lummi island wine tasting aug 19-20 ’22
Hours this weekend: 4-6pm both Friday and Saturday
Th
e wine shop will be open this weekend as usual from 4-6 Friday and Saturday. Covid continues to be a threat, even for those fully vaccinated. Limited outdoor seating is available on the deck for those who wish to stay outside.
At the current stage of the global pandemic, anyone can be an unknowing carrier, so though overall risks are low, we all must manage risk to ourselves and others in our own way. You are welcome to wear a mask , stay outside, or otherwise distance as additional precautions to protect yourself and others. For our part, we will continue taking basic precautions in the wine shop: windows open, air filter operating, outside seating options. We do continue to request that the unvaxed remain outside for tasting.
Btw, the forecast is for sunny, comfortable (70°) weather both Friday and Saturday!
Bread Pickup This Week

Whole Wheat Levain – Made with a sourdough starter built up over several days before a levain is made and fermented overnight to start fermentation and gluten development. The bread is made with levain and bread flour and about 25% fresh milled whole wheat for a ‘toothy’ crumb, great texture and flavor and a nice crisp crust. – $5/loaf
Semolina w/ Fennel & Raisins – A levain bread made with bread flour, semolina and some fresh milled whole wheat. A little butter for a tender crumb and fennel seeds and golden raisins round out the flavors. These flavors go really well with meats and cheese, but it also makes pretty darn good toast – $5/loaf
and mmm, 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 on 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: El Nido Clio ’19 Spain $45

Clio is a blend of 70% monastrell (known as mourvedre in France) and 30% cab sauv. Monastrell, a somewhat demanding grape to cultivate, has been developed to a high standard in the Murcia wine region in recent years. At the same time international demand for wine has also led to widespread planting of cab sauv in many parts of Spain, where it has thrived and developed its own Spanish footprint, and this wine showcases the blend very well. Lucky for us…come on by and try it!
Tasting notes: Inky purple in color, opaque and bright; nose of blueberries, cassis, black cherries, toast and baking spices. Full bodied, with lots of fresh black cherry and black raspberry on the palate, with underlying spice and long finish. Delicious now, but best after five years and good for another twenty after that.
Economics of the Heart: Fascism and the Holy Book

image created with Midjourney art app
The Jews have the Torah. The Muslims have the Quran. Christianity claims authority from both the Torah (Old Testament) and the Gospels, Epistles, and Acts (New Testament). All claim special relationships with the One omnipotent God such that their founder/prophet (Abraham, Mohammed, or Jesus) was The One chosen by God to be his messenger and representative on Earth. From those assumptions it was a very short step for all of these religions to claim Divine Right over the behavior of not only their own followers, but literally, Everyone on the Planet.
On reflection, these religions of the Book all seem to have started with the fundamental idea of Patriarchy– one Head Guy with Divine Right to Rule, who could proclaim a comprehensive list of rules, practices, behavioral limitations, duties, and rituals that everyone was Required to follow or suffer punitive consequences, including confinement, exile, torture, mutilation, and death– not forms of Justice, but forms of Punishment that we should all now recognize as Pavlovian Behavioral Conditioning.
It doesn’t take a great deal of contemplation to see that these structures did not come from some Omnipotent God, but rather from a bunch of ordinary men (not women) who craved Authority and Position in their culture. These Books are the foundation of centuries of feudal oppression by small groups of psychopathic men who wanted personal Power.
Why ever would an Omnipotent Deity have the slightest interest in being worshiped or obeyed by its little Creations? Why ever would any, you know, well-adjusted, Omnipotent, and Eternal Deity capable of creating Time, Space, and Infinity have any need for a mean streak?
These “Religions of the Book” account for 2.2 billion Christians (32% of the world’s population), 1.6 billion Muslims (23%), and 14 million Jews (0.2%) around the world as of 2010, about 56% of global population. Another 16% follow no religion, 15% are Hindu, 7% are Buddhists, and the rest follow one of very many more local or regional practices.
The main takeaway here is that over half the world adheres to the beliefs of male-dominated, hierarchical feudal religions, complete with authoritarian titles, lack of accountability, sins and punishments, everlasting damnation, and Divine Dictatorial Authority of the currently ruling dominant male. Really?
Et tu, Republicans?
We leave you today with this little Buddhist sutra, which takes the view that acts of loving kindness are the better measure of our worth.
Let none deceive another
Or despise any being in any state;
Let none through anger or ill will
Wish harm upon another;
Even as a mother protects with her life
Her child, her only child,
So with a boundless heart
Should one cherish all living beings;
Radiating kindness over the entire world.
Metta Sutta
This Week’s Tasting $10
Montinore Borealis White Oregon $15
Aromas of orange blossom, honeydew, guava and kiwi; sumptuous flavors of stone fruit, Meyer lemon and juicy pear drizzled with caramel.
Mas des Bressades Rosé ’21 France $12
Bright and dry rosé from a blend of Grenache, Syrah and Mourvèdre, with a splash of Carignan and Cinsault. Lovely balance of bright red fruit and wild herbs, with a vibrant, spicy finish.
El Nido Clio ’19 Spain $45
Seductive nose of blueberries, cassis, black cherry, toast, and baking spices; full bodied, with lots of fresh black cherry and black raspberry on the palate, with underlying spice and lingering finish.
lummi island wine tasting aug 12-13 ’22
Community Meet and Greet

