Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting november 3 ’17

lummi island wine tasting november 3 ’17

 (note: some photos will enlarge when clicked)

Almost home!

As mentioned last week, we will be away through November 4, so the wine shop will be open Friday but closed Saturday. Janice your baker will open the wine shop for Bread Delivery and Wine Tasting November 3, but the shop will be closed on Saturday.

We will be open again for regular hours 4-7 Friday November 10 and Saturday November 11. See you then!

Btw, the photo shown here is of the annual Round the County Sailing Race, which usually affords great viewing on Saturday as sailboats of all sizes brave the Fall Weather to sail around Orcas Island. Look for them sailing up Haro Strait in late morning, spinnakers flying in what is often Challenging weather!

 

Bread this week

Multi Grain –  made with an overnight pre-ferment; next day it is mixed with bread flour and fresh milled whole wheat and rye, then flax, sunflower and sesame seeds are added for a nice bit of crunch and some extra flavor. A great all around bread – $5/loaf

Pear Buckwheat – the preferment in this bread is a poolish, made with bread flour, water and a bit of yeast and fermented overnight. Mixed the next day with bread flour and fresh milled buckwheat. The addition of toasted walnuts and dried pears soaked in white wine makes for a really flavorful bread – $5/loaf

And for pastry, baker’s favorite…

Pain aux Raisin – made with the same laminated dough as croissants. The dough is rolled out, spread with pastry cream and sprinkled with a mix of golden raisins and dried cranberries that have been soaked in sugar syrup. Rolled up and sliced before baking.  – 2/$5

 

Montreal

Here it is Thursday night and time for another weekly blog. At the moment we are ensconced at our apartment in Montreal relaxing before heading out to Yet Another self-indulgent group dinner. So far this week:

Monday: Holder

Tuesday: Hvor

Wednesday lunch: Pintxos

Wednesday night: Toqué

Today we visited the Montreal Fine Arts Museum.  Besides a wide range of exhibits within, the top floor of the Museum also boasted a terrific view of the nearby building-sized mural of Leonard Cohen, possibly Montreal’s most well-known Citizen.

 

 

 

 

This five-day fine wine and dine experience was put together on short notice by long time Friends of the Wine Shop Ryan and Ryan, who now live in Montreal about half the year. Shown left a Quiet Moment in our apartment before stepping out tonight for Yet Another Fabulous Meal, this time at Au Pied de Cochon, an Anthony Bourdain favorite!

 

 

 

This week’s wine tasting
Wine tasting Friday will follow Janice’s Plan, which we have never quite figured out. All you Friday Regulars know what we mean!

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting oct 27 ’17

lummi island wine tasting oct 27 ’17

 (note: some photos will enlarge when clicked)

Yes, we KNOW it’s Upsetting, but…

As mentioned last week, we will be away through November 4, so the wine shop will be open the next two Fridays but closed the next two Saturdays. Janice your baker will open the wine shop the NEXT two weekends for Friday Bread Delivery and Wine Tasting.

Friday, Oct 27: OPEN for bread pickup and wine tasting

Saturday, Oct 28: CLOSED

Friday, Nov 3: OPEN for bread pickup and wine tasting

Saturday, Nov 4: CLOSED

We will be open again for regular hours 4-7 Friday November 10 and Saturday November 11. See you then!

 

Bread this week

Rosemary Olive Oil – made with bread flour and a bit of freshly milled white whole wheat for a little more flavor and texture. Fresh rosemary from the garden and olive oil to make for a nice tender crumb and a nice crisp crust. A great all around bread – $5/loaf

Black Pepper Walnut- made with a nice mix of flours, bread flour, fresh milled whole wheat and rye. A fair amount of black pepper and toasted walnuts give this bread great flavor with just a bit of peppery bite to it. Would go well with all sorts of meats and cheese – $5/loaf

And for pastry this week – a special Halloween treat!

