Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting july 9-10 ’21

lummi island wine tasting july 9-10 ’21

Current Hours: Friday & Saturday 4-6pm

We are still operating under reduced hours 4-6pm Friday and Saturday for wine tasting and sales. Covid vaccinations are required for admission upstairs in the tasting room, but unvaccinated guests are welcome to enjoy wine tasting outside on our entry deck.

The weather looks clear through the weekend, with sunshine and moderate summer temperatures predicted.

 

Bread This Week

Kamut Levain – Kamut, aka khorasan wheat, is an ancient, protein-rich grain discovered in a cave in Iran in the 70’s that many people who can’t tolerate wheat find more digestible. This bread is made with a levain that is fermented overnight before being mixed with with bread flour and fresh milled whole kamut flour. It has a nutty, rich flavor and makes a golden color loaf. A great all around bread – $5/loaf

Barley, Whole Wheat, & Rye Levain – a really nice mule-grain artisan  bread made with a sourdough culture built over several days. Made with bread flour and freshly milled whole wheat, barley and rye flours. A hearty whole grain bread that is a great all around bread – $5/loaf

and pastry this week, another favorite…

Morning Buns – Made popular by Tartine Bakery in San Francisco with the same laminated dough as croissants. The dough is rolled out, spread with a filling of brown sugar, orange zest, butter and cinnamon, then rolled up and sliced before baking.  – 2/$5

 

Wine of the Week: Casal Garcia Vinho Verde

As our dear, Portuguese-fluent friend Myra taught us years ago, the correct way to pronounce “vinho verde” (literally ‘green wine’ –for its youth, not its color– is something like “veen-yo vairdge.” We should also note that when she says it, she moves her head and hands in space, painting the words in the air like a Samba. So you know this has to be, you know, Something Special. Which is true, especially in mid-summer.

This little region at the northern end of Portugal has been making this wine for some 2000 years in what was once called the Minho province.  It’s in the blood, it’s in the landscape, it’s in the long cultural history of the region. There are some 19,000 individual “vineyards” spread over 51,000 acres. A quick calculation reveals that on average, that’s about 2.6 acres per vineyard. But many of those are even much smaller family vineyards grown on stone walls, fences, and pergolas on whatever land is available.

Located on the Atlantic west coast of the Iberian Peninsula in northern Portugal, the Vinho Verde region resembles the Pacific NW with its lush, green landscape and temperate climate. Grape varietals permitted in vinho verde include Alvarinho, Avesso, Azal, Arinto, Loureiro, and Trajadura, which all grow well in the area.

Usually bottled within three to six months after harvest, “green wine” pairs beautifully with summer salads, seafood and Asian cuisine, and is meant to be enjoyed young. Often it shows a light frizzante on the palate and a hint of off-dry sweetness balanced nicely by palate-cleansing acidity and a soothing freshness.

A light wine that is marked by its beautiful citric colors and incredible freshness with with soft aromas of tropical fruits and citrus. A very balanced wine that leaves a harmonious and citric after-taste.

 

 

 

 

 

The Economics of the Heart: Media and Anger Management

We were fascinated some years ago by the behavioral differences between Chimpanzees and Bonobos described in  Demonic Males: Apes and the Origins of Human Violence. A major takeaway from the book is that the organization of male-dominated Chimp society continually stimulates ongoing male violence– against females, against other males in their own group, and even more violently against males in other groups.

This violence has been further correlated with the olfactory obviousness of female estrus in chimp females; research has suggested  that “no adult male chimpanzee is subordinate to any female of any rank,” and that chimp males have “an innate propensity for dominance, gratuitous violence, war, rape, and murder.”

In contrast, in bonobo society, estrus has more subtle outward signs, and therefore does not evoke male competition, and indeed may explain why bonobo society is essentially matriarchal. The implication is that a single variable (the scent of female estrus) has had a profound effect on the evolution of these two closely related primates.

