lummi island wine tasting aug 25-26 ’23
Hours this weekend: Friday & Saturday, August 25-26, 4-6 pm
This week’s wine tasting:
Lyrarakis Plyto Psarades ’21 Crete $20
This is a very old grape varietal saved from extinction when planted in the Lyrarakis Psarades vineyard at 480m elevation. It makes a lively, fresh, citric wine with bright, mineral-streaked lemon fruit; subtle, complex, and pleasing texture; unique freshness; and a lovely, complex, crystalline purity.
Chateau de Montfaucon Lirac Rose’ 21 France $18
Fine, translucent ruby in color, and aged mainly in concrete tanks, it offers up attractive floral aromas, hints of crushed stones, strawberries, cherries and a hint of lime.
Argento Malbec ’20 Argentina $12
From organically grown grapes; deep purple hue; inviting aromas of red berries and flowers, and flavors of plum and sweet blackberry; finishes with ripe, balanced tannins– way over-delivers for its modest price.
Sea Sun Pinot Noir ’21 California $19
A deep, alluring pinot, strikingly soft and rich on both the nose and palate, with scents of baked cherries and pie crust, and silky notes of brown spice and vanilla.
Friday Bread Pickup This Week

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. Works well with all sorts of meats and cheese- $5/loaf
Four Seed Buttermilk – Includes all the elements of whole wheat, adding cracked wheat and bran in to the bread flour instead of milling whole wheat berries. It also has buttermilk and oil for a tender bread and a little tang, and finished with a bit of honey and sunflower, pumpkin, and sesame seeds and toasted millet $5/loaf
and pastry this week…
Morning Buns – Made popular by Tartine Bakery in San Francisco…mine are made with the same laminated dough as croissants. The dough is rolled out, spread with a filling of brown sugar, orange zest, butter and cinnamon, rolled up and sliced before baking. 2/$5
To get on the bread order list, click the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. Each week’s bread menu is sent to the list each Sunday, for ordering by Tuesday, for pickup on Friday. Simple, right..? If you will be visiting the island and would like to order bread for your visit, at least a week’s notice is recommended for pickup the following Friday.
Wine of the Week: Lyrarakis Plyto Psarades ’21 Crete $20

The varietal’s name derives from the laurel (bay leaf) plant, which is called “Dáfni” in Greek, as the wine shows distinctive herbal nuances, a clean and refreshing mouthfeel, and a clean, lingering, aromatic aftertaste. Its unique characteristics offer great food-pairing versatility, pairing very well with almost anything served outdoors in the summer.
Our take is that this lovely white wine is unique in its “palate palette,” with complex, enjoyable nuances that are unique to this rare and unusual grape.
Economics of the Heart: More Democratic Than Voting…?

