Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting april 22 ’22

lummi island wine tasting april 22 ’22

May Schedule

We plan to be OPEN for wine tasting and sales Friday and Saturday from 4-6 pm through April. Anyone with boosted vaccine status is welcome!

NOTE:  We will be closed the first three weekends of May during ferry Drydock, and reopen May 27-28 for Memorial Day weekend.

 

Bread Pickup This Week

Buckwheat Walnut & Honey – A flavorful artisan bread made with a poolish preferment, fresh milled buckwheat, and bread flour. Though buckwheat is actually a seed and contains no gluten, it is not gluten free as it is also includes bread flour made from wheat. Buckwheat has an earthy flavor that in this bread is balanced with a little honey and toasted walnut; goes well with meats and cheeses – $5/loaf

Poolish Ale – the preferment here is also a poolish, made with bread flour, a bit of yeast and a nice ale beer for the liquid and fermented overnight. Mixed the next day with bread flour and fresh milled whole wheat. This makes a great all around bread with a nice crisp crust – $5/loaf

and pastry this week…

Chocolate Croissants – A traditional laminated french pastry made with a bit of sourdough flavor and another pre-ferment to help 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 on the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. The 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.

 

 

This Week’s $5 Tasting

Cantino del Morellino Cala Civetta Vermentino ’20      Italy     $12Sustainably farmed without pesticides or irrigation and manually harvested from Tuscan vineyards for a richer texture and cleaner palate than the more familiar (and also delicious!) Sardinian vermentinos. Aromas and flavors of lemon, melon, and orange finish with a bright, balanced acidity.

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.

Pomum Red ’16     Washington    $18
Carefully made and easy-drinking red blend of mostly cab and cab franc along with malbec, petite verdot, and merlot; aromas of red fruit leather and exotic spices; flavors of black cherry, cranberry, and garrigue, with fine elegant tannins and a pleasing finish.

 

  

The Economics of the Heart: Humanism and Democracy

In just the last few days, the maelstrom of bad news buffeting us cleared long enough to let in a couple of welcome rays of sunshine. These came in the form of two carefully crafted speeches, with a common theme, in two state legislatures, by two intelligent, coherent members, calling out their Republican colleagues for the self-righteous hypocrisy of their ongoing assault on our National and State Constitutions.

Both speeches have gone viral, so it is likely you have seen/heard both. That’s okay, they’re well worth hearing again. They are the metaphoric equivalent of a broadcast announcement on the Titanic that We Are Heading Full Speed Into An Iceberg! Or, if you prefer a different metaphor, as Sinclair Lewis predicted, Fascism now has a solid beachhead in America; it is definitely carrying a Cross, and it is working very, very hard to drape itself with our Flag.

This nation was not founded on religious principles. It was founded on humanistic principles. The Founders were adamant that all religions would be allowed, would be optional, and would be private. Laws were to be based on every individual’s freedom to choose one’s own philosophy unbound by the beliefs of others. Any form of national religion would open the door for  authoritarian tyranny.

 

 

 

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting april 15 ’22

lummi island wine tasting april 15 ’22

Covid Rules
We are again OPEN for wine tasting and sales both Friday and Saturday from 4-6 pm. Anyone with boosted vaccine status is welcome!

Bread Pickup This Week

Colomba di Pasqua or “Easter Dove”: A traditional Italian Easter cake made with a slievito madre, a sourdough levain fed every 4 hours at a warm temperature to make it  more sweet than sour. This cake-like bread also contains flour, eggs, sugar and butter, candied orange peel topped with a crunchy almond and hazelnut glaze and pearl sugar before baking. The dough is baked in a dove shaped baking form as a symbol of the Easter dove.  $5/loaf

Italian Breakfast Bread – A delicious lightly sweet bread great any time of day. Made with bread flour eggs, yogurt, a little sugar and vanilla as well as dried cranberries, golden raisins, and fresh and candied lemon peel. Perfect for breakfast toast or maybe for  Easter morning French Toast!  – $5/loaf

and pastry this week…

Hot Cross Buns –   An enriched dough (butter, sugar, eggs and just a hint of whole wheat). full of spices, including cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger as well as currants and candied lemon and orange peel. Topped with a flavorful paste and glazed these are a delicious traditional treat to celebrate spring. – 2/$5

To get on the bread order list, click on the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. The 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.

