lummi island wine tasting nov 3 ’23

Hours this weekend: Open Friday 4-6pm  

  NOTE: WE WILL BE CLOSED NOV 11-12!

This week’s wine tasting

Juggernaut Chardonnay ’21     Sonoma      $17
Aromas of apple, Asian pear and lemon meringue open to flavors of stone fruit, honeysuckle and yellow plum made rich and lingering using barrel fermentation and sur lie aging; finishes with notes of vanilla bean, and butter cream with hints of baking spices and clove.

Tacchino Buongiorno Rosso ’18     Italy      $16
Aromas of dark cherry, cranberry, and slate with hints of white blossom and smoke; nicely balanced, with good structure, integrated acidity, and
bright fruit, with lingering finish.

Vall Llach Embruix Priorat ’17       Spain      $26
Blend of grenache, merlot, syrah, carignan, and cab from 7 to 30-yr-old vines on medium and steep slopes; alluring aromas of ripe plums, fresh black pepper and clove. Intense,  concentrated, lush, and round on the mid-palate with notes of chocolate-covered cherries and soft black licorice on the finish.

 

Friday Bread Pickup This Week!

Multi Grain –  Uses an overnight preferment of flour, water, salt, & yeast that begins enzymatic activity and gluten development overnight in a cool environment, before mixing with bread flour, fresh milled whole wheat and rye, plus cornmeal, flax, sunflower and sesame seeds added for a nice bit of crunch and extra flavor. $5/loaf

Rosemary Olive Oil – Made with bread flour with freshly milled whole wheat for additional flavor and texture, while fresh rosemary from the garden and olive oil make for a nice tender crumb and a crisp crust. – $5/loaf

and pastry this week…

Traditional Croissants – Made with both a sourdough levain and a prefermented dough – aka “old dough”– where a portion of the flour, water, salt and yeast is fermented overnight. The final dough is then made with more flour, butter, milk and sugar, laminated with more butter before being cut and shaped into traditional french croissants. 2/$5

Island Bakery has developed a lengthy rotation cycle of several dozen breads and pastries. Each Sunday Janice emails the week’s bread offering to her mailing list. Orders received before Wednesday will be available for pickup at the wine shop each Friday from 4:00 – 5:30 pm. Go to Contact us to get on the bread email list.

 

Wine of the Week: Tacchino Buongiorno Rosso ’18     Italy      $16

Italy’s Piedmont wine region lies in the mountainous NW corner of the Italian Alps, and sharing borders with Switzerland to the north and France to the west. The alpine environment reliably provides the warm days and cool nights that regularly generate bold, structured wines that stand the test of time. The region has long been the home of numerous small-scale, family-operated wineries with a near-obsessive focus on quality, with entire villages historically dedicated to the production of wine. 

The father of winemaker Romina Tacchino and her brother Alessio was a child when his father passed away and the family sold the family vineyards and winery. He eventually bought it back, over time expanding vineyard area from 6 to 12 hectares with two very different exposures, altitudes, and soil types. The contrasting characteristics of the two vineyards tend to complement each other as seasons are warmer or colder, wetter or dryer, allowing them to meet targets for ripeness, acidity. freshness, and texture.

 

Economics of the Heart: Madison’s Real Originalism

James Madison

The Federalist Society is supposedly all about the philosophy of James Madison, one of the principal architects of the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, and the Federalist Papers. The “Originalism” extolled by Far Right jurists is ascribed to Madison, and their interpretation of his philosophy has become the guiding rationalization for the Christian Nationalist movement which has taken over the Republican Party lock, stock, firing pin, and barrel.

It has been supported for at least two decades by trainloads of political buying power supplied in abundance by deep-pocketed right-wing billionaires; the wonderful people who have infested our nation with the Maga movement; the most anti-democratic Supreme Court money can buy; the ongoing war against women, people of color, and the environment; and now a House majority of bickering adolescents playing at being in Congress.

The recent giddy selection of Christian Nationalist Mike Johnson as House Speaker underlines the hypocrisy of the GOP’s interpretation of Madison’s “orginalism” as its guiding legislative principal. Johnson has asserted that “all you need to know about me is in the Bible,” and that the framers “clearly did not mean…to keep religion from influencing issues of civil government. To the contrary, it was meant to keep the federal government from impeding the religious practice of citizens… to protect the church from an encroaching State, not the other way around.”

Folks, this is Newspeak Doublethink stuff right out of 1984, from a baby-faced guy who is right now two heartbeats away from being President. So yes, we should all be Very Afraid.

Given this dystopian backdrop it was with some considerable relief this morning to be reminded in Heather Cox Richardson’s daily email “Letters from an American” that James Madison not only never supported such views, but on the contrary, said a great deal about why the government and religion must be kept apart, and why “men had a right to the free exercise of religion, according to the dictates of conscience.” Indeed, Madison considered this “right of conscience” to religious practice the same right which justified the whole idea of representative government, saying in Federalist #51, “In a free government the security for civil rights must be the same as that for religious rights. It consists in the one case in the multiplicity of interests, and in the other in the multiplicity of sects.”

Richardson explores these ideas more deeply in this interesting video from Salon.com. She has the historian’s confidence that things are always changing, going in and out of balance according to some set of social re-balancing mechanisms. Today’s takeaway is that we humans make our collective political pendulum swing, and democracy is so far the most effective organizational template for mutual well-being. There’s only one boat, we are all in it, and we need to work together.  

In the midst of the chaos of Republican politics, fake news, and social media, it is curiously comforting to see that all of this nonsense about “Madisonian Originalism” and the twisted laws and Supreme Court decisions put in place in its name to favor the rich over the poor, Christianity over other faiths, business interests over citizen interests and environmental quality, and the brutality of prejudice over mutual respect have just been carefully scripted shams that work for awhile and then won’t.

Madison liked systems to be in balance. Good idea.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wine Tasting

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