Pumpkin Brioche: A brioche full of fall flavors – rich brioche dough full of eggs, butter sugar and honey then flavored with pumpkin puree! As well as all those pumpkin spices that make pumpkin pie so delicious – cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger and cloves.  – 2/$5

Maryland

Last week we stayed at a very comfortable B&B a few miles south of Annapolis, on a little peninsula called Arundel on the Bay. Anne Arundel is also the name of the county which includes Annapolis, also the Capital of Maryland. They are named after Lady Anne Arundell , who at the age of 13 was married by arrangement to Cecilius Calvert, second Lord Baltimore.

Mostly it was sunny and warm, with daytime highs in the mid-seventies, cooling toward 60 at night. Everything was still green, in the lovely light shades of the area.

 

Maine

We planned to stay in a little cottage near the coast. Arrived at 0130 after a delayed flight to find a completely unacceptable accommodation, and wound up at an unlikely motel in Bucksport, Maine perched on the water with a great view of Fort Knox and the Penobscot Narrows Bridge. Even on a rainy day the view is soothing and still showing lots of fall color…(click photo for larger view)

 

 


more fall color near Blue Hill

 

 

 

 

 

 

Any trip to Maine involves lots of “chowdah” tasting…

 

 

 

 

 


This week’s wine tasting
 Wine tasting Friday will follow Janice’s Plan, which we have never quite figured out. All you Friday Regulars know what we mean!
 

 

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting october 20 ’17

lummi island wine tasting october 20 ’17

Yes, we KNOW it’s Upsetting, but it Can’t Be Helped!

As mentioned last week, we will be away through November 4, so the wine shop will be closed Saturdays till November 11. Also, Janice your baker is away this weekend as well, but she will be back NEXT weekend for Friday Bread Delivery and Wine Tasting.

What this means for Our Faithful Followers the next three weekends is:

Friday-Saturday Oct 20-21:  CLOSED both days

Friday, Oct 27: OPEN for bread pickup and wine tasting

Saturday, Oct 28: CLOSED

Friday, Nov 3: OPEN for bread pickup and wine tasting

Saturday, Nov 4: CLOSED

We will be open again for regular hours 4-7 Friday November 10 and Saturday November 11. See you then!

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting oct 13 ’17

lummi island wine tasting oct 13 ’17

 (note: some photos will enlarge when clicked)

Bread this week

Whole Wheat Levain –  made with levain and bread flour and about 25% fresh milled whole wheat and then a long, slow, cool overnight ferment in the refrigerator, giving it a nice ‘toothy’ crumb, great texture and flavor and a nice crisp crust. – $5/loaf

Breton – From the French Breton region. Bread flour and fresh milled buckwheat and rye flour with and ‘sel gris’– the grey salt from the region– that brings more mineral flavors to this bread. – $5/loaf

And for pastry this week…

Chocolate Croissants – a traditional laminated french pastry made with a bit of sourdough flavor and a pre-ferment to help strengthen the dough to create the traditional honeycomb interior. Rolled out and shaped with delicious dark chocolate in the center. – 2/$5

 

 

October Hours: Open Fridays Only Till Nov 10!

A long time ago in a barely remembered Galaxy we were all Really Young– some of us maybe Younger than others! In my case from 1963-67 I attended the U. S. Naval Academy, graduating in 1967. This month is the 50th Anniversary Reunion of my class, and Pat and I will be attending. We will be leaving in the middle of next week. Our friends Roger and Deb (from whom we bought our boat Dreamtime two years ago), will be house- and dog-sitting while we are away– but they will NOT be Wine Shop Sitting…except maybe dropping by on Fridays to say Hi…please give them a Big Welcome!

Instead, for the rest of October the wine shop Will Be Open Fridays Only  from 4-6:30 or so for Bread Pickup, wine tasting, and Of Course Wine Sales— Janice presiding As Usual. After a few days in Annapolis we will be spending a week on the Maine Coast visiting family, and then five days in Montreal wining and dining with The Ryans and a representative group from– I’m Not Making This Up– Lummi Island! (you know who you are!).

However, Please Note, the wine shop will NOT be open for the Next Three Saturdays, Oct 21, Oct 28, and Nov 4. We regret any inconvenience, and look forward to catching up with you on Nov 11-12. 