 

Mailing List Issues: The Saga Continues!

This week’s post will be emailed “by hand” again, as app glitch remains a mystery.

 

 

 

 

 

 

This Week’s $5 Tasting

Ryan Patrick Rock Island Chardonnay ’18        Washington       $15
Golden straw color; aromas and flavors of wildflowers, crisp apples, honey, and freshly baked cinnamon roll with a round, crisp, medium body and a graceful finish of sumac-spiced croutons; an appetizing, full-bodied Chardonnay.

Terra d’Oro Zinfandel  ’17     California       $15
Aromas and flavors of dried cherries, cured beef and a whiff of dried herbs create good complexity and solid structure with good acidity and firm tannins that pair well with rich dishes.

Toso Reserve Malbec ’17 Argentina $21
Elegant and balanced with food 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.

  

The Economics of the Heart: Ego and Stewardship

There are a lot of people who don’t believe that the global climate is changing. They are not persuaded by the steady rise in global temperatures, or the increasing frequency and magnitude of weather-related destruction of our surprisingly fragile infrastructure. The tacit assumption has always been that yes, forest fires and floods and droughts and hurricanes happen and take their toll–definite setbacks– but we will always be able to pick up and start over. Now we begin to realize that for us humans, climate change will make areas economically uninhabitable long before they are physically uninhabitable.

Some people are confident that their religion guarantees them Dominion over the Earth and “every living thing,” a sort of Divine Gift of Entitlement unencumbered by responsibility, compassion, love, stewardship, or humility– more of a Property Right. Every resource is there to be exploited for convenience, entertainment, or profit. As Al Gore put it, climate change is an “Inconvenient truth” that many would prefer to ignore.

Even those of us who feel, um, “stewardly” toward our precious planet make our little compromises with energy use. Leaders of Nations around the world have met regularly for many years to agree that “Yes, we Must and Will tackle this coming Problem!” But political and corporate bureaucracies have kept progress well below what everyone knows is necessary to build a sustainable infrastructure in time to save the countless species whose customary ecological niches are already disappearing. A niche is a Rare and Precious thing, and every living thing must have one or make one to survive, including us.

In our own ways we all look for ways to lower our carbon footprints enough to make a difference– to slow, stop, and dial back the concentration of CO2 in our atmosphere to 1950 or so, when there were five billion fewer of us. It’s a tall order.

Right here on our little island, we might all work together toward the goal of making our particular place Energy Independent and carbon-neutral. We have wind, sun, tides, and currents to work with, and a lot of bright people who share the same goal.

A starting goal might be to make our next ferry carbon-neutral with energy generated right here. Possible?

 

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting april 8 ’22

lummi island wine tasting april 8 ’22

Covid Rules
We are again OPEN for wine tasting and sales both Friday and Saturday from 4-6 pm. Anyone with boosted vaccine status is welcome!

Bread Pickup This Week

Pain au Levain – Made with a nice mix of bread flour and freshly milled whole wheat and rye flours. After building the sourdough and mixing the final dough it gets a long cool overnight ferment in the refrigerator. This really allows the flavor to develop in this bread. A great all around bread – $5/loaf

Cinnamon Raisin – Fermented overnight with a poolish of bread and fresh milled rye flour before mixing with bread flour and freshly milled whole wheat as well as rolled oats. Some honey for sweetness, a little milk for a tender crumb and loaded with raisins and a healthy dose of cinnamon. The cinnamon is mixed into the dough and flavors the entire bread for a hearty rustic loaf. – $5/loaf

Traditional Croissants – Made with two preferments, 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

To get on the bread order list, click on the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. The 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.

 

Mailing List Issues: The Saga Continues!

Still trying to get our mailing app to work (failed again last week) and due to that uncertainty, we are taking the precaution of emailing the link directly to our mailing list as well as trying to activate the RSS feeder.

Best case scenario is that you will receive the actual blog in one email, and a link to it in another at about the same time. Any other outcome means something didn’t work as it should. There are a lot of balls in the air right now, so please bear with us, thanks!

