GNGNB EP38: Wine Blogging Wednesday #30 New World Syrah

WBW - 3:07 am on Wednesday, August 15, 2007


A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle Wine Podcast EP38: Wine Blogging Wednesday #30

We are getting back in the swing of things and after the ZAP festival in San Francisco, we caught with an old friend, Tim Elliot of Winecast who coincidentally is hosting this month’s Wine Blogging Wednesday. This month’s challenge is much easier than the last time Tim hosted a WBW, and the theme this time around is New World Syrahs. (New World refers to areas that are relatively new to the wine making world. This includes the Americas, as well as New Zeland and Australia.)

Our choice is the 2005 Little Penguin Shiraz.


Little Penguin

Listen to our podcast, and find out why we disagree on this bottle of wine.

If you like the show (or not) take a moment to review our show on iTunes, we’d appreciate it.

Sponsorship provided by Folgers. Get your free gourmet samples at www.folgers.com/podshow

The song for this episode is by Matthew Ebel and the song is Drive Away, from the CD Beer and Coffee. Don’t forget, if you like this song drop the artist a line and let them know what you think and tell them you heard them on A Guy, A Girl, and a Bottle wine podcast!



Cheers!
-A Guy & a Girl


Check us out at PodShow at www.wine.podshow.com
Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep40: Wine Blogging Wednesday #31 - Alternative Wine Packaging

WBW - 3:06 am on Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Hey there guys and girls, here we go again! Wine Blogging Wednesday! This month’s contest is alternative wine packaging. For most people that means boxed wine. In fact, the Boxed-Wine-Guy is hosting this months’ event (Thanks Roger!) but Pam & I are not your average wine drinkers. Nope, not us. We have to be different. We went out and found some wine in a can. With a straw. The horror! Although it is wine, technically speaking it is sparkling wine in a can, and comes to us from Francis Ford Coppola and the wine is his daughter’s namesake, Sofia. The Sofia Mini comes in a package of four cans, neatly packaged in a hexagonal box, and retails for about $12.99. Following the hip trendy set, you can also find the cans for purchase at your local disco. We wonder out loud if Karen and Karla from the Rumor Girls are listening as this seems like a product right up their alley. Listen now as we give you are impressions of this marketers dream product. Have you tried Sofia? Let us know! Give us your thoughts on the wine-in-a-can concept.

Music by Bloom - Falling

A Guy and a Girl
Comment Line - 408-627-7796
Skype - Aguyandgirl

SPONSORS: Sponsorship provided by Folgers. Get your free gourmet samples at www.folgers.com/podshow

GoDaddy Promotional codes and coupons! Use these at GoDaddy.com to save some cold cash (and spend it on some wine)

Bottle1 - Save 10% off any order. Everything.
Bottle2 - Save an additional $5 of any order $30 or more.
Bottle3 - Get any .COM domain name for only $6.95/yr.

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GNGNB Ep24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)

WBW - 12:12 am on Wednesday, November 29, 2006

GNGNB Episode 24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)


OK Guys & Girls, it’s a new month, it’s Wednesday, that must mean - The next episode of LOST! Well, that isn’t really the case, as it happens to be a re-run anyway. Rather it is time once again for Wine blogging Wednesday! the theme for this month is When in Rhone, and is hosted by Jathan over at Winexpressions.com. Although Jathan wanted us to check out some exotic Rhone Varietals, I took this occassion to go and visit a local wine shop here in Willow Glen (a Suburb of San Jose, CA) called the GrapeVine and asked them a few questions about Rhone varietals and sampled a two different wines. I won’t give it all away here in the blog, but I did sample a French blend as well as a California 100% Syrah. Listen to the episode for all the wonderful details and won’t you come a take a quick trip with me to the Rhone region of France…..

Musical Artist is Butterfly Catchers and the song is Morning. Check them out!

The Grapevine is located at:

1389 Lincoln Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
Phone: 408-293-7574
Fax: 408-293-7012
http://www.grapevine-wg.com
store hours
Tues - Fri: 12pm - 9pm
Sat: 10am - 9pm

You can check out all the results from WBW#19 by visiting the following link

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes
or
Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep28: Wine Blogging Wednesday - White Wine

WBW - 5:42 pm on Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Episode 28 Wine Blogging Wednesday#20 Wrap-Up

WBW Casamaro Blanco

El gusto del vino, es como delicada poesia




A Guy and a Girl’s pick for Wine Blogging Wednesday #20 - Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99)



The goal of this month’s installment of WBW was to find and sample a white wine. Easy you say? Pah-shaw. The twist? Well, fellow podcaster and wino Bill from Wine for Newbies insisted on No blends. and oh yeah, it can’t be a Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, or a Riesling. Now what are you left with? Sure, we can here you saying, "but c’mon you two, even we fellow novice
oenophiles
(Definition - A Lover or connoisseur of wine) know that you can still find Chenin Blanc, or the super-duper yummy Semillion". We still say Pah-shaw. First off - Chenin blanc, well, yeah, we coulda/woulda/shoulda, but we wanted to let some of our fellow bloggers and podcasters pick the easy ones. Semillion? Truth be told, we did pick up a bottle of wine made from 100% semillion grapes, but decided to save that for another day. (BTW - it isn’t all that easy to find a bottle made from 100% semillion, most are blended with Sauvignon Blanc). What did we settle on? We went all out and went to Spain, and found a bottle of Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99) wine made by the Garciarevalo family owned winery, created entirely from the Verdejo grape.

Verdejo grape: White. Very high quality and one of the best white varieties in Spain. It makes very aromatic, glyceric, soft wines with body. It is plentiful in Valladolid (69%), Segovia and Avila. It is considered a main variety of Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Other Merchant Reviews

87 Pts - Robert Parker "An excellent value that has never seen a day in oak, the 2004 Casamaro Blanco, a 100% Verdelho from 50-130-year old ungrafted vines, is a soft, delicious white exhibiting plenty of honeyed apricot, peach, and floral-like characteristics. It is a medium-bodied, crisp, lively effort to drink over the next year."



2004 Garciarevalo Casamaro Rueda - Rueda is a region of Spain best known for fresh whites with zinging acidity and fresh citrusy notes. This stainless steel treated offering is no exception. Fresh lemon zest notes and long finishing, this wine made 100% from the Verdejo grape is best matched with shellfish, sushi and chicken.
– Chris Cree, 56 Degree Wines, January 8, 2006



Sponsorship Information: Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned in the podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us! (Pam is always looking for great receipes!)