The ancient Greeks used such a method, called“sortition,” in which a lottery was taken by qualified candidates who had passed an examination of their capacity to understand and exercise their duties consistent with the rules and values of the community. Of particular interest in this discussion is what research has revealed about the comparative personalities and resultant capacity for public service demonstrated by people who actively campaigned among the public for their votes vs. those who were selected by raffle. To paraphrase Woody Allen, “I would never want to vote for the kind of person who would campaign for office.”
As children of the fifties and sixties we old-timers were taught that the United States represented a kind of ideal democratic system, and we have all felt very fortunate to enjoy its benefits, serve in its military, and take part in civic affairs. However, since about 1980 there has been a national slide away from “one person, one vote” to “one dollar, one vote” that has pushed the poorest into homelessness, the struggling into poverty, and the middle classes into varying levels of economic struggle. And, of course, the Citizens United case.
In recent decades Republicans have courted the prejudices of white evangelical Christians by establishing oppressive restrictions on women’s rights, courted corporate donors by denying the threat of climate change, and turned national media and the internet into propaganda generators of “alternative facts” that have successfully convinced millions of Americans that up is down, dark is light, and bad is good.
We watched Reagan throw the poor and insane out on the street and open the door for unrestricted media lying on talk radio and Fox News. We saw Gingrich declare war on Congressional comity by openly insulting Democrats and orienting the Republican Party toward obstructionism, brinkmanship, and harassment of Democratic colleagues. And we have watched Republican legislatures use outrageous gerrymandering, restrictive barriers to voting, a concerted attempt to overturn the 2020 Presidential election, and an ongoing policy of having no policy except expecting to stay in power by the sheer volume and theatrical excess of their official proceedings.
So…at this point in time it is undeniable that our system is officially broken. And it will likely stay broken as long as Red States are permitted to make it harder for their opponents to get to vote or have their votes counted, and wealthy corporations and individuals are able to buy political and judicial influence with “campaign donations” or “free vacations.”
So sure, bring on the competency tests and the raffles, and do away with elections! Although, if one were really skeptical, one might wonder, “um…tell me again exactly how these raffles will be supervised..?.”
lummi island wine tasting aug 18-19 ’23
Hours this weekend: Friday & Saturday, August 18-19, 4-6 pm
This week’s wine tasting:
Abacela Albarino ’22 Washington $22
Bright fruit with aromas of pineapple, pear, lemon and nectarine, crisp acidity,and juicy stone and tropical fruit flavors.
Cala Civetta Sangiovese di Toscana ’21 Italy $13
Earthy nose of red plum accompanies a vibrant yet mildly tannic palate of tart cherry with a hint of smoke and ocean brine – a true expression of Scansano, nestled halfway between the Tyrrhenian Sea and Mt. Amiata.
Toso Reserve Malbec ’18 Argentina $21
Elegant and balanced with good concentration and ripeness; focused, clean notes of blackberry, plum, and ripe, dark cherries; a plush, elegant mouthfeel, easy tannins, and lingering notes of leather and Spring soil.
Friday Bread Pickup This Week

Buckwheat Rye – Fresh milled buckwheat and rye flours are soaked for several hours without any yeast in a method known as an autolyse to start the fermenting process and really gets the enzymes going before the final mix – which is then fermented overnight in the refrigerator. The buckwheat, rye soaker is mixed with bread flour, salt and yeast and a bit of honey.– $5/loaf
Whole Grain Spelt Sweet Levain – Made with a levain preferment of freshly milled whole wheat and whole spelt before mixing with bread flour along with dried apricots, golden raisins, slivered almonds, and sunflower and flax seeds. Chock full of flavor!
and pastry this week…
Chocolate Babka Rolls – A sweet pastry dough full of eggs, butter and sugar, rolled and spread with a chocolate filling, rolled up and cut into individual rolls that are placed in baking forms for baking and then brushed with sugar syrup after baking. 2/$5
To get on the bread order list, click the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. Each week’s bread menu is sent to the list each Sunday, for ordering by Tuesday, for pickup on Friday. Simple, right..? If you will be visiting the island and would like to order bread for your visit, at least a week’s notice is recommended for pickup the following Friday.
Wine of the Week: Abacela Albarino ’22 Washington $22

His comprehensive research led him to plant Tempranillo (1995) and Albariño (2000) grapes at his Fault Line Vineyards near Roseburg, OR, chosen for its specific micro-climate and soils proving that the varietals can thrive in the Pacific Northwest. Since then, the vineyards have expanded to 25 acres of tempranillo and 12 acres devoted to albariño, along with other site/climate-matched varietals including grenache, malbec, and syrah.
Currently Abecela produces about 2,000 cases of albariño each vintage. It makes a bright, lively, and flavorful white wine with typical aromas and flavors of apple, pear, and white peach, with bright acidity and a pleasant salinity that spreads out the finish: a great summer sipper with lots of afternoon dishes.
Economics of the Heart: Fascism Comes to America