 

 

 

This Week’s $5 Tasting

MAN Vintners Chenin Blanc ’21   South Africa    $11
Uses only the free-run juice to preserve a clean and natural character, refreshing acidity, and delicious ripe fruit flavors with vibrant aromas of quince, pear and pineapple. On the palate, fresh stonefruit and apple flavors are backed by refreshing acidity, minerality and a pleasing, rounded mouthfeel.

St. Francis Merlot ’17       California  $15
A classic, rich, and soft merlot with aromas of cassis, plum, and dried currant that merge into layered flavors of dark berries, espresso bean, bittersweet chocolate with a note of spice.

Tre Donne D’Arc Langhe Rosso ’18   Italy   $20
Blend of Barbera, Pinot Noir (Nero), Dolcetto, and the rare, highly aromatic grape Freisa; the Barbera and Pinot Noir are aged in oak, while the Dolcetto and Freisa are unoaked, lively, and fresh making a powerful, elegant wine with rich, moody fruit, bracing purity, and fascinating depth.

 

The Economics of the Heart: Freedom and Duty

https://constitutioncenter.org/images/uploads/cycler/washington456.jpg

https://constitutioncenter.org/images/uploads/cycler/washington456.jpg

Several editorial journalists have recently made reference to President George Washington’s Farewell Address in their comments on current political events. The address was written by Washington in late 1796, after two terms in office, with the assistance of Alexander Hamilton and James Madison. Since 1893 the address has been read aloud in the Senate each year on Washington’s birthday. It is an impressive and inspiring document. Indeed, reading it makes it very clear that he did indeed have a fatherly dedication to the Constitution and deep concerns about the country’s future.

“This government, the offspring of our own choice,…adopted upon full investigation and mature deliberation, completely free in its principles, in the distribution of its powers uniting security with energy, and containing within itself a provision for its own amendment, has a just claim to your confidence and your support. Respect for its authority, compliance with its laws, acquiescence in its measures, are duties enjoined by the fundamental maxims of true liberty. The basis of our political system is the right of the people to make and to alter their constitutions of government.”

Washington was deeply concerned that the regional factionalism he saw in the newly formed country could lead to the establishment of political parties that might be more loyal to their own causes than to the nation’s. And, indeed, our history has been a constant struggle to extend the “blessings of liberty” to all, even as many factions have in fact used militant actions, disenfranchisement, political exclusion, and various levels of good ol’ boy American terrorism to keep “others” firmly under their heel.

Many of us who grew up in the Fifties lived in a peaceful post-WWII bubble of well-being. In New England the world seemed friendly and safe. It did indeed seem self-evident that everyone should share equally in those blessings. But as we grew older we learned that there were indeed factions whose well-being required that they maintain a sense of superiority and even physical dominance over some other group.

Washington was a keen observer of human nature. He and the others who put their lives and fortunes on the line to push off the oppressive rule of the English monarchy and to create this self-governed nation Really Believed in the people’s right to establish self-government. Washington eloquently described the implicit contradictions and challenges in trying to establish such a nation:

“But the Constitution which at any time exists, until changed by an explicit and authentic act of the whole people, is sacredly obligatory upon all. The very idea of the power and the right of the people to establish government presupposes the duty of every individual to obey the established government.”

Right now our country feels much as it must have felt in the years leading up to the Civil War. Whether White Southerners actually believed Negros were inferior beings who deserved to be enslaved, or whether it was simply expedient to believe so will remain a moot question. Right now the rhetoric on the Republican mainstream table is familiarly self-aggrandizing, Constitution- undermining, and self-deceiving in its kaleidoscopic transformation of facts into lunatic dystopian fantasies, becoming more juvenile, self-centered, and “Do you really Believe that Sheet?” every day.

So yeah, this stuff we are going through now is exactly what Papa George was afraid of.

Read Washington’s Farewell Address

 

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting april 2 ’22

lummi island wine tasting april 2 ’22

Covid Rules
We are again OPEN for wine tasting and sales this Saturday (4/2) from 4-6 pm. Anyone with boosted vaccine status is welcome!

Bread Returns!

