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Wine Stories

Last Thursday night, the  Red White Boston Tasting Crew collided with the Future M Marketing conference for a tasting at  Central Bottle Wine & Provisions. Future M was a Marketing conference happening all over Boston, with sessions and events sprinkled around the city with some of the best minds in Marketing focusing on everything from brand strategy and experience architecture to next generation communities and emerging platforms. I was sad to miss it; when you work for yourself, there is not a professional development budget, at least in the beginning. One of the many things to think about when leaving the safety net of a big company (You also have to remember to order your own printer ink.)

Luckily, I was able to attend one Future M event as part of Red White Boston, and being that it was an event that involved wine, cheese, and tasting crew friends, well that made it even better.

I arrived at Central Bottle a little early to take photos. I hadn’t been to this beautiful wine and gourmet food store since their opening day. It had definitely changed a bit!

Central Bottle Wine

Central Bottle is a clean and modern space with great light from walls of windows that face out on to Mass Ave. Everywhere you look there is something delectable, cheese, bread, chocolate, wine, or beer.

Central Bottle Wine

fig cake

And then more wine.

wines

The large flat screen at Central Bottle was set up with two Twitter feeds, one for Future M and one for Red White Tasting Crew. I may have tweeted a few times just to see myself on the big screen. Winking smile

tweet up

I caught up with tasting crew members I hadn’t seen in months and chatted with some Future M participants before the tasting got started. This tasting was all about stories, starting with the fun story of how Central Bottle came to be. It’s a great story, one that it is easy to feel a part of, especially when Nick and Maureen started leading us through our tasting.

cheese

Red White Boston’s founder, Cathy Huyghe, who usually has wine open and waiting for us when we arrive for an event, structured this tasting a bit differently. Instead of diving right into the wine, we learned its story first.

The tasting lineup:

Dry Riesling from Ravines Wine Cellar in the Finger Lakes of New York

Cilegiolo Rosato from Bisson in the Liguria region of Italy

Le Poivre et Sel from Les Vin Contes in the Loire region of France

Enrico Cialdini Lambrusco from Cleto Chiarli in Italy

tasting notes

In addition to the usual wine info, the tasting sheet also included all of our Twitter handles and those of the wineries on Twitter. The sheet also included some key words and phrases that were part of each wine’s story.

Dry Riesling

The Ravines Riesling was a beautiful wine, both in its flavor and its story. Jason had visited the tasting room in the Finger Lakes just days earlier, and his description of the property made me want to go there immediately. His blog post and photos are beautiful;  be sure to check it out.

The cool climate of the Finger Lakes lends this wine a nice acidity which made it a pleasure to drink and also makes it an ideal pairing with food, including cheese. goat's milk cheese

Central Bottle owners

The next wine, a rosato from Liguria, was, as we discussed, a perfect wine for this time of year. It is light enough for summer, but has enough body to be a rosé that you drink in winter. It had an herbal quality in the nose, and I also got a bit of rose petal before tasting its deep strawberry flavors.

rose wine

Somehow I failed to photograph the third wine, my favorite of the evening. True to its name Le Poivre et Sel, this wine exhibited salty and peppery characteristics. I bought two bottles, and while I noticed more the marked spiciness on the palate, my husband commented more on the salinity. This is definitely an interesting wine and one that took him some getting used to. I loved it right off the bat, and it will definitely be making repeat appearances on our table.

While we tasted, we were treated to more food, this time salumi from Central Bottle’s case. Thin slices of salty, melt-in-your-mouth meats REALLY went well with this wine.

salumi

The final wine was a deep red, sparkling Lambrusco. Frothy and fruity, this wine would be perfect for sipping in very small pours but was a little too sweet for me. It was a nice way to wrap up the evening though, and another interesting choice from the folks at Central Bottle.

Lambrusco

What a great tasting space and fun group of people to spend an evening with! The wines were diverse and ones I might never have had the chance to try if not for this tasting. I loved how everything came together in this event. I am excited for more Red White Tasting Crew events and also to return to Central Bottle, a great store with a great staff and selection.

Have you tasted any interesting wines lately, that you loved or didn’t love?

If you live in Boston, I would love to see you at the next Red White Boston tasting crew event! Lots of wine and networking with fun people. Let me know if you have questions.

Tags: cambridge, cheese, events, Red White Boston, wine

Summer makes blogging easier. The light is great, and the ingredients, local produce, make for great photos with no work. It also makes eating easier. The elegant, fresh flavors of summer fruits and vegetables lend themselves to quick meals without much fuss, almost as if nature planned it that way. . . I just need to find a place where it is like this year round!

As you know, I have been working mostly from home, but this week I started a contract job that has me in the office more. And that means making lunch again. Summer helped make that a no-brainer. A fresh, light, and veggie-packed pasta salad was my first thought, and it was a good one.

orecchiette

I started with about 3/4 bag of Trader Joe’s orecchiette, the little ear shaped pasta. I really like tiny pastas in pasta salad. I got the water boiling and the pasta cooking while I prepped the rest of my simple recipe.

