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Help me Wine-Medic, you're my only hope

4/17/2014

3 Comments

 
How to solve a wine emergency? Below are some theoretical questions, answered with lightening speed by Wine-Medic (aka yours truly,) advice columnist extraordinaire...

Q: 
Dear Wine-Medic, 
Five seconds ago, my clumsy boyfriend spilled red wine all over my lovely light blue dress. It was a gift from my grandmother on her death bed. What can I do!? HELP! 
- Seething and Dripping

A:
Dear, S.A.D,
Grab the baking soda. QUICK! There is literally no time to spare. I wish you hadn't taken so much time writing to me. Rip that dress off. Sprinkle it liberally with the baking soda, and don't miss any of the red wine spots. Don't let it dry- at all! In fact, now get the spots damp and let the baking soda keep doing its thing. Now, throw it in a sink of cold water, gently rubbing the baking soda into the stains. Rinse well and dry. That stain should be gone. No need to banish old CBF to the sofa tonight. Congrats.

Q: 

Dear Wine-Medic,
My husband and I have been saving a very special bottle of wine for our anniversary. But when we went to pop the cork, it broke off in the bottle. What can we do? 
-Thirsty on Our Special Day


A: 
Dear Thirsty,
Fear not. It takes some doing, but all will be just fine. Grab your trusty (and preferably quite sharp) corkscrew and softly and gently screw it down into what is left of the cork in the bottle. Now, if the cork nubbin is still quite long, you may be able to screw it in enough to pull the rest out without breaking through the bottom of the cork. If not, it's still ok. Do what you gotta do to get that cork out. 
Now that the cork is free, get a funnel and some cheesecloth if you have them handy, if not, a strainer will do just fine. Grab your trusty decanter, lay the cheesecloth down inside the funnel, and pour that deliciously special wine through the cheesecloth and into the decanter. You should now have all of the cork remnants left on the cheesecloth and your wine is saved! 
If you need to wimp out and not drink the entire bottle (pshaw, I say,) then give your bottle a rinse, shake all of the water out, and pour your wine back into the bottle, putting the stopper back in. This isn't ideal because you're introducing more oxygen into the wine, but you gotta do what you gotta do.
As a side note, storing your bottles on their sides will help keep those corks from drying out and that'll keep this from happening in the future. A sharp corkscrew helps too!
Enjoy. And felicitations!


Q: 
Dear Wine-Medic,
I spilled red wine on my host's lovely carpet. What do I do? Help! This is why I never get invited to dinner parties! I'm NOT graceful. I want to be discreet before anyone notices!
-Klutzy Loser


A:
Dear KL,
Well, if you have baking soda, see above. If not, and discretion is a priority, grab the salt shaker. Go! Fast! 
Pour salt all over that spot. Gently pat it into the wine. It should help draw the liquid out. Dab your napkin into your water glass, and gently blot away the salt and the stain. Voila. All should be good. Also, take some deep, cleansing breaths. Clearly, people like you, despite your lack of grace, or you wouldn't get invited out. Have some self-confidence! People like you. They really like you!


Q:
Dear Wine-Medic,
I was just invited to an impromptu pre-dinner drink at the home of a girl I really like. She asked me to bring white wine, but it isn't cold. It is July and sweltering outside. What can I do?
-Feeling the Heat


A: 
Dear Heat,
Don't sweat. Grab that bottle, a mixing bowl, and pop over to McDonald's on your way to her house. Buy a bag of ice for $1. As soon as you get to her house, put that ice in the bowl with some water, drop the bottle in, and in about 10 min, you'll have a bottle that is cold enough to sip in the heat. After 20, it'll be as good as from the fridge! Use those 10 minutes to dazzle her with your sparkling wit- the wine will just be icing on the cake.


Q:
Dear Wine-Medic,
Dinner is in 2 hours and I'm out of wine. What do I do?
-Frantic


A:
Dear Frantic,
Go buy more. Duh. And get a few bottles. This will save you from having to send me the same dumb letter tomorrow.




If you have any legit questions for Wine-Medic, leave them in the comments! 
Cheers.
3 Comments

So... What's up with Biodynamic Farming?

4/7/2014

1 Comment

 
I studied a little bit on Biodynamics in school, and this past weekend at the store, we did a tasting of all Biodynamic wines- after all is said and done, I really want to be gung-ho on Biodynamics, but the truth is, I'm just not sure I'm totally sold... 


I suppose my outlook on Biodynamics is similar to my outlook on lots of things- it's fine to have a core set of values and beliefs, but if you adhere to any set of credences too rigidly, you can go off the rails... And I think that's where I fall on Biodynamic viticulture.


If you aren't super hippy dippy, you may be wondering what Biodynamics is. I'll give it to you in a nutshell, and provide some links to where you can find out more if you're curious. Bear in mind, I'm no expert on the subject, I'm just going with what I already know. 


