melissa). The top 3 surprises of wines were Aussie, Oregon, n Cali. A majority's heart or should I say taste buds drew to the believed Yellowtail which brought back fond memories of Jazz in the park in WI.
What could add to the night of tasting wine and Oscar bingo? That would be a food bounty!! There was plenty to graze on with yummy spinach dip in bread bowl, chicken puffs, carmelized onion puffs, crab roll ups, meatballs, and numerous dipping veggies, chips, pretzels, and bread to eat the cheesy fondue. For dessert, it was round two of fondue with chocolate. The wine and chocolate fondue was especially tasty with pretzels, marshmallows, bananas, pound cake, n Jaxie doodles. The Oscar night finished on all high notes with plenty of first time Oscar winners and everyone's belly full of wine and eats. Toast to the hostess with the mostest and a great night of Oscars!!
Labels:
Dobbes Estate Wine,
Gouguehaheim,
RaYun,
Shiraz,
Syrahs,
Virgin Wine,
Yellowtail
Monday, January 4, 2010
We, We Chenin Chardonnay
New Years Eve was filled with great conversations, potinis, and drinks in Milwaukee, WI. The night was not limited on the variety of drinks flowing to ring in the New Year with old fashions, micro brews, Irish whiskeys to cosmos. However, a celebration is not a celebration until there is wine being enjoyed and this was no different. Kate brought two great bottles of white wine and led the charge on drinking wine. So Dawn and I could not resist. We put down the cocktails to partake in the ritual of a wine tasting.
Recalling all of our fond memories of wine tasting together in Oregon, we decided our tasting would be the Tariquet Chenin Chardonnay.
So with generous pours in each glass, we started our tasting. Soon the bottle was empty but we were energized for the rest of the evening. Here is a short summary of our notes.
Dawn: All I have to say it is GOOD! Plus it doesn't taste like warm lambursco. (All of us LOL)
Kate: Smooths over the rough edges of the Chardonnay. Super drinkable, good food pairing especially with the potinis.
Melissa: Smooth, buttery. A great wine for the beach and would be great with some yummy seafood.
Some additional information on the wine.
Producer: Domaine du Tariquet
Region: CĂ´tes de Gascogne
Country: France
Great balanced wine with 75% Chenin and 25% Chardonnay. The contrast between the mineral notes of the Chenin and the richness of the Chardonnay results in a fresh, clean and delicious wine. An ideal wine for the summer or as aperitif. A 2007 wine at $10.99, we all give it two thumbs up and recommend it as great Chardonnay option.
Recalling all of our fond memories of wine tasting together in Oregon, we decided our tasting would be the Tariquet Chenin Chardonnay.
So with generous pours in each glass, we started our tasting. Soon the bottle was empty but we were energized for the rest of the evening. Here is a short summary of our notes.
Dawn: All I have to say it is GOOD! Plus it doesn't taste like warm lambursco. (All of us LOL)
Kate: Smooths over the rough edges of the Chardonnay. Super drinkable, good food pairing especially with the potinis.
Melissa: Smooth, buttery. A great wine for the beach and would be great with some yummy seafood.
Some additional information on the wine.
Producer: Domaine du Tariquet
Region: CĂ´tes de Gascogne
Country: France
Great balanced wine with 75% Chenin and 25% Chardonnay. The contrast between the mineral notes of the Chenin and the richness of the Chardonnay results in a fresh, clean and delicious wine. An ideal wine for the summer or as aperitif. A 2007 wine at $10.99, we all give it two thumbs up and recommend it as great Chardonnay option.
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Stick to coffee and alcohol
This is one of my favorites from Engrish.com. It's available as stickers, clothing, mugs, etc. And truer words have never been said.
LINK
Engrish.com
Monday, December 28, 2009
Saw 'Sideways' again
Mercedes and I watched the movie "Sideways" again. We originally saw the moving in 2004 or 2005 before moving out to Oregon. Although we found the movie enjoyable then, I think we could identify more with the wine aspects of the movie this time. Of course, much of it was dramatized, but it was still better the second time around.
The movie made us realize how passionate we are about wine (and beer, for that matter), and that when you're wrapped up in the world of fine wines and great beers, you tend to forget that not everyone on the planet is as passionate about these beverages as you are. It also made me think about how many memories and experiences are tied to our wine and beer adventures.
Oh yeah, the movie also made us think about all that great Oregon Pinot Noir.
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