An entire shallot, finely diced, went into the pan.

shallot

It joined a large zucchini, two small summer squashes, and grape tomatoes, all from Trader Joe’s, and all local or semi-local, at the very least grown somewhere in the US, an option that my Shaw’s just does not offer. Does it ever completely enrage you that, even in the height of the season, we import veggies and fruits from everywhere but our local farmers? Hello, economy fix. Let’s support businesses in our communities!

vegetables

Anyhow. . . once the pasta was cooked, I mixed it in with the vegetables and four triangles of Laughing Cow garlic & herb cheese. For a light cheese, which I normally would laugh at, I actually think Laughing Cow is good, and mixed in with the veggies and pasta, it made a nice cream “sauce”. Yummy.

Laughing Cow Cheese

I forgot to take a photo of the final product, but it was great! It made for a lunch I looked forward to, and for me, that is the ultimate test of a lunch recipe.

This pasta salad would make a great vegetarian side dish or main dish for a summer BBQ, as long as it isn’t kept out in the sun too long!

What did you have for lunch at work this week? Anything delicious?

Tags: cheese, Food, Lunch, pasta, summer, vegetables, Vegetarian

On Monday night, I opened the door to the WGBH studios event space in Brighton, leaving the gray, rainy day behind in favor of an evening in Puglia with WGBH and Red White Boston.

Wines from Puglia

The event was centered around the arrival of four Puglian winemakers visiting Boston pouring wines that had never before been tasted in Massachusetts. In addition to the wine, the event featured a  burratta pulling demonstration from an Italian cheese maker who now works for Maplebrook Farm in Vermont.

I wasn’t sure what I was most excited about, trying these new-to-me wines or seeing burratta, a Puglian specialty and favorite cheese of mine, being made. Oh, and of course getting to eat some!

First, a word about Burratta from my friends at Wikipedia:

Burrata is a fresh Italian cheese, made from mozzarella and cream. The outer shell is solid mozzarella while the inside contains both mozzarella and cream, giving it an unusual, soft texture. It is usually served fresh, at room temperature. The name "burrata" means "buttered" in Italian.

maplebrook farms cheese maplebrook farms cheese

Burratta is stuffed with many things, including, as we learned, Greek yogurt, but the traditional cheese is made with Stracciatella, spaghetti-like strands of mozzarella in cream.

stracciatella

First, we got to sample some of the mozzarella by itself. It was slightly chewy and salty, as fresh as it gets.

fresh mozzarella

Then we watched the process of making burratta. It looked like a ton of fun! Our cheesemaker, Domenico, kneaded the mozzarella curds together, adding hot water to them at one point.

burratta pulling

making burratta

Then he started to pull the cheese. It was amazing how it started out as curds and came together as a sort of rubbery mass.

burratta pulling

Burratta making is a two person process; one needs to hold the stretched mozzarella while the other fills it with a scoop of the cream. Domenico then pinched the ball of burratta closed and placed it in a container of water to set.

burratta pulling

 

burratta

Watching the burratta made was mesmerizing. While it looked like hard work, it also looked really fun. I want to visit Maplebrook Farm now!

In addition to the fresh cheese from Maplebrook, Whole Foods River Street provided antipasti plates for snacking while we tasted Puglian wine.

Whole Foods antipasti

The four wine Puglian wine producers sharing their wine were Masseria Celentano, Casaltrinita, Cantine Teanum, and Botromagno. Throughout the course of the event, each of the winemakers spoke, allowing us to learn a little about Puglian wine while walking around the room tasting. These producers are using indigenous grapes that have come to thrive in Puglia,  though some have origins that can be traced back to ancient times and other places like Greece and Asia Minor. You may or may not have heard of  some of these grapes before, Greco, Fiano, Aglianico, Primitivo, Moscato, Malvasia bianca, Nero di troia, and Montepulciano, but I would urge you to try them if you can!

I have been in a white wine mood lately; I suppose my palate is thinking it must be spring or something, so as I always do, I started tasting some of the whites, along with Brian and Jason.

Puglian wine Puglian wine

 

The crowds were a little difficult to navigate, but I tried the following wines:

Masseria Celentano La Preta: This wine, a blend of Muscato and Sauvignon Blanc, was floral, almost too much for me on its own. However, as I often enjoy many wines more with food, I could see this being a great oyster pairing, the briny oysters balancing the flavors of the wine.

Casaltrinita Greco: I found this also to have a floral, perfume-y nose, but it had delicate fruit flavors. It would be a great summer sipper.

Botromagno Gravina: A blend of Greco and Malvasia bianca, this was my favorite wine of the evening. I have enjoyed Malvasia in the past. The wine was dry and more flavorful than the other two. It had a nice acidity, flavors of honeysuckle and lemon, and was simply delightful.

Puglian wine

After awhile, the crowds got to me, and since I needed to get home to let my locked out husband in (my fault, I took his keys!), I only tried two of the reds.

Casaltrinita Coppa Malva: I loved this wine. A blend of Nero di Troia and Cabernet, this wine offered the full body and spice I love.

Maseria Celentano Querciagrande: 100% Nero di troia, this was another great pick, hearty, deep red, and as the notes said, would hold up well with meat dishes and strong, aged cheeses.

Trying wines that had never been poured in Massachusetts and some that hadn’t been poured outside Puglia was quite the treat. It made me long for trips to Italy, for sun, great wine and food, and to visit my nephews there. I swear, any time I hear someone speaking Italian, I miss them a little more!

Have you tried Puglian wines or wines from another region that is not as represented in the US?

Tags: Boston, cheese, events, Puglia, Red White Boston, wine

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