Over the last few years, we have observed the emergence of a similar contrast between Republicans and Democrats. At first glance, they seem members of the same species, citizens of the same Country. But the inescapable truth of our recent experiences is that Republicans are like chimps in some kind of Estrus Rage. They have become irrational to the point of delusion. Their media outlets purposely broadcast in RAISED and ANGRY voices, deliberately evoking Outrage and Anger with Lies Big and Small.

The polarities between chimps and bonobos are artifacts of their genetic differences. The polarities between Republicans and Democrats are manufactured continually and deliberately to keep a base of voters misinformed and malleable pawns in a power game aimed at taking over this country and dismantling it piece by piece–the ultimate corporate Takeover and Liquidation of Assets.

Hard to digest under any circumstances, but probably your best bet is serving at room temperature for the Last Show at the Restaurant at the End of the Universe…

 

This week’s $5 tasting:

Adorada “eau de California” Rosé   ’16         California       $14
Brilliant coral color with aromas of strawberries, red grapefruit, rose petal, and jasmine; palate of strawberry, orange zest and a touch of white pepper spice with bright acidity to balance the fruity creaminess. And all presented in a Very Fashionable Package!

Casal Garcia Vinho Verde       Portugal     $10
A light wine that is marked by its beautiful citric colors and incredible freshness with with soft aromas of tropical fruits and citrus. A very balanced wine that finishes with a refreshing, crisp, and harmonious finish.

Daou Pessimist Red blend ’17       California  (Paso Robles)      $25
Full-bodied, rich and spicy, with good balance and unfolding layers of elderberry and truffle with accents of cocoa, cardamom  eucalyptus, leather, tobacco, and grilled meat, with an alluring, smooth and leisurely finish.

 

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting july 2 ’21

lummi island wine tasting july 2 ’21

Current Hours: Friday & Saturday from 4-6pm

We are currently still operating under reduced hours as an extra precaution against Covid. All are welcome, and while vaccinations are required for admission upstairs in the tasting room, unvaccinated guests are welcome to enjoy wine tasting outside on our entry deck.

The weather looks clear for the weekend, with moderate summer temperatures predicted.  It is also very dry, so we hope all  of you will be very restrained with any fireworks.

 

 

Bread This Week

Breton – Incorporates the flavors and style of Brittany; bead flour, buckwheat, and rye make for interesting flavors, and sel gris -the grey salt from the region- adds a nice mineral edge. – $5/loaf

Whole Wheat Levain – Made with a sourdough starter built up over several days before final mixing of the dough, which is then fermented overnight. This long slow process nurtures the fermentation process and gluten development, giving it a ‘toothy’ crumb, great texture and flavor, and a nice crisp crust. – $5/loaf

and pastry this week…

Brioche Tart au Sucre – aka brioche sugar tarts. A rich brioche dough full of eggs and butter is rolled into a round tart and topped with more eggs, cream, butter and sugar; a great substitute for shortcake with the fresh berries oin season right now. – 2/$5

 

Region of the Week: Pic St. Loup

This week we are featuring two wines from the same appellation in France. The “Pic” in the small French wine region of Pic St. Loup is a long, craggy ridge some 2,000 feet high that dominates the French landscape for many miles in every direction. 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 also far enough north to have Atlantic-influenced cool nights that induce slow, full ripening.

We maintain a certain fascination with this unique little wine region a short drive north from Montpellier on the Mediterranean coast. Visible in the film, the “Pic” is a 640-meter “Tooth” of granite that dominates the view for miles in every direction– powerful, beautiful, vaguely remote, and iconic. 

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. Wines from this little region typically show an earthy complexity accented by spicy, herbal aromas and flavors of the  wild aromatic herbs that flourish in the area, commonly known as “garrigue.”

