But to be honest, I’m terrified Continue reading
Category Archives: adventures in wine
For Sparkling Wine Week, Pair Albert Bichot Crémant de Bourgogne Brut Réserve with smoked deviled eggs and potato chips
“We must never forget that wine is a luxury product, not a necessity,” said Albéric Bichot in 2020 (source). Albéric Bichot is head of the house of Albert Bichot, one of the four largest traditional wine merchants in Burgundy, and one that has been family business for six generations. “We can get by without luxuries, especially if they are harmful. It is totally reasonable that society expects grape growers to be accountable for the pesticides they use. In the vineyard we need a change of mindset.”
We are talking today about his Albert Bichot Crémant de Bourgogne Brut Réserve because hot on the heels of Prosecco Week (read here) is Sparkling Wine Week the first week of July! While Prosecco may be the most popular sparkling wine in the world, Crémant, a traditionally made sparkling wine from France, also offers affordable bubbles making for summer fun for a gathering with friends and family during an afternoon, brunch, or dinner. While perfectly suitable for a seafood dinner, Continue reading
Prosecco DOC Week: Tasting in the Dark with Hoby Wedler and Popping the Cork with Valdo Marca Oro
Yes, we were blindfolded and we had a tasting kit with four textures and three aromas to help us approach the Prosecco DOC universe in a new and innovative way led by Dr. Hoby Wedler. Dr Wedler was born blind, and achieved a PhD in chemistry from UC Davis which guided him as our guide. As sight is the predominant sense for most of us, being blindfolded amplifies sensory experiences to make every detail more vivid and intense.
Masciarelli’s Rainbow of Roses and Rosato Paired with Apertivo and Strawberry Mint Salad + Cerasuolo for Rosé Days
It’s 94 degrees here in the Mojave desert at this year’s Bequinox, LA’s regional Burning Man event. This morning we strolled Seraphim Ranch just north of California City in the middle of nowhere and found old friends at the Merry Mad Tea Party where we had iced butterfly flower tea and we made new friends at Cat Butt Camp where they served mimosas and bacon and celebrated Caturday.
When we got back to our camp set up on the outskirts of out 1k member community, I enjoyed a chunk of marinated grilled tritip with a side of veggie chips and a glass of Masciarelli Rosato. It’s Rosé Day, and a nearby camp called Filament is spinning Sade for an event they call “Sade and Rosé in Lingerie.”
I’m actually now sitting in a hot pink and orange lounge chair sipping rosato, I’m wearing lingerie (and bike shorts!), and I’m listening to Sade while I gaze out at the creosote dotted desert and finish this post about roses and rosato from Masciarelli. Don’t get me wrong– it’s hot under the awning of my vw van, but with this rosato, I’m feeling pretty chill– even if my laptop is not and it’s running low on battery!!
Fresh from My Trip to Italy, It’s Time for Aperitivo with Organic Grillo from Cantine Ermes “Vento di Mare” Sicilia DOC
In Milan at an outdoor cafe on my first trip to Italy in October 2022, we were quite surprised to find spritz was served with snacks, specifically, large green olives and potato chips! I looked around and saw everyone had them and that this is standard. Just like chips and salsa is expected in a Mexican food restaurant in California, so are small bowls with snacks common in Italy when you order a spritz, sparkling, or white wine in the afternoon during what we might think of as “happy hour” — that time in the day when lunch has worn off and it is too early for dinner, especially in Italy where it is more common to eat after dark and in the cool of the evening around 830 or 9pm.
Celebrate Oregon with Regenerative Wines: Brooks Cahiers Pinot Noir, Montinore Italian Red Blend, Troon Amphora Mourvedre

Celebrate Regenerative Oregon Leaders with Brooks Pinot Noir, Montinore Italian Red Blend, Troon Amphora Mourvedre
When you think of Oregon, what comes to mind? Misty mornings along the coast? Snowy Mt Hood and the Cascade Range? Warm inland days with cool nights? Portland’s Powell Books and rugged, green individualism? An ethos of progressive sustainability? Vineyards of Pinot Noir? Oregon is all of this and more contributing to make the wine and the place special. Oregon Wine Month, which concludes today, celebrates it all! Here on Wine Predator, where we focus on sustainability and wine pairings, we have three red wines by three of Oregon’s leaders when it comes to growing grapes and making wine sustainably: pioneers Brooks and Montinore, and now Troon. Three very different red wines from three different parts of Oregon: Continue reading








