Lummi Island Wine Tasting Ides of March ’14
Sunsets are Back!
In the Beginning (of March!), the Island was Without Form, and Grayness (snow!) covered the face of the Deep. And the Spirit of Spring saw the Darkness and took Pity and moved the clocks Ahead, and the days grew longer, and it was Good. And the Spirit said, “Let there be warmer days and glorious sunsets again in this dark and dismal place!” And the Light returned, and Color again filled the World, and it was Good. Very, very, Good!
See slideshow of the sunset
Wine Club: Two Thumbs Up!
It has been a year since we launched our Artisan Wine Club, and from our perspective it has been a resounding (…ounding …ounding …ounding_) success! We are deeply grateful to all of you who joined the Club and helped make it a success. For those of you who don’t know, the Club offers two kinds of rewards for membership. First, annual Wine Club dues of $35 entitle each member to save $5 on all of our wine tastings ($10 for non-members), a saving worth up to $200 a year, depending on how often you take advantage of it. Second, the more wine club members buy from us, the deeper their discounts. After $150 in purchases, save 5% on the next $150. After $300 in purchases, we pay your sales tax– 8.7% discount on all purchases.
The Wine Club has increased our weekly attendance (and social energy!) by charging members a little less for tastings, and increased our revenues by allowing us to charge infrequent visitors a little more. We are also very grateful that some members have shifted much of their wine purchasing to our shop, to both their advantage and ours. We hope that being a member of the Artisan Wine Club has been a good thing for you in the past year as well, and we hope you will renew your membership for another year. We will be contacting you individually when your membership is ready for renewal.
The Ides of March

It was a nasty and infamous piece of work, further immortalized by Shakespeare, so that two thousand years later the deed– and especially the business about the soothsayer’s warning to Beware– is still an Icon for Treachery. It just makes me wonder: is that because it was so OUTSIDE the realm of Human Behavior, or so TYPICAL of it…? All you need to know is, “Dude, not much has changed in two thousand years.”
This Week’s Tasting
Mt. Baker Roussanne ’10 Washington $12
Notes of apricot, honeyed white peach, grassy aromas and lengthy dried apricot flavors with a plump mouthfeel and a cleansing minerality and acidity.
Hahn Pinot Noir ’11 California $12
Lovely aroma of ripe dark berries, lavender, baking spice and a little smoke. Smooth on the palate of black cherry and dark berries over a layer of spice and a little black pepper.
Stephen Vincent “Crimson” 10 California $11
Firm and spicy, with appetizing blackberry, wild berry, pepper, spice and chicory notes that firm up on the finish. Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon.
Borsao Tres Picos Garnacha ’10 Spain 92pts $15
Deep notes of roasted herbs, sweet black cherries and raspberries, peppers and spice soar from the glass of this dark ruby/purple-tinged wine. Full-bodied, rich, ripe, silky textured, pure and long
Perazzeta Syrah ’08 Italy $38
From one of our favorite Italian wineries, this beautiful artisan syrah (only 80 cases produced) was made from meticulously selected grapes beginning with open-barrel fermentation. Very special!
Lummi Island Wine Tasting March 8 ’14
“Snideology”

Seattle camping

The Art of Food

This Week’s Tasting
Lost River Pinot Gris ’12 Washington $15
Aromas of citrus, pear and tropical fruits. Their most popular wine, the crisp acidity is balanced with a small amount of residual sugar.
Portteus Bistro Red 12 Washington $10
54% Merlot and 46% Cabernet Franc. A food friendly wine with delicate yet elegant mouthfeel. Blackberry, pomegranate, cocoa, honey and licorice like flavors with a creamy finish.
Palama Negroamaro ’12 Italy $10
Elegantly expansive, rich and robust, with silky mouthfeel, layered aromas of steeped spices, and palate of blackberry jam with accents of cinnamon, leather, tobacco and smoke.
Altarocca Librato Rosso ’11 Italy $16
Unoaked, from volcanic soil; zesty, spicy, dark, and smooth, with a hint of eucalyptus on the finish. Terrific!
Altavins Tinto Joven ’11 Spain $11
Mouth and sense-filling blend of garnacha, syrah, and carinena, full of ripe dark fruit and berry flavors from Terra Alta’s hot days and cool nights close to Tarragona and the Mediterranean.
Lummi Island Wine Tasting March 2 ’14
Harbingers of Spring

clicking on some photos will yield more detailed images
A touch of Winter

After the snow, glorious sun shining on snow, overwhelming our squinty Northwest mole-eyes. All in all, a bit of an adventure, lightened to casual nuisance by its occurrence amidst the unmistakable signs of Spring all around. After all, the pussy willows, the Indian plum, and the daffodils know what’s going on, and they’re certain that “Spring comes, the grass grows by itself.” Or at least it used to…will it always…?
Sorry, ladies and gentlemen, the Betting is now Closed…