Hours this weekend: 4-6pm both Friday and Saturday
The wine shop will be open this weekend as usual from 4-6 Friday and Saturday. Covid continues to be a threat, even for those fully vaccinated. Limited outdoor seating is available on the deck for those who wish to stay outside.
At this stage of the pandemic in our region, anyone can be a carrier, so though overall risks are low, we all must manage risk to ourselves and others in our own way. You are welcome to wear a mask , stay outside, or otherwise distance as additional precautions to protect yourself and others. For our part, we will continue taking basic precautions in the wine shop: windows open, air filter operating, outside seating options. We do continue to request that the unvaxed remain outside for tasting.
Btw, the forecast is for sunny, comfortable (70°) weather both Friday and Saturday.
Bread Pickup This Week

Sweet Corn & Dried Cranberry – Made with polenta and bread flour, then enriched with milk, butter and honey for a soft and tender crumb, then loaded up with dried cranberries. Has great corn flavor but is not a traditional quick cornbread. A delicious bread that makes great toast – $5/loaf
and mmm, 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 wasn’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 on 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: Tre Donne Roero Arneis ’20 Italy $20

photo courtesy asiaimportnews.com
The revered Italian wine region of Piedmont (i.e., ‘foot of the mountain’) lies in the NW corner of Italy, in the foothills of the French and Swiss Alps to the west and north. The geography makes for the serendipitous combination of warm days and cool nights that make perfect conditions for wine grapes. The Roero region is just north of the iconic Barolo and Barbaresco regions, which produce some of Italy’s most prestigious wines.
White wines from Roero must contain at least 95% Arneis, and reds must contain at least 95% Nebbiolo. The sandy clay soils make for a nuanced, medium-bodied Arneis with aromas and flavors of pear, apricot, and white blossoms. With roots diving deep into layers of tufo clay, the 35-year-old vines at Tre Donne yield a wide array of complex aromas and flavors, from prominent stone fruits and piercing minerality to subtle layers of quince, mushroom, and lemon verbena. It’s easy to like!
Read more and even more...
Economics of the Heart: Signs of Actual Progress!

