The Vine Guy – Wines To Cut Your Teeth On

For the past couple of weeks, I have been writing about how consumers who want to learn more about wine can do so by reading wine books, attending tastings and starting their own wine groups. But when it comes right down to it, the best thing to do is to simply taste more wine. The trick, however, is finding wines that will expand your horizons without shrinking your bank account.

 With a little bit of research and a lot of tasting, I have compiled a list of several wines that any wine novice or accomplished enthusiast can cut their wine teeth on for around $12 a bottle.

Check out my recommendations in this week’s Vine Guy column in the DC Examiner Newspaper

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WTOP Wine of the Week – Learning More About Wine

So, you want to learn more about wine but don’t know where to start. Or maybe you’re just looking for a reasonably priced wine that will expand your palate’s horizon. Either way, you’re not alone.

Listen to this week’s WTOP Radio Wine of the Week to learn more about what you can do to learn more about wine!

Capital Wine School

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Wine Primer 101 – Starting Your Own Wine Group

The best way for anyone to learn more about wine – whether you’re just starting off or want to take your interest in wine to the next level – is to sample as many different wines as possible. 

Starting a wine tasting group with a small group of friends will not only provide exposure to a wide variety of wines while sharing the financial burden, it will also lead to friendships that will last a life time. Personally, I have learned more about wine from the two wine tasting groups I belong to than anything else I do.

Click here to learn how to start your own wine group in this week’s Vine Guy column in the DC Examiner Newspaper

 

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Wine Primer – Learning More About Wine, Part One

Do you want to learn more about wine but don’t know where to start? Or are you just looking for a reasonably priced wine that will expand your palate’s horizon? You are not alone.

Click here to read this week’s Vine Guy column in the DC Examiner Newspaper to find out how to learn more about wine (part one of a two-part series).

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WTOP Radio Wine of the Week – Scary Good Wines for Halloween

 Tonight is Halloween – and at our house, the ghosts and goblins that show up on my doorstep are our adult friends and parents in the neighborhood who know that I usually have a bottle or two of wine open and ready to share when the doorbell rings. Plastic wine glasses compete with plastic pumpkins and paper bags, extended at arms length, looking for a liquid goody of the red or white varietal.

Listen to this week’s WTOP Radio’s Wine of the Week to see what ghostly good wines I’ll be pouring on Halloween!

 

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New Beer Wine & Co Store in Bethesda is a Bust.

A new boutique wine shop just opened in Bethesda, Maryland, and if they don’t change their attitude near future, it will soon go the way of the clay amphora. The Beer, Wine & Co. (located at the 7029 Wisconsin Avenue in the heart of Bethesda) is the sister project of the Food, Wine & Co. restaurant across the street. From the moment you walk in the door, you get the feeling that it could be something special. The only problem is, the customer is not anything special.

I have now had the unfortunate opportunity to visit this shop not once, not twice, but THREE times and have yet to get anyone behind the counter to even acknowledge my existence. On my last visit, there were three – count ‘em, three – employees behind the counter watching –and I am not making this up – women’s platform diving on the TV!

During my “alone time” I had a chance to peruse the selection of beer and wine on the shelves. While the wine inventory was ordinary (but fairly priced for a Montgomery County retailer), the beer selection was other-worldly, with choices ranging from cool domestic labels to exotic international choices.  Oh, how I wished someone would have sold a few to me!

But the problem is that you can’t get anyone to help you! And, judging from what I overheard on one visit (I believe it was my second time in), I’m not sure I’d want anyone’s help! I was in the shop for ten minutes – being ignored – when a woman walked in and asked for help. She was looking for a red wine to go with cheese. Easy enough. But the salesperson had not a clue as to where to begin. Oy! He asked her what country she wanted to try. She said she did not care, but it had to go with cheese. He asked her what type of grape she wanted to try. She said she did not care, but it had to go with cheese. So he recommended a Chianti from Italy. Now, maybe there is something about this Chianti that I don’t know, but with so many other reasonable selections to choose from on the shelf, it seemed like an odd recommendation.

Maybe the reason they don’t offer to help customers is because they don’t know what they’re doing (yet).

Okay – so I decide that it is time to let management know. I walk across the street to the sister venture and ask to speak to a manager there so that they can pass along my concerns to the non-existent management at the wine shop. She took my information down and said she would pass it along to one of the owners. Sure enough, I get a call from Carlos an hour later. When I explained what happened, he merely said – and again, I am not making this up – “We don’t like to be too pushy.” Fair enough, but to completely ignore a customer on three separate occasions isn’t not being pushy – it’s being aloof. What’s more, he explained that he was the manager and one of the owners, and – you’re going to love this – he was in the store during my last visit. He was one of the guys who was watching TV!

Once Carlos figured out that I knew that he was part of the problem, he abruptly hung up. Weird.

I may not be the biggest name in the wine world, but I do know my way around a wine shop and I can tell you that ignoring customers and making questionable wine recommendations is not a great recipe for success… If you find yourself in Bethesda and you’re in need of a bottle or two of wine, check out Cork and Fork around the corner. The staff is not only knowledgeable (the owners are former winemakers from France), but they are eager to help. Unfortunately, their beer selection is not nearly as impressive as the unfriendly Beer, Wine & Co.

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This week on WTOP Radio, I review several value-oriented wines from Cupcake Vineyards. Wine maker Adam Richardson makes tasty wines from five countries – all for less than $15!

Click here to listen to the WTOP Wine of the Week podcast.

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Cupcake Vineyards Is Loaded With Value

What happens when a naval aviator for the Royal Australian Navy turns his sights to winemaking? You get wines that take off in the mouth with well-grounded prices. You get Cupcake Vineyard wines.

Click here to read about the international value of Cupcake Vineyard wines in this week’s Vine Guy Column in the Examiner Newspaper.

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Oktoberfest is for Beer!

People are always amazed when I tell them that I really like beer. I know that my moniker, The Vine Guy, suggests otherwise, but my first love before wine was beer. I even brewed my own for several years – until my wife became pregnant with our first child and she had an “adverse” reaction to the smell of the wort.  But my love affair with beer continues.

With the onset of Oktoberfest, my beer-roots bubble up to the surface like the head of a perfectly poured lager. And this time of year is a great way to drive home the point that, just like fine wine, many beers are brewed to be paired with specific types of food. Just like the following beers…

Click here to read about beers I recommend for Oktoberfest in the DC Examiner Newspaper

Click here to listen my recommendations on WTOP Radio Wine (um, Beer) Of The Week

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WTOP Radio Wine of the Week – Falling for Oregon Pinot Noir

Fall is the perfect time to enjoy the beautifully fruit-centric pinot noir wines from Oregon’s Willamette Valley.

Blessed with a diversity of soil composition, and a temperate climate with maritime influences, the Willamette Valley is about as ideal a place to grow the finicky pinot noir grape as anywhere. The warm days and cool nights contribute to even ripening, intense fruit characteristics, and bright acidity. In general, they are a touch bolder than their French cousins and a bit rounder than the pinot noir revolution going on Down Under. They display flavors of wild strawberry, dark cherry, graphite, tea and bramble. Stony minerality is another hallmark feature of these wines.

 Click here to listen to this week’s WTOP Radio Wine of the Week for the perfect Pinot Noir wines for fall weather

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