Rosemary Olive Oil – Bread flour and freshly milled white whole wheat for additional 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

Multi Grain- Starts with a preferment of flour, water, salt & yeast. This allows a portion of the dough to begin the enzymatic activity and gluten development overnight in a cool environment. The next day it is mixed with bread, fresh milled whole wheat, rye, polenta cornmeal, flax, sunflower and sesame seeds for a nice bit of crunch and some extra flavor. – $5/loaf

Individual Cinnamon Rolls – Made with a rich sweet roll dough full of eggs, butter and sugar. The dough is rolled out, spread with pastry cream and sprinkled with cinnamon sugar. Then rolled up and sliced into individual rolls for baking. And boy are they delicious! – 2/$5.

To get on the bread order list, click on the “Contact Us” link above and fill out the form. The 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.

 

Mailing List Issues: The Saga Continues!

Still trying to get our mailing app to work (failed again last week) and due to that uncertainty, we are taking the precaution of emailing the link directly to our mailing list as well as trying to activate the RSS feeder.

Best case scenario is that you will receive the actual blog in one email, and a link to it in another at about the same time. Any other outcome means something didn’t work as it should. There are a lot of balls in the air right now, so please bear with us, thanks!

 

 

 

This Week’s $5 Tasting

Lunetta Prosecco      Italy     $14
Pale straw color with greenish reflections, and fine perlage; fragrant, with enticing aromas of apple and peach; refreshing, dry, and harmonious, with crisp fruit flavors and a clean finish.

La Quercia Montepulciano ’17       Italy    $13
100% organic Montepulciano D’abruzzo; opens with aromas of sour cherry with a hint of new leather; ripe fruity palate exhibits juicy blackberry, raspberry and a hint of anise;  easy drinking with soft tannins.

Shatter Grenache Vin de Pays des Côtes Catalanes ’19      France       $19
From Old Vines in Roussillon’s black schist soil; nose of dark fruit with a hint of espresso; velvety texture with black currant, spice and cured meat flavors with a touch of coffee; firm structure, supple tannins, excellent acidity and overall balance.

 

The Economics of the Heart: Entitlement and Cruelty

Everyone knows the beginning scenes of 2001: A Space Odyssey, when primitive humanoid apes appear to have learned violence toward their own kind from the mysterious Monolith. The message of that scene, and to some degree the whole movie, seemed to be that this penchant for violence represented some kind of “progress” for the human race that ultimately led to space travel and communication with the Infinite. Really?…it’s some kind of Progress??

Throughout our history we humans have demonstrated a penchant for predatory tribal warfare over access to various desires and necessities: food, water, social status, mating, wealth, security, land, and political power, and the present is no different.

We Americans have certainly played our part in this dominance nonsense throughout our history. We have fought the English, Native Americans, Barbary Pirates, Mexico, Spain, Ourselves in the Civil War, Germany, Japan, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and even invaded Grenada, for heaven’s sake! We have military bases all over the world. We are the only country ever to use atomic weapons, with horrific results. So we can recognize a certain cognitive dissonance in ourselves as we hold our breath and long for the fighting, wholesale murder, wanton destruction, and suffering to stop in Ukraine and across the world. We see the rise in tyrannical regimes in countries across the world, from Russia to China to Syria, Turkey, Iran, Venezuela, Hungary, Afghanistan, and more, and it feels deeply threatening.

Putin is bad enough with his unrelenting cruelty. But even more heart-breaking and gut-wrenching has been the mass desertion of the American Republican Party away from Constitutional values of inclusion and equal protection under law, and toward an authoritarian state with sharply limited individual freedoms for political opponents. Many Republican-controlled states have adopted actual punishments for those who do not subscribe wholeheartedly to their hypocritical, white, racist, selfish, entitled-by-birth, narcissistic, angry, and intolerant assertions of Entitlement to rule.

We keep glancing at our watches waiting for arrests, trials, and convictions for the hubris-fueled conspirators of the narrowly evaded attempt to overturn the 2020 Presidential election. Will justice prevail? Will our collective democratic values re-emerge in the electorate before next fall’s elections? Or will this global trend toward tyranny prevail?

There is some good news, though…Wine helps in times like these!

Wine Tasting