Anyway, musing on our recent unseasonable snowstorm, along with the bizarre weather around the world this winter, I confess to an uneasy feeling that we may have abused our Mother Planet a bit too much. And planets are complicated Beings that take a Very Long View. “Oh yes,” She says, “those humans were SO promising at the beginning, especially that Darwin fellow, he was such a Dear…but yes, they have been quite a big Disappointment after all…”
About ten years ago there was a brief news clip about a Pentagon study that had looked at some unlikely but possible climatic change scenarios involving the Strategic Implcations of….wait for it...a Sudden Ice Age! So our “out of the envelope global weather this year” seems an appropriate cue for digging into the Archives to revisit that analysis. In the words of inspiring eco-spokesman David Suzuki when asked by a Bellingham audience member whether we should be concerned about Global Warming (please think “Climate Change”), said, “You should be shi%$ng your pants!” Although this article is somewhat heavy going (“scholarly”), it raises some interesting questions that are very much worth revisiting. Every day it becomes more and more clear that our political leaders are are unwilling or unable to deal with problems of this magnitude. In short either we have to change how we select our political leaders, or our species will likely perish, and probably sooner rather than later. link
This Week’s Tasting
Leonildo Pieropan Soave ’12 Italy $15
Well-balanced, lively, and tangy, with distinct minerality and appealing flavors of cantaloupe, pear, blood orange and ginger.
Atalaya Laya ’12 Spain $10
70% Garnacha and 30% Monastrell; superb bouquet of dark cherries, blackberry and incense, with layered palate of succulent black fruit ; supremely well-crafted for this price range.
Rio Madre Rioja ’11 Spain 90pts $10
Inky ruby. Spice-accented notes of black currant and cherry cola, dark chocolate and licorice. Concentrated and powerful on the palate, with a spicy note building with air.
Maryhill Zinfandel ’09 Washington
Full-bodied, with smokey aromas of dark ripe plum and candied citrus, with a hefty palate of black currant and leathery dried plum.
Palama Metiusco ’12 Italy $23
50% Negroamaro, 25% Malvasia and Primitivo; fermented and aged in stainless steel to preserve the essence of southern Italy’s terroir— medium-bodied, earthy and complex, with a velvety finish of black cherries, raisins and plums.
Lummi Island Wine Tasting Feb 21 ’14
Marx was Right…or was it Left?

Marx has been badmouthed by capitalists for about 150 years, but he had great insight about how capitalism would influence political economy— back in those days “politics” and “economics” were inseparable aspects of social structure. And not only was he right about a lot of things– as in the quote above, he also had a sense of humor! And for many decades now, there has been an official branch of American economics devoted to the study of Marxist ideas, the Union for Radical Political Economics. Their thinking is particularly useful for examining the distributional issues of economic policy, particularly in urban settings.
A brief look at recent history shows that in the last thirty years in general and the last 15 years in particular, productivity gains in the economy have gone almost entirely to increase corporate profits, while wages have stagnated. That means that as the Pie has gotten much bigger, the shares going to capital have gotten bigger and bigger, while the shares going to labor have gotten smaller and smaller. Recently, workers at VW-Chattanooga were pressured into voting against unionization by anti-union Republican politicians. It turns out, however, that VW considers Republican interference with the union vote contrary to its long-standing commitment to the principle of co-determination between management and labor, and is now (I love this!) less likely to expand its operations in the US South. Gee…by golly, kinda makes me proud to be a VW owner…!
The Art of Wine Continues!

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Heron Fare

This Week’s Tasting
La Cana Albarino ‘ 12 Spain 91pts $14
From vines perched on blustery and wet Atlantic coast of Spain, just north of Portugal. High-pitched aromas of lime zest, lemongrass, and jasmine; energetic citrus and orchard fruit, finishing with lime and pear skin notes. read more
Jordanov Merlot ’11 Macedonia $10
Macedonia is possibly the birthplace of the cultivated vine in Europe 4000 years ago. The fruit for this wine comes from Tikves, an area with limestone and sandy soils, ideal for growing wine grapes. Notes of blueberry and densely concentrated fruit with a dusty, rich, long finish of cherry and cherry pit minerality. read more
Veramonte Cabernet Sauvignon ’10 Chile 90pts $10
Colchagua Valley, at 34°S, is closer to the Equator than any European vineyard, but cooled by the Humboldt Current; the region is characterized by steep slopes of well-drained granitic soil, irrigated by the Tinguiririca River flowing from the Andes. This rich red leads with distinct earthiness to dark cassis, plum reduction and kirsch notes, gaining traction with layers of woodsy spices, maduro tobacco and licorice on the long finish.
Andrew Murray Elleven Cabernet California $16
From south-facing hillside vines on the mineral-rich, clay-loam soils with interspersed cobbles of the new Happy Canyon AVA of Santa Barbara, this wine shows concentrated and complex notes of graphite, forest floor, flowers, and bright cherry.
Vignavecchia Chianti Classico ’10 Italy 89pts $18
Fermented in 100HL cement tanks for two weeks, then 30% aged in wood (90% sangio, 10% merlot) Old-world aromas of redcurrant, cherry pit, violet, tobacco, and horse blanket lead to intense flavors of redcurrant, bitter cherry, spices, and merlot-derived nuances of cocoa and coffee.



2072 Granger Way