Thursday, August 16, 2012

Wine Tasting- Crane Lake Merlot

.

Name: Crane Lake Merlot
Varietals: Just Merlot? This one was hard to track down

Region:  Napa and Sonoma, California
Country: New ruler of Mars
Year: 2010
Price: $5.49

Wine Maker Review: "Crane Lake Merlot is a medium-bodied, round wine with classic black currant and plum fruit flavors on the palate and a smooth finish. Pull the cork for instant enjoyment!"

My Review: This wine was surprisingly sweet. There was a noticeably tannic finish and lots of brighter fruit flavor, not much of the deep dark fruits. Honestly this reminds me of a red sangria. Like slight red wine taste but more sweet and punch-y. Its a very strange merlot. It kind of even tastes like a flat sprite at the end. This one was very strange I cannot say that I am a fan. Maybe it went bad cause it really does taste like flat sprite with koolaide and Burnette's in it. Not so much instant enjoyment.

Wine Tasting - Jacob's Creek Shiraz Cabernet



Name: Jacob's Creek Shiraz Cabernet
Varietals: Shiraz, Cab Sauv

Region: South Eastern
Country: Can't swim as well as Americans, but do have koala bears
Year: 2010
Price: $6.99

Wine Maker Review: "Attractive ripe berry fruit characters from the bouquet carry through with medium-bodied, soft and approachable tannins; this wine shows the harmony which can be achieved by carefully blending parcels of soft, rounded Shiraz with finely structured Cabernet Sauvignon, creating a wine with richly layered fruit flavours and a supple, long-lasting palate."

My Review: This wine is mild everything. Mild tannins, mild fruit, mild spice. The body is light-medium and has a mild mouth feel. I'm not even joking its just mild all around. So in that sense, you can't hate it because it gives you a little bit of everything without anything being overpowering. Don't hate it at all, just doesn't wow me. There's definitely brighter fruits like raspberries. Mild raspberries. I guess you could use approachable as a synonym for mild!! (they say that in the review)

WIne Tasting- Loredona Riesling



Name: Loredona Riesling Monterey
Varietals: Riesling!
Region: Monterey, California
Country: Better than Russia at gymnastics
Year: 2009
Price: $10.99

Wine Maker Review: "The Loredona Riesling offers delicate aromas of honeysuckle, granny smith apples and ripe melon. As you sip the wine, layers of flavors unfold starting with ripe apricot and white peaches moving into Valencia orange and lychee. The wine is quite refreshing, finishing with a pleasant tartness that lingers on the palate. Loredona Riesling is a great match with Asian dishes, seafood chowders and bisques and fresh fruit such as apples, peaches and pears."


My Review: When I go in for the sniffy sniff I get a big kick of pears, sweet ripened pears with a little sugar on top. The taste is very balanced for a riesling.  A lot of the time they are like BAM sweet but this is subtly sweet with lots of pear and peach touches and more of a dull acidity that lingers at the end. I drank this at room temp and found it to be nice that way. I usually prefer my whites to be cold but the temperature on this one worked out quite nicely. Good wine and nice to be surprised by a riesling.

Wine tasting - Elogio Tempranillo 2009




Name: Elogio Tempranillo
Varietals: 100% Tempranillo
Region: Castilla-La Mancha
Country: Spain
Year: 2009
Price: $6.00

Wine Maker Review: "Deep cherry color. Vanilla and tobacco nuances in the nose under an elegant layer of spices and ripe red and dark fruit."

My Review: This one was very dry, dark, and musty. It felt very sophisticated, as if I should be enjoying it with a nice filet mignon. In fact all I can think about while drinking it is red meats. Juicy, bloody, grilled red meats. There is also a creamy vanilla or caramel aspect that is not very sweet, just creamy. I feel as if this would go great with a meal. I drank it for fun (who would have guessed) because I had not tried this type before and really enjoyed it on its own but I feel that it would be EXCELLENT with some MEAT.