Supporting information:


Garciarevalo Winery
Garciarevalo is a family owned winery established in 1991 in Matapozuelos in the heart of Rueda. They specialize in Verdejo with additional plantings of Viura. They have 40 hectares of over-100 year old vines including Verdejo vines that are up to 130 years old. The unique qualities of this site are evident in the soils that differ from most other areas of Rueda. The soil is sand here and it allows for excellent drainage and greater difference between day and night temperatures. Long winters with late frosts combine with hot and dry summers create the ideal situation to cultivate grapes with the perfect balance of sugar and acidity.

Believing that the key to a good wine is in the raw materials, Garciarevalo strive to to make a wine as true to the fruit as possible. The utmost care and latest technologies are used to extract a juice that reflects the hard work and special attention given in the fields. The wines are then put through temperature controlled fermentation to create a final product of the highest quality.



Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Located approximately 170 km northwest of Madrid and just southwest of the mythical Ribera del Duero red wine region, lies the hugely successful wine appellation of Rueda. Wine has been produced in the Rueda region commercially since the 11th century during the reign of Alfonso XI who was the ruler of the kingdom of Castilla y Leon (the castle and the lion). Rueda was destroyed by the Moors in the 10th century during the ongoing battles and the area was depopulated until Alfonso XI, as a last effort to save the region from complete destruction, declared that anyone working the land would gain ownership of it. In came the monastic orders and wine production was begun in earnest. Sherry style wines (oxidised) were made in Rueda for centuries from the native Verdejo grape. Rueda wines came to be particularly adored by the Royal Courts. When Felipe III was resident in Valladolid, for example, he requisitioned half the wine produced in Medina del Campo, as this area was then known.

Like many other wine regions in Europe, Rueda suffered in the first half of the 20th century. The Spanish civil war and the dictatorship under Franco did nothing to benefit the local wine industry. It wasn’t until Marques de Riscal, the famed Rioja winery, arrived to Rueda in 1971 that the region came back into relevance for wine lovers.
     The region was revolutionized with the new ideas and technology Marques de Riscal brought, and has become famous for producing delightful, fresh and fruity white wines from the Verdejo grape (as opposed to unfashionable, Sherry style wines). Riscal also introduced Sauvignon Blanc to the Rueda wine region, which they discovered blended sublimely with Verdejo. These days, Rueda is wildly successful and producing amazingly good value for money fruity wines that are regularly compared to French Sancerres and New Zealand Sauvignon Blancs.

In the 18th century the vineyard area was larger than today and planted exclusively with Verdejo. The wine’s success was due in part to clarifying through local clay, which made it very clean and long-keeping. Rueda wines continued to be commercially successful until phylloxera disrupted production, destroying two-thirds of the vineyards between 1909 and 1922. Vines for replanting were chosen for yield rather than quality and Palomino replaced Verdejo, the main grape, although young wines made from it were sold locally in bulk.



Technical Information

The Rueda DO is flat, but high meseta land with wide horizons and gently rolling hills. The vineyards are divided between three provinces: the majority are in Valladolid, but others are in Avila and Segovia. The River Duero flows from east to west across the northern part of the growing area. Close to it there are limy alluvial soils with a limestone content rising to 24%. In the south the topsoil is brown and sandy with a subsoil of sandstone and clay. Drainage is good, the soil is reasonably rich in iron and it is generally easy to work. Altitudes vary between 600 and 780 metres.

There are three types of young white wine: minimum 75% varietal Verdejos, which are called Rueda Superior; 100% varietal Sauvignon Blanc; and Rueda Blanco, which must be made with a minimum of 40% Verdejo or Sauvignon. Verdejo wines are characterised by their very aromatic, citric grassiness and good structure.
(sources:
http://www.in-spain.info/top20/spanish-white-wine-rueda.htm
http://www.dorueda.com
http://www.winesfromspain.com



Lastly, the music on tonights show is brought to us by Irene. Check her out here


Bonus! -Map of the Wine regions of Spain - HERE



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl


Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep18: Wine Blogging Wednesday #17 - (or Have you ever seen a Red Kiwi?)

WBW - 10:55 am on Tuesday, November 28, 2006



We hope that everyone had a wonderful (and safe) start the the New Year. Today’s wine podcast is for the January 2006 installment of (insert booming echo here) Wine Blogging Wednesday (/echo). The theme for WBW#17 is “Red Kiwi’s” and is graciously hosted by our San Francisco neighbor to the North - The Cork Dork. As we still consider ourselves newbies to this Wine Blogging thing, we actually sample wines on that Wednesday, although I am surmising that if we sampled this yesterday, you really wouldn’t know the difference would you dear reader? :b Anyway, after waking up in a cold sweat, I realized that it was Wednesday and we hadn’t even begun to look for a New Zealand Pinot Noir! Where to find one? Well
seeing as I had to grocery shopping anyway, I headed out to the local Safeway supermarket. After spending an enormous amount of time trying to figure out how Safeway has their wine aisle sorted, there they were, the Kiwis, the challenge d’jour. I chose a 2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR from Kim Crawford Wineries and felt better. Now all I had to do was get the bottle home, get Lori to come over and taste this thing. Hard thing to do when it is only 930AM, but Lori being the trooper and the wine girl that she is agreed that it was in her job description to consume wine on demand (MY demand specifically….)

What did we have to say about this wine? Did we like it? Listen to our special Wine Podcast and check it out.

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

The notes below are provided for the readers benefit and are conspicously copied directly from the winemakers’ site.

2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR
These grapes are from various vineyards in Marlborough. The cool dry conditions experienced in 2002 were ideal for the ripening of Pinot Noir. Hand harvested at night, these grapes were cold macerated for three days and then inoculated with a pure yeast strain. When dry the grapes were pressed and a portion of the wine racked to older barriques for malolactic and ageing. After four months the wine was pumped out stabilised and bottled.

ANALYSIS AT HARVEST
Brix: 22.5
Titratable Acidity: 6.8 g/l
pH: 3.35

WINE ANALYSIS
Alcohol: 13.1
Titratable acidity: 5.7l
pH: 3.62
Residual sugar: nil

TASTING NOTES
Colour: Moderate depth of colour with strong crimson on the edges.
Aroma: Distinctively Pinot Noir with berry fruits, especially raspberry, strawberry and cherry, and hints of oak. A subtle beef Bovril complexity is beginning to occur.

Palate: A savoury Pinot Noir with elegant, ripe fruit coupled with soft tannins and a touch of oak. Medium bodied style with the ripe fruit, good weight and persistence.

Cellar: Medium term with careful cellaring.

Food Match: Great with pasta, lighter red meat and fish. An ideal summer red.

