Toasts for Turkey Day - Good Housekeeping
October 28, 2008
The annual question: Which wines go best with the mouthwtering flavors - savory, tart, sweet, salty - of the holiday feast? Our answer: whites like Riesling…
Leave a comment (No Comments)The annual question: Which wines go best with the mouthwtering flavors - savory, tart, sweet, salty - of the holiday feast? Our answer: whites like Riesling…
Leave a comment (No Comments)Harvest 2008 will be remembered as probably one of the coolest season in Eastern Washington in a long time. Our grapes are coming at low sugar (a good thing for lower alcohol), good flavor and high acid (which is great for Riesling in general). We are about 40% through picking we need to make serious strides in the next two weeks as we are drawing near the end of harvest.
One unattended consequence of this long cool hang time is the slow development of good botrytis. Good and divine Botrytis (as opposed to bad and evil botrytis aka sour rot) occurs when the botrytis fungus grows inside the grape berry and literally dries up the berry by using the water within resulting in a concentrated grape berry. Wines made from partially or completely botrytized harvest are among the most complex and delicious in the world.
This year I figure that about 15% of our berries have been dehydrated with botrytis and that bodes well for the complexity of our wines. We might even try a little TBA (for Trocken Beren Auslese: 100% botrytized harvest) for fun…
Leave a comment (No Comments)Pacific Rim is part of a Riesling advocacy group that has put out a booklet to educate consumers.
Leave a comment (No Comments)About five weeks ago we have received the raspberries from Mount Vernon that will make our Framboise this year. We have brought this reicipe out of the closet because we got so many folks calling asking for it. Well, it is back and I must say it is a very very delicious batch! We are one of the rare winery to make this type of wine/liqueur from fresh raspberries. I think it is because it is such a pain in the neck to make this type of beverage from fresh fruit rather than from concentrate. The reward for using fresh fruit is theintense raspberry flavor we extract during the making. It must be one of the most deliciously raspberrishly insane drink out there. We are now done with the infusion part of the making where we put the berries in contact with alcohol to extract the flavors and we now are settling the finished Framboise before filtration. If all goes well, we should have the Framboise out by Christmas time.
This is a picture of Scott, our Enologist, after a Framboise bath - Nice job Scott, it tastes great!
Leave a comment (1 Comment)Meet the fearless Pacific Rim Sales team as they gathered last week in Eastern Washington for our annual sales meeting. They are quite a bunch!
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