Wine Tasting - Red Rock Winery Pinot Noir



Name: Red Rock Winery Pinot Noir
Varietals: 100% Pinot Noir
Region: California
Country: 2012 Summer Olympic Champion
Year: 2010
Price: $11.99

Wine Maker Review: "Our Red Rock Winery Pinot Noir is layered with soft red fruit flavors of strawberry, dark red cherry, raspberry jam, and plums. These characteristics are balanced with subtle hints of oak and caramel notes that make our Pinot Noir smooth and balanced."

My Review: This wine tastes like raspberry jelly belly jelly beans drenched in alcohol. It was very light on the tongue as most pinot noir's are. The taste is not deep, its more of a light fruit or perhaps not ripened fruit taste, like when the fruit isn't juicy and sweet but more acidic and hard (ya know?). Its not a bad wine (i know this review sounds bad) just not super fruity. The back of the bottle screams that it is well balanced, and I would say I've had more balanced wines. Not so much oak-y or caramel-y either.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Wine Tasting- Penfolds Koonunga Hill Shiraz Cabernet



Name: Penfolds Koonunga Hill Shiraz Cabernet
Varietals: Cabernet and Shiraz blend
Region: South Australia
Country: Australia
Year: 2009
Price: $10.99


Wine Maker Review: "Sweet dark plum fruits, red berries and white fruit cake aromatics. There is a mocha/coffee and vanilla lift stemming from the balanced well integrated use of seasoned oak."


My Review: The initial taste of this wine is just alcohol, but it diminishes quickly beneath a nicely muted raspberry taste. Then you get a dry mouth feel followed by dull spice, tapering into a vanilla-y creamy finish. Very creamy finish. This was nice, not my favorite but it grew on me the more I drank it.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Wine Tasting- Alice White Shiraz




Name: Alice White Shiraz
Varietals: 100% Shiraz
Region: South Eastern Australia (again, all I got)
Country: Australia
Year: 2010
Price: $5.99


Wine Maker Review: "Our 2009 Alice White Shiraz invigorates the senses with blackcurrant fruit, ripe plum, spicy vanilla, and licorice aromas and flavors. Soft and round, this wine is well structured with supple tannins and subtle hints of chocolate, caramel, and warm toasty oak. The result is a long, savory finish that will leave you wanting more."


My Review: This was the fruit bomb I was looking for! This wine was balls cheap and actually pretty delicious! There was a huge plumby flavor that finished with an intense wash of peppery spice. Lots and lots of spice but in a good way. There was no cheap wine alcoholy taste which was very pleasing because you tend to get that with the cheaper wines. I will definitely buy this one again, especially with such a nice price. After reading the review I definitely understand the caramel tones, which were quite nice. Guess I never really thought of getting caramel out of a wine so I attributed that sweetness to the fruit. Whatever it was good.

Wine Tasting - Lindeman's Bin 50 Shiraz






Name: Lindeman's Bin 50 Shiraz
Varietals: 100% Shiraz
Region: South Eastern Australia (thats all I could find)
Country: Australia
Year: 2009
Price: $6.99


Wine Maker Review: "A medium to full bodied red with berry, plum and spice flavours following on the palate. Soft tannins on the finish create a very approachable wine."


My Review: This wine is very mild tasting. There are not a lot of strong flavors or fruit coming through which kind of surprised me for Australia (maybe that was way too generalized of thinking..) It is very tannic and dry on the tongue. There is definitely some dark fruit and spice flavor, but they are very light and mild compared to the tannins. I would not consider this full bodied, maybe medium body. The finish is also very tannic. Not too bad, but definitely not my favorite.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Wine Tasting- Bell'Agio Chianti








Name: Bell'Agio Chianti
Varietals: 90% Sangiovese, 10% Canaiolo Nero, Trebbiano and Malvasia
Region: Tuscany
Country: Italia
Year: 2010
Price: $12.99


Wine Maker Review: "Bell’Agio Chianti D.O.C.G., available in the traditional straw-covered bottle (known as a fiasco), is a vibrant, ruby-red wine with a full bouquet reminiscent of violets.  The taste is dry and smooth with zesty notes of cherry and berry fruit.  It is ideal with veal, Italian dishes and cheeses."


