This time of year brings lots of travel (yay!) and sometimes a night or two or three at a pal’s place. I like to come bearing gifts for my Host with the Most, especially those I wouldn’t buy for myself- tiny cake stands anyone?
A Perfect Picnic Basket– come on, who wouldn’t want one of these? Especially one this cute- from tastemaker and blogger extraordinaire Sarah Sherman Samuel, comes her new line of artisanal entertaining goodness. Everything is deliciously lovely and I am always partial to a picnic basket.
Some Coastal Coasters– bold and graphic, these hand-painted, non-toxic ceramic babies are the recent collaboration of BottleStock Shop’s Whitney Adams and Rissa Sandman. Evocative of a summer day at bay or just a cool addition to your host’s bar cart. P.S.: She’s having a 30% off sale today on everything but these Coastal Coasters and there are some fancy things to be had. I for one love her corkscrews. Code: HUMPDAY
A Classic Candle– the tried and true hostess gift. Can’t. Go. Wrong. And this one boasts a stylish exterior with an on-sale price tag to boot.
An Awesome Apron– for the stylish cook who’s more French linen chic than Betty Crocker ruffled. I can’t stand how awesome this apron is.
A Tie-Dyed Towel– this Turkish towel is styled up a notch with its tie-dyed detail. The perfect gift as it’s small enough to wear as a scarf but still big enough to use as a beach towel, sarong or wrap. From my favorite shop in Alexandria at Red Barn Mercantile.
A Stylish Soap Dish– Not your Grandma’s soap dish (or maybe it is if she’s into Mid-Century bric a brac), this brass wire beauty will thrill its new owner with its clean lines each time he/she scrubs up.
A Cheeky Print– because who doesn’t want a pretty watercolor of a strutting leopard in their home? If your host is fabulous, he/she will love illustrator to the fashion Gods (Hermés anyone?), Caitlin McGauley’s print. If you’re concerned that it may not “go” with your host’s decor, worry not as Jenna Lyons famously put it, “as far as I’m concerned, leopard’s a neutral.”
A Tiny Cake Stand– if your host is truly the most when it comes to baked goods, he/she will love this mini jadeite cake stand. And even if they suck at baking, you’ll never tell and they’ll still love it.
Some Swanky Stirrers– a great host is a master of the cocktail party and what better tool to help one further master that fête-ing art than this set of glass stirrers. They’ll feel like Sinatra, and what’s a better gift than that!
A Punchy Throw– again, something I wouldn’t buy for myself but would love to receive. This one’s sunny, soft and boldly graphic- sure to punch up any room.
And if all else fails, my tried and true gift for my Host with the Most- a great bottle of bubbly or rosé or even better- bubbly rosé. I recently had this one at my birthday dinner at DC’s Proof which boasts a beyond-killer wine list, including $18,000 bottles of DRC- sigh (who is actually ordering that- talk about a baller move). But honestly, this Legret NV pink bubbly was one of the very best I have ever imbibed and that’s saying something. Get it here, your Host will be psyched and while you’re at it, get a bottle for yourself too. Traveling can be hard work- pop it open when you arrive home. Cin Cin!
Blue skies, weathered and wine-stained barrels, ripening vines- there’s nothing sweeter than the sight (and smell) of an impending wine harvest. A good old-fashioned, down-and-dirty-fingers-in-the-vines-harvest is something every budding somm should experience. It’s important to get out of the cellar and into the vineyard- Wine Appreciation 101. I worked my first harvest in Virginia at Paradise Springs vineyard. Well, sort of. The harvest took all of a grueling hour, not exactly the grapes of wrath, but this East Coast vineyard is young and hopeful, boasting a small but bountiful little plot of vines. There were enough of us working the harvest that within the hour, we had clipped that Cab Franc flat off the vines. I didn’t stick around for the full harvest experience including the crushing, the pressing, the fermenting, the barreling, etc., so it don’t know if I can really count it as a true harvest experience. Yes, I took a knee and clipped those delicate grapes to my beaming heart’s content, but truly working a harvest is much more than a few hours in the dirt.