Biodynamics is an agricultural approach founded in the early 1920s in Austria by Rudolf Steiner (who also helped found the first Waldorf Schools. An interesting, probably brilliant, and kooky man.) It views agriculture from a holistic standpoint, treating soil health, plant growth, and livestock as all part of the same big ecosystem (that's the part I really like.) The goal is to let each of those elements feed the other, with limited interruption by humans and no synthetic chemical use. 


So, for instance, in a biodynamic vineyard, you would use no synthetic fertilizers (only tea treatments made from manure,) no synthetic pesticides (some oil-based treatments for mold and fungus are ok, as are some other tea-brew concoctions. Bugs and rodents are kept away by encouraging other animals to hang out in the vineyard and eat them!) You'd also likely plant a cover crop to help with re-introduction of nitrogen and other nutrients into the soil, and would have critters like chickens running around eating bugs and fertilizing the soil with their droppings. Actually makes a lot of sense here, right? Well, yes and no.  First, this is only really practical in drier areas where rots and molds aren't a huge issue. I'm not saying it can't be done, but the risk of total crop loss is pretty high if you try to do Biodynamic treatments in really wet areas. Scientifically, oils and tea sprays don't work as well as synthetic chemicals. They just don't. 


There is scientific evidence to support the idea that the manure teas and fertilization efforts of Biodynamics are very useful, and obviously low-environmental-impact options. Vine nutrition stays pretty much as well balanced on a Biodynamic plan as on a conventional nutrient addition plan. They do a good job! Hooray! 
Furthermore, if you're in a low disease and pest area, why not give Biodynamic treatments a whirl? You don't need to be putting nasty chemicals on your plants, so why taint the soil, expose workers to toxins, and mess with an already pretty good system? No reason! 


Now... for the stuff I don't really buy wholeheartedly... Biodynamics also has some kind of unusual practices- practices that seem more like religious doctrine than anything, because in many of the scientific journals I've read, there's no science to back them up. (And I like science.) For example, rather than planting, watering, harvesting, pruning, etc, based on a calendar year or on what's actually physically happening with the vine, Biodynamics uses a lunar cycle. Yes, they plant, prune, and harvest according to the cycle of the moon. For real.


Another of the more offbeat practices involves packing a cow horn full of manure and burying it in the vineyard. Now, you can argue that as the horn breaks down, it releases silica into the soil- which, it does- but only in the small area directly surrounding the horn, not into the larger vineyard block. Seems more a superstitious ritual than a scientifically backed agricultural approach. 


I think Biodynamic certification also doesn't make sense for many small growers. The rules and regulations regarding Biodynamic certification are even more strident than those for Organic certification because the list of no-no additives is a lot longer. For small wineries, simply taking the time to follow protocol and keep up with the necessary paperwork can make Biodynamics (and Organics) cost and time prohibitive. 


"So," you may ask, "why do it?" Well, there's the obvious, selfless, altruistic reasoning of "because I want to leave the planet a cleaner place." And, that's valid for a lot of people. I love the idea. If we all did it, can you imagine what a pristine, healthy, lovely planet we'd have? 


But, as so many of us aren't really that nice, why else would a person practice Biodynamics? Well, some wine producers believe that by not messing with a vine's nutrient balance very much, and by not using pesticides and synthetic chemicals, you're allowing the natural soil, sun, and water to affect the flavors in the berry- you're allowing a truer expression of terroir to shine through the fruit. 
As you may know, I'm not 100% on the terroir hype bandwagon either, however, I can actually see how this may be true. If you're a regular reader, you know I have a soft spot for small, craft producers who don't aim for a generically uniform product from vintage to vintage- I like that grapes are different from year to year, from season to season, based on weather, disease, water, etc. That's life! We're all affected by these things and I don't think wine should necessarily pretend to be unaffected. By not messing with your vines through chemical additions, you really are giving yourself over to nature in many ways (even though Biodynamics does advocate for a schedule of manure additions.) The grapes will be different from year to year, even from vineyard block to vineyard block. Terroir will be allowed to shine through.
And that, to me, is the difference between the mom-and-pop joint, and the big corporation, right there. 


Ultimately, I guess I'm not 100% on team Biodynamics, and if it were my vineyard, I can't imagine I'd go all the way to obtain certification. However, there are enough awesome elements of it that if I lived in the right place, I think it'd be great to try out the elements that work, and to toss the bits that don't (pretty much my mantra on life.)


Any questions? Deeper insight into Biodynamic viticulture or farming? Throw them my way in the comments! 

1 Comment

And the Winner Is...

4/4/2014

1 Comment

 
With 27.27% of the vote... Spill the Wine, by War. 


Submitted by my fab classmate Mark Ward! Congrats Mark! I'll shoot you an email to get your address and a little prize is a'comin your way! 


Thanks for playing, folks. We'll be back to our regularly scheduled programming by next week! 
1 Comment
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    I'm a wine-loving actress in the Windy City who holds certificates in Enology and Viticulture from Washington State University. I also own a hilarious cat.

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