My Review: I adore this wine. For my best friend's 21st birthday we went to a nice Italian place and got  Chianti and it was amazing, so I have been trying out Chiantis every since. When you first smell this wine you get plums and a little bit of that alcohol smell. The alcohol smell worried me because sometimes cheaper wines taste mostly like alcohol and they just kinda suck. When you taste it however you do NOT get the alcohol taste but you get cherries, candy, raspberries, and more andy and this lovely zesty spice. I LOVE IT. I've gotten it approximately six more times because its just delightful. It has a lighter body and the fruit/candy and spice just make a perfect medley. I love red colored candy (because its usually cherry or strawberry or raspberry) and it tastes just like that. One night I drank a whole bottle before bed just because I loved the taste so much.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Vin de Paille






Name: Potomac Point Vin de Paille
Varietals: 65% Late harvest Vidal, 30% Late after Petit Manseng, 5% Muscat Raisin
Region: Crozet, Shanandoah, and Stafford regions of VA
Country: America (fuck yeah)
Year: 2010
Price: $26.99


Winery Review: "We made this wine with the southern Italian Passito style used in the little island of Pantelleria. Completely dry and hand destemed grapes macerated in a rich must coming from very ripe, late harvested Vidal and Petit Manseng. Unique for VA you will taste an high enology creation."


My Review: My first thought with this wine was that it was just too much. It was ridiculously sweet. It also had a creamy mouth feel and there was a little acid, but what you mostly got was just SWEET. Like not even sugar sweet, more like taking a few tablespoons of syrup and mixing in fifty splenda packets. I can't say I really enjoyed it, but maybe with a nice desert it would taste better. I just found it to be too overpowering.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Red Table Wine



Name: Potomac Point Red Table Wine
Varietals: 50% Merlot, 25% Cabernet Franc, 25% Cabernet Sauvignon
Region: Northern Neck, VA and Orange, VA
Country: Where Freedom Rings
Year: 2010
Price: $16.99


Winery Review: "It is a Bordeaux-style blend. Aged in French oak for 12 months. Lots of ripe red fruit especially raspberry. It has a smooth mouth feel with good acidity levels. Very easy and very drinkable."


My Review: This wine was very nice and easy going. I'm sure most people who like red will enjoy it because all of the aspects were nicely balanced with things everyone likes and there wasn't anything too overpowering. There was lots of red berry and plum flavor, a nice acidity, and nice tannins on the finish. It also had a medium body, not too like and not too heavy or dry. I feel as though it is very versatile and could pair with many dishes. Good, safe wine just not astonishing.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Rabelos Port



Name: Potomac Point Rabelos Port
Varietals: 50% Touriga Nacional, 30% Chambourcin, 20% Tinta Cao
Region: Orange, VA and Woodstock, VA
Country: Amurika
Year: 2010
Price: Big $39.99 and little $29.99


Winery Review: "These three varietals have been harvested and aged in bourbon barrels coming from our neighbor Bowman Distillery. Rabelos is rich in wonderful flavors of ripe raspberries, baked plums, and cherries with a strong and full body. Never heavy but sweet and powerful with a toasted oaky finish. It is a never ending wine and the perfect ending to any meal.


My Review: Wow. This tasted like a rich raspberry chocolate torte. It also had amazing hints of coconut which was rather shocking but a wonderful aspect too it. It was very rich and sweet, but it was well balanced so I found it quite enjoyable. The white dessert wine was just WAY too sweet, something I thought did not exist. I suppose desert wines should resemble the deserts they are paired with however, so they should be rich and sweet. I would love to get drunk off of this.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Heritage VA Red Wine



Name: Potomac Point Heritage VA Red Blend
Varietals: 42% Merlot, 38% Cabernet Franc, 26% Cabernet Sauvignon, 4% Petit Verdot
Region: Charlottesville, VA and Orange, VA
Country: Who will win ALL of the Olympic gold medals
Year: 2009
Price: $26.99


Winery Review: "Our signature Bordeaux-style wine aromas of mocha, baked berries, and earth follow through on a round, supple entry to a dry-yet-fruity medium-to-full body with savory mulberry and tomato notes and a slate and peppercorn accented finish with powdery tannins. Well balanced with a nice acidity and a robust palate. We would pair this wine with roasted stewed beef with baked potatoes and rosemary."