Enter retired showgirl turned superstar sommelier and my pal (from our dancing days together), Sabra Lewis. A somm at the wino-darling restaurant, The NoMad, Sabra clipped California grapes this past fall with the in-crowd and her adventures were so dreamy, (at least on her Instagram account), I had to ask if she would share her first crush with us. She said yes.
But first- a bit about Sabra:
Sabra, I love that you worked your first harvest with Abe Schoener and Rajat Parr- the rockiest rockstar winemakers right now in California. The whole experience seems so incredible. What was it like physically working the harvest?
It was challenging, really a lot of manual labor that my body wasn’t used to.
How did you choose the winemakers that you worked with?
I worked with Abe Schoener at Scholium Project and Rajat Parr and Sashi Moorman at Sandhi Wines and Domaine de la Cote. Abe uses more natural methods of production and runs a very small crew who are all very involved in all aspects of winemaking from choosing the vineyards to the actual winemaking in and around Napa Valley. I wanted to learn some of his winemaking philosophies and also pick his brain about making unconventional wines in such a famous wine region. He really knows and understands the landscape there and is a true trailblazer for experimentation in a very homogenized landscape.
I wanted to work with Raj and Sashi down in Santa Rita Hills and learn from their Burgundian winemaking techniques. They have a bigger production but still run a fairly hand-off approach really modeled after Burgundy. They are also trailblazing the idea of “balance” in their wines and started a movement in California called IPOB, along with Jasmine Hirsch favoring modest alcohol and oak levels.
Yes! Exactly what us winos are always wanting more of- lower alcohol and less imparted oak make for prettier and tastier wines. Ok, give me your top 5 reasons everyone should work a harvest at some point in their life.
1. Working a harvest gives you a huge appreciation for each bottle of wine you open. There is so so much hard work and investment before there are any monetary returns, if ever.
2. You really get to understand the winemakers passion and artistry through what they do. Often times there is a great sense of family history and cultural significance as well, especially in the old world.
3. When you work a harvest, you start to understand agriculture and why terroir matters. Most of us city folk have little experience with that!
4. You really get a sense of how many variables there are that translate to both minor and major differences in the final bottle.
5. You get a head-to-toe understanding of the life of a bottle. For example, being able to see fermentation in action and taste the wine from beginning to end: tasting the berry on the vine to tasting the juice during mid-fermentation to malo to finished wine in barrel to bottled wine at various stages of development. It’s eye-opening and you really get a sense of a wine’s “life” that way.
Sold. What’s a typical day like during harvest -when do you wake up, and what exactly do you do?
EARLY! If you are helping to pick, then it’s best to pick before sunrise when the grapes are cooler. If you are pressing or making wine, it gets really hot out, so you are more productive in the early hours. During harvest, most winemakers barely sleep. There is just so much to do and coordinate between picking decisions and the logistics of receiving grapes and starting to press- a lot of pieces in the puzzle. When there is down time it’s all about cleaning the crush pad and work space. Wineries have to be immaculate!
What do you all drink after work?
BEER! There is nothing more refreshing than a crisp beer after a long day in the vineyard or a long day on the crush pad. Although, harvest is also about sharing and Raj makes a point to open up extraordinary bottles to share with his team so that they know what to aspire to. There were many many iconic bottles of wine opened up while I was there from Champagne to the great whites and reds of Burgundy and the Rhone, Italian, German and Austrian Rieslings… you name it!
Sounds like a dream. What is your hands-down favorite part about working the harvest?
The camaraderie of working physically hard with a team. As an intern, you are the low man on the totem pole, but it’s still fun to watch and learn what people are doing and see the decision making process. I loved going out into the vineyards and walking through the vines. Vineyards are such beautiful and peaceful places. They are so organized and wild at the same time. It’s a wonderful juxtaposition that I find a lot of harmony in. As much as I adore NYC, it’s important to physically get yourself in a vineyard for a few hours to gain some perspective.
It’s sort of like that dressing room camaraderie backstage on Broadway right? Well, except for the lights and the makeup and the costumes and well… maybe it’s not quite like that, but I do love that camaraderie thing. But back to the vino- from the labor of your harvest, what is the bottle you’re most excited to taste?
2013 Domaine de la Cote, La Cote. Also, the “Troken” project which is a dry Riesling modeled after Johannes Leitz from the Rheingau.