GNGNB Ep31: Wine Blogging Wednesday#21

WBW - 7:00 am on Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Episode 31: Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

This month’s Wine Podcast - Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

It’s that time of the month again for another installment of Wine Blogging Wednesday. For installment #21 of WBW, we are joining forces with Is My Blog Burning #26 and are having both a meal and a great bottle of wine!

Here were the rules for this installment:

1. Pick a favorite bottle of wine from your cellar and create/cook a dish that goes with it.

2. Pick a favorite dish in your culinary repertoire and seek out a wine that will pair with it.



The Girl (and my lovely wife Pam) has cooked a delicious meal, and I chose the 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay as detailed below. Our daughter, who also joins us on this show, has the 2006 Leche de Safeway, which also comes highly recommended.



WINEMAKER’S COMMENTS
The 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay is a youthful yellow in color, with aromas of white flowers, lime custard, citrus and baked pear. The Burgundian winemaking techniques including alcoholic and malolactic fermentation in barrel with lees stirring and extended aging contribute a complex bouquet of honey and vanilla and amplify an already intensely viscous wine. This is a substantial wine with a silky texture on the palate with layers of complexity and richness making it well-suited to roasted chicken or pork.

- The Guy



The Girl:
For dinner I prepared Cornish game hens, I usually cook these little midget chickens whole, but to save on time I butterflied them so that they would cook faster. To split them you cut them along their backbone, flip them over breast side up and using the heal of your palm press down to flatten. These guys are so easy to make and what I find is that they are great basted in butter, with some dried herbs, salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Cook for 40 minutes in a 350 degree oven till the liquid runs clear when pricked in the leg.

Some of you might be curious where these miniature chickens came from, well in 1965 chicken mogul Donald John Tyson created these little hens by cross-breeding White Rock hens and Cornish hens. His intent was to create a specialty item at a higher price to appeal to foodies. They look like miniature chickens, and you guessed it:they taste just like chicken.

I also prepared some Uncle Ben’s whole grain rice and added a few things to the rice. I love Uncle Ben’s brown rice because it cooks faster then regular brown rice and tastes the same. I soaked a few porcini mushrooms and sundried tomatoes in hot water until they were soft, reserved the liquid and chopped up the mushrooms and tomato and set them aside. I followed the directions on the box for 1 cup of rice but instead of adding 2 cups of water I used chicken broth for flavor and I held back the 1/2 cup of water and added the liquid from the mushrooms and tomatoes. Boil the liquid and throw in the rice, mushrooms, and tomatoes then reduce the heat and simmer. For the veggies, I just boiled some fresh green beans in salted water until tender yet crisp.
 Sponsor!-Uncle Bens Whole Grain Rice


Sponsorship Information;
Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned before in our wine podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us!
 
Music this episode:
Artist: Lee Coulter
Song: Booty VooDoo



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.


Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl
Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

Wine Blogging Wednesday 18 Announced

WBW - 5:00 am on Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Wine Blogging Wednesday
OK Guys & Girls - The next installment for Wine Blogging Wednesday (AKA “WBW”) has been posted. Keeping in step with the monthly theme of ‘Love’, the theme for Wine Blogging Wednesday #18 is:


Wine Shops that feel the love!

What is this you ask? Well, everyone loves wine, and given the abdunance of places to go and purchase wine, your challenge is to go out and visit a wine shop and talk, really talk with the employees. Ask them what they like, what they recommend. Does the store offer tastings? Does it perform it’s mission with flair, or does it fall short? What makes this store stand out above the rest? We want to know. You can particpate along with by simply blogging about your favorite shop and posting a link back to this month’s host - Dr. Vino We of course will release a short wine podcast about our adventures, be sure to stay tuned to hear what we discover!

Wednesday February 1, 2006 is the date for your posting on your blog. If you want to post photos to Flickr, tag them WBW or WBW18.

- A Guy and A Girl

GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

WBW - 4:42 am on Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Click to download GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

(This is a repost, I had to fix the audio - should be all better now!) - The Guy



Hello once again Guys and Girls, we are back with another episode of Wine Blogging Wednesday (WBW22 to be exact). Tim Elliot, a fellow wine podcaster at Winecast, is hosting this month’s extravaganza and has selected ‘Red wines with less than 12.5% alcohol’ as the goal. This is in contrast to the Girl’s wishes of finding wines with a much higher alcohol content, but I digress.

I looked high, and I looked low, but being from California, it was somewhat difficult to adhere to the rules, so we chose 2 different wines for our assignment: Santa Ema 2002 Merlot (12.8% ABV) and the 2001 Quinta D’Aguieura (12% ABV). (Ironically, Kate Hopkins of the Accidental Hedonist originally tasted a 2002 Santa Ema for the original Wine Blogging Wednesday, waaay back in September of 2004.)

You’ll have to listen to the podcast to hear our thoughts on these low alcohol wines.

2001 Quinta D’Aguieura 40% Touriga Nacional / 60% Cabernet Sauvignon (12% Alcohol) Vinho Regional Beiras (from Portugal)

Background Music by Mike Ratza - Blue Bossa
Music - Black Lab - Ecstasy

Earthlink Ad Challenge

What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply want to provide some feedback. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!
-A Guy & a Girl

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)

WBW - 9:18 pm on Monday, November 27, 2006

GNGNB Episode 24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)


OK Guys & Girls, it’s a new month, it’s Wednesday, that must mean - The next episode of LOST! Well, that isn’t really the case, as it happens to be a re-run anyway. Rather it is time once again for Wine blogging Wednesday! the theme for this month is When in Rhone, and is hosted by Jathan over at Winexpressions.com. Although Jathan wanted us to check out some exotic Rhone Varietals, I took this occassion to go and visit a local wine shop here in Willow Glen (a Suburb of San Jose, CA) called the GrapeVine and asked them a few questions about Rhone varietals and sampled a two different wines. I won’t give it all away here in the blog, but I did sample a French blend as well as a California 100% Syrah. Listen to the episode for all the wonderful details and won’t you come a take a quick trip with me to the Rhone region of France…..

Musical Artist is Butterfly Catchers and the song is Morning. Check them out!

The Grapevine is located at:

1389 Lincoln Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
Phone: 408-293-7574
Fax: 408-293-7012
http://www.grapevine-wg.com
store hours
Tues - Fri: 12pm - 9pm
Sat: 10am - 9pm

You can check out all the results from WBW#19 by visiting the following link

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes
or
Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

WBW - 3:28 pm on Monday, November 27, 2006

Click to download GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

(This is a repost, I had to fix the audio - should be all better now!) - The Guy



Hello once again Guys and Girls, we are back with another episode of Wine Blogging Wednesday (WBW22 to be exact). Tim Elliot, a fellow wine podcaster at Winecast, is hosting this month’s extravaganza and has selected ‘Red wines with less than 12.5% alcohol’ as the goal. This is in contrast to the Girl’s wishes of finding wines with a much higher alcohol content, but I digress.