My Review: Best wine I have ever tasted, hands down. It was like drinking sunshine from a unicorns ass. It was extremely soft and velvety and just beautifully blended. There were lots of tannins but they danced elegantly with dark fruits like a cherry cobbler. It was just, perfect. I think anyone would like this wine regardless if they did not enjoy reds because it was just that good. I got a glass of this for lunch afterwards at the winery and just sweet Jesus I could have drank twelve bottles into a stupor and would have been so happy. I need to return and get another bottle ASAP. I did not understand the tomato reference in the review...

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Cabernet Franc



Name: Potomac Point Cabernet Franc
Varietals: 85% Cabernet Franc, 10% Tannat, 5% Merlot
Region: Northern Neck, VA
Country: The Greatest Nation in the World
Year: 2009
Price: $22.99


Winery Review: "A fruit-forward wine with flavors of blueberry, strawberry, and a peppery finish. It is smooth with a medium tannin feeling on the middle palate, It ends with a long, rich finish. The french barrels added hints of vanilla and wood accents."


My Review: I felt as though the review of this wine was pretty on point. I definitely got the blueberry and strawberry but also some dark cherry aspects. The finish was a nice balanced spice that seemed to linger on the tongue. After the first sip we ate a piece of dark chocolate and then had another taste. This was just AWESOME because the lingering chocolate in my mouth made it taste like these chocolate covered cherries I used to buy from a little store called Hyperion in Fredericksburg (my hometown). I need to buy a bottle and some chocolate and just go to town one night and watch some Game of Thrones.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Winery Abbinato


Name: Potomac Point Abbinato
Varietals: 50% Sangiovese, 50% Touriga Nacional
Region: King George, VA and Orange, VA
Country: The Land of Opportunity
Year: 2010
Price: $16.99


Winery Review: "A Chianti style blend, easy to drink and light bodied with soft tannic structure. It is a modern style light wine accompanied with fruit and vanilla flavors. Perfect to serve with your favorite Italian meal, barbeque chicken, and tomato based dishes. Good pizza wine too!"


My Review: Our tasting guide told us that this was a "beginner red" because it was so soft and pleasant. This had nice spicy aromas. It was very soft and silky on the mouth. It was slightly spicy and had hints of dark red fruits, but the two were very well balanced. I can't see anyone not liking this wine because it was like extremely pleasant and well balanced. Like our tasting guide had mentioned, I feel as though even those not into red wines would enjoy this. Definitely worth the price for such a pleasant wine. Most all of the reds from this winery lacked the annoying alcoholic taste that cheaper grocery store wines have.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point La Belle Vie White Table Wine


Name: Potomac Point La Belle Vie White Table Wine
Varietals: 70% Vidal, 15% Viognier, 10% Chardonnay, 5% Petit Manseng
Region: Woodstock, VA
Country: USA! (USA! USA! USA!)
Year: 2010
Price: $12.99


Winery Review: "Crisp and refreshing white wine that is perfect for sipping on the patio. This slightly sweet white has hints of citrus and melons. The perfect anytime wine with friends!"


My Review: This white was actually a little heavier. It was pretty acidic, but in a more balanced way than some other cheaper wines. They mention melons again and I don't get it, never got the melon taste. It was kind of a typical acidic white wine with a little green apple and lemony zest but with a little more body than most. A lot better than a Barefoot or Yellowtail and the price isn't too bad either.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Viognier Reserve


Name: Potomac Point Viognier Reserve
Varietals: 90% Viognier and 10% Chardonnay
Region: Chatam, VA
Country: America, the beautiful
Year: 2010
Price: $24.99


Winery Review: "The very ripe fruit made this wine a perfect example of the true nature of this variety, tropical flavors with accents of citrus, banana, and passion fruit. The absence of malolactic fermentation allows the freshness of the fruits to shine through." It is also a Wine Challenge London silver medal and platinum medal winner.