In the past decade or two we have seen increasing conflict of values about what is important or not, what is fair or foul, true or false, right or wrong, cruel or just, legal or illegal, deserving or undeserving, noble or corrupt, worthy or unworthy. We have seen our two-party political landscape morph from reasoned argument to entitled assertion, from structured discussion to infantile rant, from conducting the people’s business to keeping the people’s business from being conducted. All of these things are brought even more starkly into relief by the fascisization of Republican politics and the resultant multiple criminal charges against the Tweetster, who meets or exceeds all the qualifications for a Fascist leader.
Every Fascist leader of the last century built around themselves a cult of personality, and this is not lost on fascism scholar Ruth Ben-Ghiat who gives Mussolini credit for creating the mold: “Mussolini would strip his shirt off in newsreels, engaging cheering fans in idolizing their leader.” link
“The primary way the early fascists got to power was by killing off and intimidating their primary rivals, the Socialists, with their own “Squadrists” — terrorists who would descend upon towns in trucks, uniformed in black shirts — had knives and they killed thousands of people in the years 1919 to 1922. The killing went on after Mussolini became prime minister…landowners and businessmen in particular supported the suppression of socialism.” link
Today in our own country and around the world we see an increasing number of world leaders that bear these Fascist characteristics —the hyper-nationalism, the leader cult, the undermining of the independence of the judiciary. And it is happening right here, right now in our own country. Today’s Republican Party has no platform other than Trumpism and limiting the rights of women, immigrants, and people of color, while bowing to the wishes of Corporations and billionaires.
Pretty existential stuff…
lummi island wine tasting aug 11-12 ’23
Hours this weekend: Friday & Saturday, August 11-12, 4-6 pm

stork nest outside our window in Haro, Spain, 2013
This week’s wine tasting:
Maryhill Viognier Washington $14
Carefully picked and slowly pressed to extract vibrant aromas of melon, pear, and apricot with traces of pineapple and grapefruit, continuing into a sensational and crisp fruit finish.
Chateau Cabirau Cotes de Rousillon ’19 $17
The backbone of the Syrah and Carignan ally perfectly with the opulent Grenache, giving a medium-bodied wine of intense black fruit flavors, redolent of mountain herbs.
Muga Anden Estacion Rioja Crianza ’19 Spain $21
Tempranillo/Garnacha blend matured in French and European barrels for 14 months, making for a floral, juicy, open and approachable rioja. read more
Friday Bread Pickup This Week
Pain Meunier -aka “Miller’s Bread”— made with pre-fermented dough it contains all portions of the wheat berry: flour, fresh milled whole wheat, cracked wheat and wheat germ, always a favorite and a great all around bread. It makes the best toast! – $5/loaf
Sonnenblumenbrot – aka Sunflower Seed Bread– made with a pre-ferment that is a complete dough itself. It takes a portion of the flour, water, salt and yeast that ferments overnight before mixing the final dough, made with bread flour and freshly milled rye, then loaded up with toasted sunflower seeds and some barley malt syrup for sweetness. This is a typical German seed bread – $5/loaf
and pastry this week…
Black Sesame & Candied Lemon Brioche: A delicious brioche dough full of eggs, butter and sugar. Filled with fresh lemon zest and candied lemon and as if that weren’t enough, topped with a black sesame streusel before baking. Ooh la la, what’s not to like…–? 2/$5
To get on the bread order list, click the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. Each week’s bread menu is sent to the list each Sunday, for ordering by Tuesday, for pickup on Friday. Simple, right..? If you will be visiting the island and would like to order bread for your visit, at least a week’s notice is recommended for pickup the following Friday.
Wine of the Week: Muga El Andén de la Estación Crianza ’19 Spain $21

same stork nest in Haro
Pied de cuve is a technique used by winemakers to develop a local wild yeast indigenous to a particular vineyard to ferment wines made from that vineyard’s grapes. Muga uses this process int the fermentation of this week’s featured wine. The process begins by picking a small amount of grapes shortly before the full harvest which are crushed and allowed to start fermenting from the native yeasts already present on the grapes. This culture is then added to the rest of the grapes when they are picked to initiate fermentation. In organic and biodynamic viniculture, it is part of the local conditions that define every vineyard…its terroir.
We visited the winery at Muga some years ago. Unfortunately, we also had some kind of bug that forced us to cancel several other winery visits we had scheduled. So we laid low, took some short walks through Haro’s narrow streets, and…during our convalescence we were entertained by the stork pair that were nesting on a rooftop directly across the narrow street from our little second-floor apartment. Curiously, despite being under the weather, our memories are fond ones. Haro is a small community, in a pretty arid landscape surrounded by vineyards, with good food, charming and friendly people, and a surprising number of rooftop stork nests. What more could you want??
By the way, just tasted this lovely Rioja for the first time about an hour ago…it is big, luscious, nuanced, and powerful, from new vineyards acquired and developed by Muga over recent decades. Seriously tasty!
Economics of the Heart: Climate Crisis Deepens

