Feature Articles
  • State of the Industry: Spotlight: Boston

    Boston. Too old school. Too insular, too cynical. Too small-town to compete with major markets. Too, well, Bostonian.

    No one knows the blemishes of our beautiful city more than those of us who have struggled through the ranks in restaurants, retail shops and distribution channels, working with laws and gatekeepers that feel like they were put into place right after Paul Revere ran through the night to Lexington and Concord…

  • Matt Stamp: The True Story of To-Kalon Vineyard

    Prior to the turn of the 20th Century, there was a winery in Napa Valley which used the name ‘Tokalon’… That winery was sold off in parcels during the first fifteen to twenty years of the 20th Century and use of the name was discontinued. Accordingly, although the name has some historical significance, it has no current meaning or significance in the wine industry.
    -Robert Mondavi Winery, responding…
  • State of the Industry: New York City's Pioneering Female Sommeliers

    Every couple of years we see a new flood of articles announcing the arrival of women sommeliers. My issue with these well intentioned pieces isn’t the effort to highlight the achievements of 50% of our planet, but that they tend to get some fundamental facts wrong and often fail to give credit to the women who were paving the way twenty years ago. Being a guy in this industry and voicing a critical opinion on the…

  • Gregory Jones: Climate, Grapes, and Wine

    Terroir and the Importance of Climate to Winegrape Production

    Wine is the result of myriad influences that are often embodied in the concept of terroir, a term which attempts to capture all of the environmental and cultural influences in growing grapes...

  • John Wilkinson: Pisco's Two Traditions

    Pisco. Two countries lay claim to it. One claims exclusive rights to the name. But as that country’s biggest competitor is also its biggest customer, everything gets a little more complicated...

    I moved to Santiago, Chile in early 2015 and got curious...

  • Erin Brooks: Navigating Wine Certification in America

    I’ve been told that life is about the journey, not the destination, and I try to remember this when I’m up at 6:00 a.m. for a tasting group, or at my desk at midnight after work writing an essay about modern viticultural practices in New Zealand. When...

  • Guild of Sommeliers: The Wines of Central Friuli

    An in-depth report by Daniel Bjugstad of Pizzeria Locale in Boulder, CO.

    Friuli Venezia Giulia, the border region between Italy’s Veneto and the neighboring countries of Slovenia and Austria, has been divided amongst empires for nearly two thousand years. The Romans, Huns, Goths, Lombards, Venetians, French, Austrians, Italians and Yugoslavs have all laid claim to the region at some point in history, and each culture…

  • Mark Ridgwell: Gin: The Perfect Storm of Tradition and Innovation

    For sure, gin is not among the world’s oldest spirits. Indeed, scarcely 300 years have passed since the Protestant William of Orange took the throne of England, Ireland and Scotland and called upon local compounders to provide an alternative to the imported...

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