Typically, Pic St. Loup reds show deep color and satisfying depth of flavor, with bold, spicy, and earthy complexity. They also tend to display more elegance and refinement than wines from the hotter Languedoc plains to the south. This week we are pouring two wines from the region, both old favorites: the Lancyre Rosé and the Chateau la Roque Rouge, both blends of Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvèdre.

 

Economics of the Heart: The Futility of False Economies

A couple of days ago Lummi Island writer Charlie Warzel had a brief piece in the Washington Post about our recent heat wave. The title nicely captured what we all experienced: existential dread. 

Climate science has been warning us about the coming Climate Crunch  for nearly fifty years. In 1980 I spent a summer as a research fellow at Battelle Labs working on a project funded by the Department of Energy on the potential economic impacts of carbon dioxide-induced climate change. A number of complex simulation models were already available, and were predicting a potential increase in average temperature of 1.5 degrees by year 2000. Such models view climate as a heat engine, which is any system that uses heat energy to do work, and view CO2 concentration as a variable that decreases the ability of the atmosphere to cool.

In the case of climate systems, the Sun is the power source and the atmosphere, land masses, oceans, and waterways are sinks. As the Earth turns on its axis, at every moment a different point on its surface sees the Sun directly overhead. That moving geographic point traces the line of maximum solar radiation that day. Each year the line crosses the Equator twice and briefly touches the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn once each.

At any given point on the planet the solar energy waxes and wanes through the day. Hot air rises, moves toward the poles, cools, and sinks, powering atmospheric circulation and winds. Similarly cold water sinks and warmer water rises. Where wind and water meet, the friction causes waves. Where cold and warm water meet, they cause vertical circulation. Where sun, water, and air meet, heat causes evaporation and cold causes condensation and rain. As the atmosphere warms it evaporates more water, dumps more rain, and releases more kinetic energy as wind. We all know these things.

A useful metaphor for our existential dread is not these natural cycles, but the recent tragedy of the condo collapse in Florida. It is becoming clear that the Owners’ Association had been informed several years earlier that the building had severe and rapidly worsening structural damage, and it was going to cost each owner a LOT of $$ to fix it. After two years of being unable to get residents to agree to fund the work, many of the volunteer Board members resigned as a group.

Those condos are a metaphor for our Climate, and this past weekend, right here where we live, we saw the cracks open up. We can feel in our bones that if we don’t all put our shoulders to this wheel and make the sacrifices and efforts required to stop and reverse global warming in the next couple of decades–  i.e. Right Now– we could miss our only chance and our Earth could become the next Venus– a lifeless furnace of a planet. And that totally qualifies as existential dread.

 

 

 

This week’s $5 tasting:

Lancyre Pic St. Loup Rosé ’20      France       $15
Raspberry and pear aromas on the nose, with distinctive spicy, minty garrigue notes. Big, bold and firm on the palate, ending with a long, clean finish; pairs perfectly with hearty salads, grilled vegetables, kebabs, stuffed tomatoes or charcuterie.

Oregon Solidarity Chardonnay ’18     Oregon     $18
Bursts with fresh apple, pear and peach aromas. Barrel fermentation has smoothed any rough edges and polished the flavors to a bright sheen.

Chateau la Roque Rouge ’17   France   $19
65% Grenache, 25% Syrah, 10% Mourvèdre. A lithe and expressive red, with fine balance and well-structured flavors of dried cherry, plum, and boysenberry, featuring hints of tarragon and cream on the finish.

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting june 25-26 ’21

lummi island wine tasting june 25-26 ’21

Re-Open Hours: Fridays & Saturdays 4-6pm

NOTE: Covid vaccinations are required for admission upstairs, but unvaccinated guests are welcome to enjoy tastings on the deck.