I looked high, and I looked low, but being from California, it was somewhat difficult to adhere to the rules, so we chose 2 different wines for our assignment: Santa Ema 2002 Merlot (12.8% ABV) and the 2001 Quinta D’Aguieura (12% ABV). (Ironically, Kate Hopkins of the Accidental Hedonist originally tasted a 2002 Santa Ema for the original Wine Blogging Wednesday, waaay back in September of 2004.)

You’ll have to listen to the podcast to hear our thoughts on these low alcohol wines.

2001 Quinta D’Aguieura 40% Touriga Nacional / 60% Cabernet Sauvignon (12% Alcohol) Vinho Regional Beiras (from Portugal)

Background Music by Mike Ratza - Blue Bossa
Music - Black Lab - Ecstasy

Earthlink Ad Challenge

What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply want to provide some feedback. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!
-A Guy & a Girl

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep31: Wine Blogging Wednesday#21

WBW - 3:05 pm on Monday, November 27, 2006

Episode 31: Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

This month’s Wine Podcast - Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

It’s that time of the month again for another installment of Wine Blogging Wednesday. For installment #21 of WBW, we are joining forces with Is My Blog Burning #26 and are having both a meal and a great bottle of wine!

Here were the rules for this installment:

1. Pick a favorite bottle of wine from your cellar and create/cook a dish that goes with it.

2. Pick a favorite dish in your culinary repertoire and seek out a wine that will pair with it.



The Girl (and my lovely wife Pam) has cooked a delicious meal, and I chose the 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay as detailed below. Our daughter, who also joins us on this show, has the 2006 Leche de Safeway, which also comes highly recommended.



WINEMAKER’S COMMENTS
The 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay is a youthful yellow in color, with aromas of white flowers, lime custard, citrus and baked pear. The Burgundian winemaking techniques including alcoholic and malolactic fermentation in barrel with lees stirring and extended aging contribute a complex bouquet of honey and vanilla and amplify an already intensely viscous wine. This is a substantial wine with a silky texture on the palate with layers of complexity and richness making it well-suited to roasted chicken or pork.

- The Guy



The Girl:
For dinner I prepared Cornish game hens, I usually cook these little midget chickens whole, but to save on time I butterflied them so that they would cook faster. To split them you cut them along their backbone, flip them over breast side up and using the heal of your palm press down to flatten. These guys are so easy to make and what I find is that they are great basted in butter, with some dried herbs, salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Cook for 40 minutes in a 350 degree oven till the liquid runs clear when pricked in the leg.

Some of you might be curious where these miniature chickens came from, well in 1965 chicken mogul Donald John Tyson created these little hens by cross-breeding White Rock hens and Cornish hens. His intent was to create a specialty item at a higher price to appeal to foodies. They look like miniature chickens, and you guessed it:they taste just like chicken.

I also prepared some Uncle Ben’s whole grain rice and added a few things to the rice. I love Uncle Ben’s brown rice because it cooks faster then regular brown rice and tastes the same. I soaked a few porcini mushrooms and sundried tomatoes in hot water until they were soft, reserved the liquid and chopped up the mushrooms and tomato and set them aside. I followed the directions on the box for 1 cup of rice but instead of adding 2 cups of water I used chicken broth for flavor and I held back the 1/2 cup of water and added the liquid from the mushrooms and tomatoes. Boil the liquid and throw in the rice, mushrooms, and tomatoes then reduce the heat and simmer. For the veggies, I just boiled some fresh green beans in salted water until tender yet crisp.
 Sponsor!-Uncle Bens Whole Grain Rice


Sponsorship Information;
Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned before in our wine podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us!
 
Music this episode:
Artist: Lee Coulter
Song: Booty VooDoo



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.


Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl
Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep28: Wine Blogging Wednesday - White Wine

WBW - 12:29 pm on Monday, November 27, 2006

Episode 28 Wine Blogging Wednesday#20 Wrap-Up

WBW Casamaro Blanco

El gusto del vino, es como delicada poesia




A Guy and a Girl’s pick for Wine Blogging Wednesday #20 - Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99)



The goal of this month’s installment of WBW was to find and sample a white wine. Easy you say? Pah-shaw. The twist? Well, fellow podcaster and wino Bill from Wine for Newbies insisted on No blends. and oh yeah, it can’t be a Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, or a Riesling. Now what are you left with? Sure, we can here you saying, "but c’mon you two, even we fellow novice
oenophiles
(Definition - A Lover or connoisseur of wine) know that you can still find Chenin Blanc, or the super-duper yummy Semillion". We still say Pah-shaw. First off - Chenin blanc, well, yeah, we coulda/woulda/shoulda, but we wanted to let some of our fellow bloggers and podcasters pick the easy ones. Semillion? Truth be told, we did pick up a bottle of wine made from 100% semillion grapes, but decided to save that for another day. (BTW - it isn’t all that easy to find a bottle made from 100% semillion, most are blended with Sauvignon Blanc). What did we settle on? We went all out and went to Spain, and found a bottle of Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99) wine made by the Garciarevalo family owned winery, created entirely from the Verdejo grape.

Verdejo grape: White. Very high quality and one of the best white varieties in Spain. It makes very aromatic, glyceric, soft wines with body. It is plentiful in Valladolid (69%), Segovia and Avila. It is considered a main variety of Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Other Merchant Reviews

87 Pts - Robert Parker "An excellent value that has never seen a day in oak, the 2004 Casamaro Blanco, a 100% Verdelho from 50-130-year old ungrafted vines, is a soft, delicious white exhibiting plenty of honeyed apricot, peach, and floral-like characteristics. It is a medium-bodied, crisp, lively effort to drink over the next year."



2004 Garciarevalo Casamaro Rueda - Rueda is a region of Spain best known for fresh whites with zinging acidity and fresh citrusy notes. This stainless steel treated offering is no exception. Fresh lemon zest notes and long finishing, this wine made 100% from the Verdejo grape is best matched with shellfish, sushi and chicken.
– Chris Cree, 56 Degree Wines, January 8, 2006



Sponsorship Information: Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned in the podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us! (Pam is always looking for great receipes!)