My Review: My first reaction was this was very bitter on the tongue. The review was not kidding about tropical flavors. I had never tried a Viognier before and so I was not prepared for these new tastes from a wine. There was a very strong banana flavor and I also got a little pineapple and passion fruit. It was dropping the tropical box of Mike and Ikes into a glass of pinot grigio. I didn't hate this wine in any way, just not sure if I would choose to buy a whole bottle for myself.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Winery Highland Reserve Chardonnay

Name: Potomac Point Winery Highland Reserve Chardonnay

Variety: 100% Chardonnay
Region: Shenandoah, VA
Country: The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave
Year: 2009
Price: $21.99


Winery Review: "A barrel fermented wine with melon fruit flavor and a final vanilla accent. It is mineral and full bodied chardonnay that goes great with any cream sauce or sipping by the fire."


My Review: This chardonnay was heavier and creamier than the regular 2011 Chardonnay. I didn't really get the melon aspect mentioned in the winery review. I found it to taste very creamy with a nice hints of vanilla. This had a very strong vanilla aftertaste that was also quite enjoyable. This and the normal 2011 Chardonnay were very different in taste and mouth feel which is very interesting since they are both 100% Chardonnay, showing how versatile grapes can be! I enjoyed this wine very much but it would not be my wine of choice. I think I prefer the 2011 Chardonnay just because it was so very light and pleasant.

Wine Tasting- Potomac Point Chardonnay

Name: Potomac Point Chardonnay 
Variety: 100% Chardonnay
Region: King George, VA
Country: The United States of America
Year: 2011
Price: $15.99


Winery Review: "Potomac Point's most versatile wine. Crisp and refreshing, nicely balanced with toasty notes and aromas of green apple in the bouquet. Beautiful fruit followed by a lingering finish."


My Review: I am usually not a big fan of Chardonnay, but I found this one to be quite enjoyable. I think I liked it better than others because it had a very light body and it wasn't too overpowering. I got lots of crisp green apple as indicated without the oak monster (probably because it was aged in stainless steel). Another seller was that it had a very nice aftertaste that was just the right amount of fruit. When they said "lingering finish" in the description I was a little worried but it actually was very pleasant! I found it to be very well balanced and a lot more appealing than most Chardonnays.

Wine Tasting- La Belle Vie Rose

Name: La Belle Vie Rose (or the wineries Rose table wine)
Varietals: 80% Syrah and 20% Chamboucin
Region: Madison, VA and Woodstock, VA
Country: AMERICA
Year: 2010
Price: $16.99


Winemaker review: "It is a semi-sweet, very light Rose that is light in color. It has typical citrus and strawberry flavors. The mouth is elegant, slightly sweet, and crisp with a nice refreshing ending."


My Review: This wine was very light and crisp as the review indicated. I did get a nice strawberry taste, as well as a crisp apple taste, like from a pink lady apple. I found it to be a little more than slightly sweet, but in a good way! To me, it kind of was in the same lines as one of those Moscatos that is only like 5.5% alcohol so its very smooth and sweet but delicious also. Because of this I found it surprising that it was 13.2% alcohol. I haven't tried a lot of Rose wines but I really did enjoy this one and found it a lot nicer than the ones I have tried previously (and I never objected to those). 

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Wine Dinner- Spring Break Cruise

Over spring break my boyfriend and I went on a cruise to the Bahamas. We left out of Baltimore, MD so we had a few days at sea at the start of our cruise. There are several "excursions" which are pretty much ways that Carnival can steal more of your money, which totally works by the way. One of these excursions was a wine and food pairing with Sommelier Ivan (sweet name I know). It was $25 dollars so we thought what the heck and did this instead of lunch one day. It was at the nicer restaurant which you had to pay more for instead of the dining room which was included in the cruise fee. The place was awesome, it was at the highest point of the ship so the view was beautiful and there were murals and mirrors surrounding everything. Our guide Ivan was adorable and very informative. He told us we were going to see how food can change the tastes of the wines. They filled our 5 glasses with generous portions of five different wines and brought out a plate for each of us with various items so we could taste them with the wines. The only gave us the countries where the wines were from by the way, not the regions.