Bread This Week

Spelt Levain – Spelt is an ancient grain that is a wheat. It has a nutty, slightly sweet flavor and has gluten but it isn’t as strong as the gluten in modern wheat. This bread is made with a culture that is used to create a levain before the final dough is mixed with traditional bread flour, spelt flour, fresh milled whole spelt and fresh milled whole rye. It is a great all around bread – $5/loaf

Semolina w/ Fennel & Raisins – Also 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. Judy A. says this is her favorite! These flavors go really well with meats and cheese, but it also makes pretty darn good toast – $5/loaf

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. I’ve heard some people say they hide these to keep them all to theirselves. Be sure and get your order in early as quantities are limited – 2/$5

Wine of the Week: Chasing Venus Sauvignon Blanc  ’20         New Zealand      $14

This is an interesting wine our island wine rep Judy brought by a few weeks ago. We both liked it immediately. Though unmistakably a NZ sauv blanc, it also has more subtlety, complexity,and flavor nuances than is typical for the region. With unusually hot weather forecast for this weekend, this wine is certain to be a refreshing thirst-quencher.

The interesting name of this NZ sauv blanc derives from the voyage of Captain James Cook in command of the HMS Endeavor from 1768-1771 on an expedition with two major objectives. The first was a Royal Society scientific project to study the predicted transit of Venus across the Sun in 1769. The second was more a geopolitical matter of of growing Empire: to search for and explore Terra Australis Incognita, the rumored “undiscovered land” in the South Pacific. And indeed, Cook became the first European to locate and explore New Zealand and Australia, with huge and lasting consequences.

Tasting notes: Bright, crisp, lively and refreshing, with tantalizing aromas of tropical fruit, lychee, and pineapple lead to big flavors of grapefruit, mango, papaya, gooseberry and lime.

Economics of the Heart: The Edges of the Future

Believe it or not, we are about to mark the middle of the first year of the Biden Presidency. The past year has been a chaotic sequence of unlikely events that continue to shroud even the relatively short-term future in discomforting uncertainty. In the space of a year our country has endured an astonishing sequence of emotional roller coaster rides.

A brief list of emotionally charged events of the past year include things like two Impeachment Convictions of the Former Guy, the Global Covid Pandemic, the death of liberal Justice Ginsburg and immediate hypocritical assignment of her seat by Darth McConnell to yet another Catholic Absolutist; the Big Lie about the 2020 election; the unlikely wins of two Democrats as Senators in Georgia; Republican collusion in the Capitol Riot; Republican assertion that Climate Change is not a problem — the list goes on and on.

We find ourselves at a tense crossroads where anything can happen; where the stakes are infinitely high, and the continuing existence of Life on Earth is in peril from human activity. Life itself feels delicately and inappropriately at stake, mainly because Republicans are more concerned about preserving personal and corporate wealth than about the long-term viability of Life on Earth. Maybe they are All In with the belief that short-term profit is more important than long-term survival and viability. Maybe it’s not just an act. 

The point we are trying to locate and take aim at is this: the very existence of Life on Earth is in peril from the unwillingness of Republicans to realize or care about Science. This is not our grandparents’ politics. This is, in every conceivable way, an existential battle for a sustainable future. Every indicator suggests that Republicans long ago brainwashed each other and a third of the national electorate into believing that global warming is a myth, that fossil fuels have a long and bright future, and that Critical Race Theory is the only thing keeping them from having the lives they want.

This week’s $5  tasting:

The forecast is for a major Heat Wave this weekend. We think these wines will offer particular refreshment for these conditions.  Oh, and did we mention we have…wait for it…Air Conditioning…!

Bargemone Provence Rose ’20  France    $14
Beautiful pale pink, with bright, mineral-dusted aromas of pink grapefruit and dried red berries. Light and racy on the palate, with tangy citrus and redcurrant flavors. Finishes brisk and dry, with good lingering spiciness and length.

Chasing Venus Sauv Blanc  ’20         New Zealand      $14
Bright, crisp, lively and refreshing, with tantalizing aromas of tropical fruit, lychee, and pineapple lead to big flavors of grapefruit, mango, papaya, gooseberry and lime.