Supporting information:


Garciarevalo Winery
Garciarevalo is a family owned winery established in 1991 in Matapozuelos in the heart of Rueda. They specialize in Verdejo with additional plantings of Viura. They have 40 hectares of over-100 year old vines including Verdejo vines that are up to 130 years old. The unique qualities of this site are evident in the soils that differ from most other areas of Rueda. The soil is sand here and it allows for excellent drainage and greater difference between day and night temperatures. Long winters with late frosts combine with hot and dry summers create the ideal situation to cultivate grapes with the perfect balance of sugar and acidity.

Believing that the key to a good wine is in the raw materials, Garciarevalo strive to to make a wine as true to the fruit as possible. The utmost care and latest technologies are used to extract a juice that reflects the hard work and special attention given in the fields. The wines are then put through temperature controlled fermentation to create a final product of the highest quality.



Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Located approximately 170 km northwest of Madrid and just southwest of the mythical Ribera del Duero red wine region, lies the hugely successful wine appellation of Rueda. Wine has been produced in the Rueda region commercially since the 11th century during the reign of Alfonso XI who was the ruler of the kingdom of Castilla y Leon (the castle and the lion). Rueda was destroyed by the Moors in the 10th century during the ongoing battles and the area was depopulated until Alfonso XI, as a last effort to save the region from complete destruction, declared that anyone working the land would gain ownership of it. In came the monastic orders and wine production was begun in earnest. Sherry style wines (oxidised) were made in Rueda for centuries from the native Verdejo grape. Rueda wines came to be particularly adored by the Royal Courts. When Felipe III was resident in Valladolid, for example, he requisitioned half the wine produced in Medina del Campo, as this area was then known.

Like many other wine regions in Europe, Rueda suffered in the first half of the 20th century. The Spanish civil war and the dictatorship under Franco did nothing to benefit the local wine industry. It wasn’t until Marques de Riscal, the famed Rioja winery, arrived to Rueda in 1971 that the region came back into relevance for wine lovers.
     The region was revolutionized with the new ideas and technology Marques de Riscal brought, and has become famous for producing delightful, fresh and fruity white wines from the Verdejo grape (as opposed to unfashionable, Sherry style wines). Riscal also introduced Sauvignon Blanc to the Rueda wine region, which they discovered blended sublimely with Verdejo. These days, Rueda is wildly successful and producing amazingly good value for money fruity wines that are regularly compared to French Sancerres and New Zealand Sauvignon Blancs.

In the 18th century the vineyard area was larger than today and planted exclusively with Verdejo. The wine’s success was due in part to clarifying through local clay, which made it very clean and long-keeping. Rueda wines continued to be commercially successful until phylloxera disrupted production, destroying two-thirds of the vineyards between 1909 and 1922. Vines for replanting were chosen for yield rather than quality and Palomino replaced Verdejo, the main grape, although young wines made from it were sold locally in bulk.



Technical Information

The Rueda DO is flat, but high meseta land with wide horizons and gently rolling hills. The vineyards are divided between three provinces: the majority are in Valladolid, but others are in Avila and Segovia. The River Duero flows from east to west across the northern part of the growing area. Close to it there are limy alluvial soils with a limestone content rising to 24%. In the south the topsoil is brown and sandy with a subsoil of sandstone and clay. Drainage is good, the soil is reasonably rich in iron and it is generally easy to work. Altitudes vary between 600 and 780 metres.

There are three types of young white wine: minimum 75% varietal Verdejos, which are called Rueda Superior; 100% varietal Sauvignon Blanc; and Rueda Blanco, which must be made with a minimum of 40% Verdejo or Sauvignon. Verdejo wines are characterised by their very aromatic, citric grassiness and good structure.
(sources:
http://www.in-spain.info/top20/spanish-white-wine-rueda.htm
http://www.dorueda.com
http://www.winesfromspain.com



Lastly, the music on tonights show is brought to us by Irene. Check her out here


Bonus! -Map of the Wine regions of Spain - HERE



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl


Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

Wine Blogging Wednesday 18 Announced

WBW - 11:00 am on Monday, November 27, 2006

Wine Blogging Wednesday
OK Guys & Girls - The next installment for Wine Blogging Wednesday (AKA “WBW”) has been posted. Keeping in step with the monthly theme of ‘Love’, the theme for Wine Blogging Wednesday #18 is:


Wine Shops that feel the love!

What is this you ask? Well, everyone loves wine, and given the abdunance of places to go and purchase wine, your challenge is to go out and visit a wine shop and talk, really talk with the employees. Ask them what they like, what they recommend. Does the store offer tastings? Does it perform it’s mission with flair, or does it fall short? What makes this store stand out above the rest? We want to know. You can particpate along with by simply blogging about your favorite shop and posting a link back to this month’s host - Dr. Vino We of course will release a short wine podcast about our adventures, be sure to stay tuned to hear what we discover!

Wednesday February 1, 2006 is the date for your posting on your blog. If you want to post photos to Flickr, tag them WBW or WBW18.

- A Guy and A Girl

GNGNB Ep18: Wine Blogging Wednesday #17 - (or Have you ever seen a Red Kiwi?)

WBW - 7:00 am on Monday, November 27, 2006



We hope that everyone had a wonderful (and safe) start the the New Year. Today’s wine podcast is for the January 2006 installment of (insert booming echo here) Wine Blogging Wednesday (/echo). The theme for WBW#17 is “Red Kiwi’s” and is graciously hosted by our San Francisco neighbor to the North - The Cork Dork. As we still consider ourselves newbies to this Wine Blogging thing, we actually sample wines on that Wednesday, although I am surmising that if we sampled this yesterday, you really wouldn’t know the difference would you dear reader? :b Anyway, after waking up in a cold sweat, I realized that it was Wednesday and we hadn’t even begun to look for a New Zealand Pinot Noir! Where to find one? Well
seeing as I had to grocery shopping anyway, I headed out to the local Safeway supermarket. After spending an enormous amount of time trying to figure out how Safeway has their wine aisle sorted, there they were, the Kiwis, the challenge d’jour. I chose a 2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR from Kim Crawford Wineries and felt better. Now all I had to do was get the bottle home, get Lori to come over and taste this thing. Hard thing to do when it is only 930AM, but Lori being the trooper and the wine girl that she is agreed that it was in her job description to consume wine on demand (MY demand specifically….)

What did we have to say about this wine? Did we like it? Listen to our special Wine Podcast and check it out.

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

The notes below are provided for the readers benefit and are conspicously copied directly from the winemakers’ site.

2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR
These grapes are from various vineyards in Marlborough. The cool dry conditions experienced in 2002 were ideal for the ripening of Pinot Noir. Hand harvested at night, these grapes were cold macerated for three days and then inoculated with a pure yeast strain. When dry the grapes were pressed and a portion of the wine racked to older barriques for malolactic and ageing. After four months the wine was pumped out stabilised and bottled.