The first good news is that after many years of effort by our community and our representatives at the local, county, state, and federal level, the USDOT (thanks, Pete!) has awarded Whatcom County $25M for our ferry replacement project! This would not have happened without the considerable effort of many in our local and extended community over the past decade: ferry Captains and crew, County Public Works and Council, LIFAC (Ferry Advisory Committee), our State and Federal legislators, our Governor, DOT Secretary Buttigieg, and many others who played vital roles in getting us this far. So it’s a very Big Deal and a huge relief to have this funding come through as our trusty Whatcom Chief gets increasingly crotchety in her old age.
The plan on the table is for a 34-car ferry to replace the Chief, which was designed 60 years ago as a 16-car vessel but which, as everyone knows has operated for decades as a 20-car vessel, bumper to bumper, door to door, day after day. The next boat will likely have walkable space all around each vehicle…quite extravagant, even a bit agoraphobic, perhaps..? Another possible stumbling block could be that the $25 million in the original rough proposal is now $37 million in current dollars, so it is likely there will be a two years of further tweaking before the final design is approved. Some of us who will remain unnamed for the moment have been pushing for a smaller, more energy-efficient vessel; given that the 34-car design would now cost another $10 million, there are likely to be numerous trade-offs before a final design is reached. This moment is for savoring the green light to move ahead with the project. It’s a Big Deal for all of us.
The proposed new ferry (after considerable arm -twisting) is a diesel-electric hybrid design, not the diesel-only originally proposed. Also, for six decades the ferry has berthed at the Island at night, and all the crew have been island residents. Therefore, because the new vessel will have to recharge overnight on the Island, an essential component of island infrastructure will involve a charging/energy storage station. At LIFAC’s urging, the County has also approved a Shore Power Study in the near term to explore and evaluate various recharge options.
Over the last twenty years there has been a great deal of research across the globe into replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy resources. One of the key infrastructure challenges has been how to make renewable energy resources reliable and predictable. After all, the great convenience of fossil fuels is you can use it whenever you want. But sun, wind, waves and currents are more fickle, so a great deal of global research has explored ways to gather and store energy from renewables while the sun is shining, the wind is blowing, the waves are crashing, the tide is changing, and then draw from it as necessary, the renewable equivalent of “starting the engine.” This, in turn, has led to substantial improvements in the capacity and efficiency of energy storage systems.
These lines of inquiry have been productive enough that it now makes sense for communities like our little island to start planning how to use microgrids, solar panels, windmills, waterfalls, waves, and tidal energy– whatever is locally available– to gather and store clean energy to run not only the next ferry, but also our homes and other infrastructure as well. It is now looking entirely feasible for a place like Lummi Island to become energy independent, with every property both generating energy for and using energy from interconnected community sources.
Including generating power for the next ferry!
This Week’s Tasting $10
Tre Donne Roero Arneis ’20 Italy $20
Pale golden yellow; soft aromas of orange blossom, honeysuckle, nectarine, and lemon verbena; flavors of pear, peach, quince, and green apple; enduring minerality and balanced acidity.
La Atalaya del Camino ’19 Spain $13
Intense aromas, fruit, and elegance on the nose with a distinct spiciness and a touch of floral notes. Rich and meaty structure, with rich dark fruits and hints of spice. Smooth and pleasant long finish.
Sineann Oregon Pinot Noir ’19 Oregon $30
Aromas of deep dark fruits lead to a juicy, vibrant palate with notes of black cherry, black raspberry, fig, baking spice and fresh plum, and layered fruit flavors, finishing with supple, textured tannins and a lingering, complex finish.
lummi island wine tasting aug 5-6 ’22
Hours this weekend: 4-6pm both Friday and Saturday

At this stage of the pandemic in our region, anyone can be a carrier, so though overall risks are low, we all must manage risk to ourselves and others in our own way. You are welcome to wear a mask , stay outside, or otherwise distance as additional precautions to protect yourself and others. For our part, we will continue taking basic precautions in the wine shop: windows open, air filter operating, outside seating options. We do continue to request that the unvaxed remain outside for tasting.
Fyi, the forecast is for warm, sunny, comfortable (72°) weather all weekend…!
Bread Pickup This Week