I can quench the acid now and just hoping I can get my hands on some of this stuff to taste the fruits of your labor. Would you do a Cali. harvest again?
I would love to.
What wine region or winemaker is on your wish list to harvest in the world?
It would be cool to work in Burgundy and Piedmont.
Ok- any musts (dining or otherwise) for Napa or the Santa Barbara region right now? Where do we need to go?
If you are ever near Santa Barbara, you MUST go to Mattei’s Tavern. One of the best dining experiences I’ve ever had!
Ah yes, in lovely Los Olivos- love that town, it always makes me think about that iconic Sideways scene just outside the Los Olivos Cafe with Paul Giammati announcing that he’s not going to drink “any f*$#ing Merlot” (that line really did do a number on Merlot sales). Anyway, I have not been to Mattei’s– it is now officially on the list.
Thank you Sabra for sharing, I can’t wait to follow along with your continuing adventures in vino, you are on a roll.
Thanks for the interview. Cheers!
Pick up one of the 2013 bottles Sabra helped to harvest, and taste the fruits of her labor:
Sandhi La Cote Pinot Noir 2013, $90: California’s Prince of Pinot, Rajat Parr’s photo is what you find when you look up rockstar sommelier turned winemaker. Parr knows how to let the wine tell its own tale. This Pinot sings the song of the Santa Rita Hills (my personal favorite wine region and if-I-could-live-anywhere-in-the-world spot). These hills were made for Pinot. Paul Giamatti’s Sideways character agrees. The La Cote is a great bottle to invest in and daydeam about until that special occasion calls for you to pop its cork. Also makes for a killer and molto impressive gift.
Scholium Project Dulcissima Camilla Farina Vineyards Sauvignon Blanc 2013, $29: Abe Schoener’s wines are not for everybody. He is a former classics Professor who gets off on really pushing the envelope with his juice. Experimentation is his game, and in turn, he’s a culty wine nerd’s hero. Not your momma’s Sauvignon Blanc, this one is ever changing depending on when it’s opened, but expect some serious funk, a little residual sugar and killer acid.
*Bonus: Sabra’s pals were simultaneously hard at work helping another cult California winemaker, Steve Matthiason last fall. Here’s a ripe pick from their harvest: Matthiason Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2013, $60: a shining star example of a near perfect Cali Cab. This is the stuff that made Napa famous. Structured and lean, yet packed with fruit, this is the epitome of a classic Napa Cab- these guys got the balance of fruit to tannin just right- like Goldilocks sipping from Baby Bear’s bowl.
Follow along with rising somm star, Sabra Lewis here and here.
P.S.: If you want to explore the Santa Rita Hills, Solvang, Lompoc and Los Olivos, this is my favorite vacation rental company. I am eyeing this house for my best group of gals to reunion at someday soon- right in the heart of wine country. The 7 of us stayed here a few years ago and it was truly something to write home about. The built-in backyard trampoline amounted to lots of ready-made memories. For this type of property, if you have a large group, the prices are pretty great.
Happiness is: Another birthday and a glass in the hand. Throw in some loved ones and call is perfetto.
Three Cheers for the weekend and… it’s my birthday ya’ll, so I’m raising a glass to another year. We’re keeping it low key this year. Actually, I’ve kept my birthday pretty low key since I turned 30, I guess it’s just one of those decades. I’m thinking that next year I might want to blow it out a bit more, but for now, I’m pretty psyched just to go out to dinner in DC with the hubs (which is a big outing these days for this newly suburban gal) and assemble some toddler toys (very exciting, right.) I’ll be eating some delicious cake though. I just got a freshly made Daisy Cake in the mail that I can’t wait to sink my teeth into, I’ve heard these things are amazing. Have you tried them? What a fun gift- a delicious cake in the mail, is that not a great gift? And I don’t usually go in for buying myself stuff on my birthday but I caved this year and bought a new bed. I decided that it is officially time to upgrade to a King now that the kiddos are 2 and regularly jumping into bed with us. That beloved Queen-sized bed can quietly retreat into retirement, my daughter likes to sleep horizontal so, we kind of didn’t have a choice. I splurged on this white wooden beauty. I saw it in my friend Kristen’s Connecticut-come-Scandinavian abode and loved it so much that I had to copy.