ANALYSIS AT HARVEST
Brix: 22.5
Titratable Acidity: 6.8 g/l
pH: 3.35

WINE ANALYSIS
Alcohol: 13.1
Titratable acidity: 5.7l
pH: 3.62
Residual sugar: nil

TASTING NOTES
Colour: Moderate depth of colour with strong crimson on the edges.
Aroma: Distinctively Pinot Noir with berry fruits, especially raspberry, strawberry and cherry, and hints of oak. A subtle beef Bovril complexity is beginning to occur.

Palate: A savoury Pinot Noir with elegant, ripe fruit coupled with soft tannins and a touch of oak. Medium bodied style with the ripe fruit, good weight and persistence.

Cellar: Medium term with careful cellaring.

Food Match: Great with pasta, lighter red meat and fish. An ideal summer red.

GNGNB Ep28: Wine Blogging Wednesday - White Wine

WBW - 1:53 pm on Sunday, November 26, 2006

Episode 28 Wine Blogging Wednesday#20 Wrap-Up

WBW Casamaro Blanco

El gusto del vino, es como delicada poesia




A Guy and a Girl’s pick for Wine Blogging Wednesday #20 - Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99)



The goal of this month’s installment of WBW was to find and sample a white wine. Easy you say? Pah-shaw. The twist? Well, fellow podcaster and wino Bill from Wine for Newbies insisted on No blends. and oh yeah, it can’t be a Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, or a Riesling. Now what are you left with? Sure, we can here you saying, "but c’mon you two, even we fellow novice
oenophiles
(Definition - A Lover or connoisseur of wine) know that you can still find Chenin Blanc, or the super-duper yummy Semillion". We still say Pah-shaw. First off - Chenin blanc, well, yeah, we coulda/woulda/shoulda, but we wanted to let some of our fellow bloggers and podcasters pick the easy ones. Semillion? Truth be told, we did pick up a bottle of wine made from 100% semillion grapes, but decided to save that for another day. (BTW - it isn’t all that easy to find a bottle made from 100% semillion, most are blended with Sauvignon Blanc). What did we settle on? We went all out and went to Spain, and found a bottle of Casamaro Verdejo Rueda ($10.99) wine made by the Garciarevalo family owned winery, created entirely from the Verdejo grape.

Verdejo grape: White. Very high quality and one of the best white varieties in Spain. It makes very aromatic, glyceric, soft wines with body. It is plentiful in Valladolid (69%), Segovia and Avila. It is considered a main variety of Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Other Merchant Reviews

87 Pts - Robert Parker "An excellent value that has never seen a day in oak, the 2004 Casamaro Blanco, a 100% Verdelho from 50-130-year old ungrafted vines, is a soft, delicious white exhibiting plenty of honeyed apricot, peach, and floral-like characteristics. It is a medium-bodied, crisp, lively effort to drink over the next year."



2004 Garciarevalo Casamaro Rueda - Rueda is a region of Spain best known for fresh whites with zinging acidity and fresh citrusy notes. This stainless steel treated offering is no exception. Fresh lemon zest notes and long finishing, this wine made 100% from the Verdejo grape is best matched with shellfish, sushi and chicken.
– Chris Cree, 56 Degree Wines, January 8, 2006



Sponsorship Information: Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned in the podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us! (Pam is always looking for great receipes!)




Supporting information:


Garciarevalo Winery
Garciarevalo is a family owned winery established in 1991 in Matapozuelos in the heart of Rueda. They specialize in Verdejo with additional plantings of Viura. They have 40 hectares of over-100 year old vines including Verdejo vines that are up to 130 years old. The unique qualities of this site are evident in the soils that differ from most other areas of Rueda. The soil is sand here and it allows for excellent drainage and greater difference between day and night temperatures. Long winters with late frosts combine with hot and dry summers create the ideal situation to cultivate grapes with the perfect balance of sugar and acidity.

Believing that the key to a good wine is in the raw materials, Garciarevalo strive to to make a wine as true to the fruit as possible. The utmost care and latest technologies are used to extract a juice that reflects the hard work and special attention given in the fields. The wines are then put through temperature controlled fermentation to create a final product of the highest quality.



Rueda Denomination of Origin (D.O.)

Located approximately 170 km northwest of Madrid and just southwest of the mythical Ribera del Duero red wine region, lies the hugely successful wine appellation of Rueda. Wine has been produced in the Rueda region commercially since the 11th century during the reign of Alfonso XI who was the ruler of the kingdom of Castilla y Leon (the castle and the lion). Rueda was destroyed by the Moors in the 10th century during the ongoing battles and the area was depopulated until Alfonso XI, as a last effort to save the region from complete destruction, declared that anyone working the land would gain ownership of it. In came the monastic orders and wine production was begun in earnest. Sherry style wines (oxidised) were made in Rueda for centuries from the native Verdejo grape. Rueda wines came to be particularly adored by the Royal Courts. When Felipe III was resident in Valladolid, for example, he requisitioned half the wine produced in Medina del Campo, as this area was then known.

Like many other wine regions in Europe, Rueda suffered in the first half of the 20th century. The Spanish civil war and the dictatorship under Franco did nothing to benefit the local wine industry. It wasn’t until Marques de Riscal, the famed Rioja winery, arrived to Rueda in 1971 that the region came back into relevance for wine lovers.
     The region was revolutionized with the new ideas and technology Marques de Riscal brought, and has become famous for producing delightful, fresh and fruity white wines from the Verdejo grape (as opposed to unfashionable, Sherry style wines). Riscal also introduced Sauvignon Blanc to the Rueda wine region, which they discovered blended sublimely with Verdejo. These days, Rueda is wildly successful and producing amazingly good value for money fruity wines that are regularly compared to French Sancerres and New Zealand Sauvignon Blancs.

In the 18th century the vineyard area was larger than today and planted exclusively with Verdejo. The wine’s success was due in part to clarifying through local clay, which made it very clean and long-keeping. Rueda wines continued to be commercially successful until phylloxera disrupted production, destroying two-thirds of the vineyards between 1909 and 1922. Vines for replanting were chosen for yield rather than quality and Palomino replaced Verdejo, the main grape, although young wines made from it were sold locally in bulk.



Technical Information

The Rueda DO is flat, but high meseta land with wide horizons and gently rolling hills. The vineyards are divided between three provinces: the majority are in Valladolid, but others are in Avila and Segovia. The River Duero flows from east to west across the northern part of the growing area. Close to it there are limy alluvial soils with a limestone content rising to 24%. In the south the topsoil is brown and sandy with a subsoil of sandstone and clay. Drainage is good, the soil is reasonably rich in iron and it is generally easy to work. Altitudes vary between 600 and 780 metres.