Gamache Boulder Red ’17     Washington    $16
Smooth and approachable red blend layered with depth and complexity. Aromas and flavors of blackberry, black cherry and blueberry. Pairs well with everyday fare from pizza to barbecued hamburgers.

Wine Tasting
Comments Off on lummi island wine tasting june 18 ’21

lummi island wine tasting june 18 ’21

No Bread This Week!  🙁

As those of you on the Bread Mailing List already know, our baker has taken this week off. Look for an email Sunday for next week’s choices.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wine of the Week: Domaine de l’Amauve La Daurèle Séguret ’18     

Domaine de l’Amauve, in the picturesque Southern Rhone region of Séguret, is a modest family winery of 10 ha that has been owned by the same family for generations.

The current owner-winemaker is Christian Vœux who isfollowing a very long family tradition, took over the vineyards and winery from his parents in 2006 after many years’ experience as winemaker for Château Mont-Redon in Chateauneuf du Pape.

The name of the property comes from the flower of mauve (Malva sylvestris), sometimes known as common mallow, which is prolific in the vineyard through the spring and provides both visual and sensory beauty. 

La Daurèle is a carefully crafted  blend of Grenache blanc (brings white fruit notes), Clairette (floral notes), Viognier (pear and texture), and Ugni blanc (crisp freshness), adding up to a round, well-balanced wine with appealing notes of hazelnut and heather.

 

 

Economics of the Heart: Irreconcilable Values

About a month ago an article in the Washington Post discussed findings from a CBS News poll showing that two thirds of Republican voters considered  maintaining loyalty to Donald Trump the main priority of the party and believed that the 2020 election had been “stolen” by Democrats. Nearly half preferred deliberate efforts to make it harder for Democrats to vote than to support policies to attract their support. These findings are consistent with the fact that in 2020, for the first time in its 160-year history, the RNC adopted no party platform–just Trump’s “America First” agenda. This level of mass hysteria is the direct and intended result of the five year, 24/7 Fake News campaign of Fox News and Right-Wing radio.

In her 1962 book Economic Philosophy, Joan Robinson looked deeply into the relationships among economics, values, and ideologies. We have often quoted her observation that “any economic system requires a set of values, a set of rules, and a will in the population to carry them out.”

She also said that “a society cannot exist unless its members have common feelings about the proper way of conducting its affairs; i.e., a common ideology. As the events of the past four years in general, and the past year in particular have shown, a large proportion of Americans no longer believe in the values adopted in our Constitution and which have held fast for 250 years.

Since the New Deal almost a hundred years ago, Republicans have been searching for a way to justify the entitlement of the rich to accumulate wealth without regard to the environment or the welfare of our own huddled masses. Under Reagan the Eighties became the Decade of the Bottom Line, the Nineties the Decade of Vapid Pragmatism, the Aughts the Decade of Republican Secession, and the Teens the Decade of Autocratic Consolidation.

They feel Entitled to have way more than any logical fair share. Like feudal Lords they really believe, as Dick Cheney put it, “It’s our Due.” (for being in power).

It is much broader than the 1/6 assault on the Capitol. There has been an ongoing war on Truth itself for forty years, and now they have succeeded in making nearly half the country unable to tell truth from lies.

 

This week’s $5 wine tasting

Villa Viva Cotes de Thau Rose ’20         France        $12

100% ruby color, notes of fresh strawberries and raspberries, a grapefruity tang and subtle undercurrent of mineral intrigue; clean soft, and balanced, with a lingering finish.

Domaine de l’Amauve La Daurèle, CdR Villages Séguret ’18      France       $18

Grenache blanc, clairette, viognier, & ugni blanc; expressive nose of white fruits, mirabel plum, and acacia honey; soft on the palate with lively citrus flavors…very Food Versatile!

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, and bittersweet chocolate and a long, vibrant finish with a note of spice.

Wine Tasting