Author Archive

What Makes Inexpensive Wine Inexpensive?

By From http://kybecca.blogspot.com/ • May 1st, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I’m often asked why expensive wines are expensive, but the question in the title of this post is probably more interesting. First, it’s important to understand the difference between cheap wine and cheap wine. Cheap wine can be really good and a great bargain. Often they come from countries, such as Argentina, where making wine is very inexpensive and they can thus charge lower prices for their wine. Our own kybecca malbec is from Argentina. Another technique is to make wine in large yields, which drives down the price of each bottle. Many good wines can be made this way. The result is that there are many wines less than $10 that are very good.

In the last ten or fifteen years, however, we have seen a ‘race to the bottom’ when it comes to wine. Clever marketers have convinced the public that the less you pay for wine, the better the bargain you’re getting. It has now become common to see people boasting about how cheap their wine is. We don’t even apply the same standard to beer – how many of you would boast about how cheap your six pack of Milwaukee’s Best was? You wouldn’t, because you wouldn’t buy that stuff no matter how cheap it was (unless you are in college). Or imagine if somebody was selling hamburgers for 25 cents each. Your reaction wouldn’t be “what a bargain!”, it would be “25 cents for a burger? That’s disgusting.”

This trend has reached its peak with the Bronco Wine Company, a company that believes wine is a common commodity good for generating profits rather than an art and a very enjoyable part of life’s leisure. Bronco is responsible, among other things, for the extremely popular Charles Shaw wines that you find at Trader Joes. I’m going to let you in on some trade secrets for your own benefit. Here’s how this wine is made: Grapes are grown in huge yields with no regard for quality (good winemakers constantly prune and trim their vines to ensure quality). The vines are tended by machines and in many cases go from seed to grape without a human hand ever touching it. The grapes are watered just before harvest to increase the juice yield (but eliminating whatever flavor they had). The juice is spun in a centrifuge to separate out the tannins and other stuff normally found desirable. The juice ferments with oak chips, which are dunked into the fermentation tanks like giant tea bags. At the end, sweetness is added using grape extract or plain sugar. In fact, most of the flavor you get from these wines is from oak and sugar and nothing else. These people are chemists, not winemakers. Bronco then takes these wines and markets them under all sorts of names like Napa Creek, Forest Glen, and stuff like that. Trader Joe’s Charles Shaw wines is just one incarnation of the same product. All of this also applies to another very popular wine from Australia with a kangaroo on the label.

My point is this: cheap wine is fine (we sell lots of it), but don’t be fooled into buying cheap wine. You’re not getting a bargain, you’re getting ripped off. Why spend $3 on wine made by scientists when for $4 more you can get wine at 10 times the quality?



Anybody Looking For Some Rarer Dogfish Head Beers?

By From http://kybecca.blogspot.com/ • Apr 30th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

This week we got in stock:

Immort Ale
120 Minute IPA
Midas Touch

and at the Plank Road store only:

The highly anticipated and incredibly difficult for me to get Palo Santo Marron. This is a new beer for Dogfish Head. It’s a strong brown ale aged in Palo Santo wood, a type of wood from Paraguay. We’ll get this beer again at some point, but for now I have to limit quantities to one 4-pack per customer, as I have only a small amount to sell. I doubt this beer will be around for long so if you’ve been waiting for it don’t delay.



Best Beer I’ve Ever Tasted?

By From http://kybecca.blogspot.com/ • Apr 28th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

It’s definitely in the top three, and without a doubt the best English beer I’ve ever tasted. I’m talking about the J.W. Lees Harvest Ale 2006 aged in Sherry casks. I blogged about it when we first got it in (check a few posts down), but I hadn’t tasted it yet at that point. It’s extremely rare to find a beer with the complexity of this one.

The aromas are subdued in comparison to the flavor. To me it smelled like figs, candy, and rum. It’s on the palate that this beer really shines. Initially I get flavors of mandarin orange, apple brandy, cereal, and raisins, just to name a few. The sherry flavor is there but very much in the background. On the finish the figs come back again strong. It’s like the beer evolves on your palate. Drinking this was the best beer experience I’ve had in a long time. I recommend this beer as an after dinner drink, because its qualities reminded me of a fine port or fortified muscat wine. Truly exceptional. Also one of a tiny handful of beers that I ever thought could stand up (in terms of complexity) to a fine wine. I’m putting one in the cellar for sure.

This beer is not easy to get, so come by and snatch one for yourself while they’re still here, because I can assure you I will drink them all in a matter of time.



We Have a Wine Dinner Planned For You

By From http://kybecca.blogspot.com/ • Apr 25th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

In case you haven’t seen the newsletter, on Saturday, the 3rd of May we’ll be hosting an Australian-themed wine dinner at our store on Plank Road. Jon Amoroso of The Grateful Palate will be here to discuss the wine. Our caterer will be preparing some excellent food in this 5 course meal, and each course will be paired with an Australian wine. The highlight will be the First Class Shiraz, which the Wine Advocate gave 94 points. Have you had the Boarding Pass Shiraz? This is the higher-end version of that wine, so if you thought Boarding Pass was good you’ll think First Class is amazing.

Interested? Click here for the full menu and wine pairings, plus enrollment information. If you sign up by this Sunday, you’ll get $5 off each reservation. Dinner starts at 7pm.



Purdue License Plates

By From http://blog.yagelski.com/ • Apr 15th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I live in Virgina, also known as the land of vanity automobile tags.Besides displaying their unique talent to spell cleaver words and sayings in “IM-speak”, Virginia automobile owners can also easily show their affiliation with a club, group or organiz…



NCAA Tournament Wrap-Up

By From http://blog.yagelski.com/ • Mar 30th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Yes, I realize that the NCAA basketball tournaments are not officially over, but the ride has ended for my favorites; the Purdue men’s and women’s teams.It was a very good season for both, with the teams achieving a level of success that I did not thin…



How NOT to Write a Press Release and Attract Conservative Voters

By From http://www.spotsygop.com/blogger.html • Mar 13th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

This is however, exactly how to get fired if you wrote this for a campaign I worked on… the word “smarmy” comes to mind, not “savvy”. GILMORE CAMPAIGN DEMANDS BOB MARSHALL APOLOGIZEAND STOP ATTACKING PRO-FAMILY LEADERSALEXANDRIA – The U.S. Senate cam…



Back to Carriacou

By From http://blog.yagelski.com/ • Mar 12th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

I’ve started a new blog to document the planning process for our next family vacation; a trip back to the Grenadine island of Carriacou. If you are interested in making a trip to a Caribbean island, or just want to follow along and laugh at our experie…



ANOTHER Purdue Sports Weekend

By From http://blog.yagelski.com/ • Mar 10th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

Wow!I’m not certain I know how else to describe the Big Ten Conference Tournament run completed this evening by the Purdue Women’s Basketball Team.Simply incredible.The wins against Indiana, Iowa and Illinois were simply outstanding.Congratulations Lad…



Great Uncle Ken

By From http://blog.yagelski.com/ • Mar 7th, 2008 • Category: Blog Entries.Local

On Wednesday my oldest nephew and his wife celebrated the birth of their first child. A boy they have named Evan.How wonderful new life is.How precious is this baby boy.But how in the world did I become old enough to be a great-uncle?!I had always stri…