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Category Archives: Terroir

Coming to terms

Posted on October 4, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

Confronting your children’s prejudices, solving mysteries, eradicating corruption, and facing one’s own demons.

A fictional tale, based on a contemporary newspaper story, that takes on social issues.

14th in the 30+ book series of Commissario Brunetti mysteries.  A little slower moving than some of the others in the series, but well worth paying attention to the sideline developments.

The conclusion of the story was a bit of a let down –  but it is a great invitation to navigate customs and prejudices in different communities.

A series worthy of shelf space in your library.

Blood from a Stone – Donna Leon

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0143117094

Volcanos and clay

Posted on October 1, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir 1 Comment

Clay over volcanic rock is part of the terroir that makes this certified organic white. It is matured on its lees. Lees are the natural deposit formed by the solid particles in the wine over the winter. After alcoholic fermentation is complete, the wine rests on its lees all winter until bottling at the end of March.

It is never racked, which allows the conservation of a small quantity of carbon dioxide, giving the wine a fine beading, a quality appreciated by many.

The palate is dominated by lively acidity, impeccably balanced by a refreshing tropical fruity note mixed with a soft creamy texture.

The Goddess of Wine tells me I often serve my whites too cool …except this one.  She says Chill it well. So we did, and served it with fish.

An interesting mystery to solve would be to try a red from the same terroir.

MUSCADET SEVRE ET MAINE SUR LIE – CHATEAU DE LA GRAVELLE 18

$19.49 regularly $20.99

12% alcohol

UPC: 03760233945574

Muscadet mystery case organic volcanic

Complete with Instructions

Posted on September 28, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

This Verdejo from Rueda has the lightness and purity of its fruit. These old Verdejo vines are true warriors and were, in another life, blended into red bulk wines of the province of Leon. El Petit Bonhomme staked out their pedigree and achieved this mouth-watering wine by nurturing these grapes to their full, lustrous potential.

Pale golden colour with pear and peachy notes on the nose, engaging crisp and vibrant round texture in the palate, citrus and passion-fruit, herbaceous and mineral notes, with an intense powerful finish.

We keep coming back to this one. Try something different to pair it with for supper and you will find new nuances to the wine.  

RUEDA VERDEJO – EL PETIT BONHOMME BLANCO

$17.9913.5% Alcohol

UPC: 08437012278264

mystery case northern Spain Verdejo

Dynamite.  Burned bridges.  Where are the Gurlz?

Posted on September 24, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

This bunch doesn’t do anything the Traditional Way.  A church was blown up (the dynamite) to loosen the nails … then moved it to the winery.  They’ve burned a few bridges along the way to making world class wines with a great sense of fun.

They were the first Okanagan winery to make all their wines with screw tops.

Iconic location.  Iconic wines for an iconic experience.

Hatfield’s Fuse is a great blend ready to incite good times with fish, chicken or creamy pasta.

36% viognier, 16% orange muscat, 12% chardonnay musque, 9% sauvignon blanc, 8% chardonnay, 7% pinot blanc, 6% pinot gris, 4% gewurztraminer, 2% riesling

$20.00 a bottle is low bribery money to pay to get the Gurlz to come for supper.

Blasted Church mystery case

A Goldsmith of Words

Posted on September 22, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

Night Train to Lisbon recounts the travels of Swiss Classics instructor Raimund Gregorius as he explores the life of Amadeu de Prado, a Portuguese doctor, during António de Oliveira Salazar’s right-wing dictatorship in Portugal. Prado is a serious thinker whose active mind becomes evident in a series of his notes collected and read by Gregorius.

A chance encounter with a Portuguese woman on a bridge, followed by picking up a book in a bookstore, lead to questioning everything in the protagonist’s life.

Quit his job, hopped a train and began to explore.  This is the tale of two men, Gregorius, a Classics teacher who has hidden away from life in the realm of scholarship and Amadeu de Prado, a brilliant, passionate man, a doctor who became a member of the resistance to the government of Salazar in 20th century Portugal.

“We leave something of ourselves behind when we leave a place, we stay there, even though we go away. And there are things in us that we can find again only by going back there.”

You’ll stop many times during your read, and sit and think about what’s going on around you. 

Night Train to Lisbon, by Pascal Mercier,  Barbara Harshav (Translator), was also made into a movie starring Jeremy Irons.

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0802143976

Refined Intensity

Posted on September 21, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

The ‘Vigna Pedale’ Castel del Monte Riserva DOCG di Torrevento is a bold wine, multi-award-winning by international critics for its original, elegant and extraordinarily harmonious presentation.

The Hills of the Castel del Monte DOCG area – Pedale area of southern Italy is where this Nero di Troia grape flourishes.  A deep ruby red with garnet hints.  Its INTENSE on the nose and very full on the palate.

BBQ styled meats work really well or serve up some aged cheeses and classic cold cuts. As we get into Fall this will be ideal with a roast.  I’d  even serve it with a fish based dish.

Vigna Pedale Castel del Monte DOCG Red Riserva

$19.99

13.5 % alcohol

mystery case nero di troia Southern Italy

Start Counting

Posted on September 19, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

Want to reduce your risk for dementia? Slap on a step counter and start tallying your steps — you’ll need between 3,800 and 9,800 each day to reduce your risk of mental decline, according to a new study.

