• State of the Industry: Spotlight: New York City

    I have been lucky to work in New York for nearly ten years, and if I have learned one thing, it’s that this truly is the city that never sleeps, and that is because it is continually reinventing itself. Never resting on laurels and driven by a palpable energy, the New York wine scene is in a constant state of evolution—and it has never been better than it is right now.
     
    Thanks to great mentors and some exceptionally…

  • Charles Neal: Where the Ocean Meets the Sea: Wines of Fronton, Gaillac, Marcillac, and Cahors

    In my first installment on the wines of Southwest France I covered wines from the Pyrénées, including Jurançon, Madiran and Irouleguy. In this second installment, we are moving from the western edge of the Southwest to its eastern border. Here the wines are influenced by the intersection of two bodies of water: the Atlantic Ocean to the west and the Mediterranean Sea to the south.

    The Atlantic climate…

  • State of the Industry: South American Wine Sales, Trends and Challenges Today

    South American wines can happily and proudly claim palpable success in the United States. A mere curiosity some 35 years ago, wines from the continent can today boast being the #3 (Argentina) and #5 (Chile) wine imports into America. It only takes a stroll down a grocery store aisle or a glance at most wine lists to see this phenomenon played out. Beyond that, interest is emerging in the sommelier community for exciting…

  • Matt Stamp: Mascarello vs. Mascarello, by the numbers

    Despite unseasonal early fall weather reaching into the 90s, our core mission remained intact: drink a lot of Nebbiolo, a quintessential cold-weather wine, and wash it down with some home-cooked osso buco and polenta. Accepted, happily! Winemaker Dan Petroski (Massican, Larkmead), vintner Bob Bressler, and a crew of current and former Napa sommeliers—Jimmy Hayes, Dennis Kelly MS, Sur Lucero MS, Jason Heller MS,…

  • State of the Industry: Spotlight: San Francisco Bay Area

    When I moved to the Bay Area a little over four years ago, the restaurant scene could be described as guarded, at best. The effects of the mortgage-backed securities and housing meltdowns were still reverberating. Everyone was cautious. Chefs eased back on their craft and kept things simple; sommeliers were prudent, buying what sold to maintain cash flow; guests avoided splurging and sought safety over ambition.

    How things…

  • Guild of Sommeliers: Languedoc: GoS Report 2014

    In July 2014, the Guild of Sommeliers sent six members—Amanda McCrossinNadia Pavleska, John Freitas, William Moss, Daniel Bjugstad, and Eric Entrikin MS—to Languedoc in Southern France to experience this rapidly evolving wine region. Following is their report.

    Languedoc: Then and Now
    Eric Entrikin MS

    What can you say about a region that has a 2,600-year-long history of vine cultivation, yet everything current…

  • State of the Industry: Champagne Sales, Trends and Challenges Today

    From the point of view of an American consumer, the world of Champagne is more diverse today than ever before. While the most prominent names are still highly appreciated, the proliferation of lesser-known houses and grower estates in the marketplace has given us an incredible array of wines to choose from. More importantly, this diversity has encouraged more of us—consumers and wine professionals alike—to think of…
  • Paz Levinson: Fruit, Terroir, Balance: Argentina Today

    Argentina’s winemaking industry is evolving fast. With changes happening in the vineyard as well as in the cellar, there is an intrinsic complexity and diversity in the current landscape that refuses to conform to a simple outline. A few years ago the...

  • Guild of Sommeliers: Cariñena: Guild of Sommeliers Report 2014

    The Guild of Sommeliers sent six members to Cariñena DO/DOP in the spring of 2014 to discover this unexplored region in northeastern Spain, and report back on its wines, culture, and potential. Following is their story.

    Andrew Rastello

    Coming out of passing my Advanced Exam in April, I wasn’t sure my high could get much, well, higher… but days later, I received notice that I’d been awarded the travel scholarship…

  • Matt Stamp: Santorini: The Volcano Island

    Young Assyrtiko is relentless. It is a predator, and your palate is the prey. It puts you on your back and you throw your hands up. You have to submit!
    -Yoon Ha MS

    Put simply, Santorini Assyrtiko may be the best terroir value in the world. The wines generally retail between $15-30 in the US, a price point at which one can easily find good varietal quality, but real sense of place becomes a bit more elusive. Modern Assyrtiko…