There are three types of young white wine: minimum 75% varietal Verdejos, which are called Rueda Superior; 100% varietal Sauvignon Blanc; and Rueda Blanco, which must be made with a minimum of 40% Verdejo or Sauvignon. Verdejo wines are characterised by their very aromatic, citric grassiness and good structure.
(sources:
http://www.in-spain.info/top20/spanish-white-wine-rueda.htm
http://www.dorueda.com
http://www.winesfromspain.com



Lastly, the music on tonights show is brought to us by Irene. Check her out here


Bonus! -Map of the Wine regions of Spain - HERE



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl


Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep31: Wine Blogging Wednesday#21

WBW - 12:09 pm on Sunday, November 26, 2006

Episode 31: Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

This month’s Wine Podcast - Wine Blogging Wednesday #21

It’s that time of the month again for another installment of Wine Blogging Wednesday. For installment #21 of WBW, we are joining forces with Is My Blog Burning #26 and are having both a meal and a great bottle of wine!

Here were the rules for this installment:

1. Pick a favorite bottle of wine from your cellar and create/cook a dish that goes with it.

2. Pick a favorite dish in your culinary repertoire and seek out a wine that will pair with it.



The Girl (and my lovely wife Pam) has cooked a delicious meal, and I chose the 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay as detailed below. Our daughter, who also joins us on this show, has the 2006 Leche de Safeway, which also comes highly recommended.



WINEMAKER’S COMMENTS
The 2004 J. Lohr Arroyo Vista Vineyard Chardonnay is a youthful yellow in color, with aromas of white flowers, lime custard, citrus and baked pear. The Burgundian winemaking techniques including alcoholic and malolactic fermentation in barrel with lees stirring and extended aging contribute a complex bouquet of honey and vanilla and amplify an already intensely viscous wine. This is a substantial wine with a silky texture on the palate with layers of complexity and richness making it well-suited to roasted chicken or pork.

- The Guy



The Girl:
For dinner I prepared Cornish game hens, I usually cook these little midget chickens whole, but to save on time I butterflied them so that they would cook faster. To split them you cut them along their backbone, flip them over breast side up and using the heal of your palm press down to flatten. These guys are so easy to make and what I find is that they are great basted in butter, with some dried herbs, salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Cook for 40 minutes in a 350 degree oven till the liquid runs clear when pricked in the leg.

Some of you might be curious where these miniature chickens came from, well in 1965 chicken mogul Donald John Tyson created these little hens by cross-breeding White Rock hens and Cornish hens. His intent was to create a specialty item at a higher price to appeal to foodies. They look like miniature chickens, and you guessed it:they taste just like chicken.

I also prepared some Uncle Ben’s whole grain rice and added a few things to the rice. I love Uncle Ben’s brown rice because it cooks faster then regular brown rice and tastes the same. I soaked a few porcini mushrooms and sundried tomatoes in hot water until they were soft, reserved the liquid and chopped up the mushrooms and tomato and set them aside. I followed the directions on the box for 1 cup of rice but instead of adding 2 cups of water I used chicken broth for flavor and I held back the 1/2 cup of water and added the liquid from the mushrooms and tomatoes. Boil the liquid and throw in the rice, mushrooms, and tomatoes then reduce the heat and simmer. For the veggies, I just boiled some fresh green beans in salted water until tender yet crisp.
 Sponsor!-Uncle Bens Whole Grain Rice


Sponsorship Information;
Special thanks to Uncle Bens Whole Grain Brown Rice for providing sponsorship for ‘A Guy, a Girl, and a Bottle’. As mentioned before in our wine podcast, Uncle Bens is sponsoring a receipe contest using their whole grain rice products - enter your receipe at www.unclebens.com/recipecontest. Don’t forget to share your receipe with us!
 
Music this episode:
Artist: Lee Coulter
Song: Booty VooDoo



What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply disagree completely with everything we said. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.


Cheers!

-A Guy & a Girl
Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep18: Wine Blogging Wednesday #17 - (or Have you ever seen a Red Kiwi?)

WBW - 10:27 am on Sunday, November 26, 2006



We hope that everyone had a wonderful (and safe) start the the New Year. Today’s wine podcast is for the January 2006 installment of (insert booming echo here) Wine Blogging Wednesday (/echo). The theme for WBW#17 is “Red Kiwi’s” and is graciously hosted by our San Francisco neighbor to the North - The Cork Dork. As we still consider ourselves newbies to this Wine Blogging thing, we actually sample wines on that Wednesday, although I am surmising that if we sampled this yesterday, you really wouldn’t know the difference would you dear reader? :b Anyway, after waking up in a cold sweat, I realized that it was Wednesday and we hadn’t even begun to look for a New Zealand Pinot Noir! Where to find one? Well
seeing as I had to grocery shopping anyway, I headed out to the local Safeway supermarket. After spending an enormous amount of time trying to figure out how Safeway has their wine aisle sorted, there they were, the Kiwis, the challenge d’jour. I chose a 2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR from Kim Crawford Wineries and felt better. Now all I had to do was get the bottle home, get Lori to come over and taste this thing. Hard thing to do when it is only 930AM, but Lori being the trooper and the wine girl that she is agreed that it was in her job description to consume wine on demand (MY demand specifically….)

What did we have to say about this wine? Did we like it? Listen to our special Wine Podcast and check it out.

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

The notes below are provided for the readers benefit and are conspicously copied directly from the winemakers’ site.

2002 MARLBOROUGH PINOT NOIR
These grapes are from various vineyards in Marlborough. The cool dry conditions experienced in 2002 were ideal for the ripening of Pinot Noir. Hand harvested at night, these grapes were cold macerated for three days and then inoculated with a pure yeast strain. When dry the grapes were pressed and a portion of the wine racked to older barriques for malolactic and ageing. After four months the wine was pumped out stabilised and bottled.

ANALYSIS AT HARVEST
Brix: 22.5
Titratable Acidity: 6.8 g/l
pH: 3.35

WINE ANALYSIS
Alcohol: 13.1
Titratable acidity: 5.7l
pH: 3.62
Residual sugar: nil

TASTING NOTES
Colour: Moderate depth of colour with strong crimson on the edges.
Aroma: Distinctively Pinot Noir with berry fruits, especially raspberry, strawberry and cherry, and hints of oak. A subtle beef Bovril complexity is beginning to occur.

Palate: A savoury Pinot Noir with elegant, ripe fruit coupled with soft tannins and a touch of oak. Medium bodied style with the ripe fruit, good weight and persistence.