In other news, I am so flattered to be featured on Alexandria Stylebook. I’m a little late to the party in posting this as it was published a few weeks back but this summer has been a bit crazy town so I’m just now getting around to actually processing the events of the last month. Thank you Stylebook for the fun feature and thanks to the talented Rashmi Pappu for the super fun photos. I’m not sure what she thought of me when my inner showgirl busted out in the middle of our photo session, I try to keep her at bay but it’s like they say “Once a Showgirl, Always a…”- or does anyone really say that? Maybe it’s just me.
And the icing on this birthday day’s cake was the copy of the latest Anthology magazine that I received in the mail this morning. What a perfect present. Inside features a story written by Anna Watson Carl that she and I styled together, set right here in VA. The story centers around a dinner party that I threw in the Virginia vines at a local (and gorgeous) vineyard for my dancing d’Amboise family. They trekked it down here from the big City and joined us for an unforgettable lunch amidst the ripening Cab Franc grapes at Paradise Springs. Amy Dickerson shot the story and I am still swooning over its dreaminess- I am so beyond flattered by all of it and what fun we had. A wonderful memory indeed. I am looking forward to posting more about the story when it hits newsstands (or your local Anthropologie store).
Much to be thankful for. Another year older… sigh. Sure, I harken back to the idealistic memories of my younger days but honestly I’ve always felt that I’ll take every birthday I can get, so you know what- bring it on.
What are your plans for the weekend?
What I’m Drinking: It’s my birthday so it has to be rosé. I’m not sure what, we’ll see what the wine list has to offer in the way of the pink stuff but I am loving the YesWayRosé girls. Have you seen them around the interwebs? A fun and festive celebration of the good stuff and I want that tote to the right.
A Few Things that rose my brow:
Kristen Bell as Mary Poppins- this is pretty great, if you’re in favor of raising the minimum wage that is. If you’re not, it might piss you off.
Hold onto your hats kids, the official looming kale shortage has been announced. It was only a matter of time right? I’ve never seen such enthusiasm over a leafy green. I’m totally guilty for contributing to the consuming that will result in the shortage.
This made me feel better about the ridiculous lack of sleep I’ve had since being pregnant. I’m sure a counter study will come out tomorrow that says the opposite but for now, I’m sticking with this one.
Talk about travel porn– well big budget luxury hotel travel porn anyway. These photos make me want to pack my bags pronto.
And while we’re talking travel, a few travel instagrammers that Emma Banks over at Camille Styles thinks we should follow. What say you all? Any favorite travel insta accounts? Do tell.
And while we’re on the insta topic, this is interesting. What it LOOKS like we’re doing vs. what we’re probably ACTUALLY doing.
And Panzanella- it’s everywhere these days and I’m always in the mood for it. Here’s a yummy sweet pepper version from Love and Lemons and a rustic and summery recipe from Melina Hammer over on the Anthology blog.
We are in it kids- deep in the thick of hot fun in the summertime. A few of my favorite things to do during these dog days:
1. Toast: Everyday. Because why not? Every day is a gift especially these lazy and fun summer days. I’m currently digging my pink Txakolina direct from Spain’s Basque Country. A sip of this stuff is like a run through the summertime sprinklers- just fun, zippy, fruit-filled, and effervescent goodness. It’s hard to find and may be worth ordering online. I think it’s fun to serve this as a cocktail or an aperitif at your dinner party or just as a glass on your back porch whenever. We sell a killer white Txakolina at Waterfront and I just had this one at Asheville’s Cúrate- holy deliciousness.
2. Surf: Or at least something like it. I’m no surfer girl, but I sure wish I was. I probably need to tackle my early 80s too-many-viewings-of-Jaws-induced shark phobia first, but this Costa Rica Surf Camp is calling my name- doesn’t it seem awesome (read the tripadvisor reviews and you will soon be socking away $ for this trip just like me- I smell a girl’s trip). I’d like to tackle a wave or two sooner than later in any case but for now, I’m pretty happy boogie boarding in the shallow end of the Atlantic and channeling my inner 12 year-old. There’s nothing like catching a wave to make you feel like a tween again. Wheeeeee!
