Archive for the ‘Culture and Wine’ Category

Apr 14, 2008

On Dogs, Wine & God

Arthur, of redwinebuzz, commenting on today’s earlier post about what should be the standard for quality in wine, makes the case that a high high quality wine is that which best displays their classic traits and characteristics of the variety or combination of variety and terroir. (Correct me if I mischaracterize you Arthur. Using dog breeding as an example, he writes: “What makes a Doberman a classic example of the breed? The way it best displays the traits and characteristics…

Apr 14, 2008

Ignorance & Quality: The Big Wine Question

"In yet another anti-intellectual effort to take fancy-schmancy wine down a peg or two, a new book purports to demonstrate that price bears little relation to quality and that the experts don’t know what they are talking about." This is how Eric Asimov at The Pour begins a post that I think is deliciously provocative. The "effort" he is referring to is a new book entitled, "The Wine Trials". The book describes a set of blind tastings of wines costing…

Apr 8, 2008

I’m A Twit!!

Am I a Twit? God knows I’ve had this shingle hung around my neck by a few dismissive folks over the years. But I’ve never willingly adopted the moniker. Until Now. TOM’S NEW TWITTER FEED. Yes, I joined twitter. I’m not quite committed to the TwitterRevolution as I’m not sure how it will increase my productivity as a blogger or quality as a blogger or the readership of my blog. Nor am I sure how it will increase the quality…

Apr 4, 2008

The Internet & Giving Wine a Fighting Chance

A new website has opened its doors that reminds me just how extraordinarily empowering the Internet is. Prior to the Internet’s development it would have been impossible for a brick and mortar version of Israeli Wine Direct to survive anywhere in the United States. The focus and selection of wines at this new on-line retailer is so specific and exclusive it quite literally would have been passed by and perhaps glanced at no matter where in America it opened its…

Apr 1, 2008

Tales of the Obsessed

How does one measure the damage done by someone’s pursuit of their obsession? I think inevitably it is a measure of the disregard one shows toward those other parts of the obsessed one’s life that suffer as a result of otherwise due amounts of attention being spent on the object of the obsession. This begs the questions, can any obsession be healthy and can an obsession really be termed that if the those other parts of one’s life remains intact,…