Pan de Cioccolate – A delicious chocolate artisan bread that isn’t an enriched sweet pastry dough with lots of eggs, butter and sugar. Rather this bread is a rich chocolate bread made with a levain, bread flour and fresh milled rye flour, honey for sweetness, vanilla and plenty of dark chocolate. Makes fabulous toast, even better french toast – $5/loaf
and mmm, pastry this week…!
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
To get on the bread order list, click on 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: Seghesio Zinfandel ’19 California $23
The Seghesio family has been growing zinfandel grapes in Sonoma for 125 years, possibly starting with cuttings from closely related primitivo vines from southern Italy. Zinfandel from the region has built a reputation for big, fruit-forward red wines that coat the palate and fill the senses with their flavors and aromas. Over the decades the winery has developed numerous single-vineyard labels, each with its own special characteristics.
As is the case for many top wineries, selected portions of the juice that doesn’t make the cut for single-vineyard bottling are blended to make this annual blend, which is predictably delicious and enticing in its own way. From year to year it reliably delivers a delicious zinfandel at a modest price.
The Economics of the Heart: Still on Track for Corporate Feudalism

Milbank lays out a detailed timeline of the evolution of the movement through the Clinton years, into the “tea party” years, the full-on racist anti-Obama years, and the current election-denial years. As Milbank points out, “the problem isn’t primarily polarization. The problem is that one of our two major political parties has ceased good-faith participation in the democratic process… Republicans became Destructionists: They destroyed truth, they destroyed decency, they destroyed patriotism, they destroyed national unity, they destroyed racial progress, they destroyed their own party, and they are well on their way to destroying the world’s oldest democracy.”
The fact is that this Repupli-Fascist movement is now mature, wealthy, and in full charge of many state governments and much of our Federal infrastructure. In a few short months there will be another national election to determine the division of power in Congress for the next two years. While the efforts by many Red states to rig their elections “legally” to assure lasting majorities are flagrant violations of Constitutional principles, they still stand as formidable obstacles to fairness and justice. Of course, recent events have also shown that their white, fundamentalist, Christian views also control much of the Federal Court as well.
There is one tiny glimmer of hope in recent news from Kansas (we’re not making this up!). The defeat of a proposal to change the State Constitution to ban abortion was soundly defeated in this week’s election by a massive and surprising voter turnout. At the same time the latest polls from 538 are showing that the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the MCSC (Mostly Catholic Supreme Court) seems to have ignited a revolution of sorts among women across the country. Because similar feelings exist among women in All the red states, many state poll results are shifting toward blue because of this one issue. To which we can only whisper, “let it be…”
This Week’s $5 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.
Domaine de l’Amauve La Daurèle, Côtes du Rhône Villages Séguret ’18 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…a particular favorite!
Seghesio Zinfandel ’19 California $23
Aromas of deep dark fruits lead to a juicy, vibrant palate with notes of black cherry, black raspberry, fig, baking spice and fresh plum, and layered fruit flavors, finishing with supple, textured tannins and a lingering, complex finish.
lummi island wine tasting july 22-23 ’22
Hours this weekend: 4-6pm both Friday and Saturday

Covid cases remain low at about 2 per 1000, considerably lower than chances of getting the annual flu. You are welcome to wear masks and/or stay outside as additional precautions to protect yourself and others. For our part, we will continue taking basic precautions in the wine shop: windows open, air filter operating, outside seating options. We do continue to request that the unvaxed remain outside for tasting.
Fyi, the forecast is for warm sunny weather all weekend…
Bread Pickup This Week

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
and mmm, pastry this week…!
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. 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: Parducci Small Lot Petite Sirah ’20 Mendocino $15
Parducci Winery is the oldest winery in Mendocino County, founded in 1921 during Prohibition by Tuscan immigrant Adolph Parducci. His first vineyards were of petite sirah, and his old “home ranch vineyard” is still making wine from that signature Petite Sirah. The winery prospered and stayed in the family until 2004, when it was sold to a group of native Mendocino investors with lengthy vineyard and winery management experience. They have been making a concerted effort to manage the vineyards sustainably and symbiotically with the regional environment. watch video
Petite Sirah is a distinct grape variety developed from Syrah and Peloursin around 1850 in France. Peloursin is now quite rare, but is occasionally found in blends from some older vineyards in California.
Tasting notes: Rich and full-bodied, with dense blueberry and cocoa flavors and tongue-coating and lingering soft tannins that extend the saturated fruit flavors on the finish.
The Economics of the Heart: An Ongoing Civil War