Clifford Bay Sauvignon Blanc from New Zeland
This wine was very pale in color. It tasted very acidic and had hints of citrus and green apple and I found it to be very earthy. We paired it with green apple. After taking a bite of the apple and then sipping the wine, it changed the taste of the wine to be less acidic and more mellow, which I found to be much more enjoyable afterwards.

Zonin Pinot Grigio from Italy 
This wine was a light gold color, darker than the Clifford Bay. It had a less strong scent than the first wine. I found it to have not much taste and to be a little bitter. Another person at the tasting said it reminded her of "fresh cut grass" which doesn't sound very appealing. This wine was paired with salmon. After the fish it seemed to express more flavors and seemed a little lighter. Next we tried it with a bite of lemon with some salt on it. This taste of wine after was even more different and was sweeter and fruiter.

Robert Mondavi Chardonnay from USA 
Of the white wines this had the darkest, strongest gold color. It had an oaky smell kind of like fresh wood. This wine was very heavy and had a creamy taste and I got a lot of oak out of it. This was paired with a marmalade and afterwards it tasted lighter, less oaky, and seemed to have a lighter body.

Then our guide told us about tears when swirling the wine in your glass. When the tears are close together and slow it means there is a higher alcohol content.

Mirassou Pinot Noir from USA
This had a light red color and its scent was very pungent of red berries and spice even outside of the glass as we swirled it. The taste was nice because it was dry but also very light. This was paired with filet mignon that was DELICIOUS however when tried with the wine I really only got the steak taste because the wine was so light. He told us this was a bad pairing. Then we tasted with strawberries and it was a good pairing because it gave the wine more depth and became light and fruity.

Black Swan Shiraz from Australia
The guide referred to Shiraz as "a cowboy in a tuxedo." This was of a much darker color than the Pinot Noir. The scent was strong and spicy with more pepper than the previous red. It tasted of burnt oak and darker berries like currants. The tears of this wine fell very fast, but the alcohol percentage was 14% so I was not surprised. He also said for this type of wine they allow the grapes to be over ripened. First we paired this with green apple as the bad pairing example. It tasted really strange with an awkward bitter taste that I couldn't really put my finger on ... but it was NOT GOOD.

Our guide gave us more of all the wines and let us finish up our food at the end and told us to try everything together to see what we liked. He said that Brie cheese was the best pairing for most all wines because it just makes the wine tastes better by smoothing and softening the taste so that it is more rounded and easier on the palate. I had to agree! He also gave us some more tips. He said that when eating sweet foods you should drink a sweeter wine so that the taste is not overpowered, hence desert wines. He also told us that when in doubt when choosing a wine to pair with food just use a Champagne! He also told us that we should match the body of the wine with the food for the best pairing. All in all it was a great time! The steak and fish were very good and we got nice size portions of all the wines so I enjoyed myself thoroughly. Now for some pics.
Heres the wines! I took notes on that paper they were sitting on.


Here's my food plate. We got extra plates of the meats. 


Here's how it ended! 


My flash broke on the trip which is the reason for the awkward lighting. 






Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Dinner- Zeppolis (Italy)

Captain's Log: April 1, 2012

So first of all this little wine/dinner thing was awesome for twelve bucks. There was a plethora of munchies to go along with the wine: cheese and crackers, cheesy bread, bruschetta bread,  salad, pasta with veggies, cheesy pasta, and pasta with meat sauce. Pretty legit for all you can eat also. I made my boyfriend go with me. We had gone to a wine tasting on the cruise we went on for spring break and it was also pretty sweet so he wanted to try it again. We sat at an awkwardly small table with a stranger who turned out to be awesome! I can't remember her name but she was really friendly and gave us a lot of insight into the wines actually because she had been a waitress for the past like six years or something. She actually was allergic to red wines, so they gave her a full glass of Dr. Loosen Reisling which she let me try. It was 8.5% alcohol and the perfect amount of sweet match with a fruity balance. I liked it so much I bought a bottle when we left with our 10% wine discount for going. 