3. Travel: As much as humanly possible. Hitting the road during the summertime is not as easy as it once was what with the Pack ‘n Plays, booster seats, bibs and things and other assorted toddler accouterments, it’s more like a moon launch than a quick pop in the car, but it’s still worth it. We’ve been on the road now for 3 weeks and are loving every minute of it. We’re working some, relaxing some and trying to soak all of it in.
4. Throw: Al Fresco Dinner Parties- lots of them. What better excuse to have your pals over, pop a bottle of bubbly and nosh on over-ripe juicilicious produce and grilled everythings. I’ve taken lots of cues from my girl Anna Watson Carl- the queen of the simple and stylish dinner party. She just trucked it cross-country hosting swoon-worthy dinner parties with the tastiest of the bloggy blog tastemakers. Check out her adventures here, steal some of her simple styling tricks (not to mention recipes) and pre-order her sure-to-be fab self-published The Yellow Table cookbook here (I just did). Kudos Anna- you are killing it.
5. Read: A novel, a great cookbook and a killer autobiography. I don’t read nearly as much as I’d like to, but oh that lost art of the lazy read- I’m hoping to one day figure out life so that it leaves more time for this great joy. Reading is so good for you, like a shot of wheat grass in the morning- it cleans you out, refuels and energizes in one shot. I recently read a great article about how reading fiction makes one more empathetic, our society could use a bit more of that stuff. Reading is so crucial to our psyche I think, and there’s nothing like the joy of being sucked in to a riveting page-turner, romanced by great language and epic characters- the good stuff indeed. I’m currently reading The Yonahlosse Riding Camp for Girls (how nice to read a good novel), perusing Vefa’s Kitchen (if I can’t spend the summer on a Greek Isle, I can at least cook like it) and Ava Gardner’s biography (which I wish lasted my entire lifetime)- I can never get enough of that diva- what a wild one.
6. Grill: Peaches and put them in everything. I’m seriously nuts about grilled peaches. It’s like I can’t believe what I’ve been missing my whole life. Summertime in a bite- I throw them in salads (lovely with arugula and gorgonzola) and great as a sub for tomatoes in your fresh Caprese salads. Stick ’em on kabobs, serve them for dessert with a dollop of gelato- they’re pretty much great with everything and make for a happy Riesling partner- it is The Summer of Riesling afterall, if you’re a Paul Grieco follower that is, and who in their right wino-mind isn’t?
7. Make: Pinot Noir Popsicles and Espresso Granita. Pinot Pops for the grown ups and Blackberry Lemonade Pops for the kiddos- so simple and perfectly summer. A freshly made Espresso Granita puts me right in that Piazza in front of the Parthenon- a little Roman Holiday on my Virginia deck. I love this recipe.
What are some of your Summertime To-Dos?
Photos: Dinner Party and Peaches: Jack Mathews and Jeanine Donofrio of Love and Lemons, Pinot Pop: Bon Appétit, Granita: Sisboomblog, VW Van Road Trip: Smitten Studio
Bookstores and Coffee and Vino- Oh My! I am in Smoky Mountain Town Bliss. Above, one of my favorite spots from the sweet town of Sylva. A top notch local bookstore chock full of excellent staff picks (love that!) with a great little coffee and wine bar to boot- Ahhhhhhhhh (please read in Soprano).
Happy Weekend dear readers. We are still on the road so to speak, doing this summer up Americana-style. We’re parked just outside of Asheville, NC for now and working with our talented family members (namely Charlotte d’Amboise and Terry Mann) choreographing and teaching some youngsters the ways of the old Broadway. We are having a blast and I am loving our little mountain town. We’re deep in the thick of the Great Smoky Mountains nestled in a quaint little town called Cullowhee, just adjacent to the darling little town of Sylva. I am loving it so- mostly because the town is loud and proudly local-centric, you can’t believe how many bookstores dot this four-block town, not to mention a store that actually sells records- I feel like I’m in a time warp. The clouds hang low over these tree-laden mountains and ooze a mysterious smoke throughout the day opening up to reveal the sunny Saturday Farmer’s Market, live music on the creek, artisanal coffee with Scrabble and Yahtzee table-side and the list goes on. I’m charmed beyond belief. The kiddos are loving it too- lots of summer frolicking through the local playgrounds and town pool in between rehearsals and dance class. Too fun.