photo courtesy NOAA/NWS
We have known for nearly 50 years that burning fossil fuels was a Faustian bargain. Early models in the 70’s were remarkably accurate in predicting how increasing concentrations of CO2 and other hydrocarbons produced by the combustion of fossil fuels would affect global climate. As models and data got better, our predictions got better; and as our predictions got better, giant energy companies found ways to subvert any attempts to decrease the rapidly growing production and use of the gas, oil, and coal that were adding heat to the atmosphere and more wealth to people who already had plenty.
A warmer atmosphere does all of the things that heat does on a bigger and bigger scale each year. Increasing evaporation of oceans, rivers, and lakes takes more water into the atmosphere and moves it to a cooler latitude, and releases it as rain. The increasing heat in the atmosphere also creates higher winds with more kinetic energy and increasingly destructive winds, rainfall, catastrophic flooding in some places, and stifling drought in others.
Every living thing is threatened by these changes. Entire ecosystems that had slowly developed symbiosis among the life forms around them and thrived for millennia are now threatened. And we humans, we who are causing all this stress and destruction, keep acting as though it’s no big deal, someone will find some way to adapt.
Over the last week or two I have found myself picturing Q, the cynical-yet-God-like-powered character from the Star Trek series, looking down his nose at us deceptive and self-serving human beings and observing with a cynical sneer, “Well, now, isn’t that Convenient for you!” as Corporate Mindlessness rationalizes the continued destruction of the living systems upon which all life depends.
Many places in the world have already experienced devastating climate-related disasters, and this summer has been a particularly sobering Slap in the Face to our short-sighted selfishness. For some reason, yesterday’s sudden, catastrophic, and heartbreaking wind-driven fire-storm in Lahaina, is particularly shocking: so fast, so brutal, so complete, a worst nightmare in a place we all think of as a paradise.
We swear and sob at these things that are happening more and more frequently, with worse and worse destruction, in more and more places. The fires and floods and winds are getting worse and worse, and the prospects of rebuilding are becoming less and less rational in more and more places. The ice is melting rapidly at both poles. People in Arizona can only leave their air-conditioned homes between sunset and sunrise.
Given the human penchant to revert to feudal/authoritarian political economies under enough stress, the rapidly increasing costs of climate disasters, within our nation and across the world, are made even more poignantly disturbing.
lummi island wine tasting aug 4-5 ’23
Hours this weekend: Friday & Saturday, July 28-29, 4-6 pm
This week’s wine tasting:
Natura Rose ’21 Chile $12
Cold-soaked before pressing and cold-fermented on the skins to develop rich and nuanced aromas and flavors of grassy lime, tropical fruits, and lychee, with a crisp, lingering finish.
Idilico Albarino ’22 Washington $17
Fermented on the lees for four months, lightly cold stabilized, fined and filtered before bottling; nose of citrus and tropical fruit leads to luscious, crisp, and refreshing flavors. “Drink anytime the sun shines…”
Lancyre Pic St Loup Vielles Vignes ’17
100 % malbec; unfolds with dark, enchanting notes of blackberry, grilled plum, and jammy raspberry with accents of orange peel, vanilla, and tobacco spice, finishing with balanced structure, plush texture, and a lengthy finish.
Friday Bread Pickup This Week
Fig Anise – Made with a sponge that is fermented overnight, then the final dough is mixed with bread flour and fresh milled whole wheat. Honey, dried figs and anise bring in all the flavors of the mediterranean. A great flavorful bread – $5/loaf
Sesame Semolina – Uses a sponge pre-ferment that ferments some of the flour, water & yeast before mixing the final dough. Made with semolina and bread flour and a soaker of cornmeal, millet and sesame seeds and a little olive oil to round out the flavor and tenderize the crumb; rolled in sesame seeds before baking– lots of great flavors! – $5/loaf
and pastry this week…
Chocolate Croissants – traditional laminated french pastry with a bit of sourdough flavor and another pre-mass hypnosisferment to help strengthen the dough and create the traditional “honeycomb” interior. Rolled out and shaped with delicious dark chocolate in the center. –2/$5 🙂
To get on the bread order list, click the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. Each week’s bread menu is sent to the list each Sunday, for ordering by Tuesday, for pickup on Friday. Simple, right..? If you will be visiting the island and would like to order bread for your visit, at least a week’s notice is recommended for pickup the following Friday.
Wine of the Week: Lancyre Pic St Loup Vielles Vignes ’17 France $22
The “Pic” which dominates the small French wine region of Pic St. Loup is a 640-m (2000 ft.) “Tooth” of granite that dominates the view for many miles in every direction– powerful, beautiful, vaguely remote, and iconic. It looms over a collection of very special, well-drained, limestone-rich vineyards. About an hour north of Montpellier on the Mediterranean coast to the south, it features hot days but is far enough north to have Atlantic-influenced cool nights that induce slow, full ripening.
The wines from Pic St. Loup must be predominantly syrah, grenache, and mourvedre (as in nearby Southern Rhone) and fairly consistently have a certain gravitas. The vines must be at least six years old (not the usual three) before considered mature enough for making red wines, but are perfect for making excellent rosé! Vineyards are scattered among rugged terrain that slopes up from the Mediterranean. Atlantic influences make the local climate cooler and wetter than elsewhere in Languedoc.
We have carried their rosés for many years, but it has been a long time since we have poured one of its old vine reds!
Mar a Lago Update Revisited: Democracy at a Crossroad