Cellar: Medium term with careful cellaring.

Food Match: Great with pasta, lighter red meat and fish. An ideal summer red.

Wine Blogging Wednesday 18 Announced

WBW - 9:33 am on Sunday, November 26, 2006

Wine Blogging Wednesday
OK Guys & Girls - The next installment for Wine Blogging Wednesday (AKA “WBW”) has been posted. Keeping in step with the monthly theme of ‘Love’, the theme for Wine Blogging Wednesday #18 is:


Wine Shops that feel the love!

What is this you ask? Well, everyone loves wine, and given the abdunance of places to go and purchase wine, your challenge is to go out and visit a wine shop and talk, really talk with the employees. Ask them what they like, what they recommend. Does the store offer tastings? Does it perform it’s mission with flair, or does it fall short? What makes this store stand out above the rest? We want to know. You can particpate along with by simply blogging about your favorite shop and posting a link back to this month’s host - Dr. Vino We of course will release a short wine podcast about our adventures, be sure to stay tuned to hear what we discover!

Wednesday February 1, 2006 is the date for your posting on your blog. If you want to post photos to Flickr, tag them WBW or WBW18.

- A Guy and A Girl

GNGNB Ep24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)

WBW - 8:40 am on Sunday, November 26, 2006

GNGNB Episode 24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)


OK Guys & Girls, it’s a new month, it’s Wednesday, that must mean - The next episode of LOST! Well, that isn’t really the case, as it happens to be a re-run anyway. Rather it is time once again for Wine blogging Wednesday! the theme for this month is When in Rhone, and is hosted by Jathan over at Winexpressions.com. Although Jathan wanted us to check out some exotic Rhone Varietals, I took this occassion to go and visit a local wine shop here in Willow Glen (a Suburb of San Jose, CA) called the GrapeVine and asked them a few questions about Rhone varietals and sampled a two different wines. I won’t give it all away here in the blog, but I did sample a French blend as well as a California 100% Syrah. Listen to the episode for all the wonderful details and won’t you come a take a quick trip with me to the Rhone region of France…..

Musical Artist is Butterfly Catchers and the song is Morning. Check them out!

The Grapevine is located at:

1389 Lincoln Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
Phone: 408-293-7574
Fax: 408-293-7012
http://www.grapevine-wg.com
store hours
Tues - Fri: 12pm - 9pm
Sat: 10am - 9pm

You can check out all the results from WBW#19 by visiting the following link

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes
or
Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

WBW - 6:40 am on Sunday, November 26, 2006

Click to download GNGNB Ep33: Wine Blogging Wednesday #22

(This is a repost, I had to fix the audio - should be all better now!) - The Guy



Hello once again Guys and Girls, we are back with another episode of Wine Blogging Wednesday (WBW22 to be exact). Tim Elliot, a fellow wine podcaster at Winecast, is hosting this month’s extravaganza and has selected ‘Red wines with less than 12.5% alcohol’ as the goal. This is in contrast to the Girl’s wishes of finding wines with a much higher alcohol content, but I digress.

I looked high, and I looked low, but being from California, it was somewhat difficult to adhere to the rules, so we chose 2 different wines for our assignment: Santa Ema 2002 Merlot (12.8% ABV) and the 2001 Quinta D’Aguieura (12% ABV). (Ironically, Kate Hopkins of the Accidental Hedonist originally tasted a 2002 Santa Ema for the original Wine Blogging Wednesday, waaay back in September of 2004.)

You’ll have to listen to the podcast to hear our thoughts on these low alcohol wines.

2001 Quinta D’Aguieura 40% Touriga Nacional / 60% Cabernet Sauvignon (12% Alcohol) Vinho Regional Beiras (from Portugal)

Background Music by Mike Ratza - Blue Bossa
Music - Black Lab - Ecstasy

Earthlink Ad Challenge

What did you think of this episode? Leave us some feedback! Simply call 408-627-7796 and let us know if you like what you hear, have suggestions, or simply want to provide some feedback. If you prefer email, you can drop us a line at guyandgirl@gmail.com.

Cheers!
-A Guy & a Girl

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes or Yahoo!

GNGNB Ep24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)

WBW - 10:04 pm on Saturday, November 25, 2006

GNGNB Episode 24: Wine Blogging Wednesday #19 (When in Rhone)


OK Guys & Girls, it’s a new month, it’s Wednesday, that must mean - The next episode of LOST! Well, that isn’t really the case, as it happens to be a re-run anyway. Rather it is time once again for Wine blogging Wednesday! the theme for this month is When in Rhone, and is hosted by Jathan over at Winexpressions.com. Although Jathan wanted us to check out some exotic Rhone Varietals, I took this occassion to go and visit a local wine shop here in Willow Glen (a Suburb of San Jose, CA) called the GrapeVine and asked them a few questions about Rhone varietals and sampled a two different wines. I won’t give it all away here in the blog, but I did sample a French blend as well as a California 100% Syrah. Listen to the episode for all the wonderful details and won’t you come a take a quick trip with me to the Rhone region of France…..

Musical Artist is Butterfly Catchers and the song is Morning. Check them out!

The Grapevine is located at:

1389 Lincoln Avenue
San Jose, CA 95125
Phone: 408-293-7574
Fax: 408-293-7012
http://www.grapevine-wg.com
store hours
Tues - Fri: 12pm - 9pm
Sat: 10am - 9pm

You can check out all the results from WBW#19 by visiting the following link

- The Guy
guyandgirl@gmail.com

Subscribe to our Wine Podcast at iTunes
or
Yahoo!

Wine Blogging Wednesday 18 Announced

WBW - 8:22 pm on Saturday, November 25, 2006

Wine Blogging Wednesday
OK Guys & Girls - The next installment for Wine Blogging Wednesday (AKA “WBW”) has been posted. Keeping in step with the monthly theme of ‘Love’, the theme for Wine Blogging Wednesday #18 is:


Wine Shops that feel the love!

What is this you ask? Well, everyone loves wine, and given the abdunance of places to go and purchase wine, your challenge is to go out and visit a wine shop and talk, really talk with the employees. Ask them what they like, what they recommend. Does the store offer tastings? Does it perform it’s mission with flair, or does it fall short? What makes this store stand out above the rest? We want to know. You can particpate along with by simply blogging about your favorite shop and posting a link back to this month’s host - Dr. Vino We of course will release a short wine podcast about our adventures, be sure to stay tuned to hear what we discover!

Wednesday February 1, 2006 is the date for your posting on your blog. If you want to post photos to Flickr, tag them WBW or WBW18.

- A Guy and A Girl