 

Seguret

As with the above paragraph, it is hard to believe it’s been six years since we visited Seguret, arguably the Most Picturesque Village in France. Washington winemaker Bob Betz had suggested it was not to be missed, and so we made a point to visit. Like many Designated Picturesque Villages in France, there is little Industry beyond Being, well, Picturesque, constantly Posing in a way. Every turn of an alley, every stone stair climbed, every archway-framed view has its Finger on your Cute Button before you can even begin to shrug and exclaim Jacques Robinson!

This photo was taken from the window of a (of course) Charming Little Tea Shop about halfway up the steep, narrow, and winding cobbled walkways of the village. It was great to sit down, have a little something, and explore the interesting selection of teas. I settled on an Oolong tea called Tung Ting (aka Dong Ding), which has become a Favorite Late Afternoon soother.

I bring this up today because this weekend we are pouring a white wine from Seguret which blends some of our favorite white varietals (see notes, below). Hopefully it will taste as good accompanying the view from our wine shop window as it would if you were actually there!

 

Mar a Lago Update: Chickens Blow Home to Roost

Climate science is not really that Complicated. Even Republicans should be able to Grok the Basic Mechanisms. Either they actually do, and are deliberately Choosing Short Term Personal Gains over Long Term Global Survivability, or they Really Doh!-n’t grasp the Basics of Earthly Thermodynamics, and it falls on All of Us to Set Them Straight.

The Basics:  Solar heating evaporates water from the Earth’s Surface and moves it to Higher Latitudes where it condenses  and falls as Rain. Increasing Heat in the Atmosphere means it can Hold More Water and can carry More Kinetic Energy. As has been predicted by Climate Models for the last Forty Years, that means more evaporation (some latitudes get much drier); more Rainfall (and more Floods), and more Kinetic Energy in the Atmosphere (More Wind).

We have many friends in Northern Califonia. Right now many of them are on mandatory Evacuation from their homes, and this only one week after the worst series of Hurricanes in memory have Devastated the Caribbean.

Donald Trump’s America is the Only Country in the World that finds it politically and economically Convenient to Deny that these Catastrophic changes in Global Temperature and their Systemic Effects on Evaporation, Rainfall, and Winds are Directly Causing more intense Hurricanes, Increasingly serious and more frequent Flooding, and More and More Costly Wildfires. It’s hard to imagine what kind of Accounting Stance can find a Profit Motive in Refusing to Acknowledge what the Entire Rest of the World Accepts as Fact, and what our fellow Citizens in Texas, Lousiana, Florida, the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and Northern California are presently Experiencing.

 

This week’s wine tasting

Domaine de l’Amauve La Daurèle, Côtes du Rhône Villages Séguret ’16    France    $17
Grenache blanc, clairette, viognier, & ugni blanc; expressive nose of white fruits, mirabelle plum, and acacia honey; soft on the palate with lively citrus flavors…very Food Versatile!

Cloudlift Chardonnay ’14   Washington    $18
Toasty oak leads the aromatics, picking up butter, brioche, ripe pear and dried apple; on the palate flavors of sweet Bartlett pear and fresh Golden Delicious apple. Bright acidity and a finish of ripe nectarine– enjoyable and complex.

Robert Ramsay Mason’s Red ’14   Washington  $17
Easy-drinking cinsault-dominant Rhone blend; subtle nose of black cherry paste with a hint of cinnamon spice that expands on the palate to a soft anise finish.

La Rocaliere Lirac Rouge ’14              France              $16
Equal parts grenache, mourvedre, and syrah. Clay hillsides and serene aging in cement tanks yield this
inky purple wine with floral and spicy aromas and soft, mouth-pleasing texture.

Catena Zapata Cab Franc San Carlos ’14    Argentina   $19
Purple color with ruby tones. Elegant aromas of spices, garrigue, red berries, cassis, and raspberries, with layers of cedar. Mouth-filling and rich with flavors of cassis, raspberries and notes of black pepper and oregano. The finish is bright and fresh with finely grained tannins.


 

 

Wine Tasting