Forbes.com, american-flag-on-cracked-background
Every once in a while we read something that unexpectedly pulls several seemingly unrelated issues into such a compelling systemic context that we have something of a “Eureka!” moment. That happened this week while reading an interview from last March with Barbara Walter, a political scientist at UCSD, who recently published a fascinating and timely book: How Civil Wars Start: And How to Stop Them.
Over the decades political scientists have collected lots of data about revolutions and tested lots of models in search of a set of variables that could best predict them. In 1994 the CIA started a think tank called the Political Instability Task Force to identify effective metrics to assess a society’s likelihood of civil war. Over time the group has examined some 250 historical instances of acute instability between 1955 and 2002, assessed some thirty different factors as possible predictors, and found only two that had significant predictive value.
The first factor is a nation’s degree of anocracy, its tendency to be autocratic or democratic. Scores ranged from -10 for a completely autocratic state like North Korea to +10 for a completely democratic state like Denmark or Canada. Most countries are somewhere in between. The US is currently at a +5, down from the +10 it had enjoyed since the scale was invented. Countries in the ambiguous zone between -5 and +5 have significant and conflicting elements of both and are therefore considered at higher risk for revolution than either stable democracies or stable autocracies.
The second factor is whether the current dominant organizing principle in the society is based on ideology (values) or identity (religion, ethnicity, race). While ideological differences lend themselves well to democratic compromise, identity differences are much more likely to lead to animosity, tribalism, and even civil war.
In the interview Professor Walter relates a story of how her father, a young German boy during the Nazi years, before emigrating to the US in the 50’s, became very agitated about the Trump candidacy and election in 2016, seeing in his politics many parallels to the Nazi brown-shirts of his childhood: twisting facts, denigrating minorities and immigrants, and undermining dissent.
There have always been political differences in American politics, but compromises have led to deals, public business has been conducted, and the government has been stable. The eye-opening takeaway from the author’s observations is that the political battle that has been going on in our country since about 1992 has never been just a simple clash of liberal and conservative values. It began in the 90’s with Gingrich’s open warfare against the Clinton White House in particular and Congressional Democrats in general. It started becoming less and less about ideas and values and more and more about identity.
That was accelerated by populist response to the Obama Presidency, which in turn led to the election of some 87 “Tea Party” Republicans in 2010 who espoused the extreme views of the Koch brothers and its lobbying arm ALEC. Most of them came from such heavily gerrymandered conservative districts they were largely guaranteed election, unless they lost a primary to a candidate further to their Right. With no incentive to move toward the center for reelection, they have have increasingly refused to compromise on any issue rather than give Democrats a “win” on anything– quite willing to let their constituents suffer rather than compromise.
It is difficult to see anything positive coming from the increased militancy of the Right, spotlighted spectacularly by the recent authoritarian Supreme Court decisions to overturn Roe v. Wade and to forbid the EPA from regulating carbon emissions. Our nation seems to be nearing a turning point: The party’s long-term viability may be in doubt if a strategy of mindless, implacable obstruction endangers the stability and prosperity of the country, causing too many voters to consider it an existential threat. Cynical political realism, if nothing else, suggests that the Republican Party can’t carry on forever as a permanent revolution. (https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2020/12/04/tea-party-trumpism-conservatives-populism/)
This Week’s $5 Tasting
La Vielle Ferme Rosé ’20 France $11
Classic and tasty blend of grenache, syrah, and cinsault from northern Provence; fruity, dry, crisp, delicious, and smooth, all at a bargain price!
The Wolftrap Syrah Mourvèdre Viognier ’18 South Africa $12
Aromas of ripe plums, red currants, violets, Italian herbs and exotic spices lead to vibrant flavors of darker berries and spicy plum with hints of orange peel that linger on a juicy finish.
Parducci Small Lot Petite Sirah ’20 Mendocino $15
Rich, dark, and full-bodied wine with dense blueberry and cocoa flavors, and tongue-coating, lingering soft tannins that give pleasing length to the saturated fruit flavors on the finish.

2072 Granger Way