We are all wired like Gollum, and also like Jesus or Buddha. In any given moment we can all be either one, and it is not a matter of religion. It is an ongoing conflict between our individual ambitions and our ability to have compassion for those who are suffering. It’s not that complicated; it’s as if we all have some crossed wires sometimes about mine, yours, and ours.
Our country’s founding premises some 250 years ago embodied the Enlightenment principles of Humanism. We all have the same needs for physical and emotional safety and nourishment and a sense of belonging in a community of shared values and mutual respect. Those needs made the default organization of the earliest humans a tribal cooperative that needed each other to survive and, when possible, to thrive.
Some evidence suggests that modern homo sapiens first appeared perhaps as recently as 40,000 years ago and subsumed or out-competed and/or interbred with other humanoids, including Neanderthals. (most of us have some Neanderthal DNA). As described in Sapiens, by Yuval Harrari, our species has made a profound mark on our world in a very short period of time. We are both creative and destructive, kind and ruthless, sometimes creators of both beauty and horror.
Several millennia of civilization have put boundaries around many of those instincts, but under enough duress any of us is capable of anything to protect ourselves, our friends, our families, and our communities from outside threats—or, perhaps, to advance our political interests.
During the 2016 campaign it became apparent that the Tweetster (duck in sunglasses!) was able to stoke a latent paranoia among ordinarily rational people that convinced them that various Others were invading America to Steal their Stuff: Muslims, Mexicans, non-whites, non-Christians. Everyone who was different was a threat, and the Tweetster was able to turn those latent fears and prejudices into a political movement. He was able to connect with their inner fears by giving voice to them. At the same time, those same behaviors evoked the opposite reaction from many of us, making him a particularly polarizing and manipulative figure, not unlike Hitler or Mussolini. Our nation is still deeply polarized from the vastly different realities evoked by competing media orientations.
2016 wasn’t a typical political campaign– it was more some kind of mass hypnosis. Even today, as the Tweetster faced his Third (and most compelling) indictment (on the Jan 6 insurrection), no doubt a large number of Americans (perhaps including you) take it for granted that everything he has said and that Fox and Twitter and Christian Radio have echoed for the last six years is True, because somehow that message justifies their own self-doubt, their own dissatisfaction with their station, and their need to have someone to blame for their sense that they deserve more and those Others deserve less.
At root all of this tension has exposed a deep rift in the common values that have held this nation together. Right here on our little island we see in our local social media unkindness and judgment which benefits no one. There is no way of telling if the Tweetster caused all of this fear, anger, and distrust in our nation, or vice versa. Either way, it’s gonna be a long year or two till this gets sorted out.
There is an old Maine story about a young fellow racing along a rural road in Maine in his sports car and hits a cow that stepped into the road. He comes quickly to a stop and walks back to see the cow still standing and the farmer next to it. The kid says hopefully, “Um, well, she seems to be okay…??” The farmer pauses for a long time before saying, “Well sonny, I’ll tell yuh…if yuh think yuh done ‘er any good, I’ll be happy to pay yuh for it…”




2072 Granger Way