People between the ages of 40 and 79 who took 9,826 steps per day were 50% less likely to develop dementia within seven years, the study found. Furthermore, people who walked with “purpose” — at a pace over 40 steps a minute — were able to cut their risk of dementia by 57% with just 6,315 steps a day.”It is a brisk walking activity, like a power walk,” said study coauthor Borja del Pozo Cruz, an adjunct associate professor at the University of Southern Denmark in Odense, Denmark, and senior researcher in health sciences for the University of Cadiz in Spain.

Even people who walked approximately 3,800 steps a day at any speed cut their risk of dementia by 25%, the study found.

“That would be enough, at first, for sedentary individuals,” said del Pozo Cruz in an email.

“In fact, it is a message that doctors could use to motivate very sedentary older adults — 4k steps is very doable by many, even those that are less fit or do not feel very motivated,” he added. “Perhaps, more active and fitter individuals should aim for 10k, where we see maximum effects.” 

But there was a even more interesting result buried in the study, according to an editorial entitled “Is 112 the New 10,000?”published Tuesday in JAMA Neurology.

The largest reduction in dementia risk — 62% — was achieved by people who walked at a very brisk pace of 112 steps per minute for 30 minutes a day, the study found. Prior research has labeled 100 steps a minute (2.7 miles per hour) as a “brisk” or moderate level of intensity. 

The editorial argued that individuals looking to reduce their risk of dementia focus on their walking pace over their walked distance. 

“While 112 steps/min is a rather brisk cadence, ‘112’ is conceivably a much more tractable and less intimidating number for most individuals than ‘10,000,’ especially if they have been physically inactive or underactive,” wrote Alzheimer’s researchers Ozioma Okonkwo and Elizabeth Planalp in the editorial. Okonkwo is an associate professor in the department of medicine at the Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the University of Wisconsin–Madison; Planalp is a research scientist in Okonkwo’s lab. 

“We do agree this is a very interesting finding,” said del Pozo Cruz via email. “Our take is that intensity of stepping matters! Over and above volume. Technology could be use to track not only number of steps but also pace and so these types of metrics can also be incorporated in commercial watches. More research is needed on this.” 5 exercises to offset too much sitting 

The study did have some limitations, its authors point out — it was only observational, so it cannot establish a direct cause and effect between walking and a lower risk of dementia. In addition, “the age range of participants may have resulted in limited dementia cases, meaning our results may not be generalizable to older populations,” the study said.

“Because there are often considerable delays in dementia diagnosis, and this study did not include formal clinical and cognitive assessments of dementia, it is possible that the prevalence of dementia in the community was much higher,” the authors added.

While agreeing that the findings cannot be interpreted as a direct cause and effect, “the mounting evidence in support of the benefits of physical activity for maintaining optimal brain health can no longer be disregarded,” wrote Okonkwo and Planalp.

“It is time for the management of physical inactivity to be considered an intrinsic part of routine primary care visits for older adults,” they added. 

Research adds up

Indeed, recent research published in July has found many leisure activities, such as household chores, exercise, adult education classes and visiting with family and friends, affected dementia risk in middle-aged people.

Adults who were highly engaged in physical activity such as frequent exercise had a 35% lower risk of developing dementia compared with people who were the least engaged in these activities, researchers found.

Regularly doing household chores lowered risk by 21% while daily visits with family and friends lowered the risk of dementia by 15%, when compared with people who were less engaged.

Everyone in the study benefited from the protective effect of physical and mental activities, whether or not they had a family history of dementia, researchers found.

Another study published in January found that exercise may slow dementia in active older people whose brains already showed signs of plaques, tangles and other hallmarks of Alzheimer’s and other cognitive diseases.

That study found exercise boosts levels of a protein known to strengthen communication between brain cells via synapses, which may be a key factor in keeping dementia at bay.

“Dementia is preventable to a great extent,” said del Pozo Cruz. “Physical activity as well as other lifestyle behaviors such lack of alcohol and smoking, maintaining a healthy diet and weight and sleep can put you on the right track to avoid dementia.”

Delivers

Posted on September 17, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

The use of oak might be subtle, but the flavours are quite intense (berries, plums, touch of liquorice) with a lovely textured finish.  

 Vintage Conditions: Heavy winter rains and a mild spring led to the production of strong canopies, which protected the fruit during the summer heat, and resulted in wines of great strength and character.  5 months in stainless steel 80% 3 months on French oak 3 months on American oak planks 10% planks 10% .

The wine doesn’t need a big wordy write up.  It’s hearty, healthy, and worthy.

Team it up with big flavour pasta dishes, or bbq meats or maybe venison

Rosemount Shiraz

$18.98

13% Alcohol

mystery case Oak Shiraz South Eastern Australia

Enhancing word power

Posted on September 16, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

Worked so well together

Posted on September 14, 2022 by Roger Harmston Posted in Terroir Leave a comment

This extremely quaffable Chinon is made with fruit grown on 45-65 year old vines produce a dark purple in colour wine.  Round and seductive is a good description with slightly chalky tannins and crunchy acidity. Fermented and aged in cement and bottled without sulphur.

Domaine de l’R’s vineyard is managed as naturally as possible by working the soil and protecting the vines from disease with sulphur and copper. The harvest is carried out manually and only gravity is used for movements in the cellar (and therefore racking is minimal). Fermentation takes place in raw cement vats and the addition of sulphites takes place only when necessary prior to bottling.

Powerful is a good description. Medium Bodied  but full of flavour. We had it with bbq ribs.

CHINON – DOMAINE DE L’R LE CANAL DES GRANDS PIECES 2020

$30.99 regularly $34.99

13.5% Alcohol

UPC: 03760104954957

Chinon mystery case
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