Now into the wines.
I really liked our wine guide. He mixed up the wines to see if we could tell if one or the other was more expensive. I was usually wrong in this aspect but I am kind of a wine novice so I did not expect much of myself. What was really funny was trying to get my boyfriend to describe the wines... he was awful but he doesn't know anything about wine except that he likes Pinot Noir which we randomly picked out one time.
WHITES
Fossi Bianco White table wine: Only $6.99 and alcohol content of 11.5%
This wine was really crisp, acidic, and citrusy. The body was  very light and there were nice hints of green apple. I thought it was great for the price but not the greatest wine I have ever tasted.
La Fiera 2010 Pinot Grigio Veneto: $7.99 and 12% alcohol
This wine was a little less acidic than the previous one with what seemed like hints of pear. It seemed to be a little more balanced and more dry. This wine was supposed to go nicely with salads so I tried it with mine and I agreed. Went nicely with the balsamic vinaigrette.
Nals Margried 2010 Pinot Grigio Alto Adige: $14.99 and 13.5% alcohol
This wine was slightly more oaky than the other Pinot Grigio and seemed to be thicker. It seemed to have a lemony bite to it as well.
Lodali 2011 Moscato D'Asti: $12.99
This was AWESOME. It was like that Welches sparkling grape juice. My family always drank that at Thanksgiving and Christmas because they do not drink alcohol so it reminded me of that but more fun because it was alcoholic! The only thing is the alcohol content was 5.5%, so its like drinking a beer pretty much. Actually it kind of tasted like a Woodchuck cider, especially since it was carbonated. Definitely would like to have a go at this one again. As I said in the beginning the Reisling we bought tasted similar to this one, except had a higher alcohol content and had a more "wine" taste than this Moscato.
REDS
Luca Primativa del Salento Puglia
This one smelled very spicy. It tasted very rich, but not as dry as some other red wines can be. I definitely got some spice, dark cherry, and a very dark and robust fruity taste. This one tasted the best with the meat pasta I thought.
SUD Primativo Puglia
This wine was very dark and rich in color. The spice in the smell of this one was a little lighter than the previous primativo and was also complemented with a vanilla-y smell. This was also a little more minerally than the previuos in taste. I also got the dark fruit taste (like cherry or plum) with a little more herbs this time.
Morli Neri 2009 Chianti DOCG
The first Chianti I ever had was at my best friend's 21st birthday dinner that we went to at an awesome Italian restaurant in Arlington, VA where we got to eat at the Chef's table in the kitchen, which seems kind of weird but it was awesome. Our wine guide told us that this one was DOCG certified meaning it passed all of the wine laws to make a Chianti so I had high hopes. I found it to be very pleasant, but not as awesome as the first Chianti that I mentioned (probably because of the circumstance). I got more of a cherry or raspberry jam taste and but I thought the body was very nice being not too full or light.
Bibi Graetz 2010 Casamata Toscana
Our wine guide told us that this wine was known as a "Super Tuscan." This one tasted very rich and seemed to be very tannic. I got some licorice and like red beet taste almost.
Lodali 2009 Nebbiolo D'Alba Sant Ambrogrio
This wine was the most expensive wine Zeppolis has allowed at a tasting yet at $17.99 a bottle. So naturally when he told us this I had high expectations. I found it to be very pleasant and it balanced all of its elements well. Probably the most well rounded wine I have ever tasted. It had a nice fruit taste as well as balancing in some spice.

I definitely want to go to another one. Well worth the money and very insightful to the wine world. Plus they give you coupons and wine discounts!

Here's the bottle of Reisling that I bought!