We are off to brewery nirvana (aka Asheville) tomorrow where I’m hoping to eat at Katie Button’s Cúrate. Carolina-bred but trained at El Bulli, her little tapas joint is supposed to be insane. We have a rezzie, I just don’t know how things will shake out with the kiddos in tow, things are always a bit up in the air with those little ones, it all depends on the noise level in her joint, to be honest. The louder the better these days so as not to completely disrupt the ambience. I’m not sure a brewery hop is the most toddler-friendly activity either but I am hoping to try one (or two) of Asheville’s legendary home brews. A full report to come. I could totally live here. This Smoky Mountain region is not only beautiful but really funky and interesting. I can’t say much for the local wine here, it leaves a bit to be desired but the beer more than makes up for it, and our local wine store ponies up lots of delicious juice including those imported by one Kermit Lynch, so they clearly know what’s up. I’m digging it.
It’s that time of year my friends- ice cream cones, stripey beach umbrellas, sand in your toes, Otis Redding (or DJ Jazzy Jeff and The Fresh Prince’s “Summertime” for my fellow Gen X’ers- p.s.: whatever happened to that jazziest of Jeffs?) in the background- the whole lot of summertime fun. I count myself lucky to get to the beach at least once during summer now that I’m a bit inland. We just finished our beach week in the Outer Banks. I made sure to book our vacation early in the summer to avoid any hurricane shenanigans and what do you know- Hurricane Arthur and its evil (but not too menacing as it turns out) eye huffed and puffed right over our little beach town. We survived. I was a bit of a ‘fraidy cat at first with my little ones and thinking maybe it best that we high-tail it out of there, but the locals were completely non-plussed and friends that had braved similar storms advised us to ride it out, so we did. None too nonchalantly, I might add. I was pretty much up all night watching those notorious Weather Channel stormcasters in their drenched slickers hopelessly listing to the left and feeling our beach cottage go bump in the night. It was an adventure and because there wasn’t really any damage and it wasn’t too harrowing, it was kind of fun.
I was so pleasantly surprised by the OBX, as the locals refer to the Barrier Islands of North Carolina, especially the quaint little town of Duck where we stayed. It’s nice to know and love a beach town none too far away- 5 hours from DC door-to-door, not too shabby. I’ll post my top 5 spots to hang in Duck this coming week.
For now, I thought I’d just share a few photos and wax poetically about the lazy days of summer. As a society, I am convinced that we are not doing things right. We should do as the Romans do and take 5 weeks vacay a year- minimum. A week or two doesn’t quite cut it. It takes a solid 3 days to come down off one’s normal life chaos and relax into your vacation anyway, right? Sigh. Maybe one of these days we’ll get it right and start doling out not only more vacation time but more maternity leave etc. etc.
But I digress, I’ll take whatever I can get when it comes to vacation and this one was a lazy, relaxing one- just the way it ought to be come July. I’m endlessly on the hunt for the ultimate little beach town that I can’t wait to return to each year. Sure I’d love to have my own beach house, preferably an exact replica of Diane Keaton’s in “Something’s Gotta Give” (oh Nancy Meyers, you do know how to tug on a gal’s heartstrings), but I’d happily take a paired-down version of that house too. Ha. I have images of escaping to a seaside town for a few months each summer to read (imagine that- actually reading a book), build sandcastles, bike around town and the like- maybe a la Jessica Fletcher in her Cabot Cove or Doris Day in her Carmel? Any seaside town will do. On the other hand, it’s awfully fun trying out different beach towns each year. Maybe I’ll completely fall head over heels one day and settle on one, but it’s for now, it’s pretty great exploring them. The simple joys. Now about that vacation time…
Hang time in the Hammock- aww yeah, that’s what it’s all about. I treasure these moments just before they squirm their way out and I’m once again chasing them all over the sand. But to get a few moments like this- heaven. Where do you all escape to in the summers? Do tell.
Former showgirl, forever travel junkie, sometime sommelier, and mom to twin bebes. This little blog is a mixed bag of tasting notes, travels, tales of motherhood, and current musings. Thank you for stopping by. Cin Cin! (photo by Amy Dickerson for Anthology Magazine)
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