Top 10 posts for 2015!

Top 10 food and wine posts for 2015

By Joseph Temple

As a guest blogger for nearly two years, it has been a great privilege to write for the International Wine & Food Society.  And after looking at Google Analytics, it was interesting to see what posts this year received the largest amount of hits.  So for the last entry of 2015, let’s have a look at the top 10 entries — decided by you!



1. Top 3 wine trends of the 90s (5.29.2015)

 


2. Looking back at 5 wine
trends from the 1980s (5.1.2015)

 


3. 10 facts about Prosecco – the sparkling wine that’s taking the world by storm! (4.3.2015)

 


4. St. Pierre and Miquelon: The original gangster’s paradise (2.20.2015)

 


5. A look back at Falcon Crest (1.16.2015)

 


6. 10 food and wine trends from the 1970s (9.18.2015)

 


7. The Wine of Patriots: 5 ways Madeira shaped the American Revolution (3.6.2015)

 


8. Wine & 5 Forgettable Presidents (1.9.2015)

 


9. The Oyster Bay atmosphere: Wining and Dining in TR’s White House (5.8.2015)

 


10. 10 interesting facts about the Argentine wine industry (5.15.2015)

 


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Ask Sid: Port for Christmas Dinner?

Ask your question here The International Wine & Food Society

Ask Sid: Port for Christmas Dinner

Question: Opening a couple of bottles of Port after our Christmas turkey dinner and wonder how long they will last if we don’t finish them off that evening.

Answer: Nice treat. A very appropriate time to open Port as you take time to relax and reflect with family & friends. I like it served with toasted walnuts and pistachios. Need more information on the specific Ports you plan to open. Hopefully an outstanding vintage with some age which are drinking beautifully now like 1963, 1966, 1970, 1977, or 1994! Vintage Port throws sediment and needs to be decanted before service and will oxidize the quickest. Still if you pour the remains into a small bottle and refrigerate it should probably will be OK for about a week – younger vintages holding better than older ones. Late bottled vintage (LBV) or tawny are longer in wood and sediment is not an issue. All ports are fortified with grape spirit to stop the fermentation leaving some natural sugar and raising the alcohol level to around 20 degrees. Therefore all ports are usually sturdier than table wines with a lower alcohol. Leftover LBV or tawny will deteriorate more slowly if refrigerated because they have been already exposed to more oxygen while spending a longer time in wood and should be OK for about a month. Enjoy!


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Most Reliable Restaurant Review Websites

Most Reliable Restaurant Review Websites

Like many of you I seem to get lots of enquiries asking for a restaurant (or hotel, winery or tour company) recommendation for not only Vancouver but for other places around the world. I am somewhat flattered to be asked and pleased to try and help. However in this digital age I wonder why more people don’t rely on their own searches from the numerous critics on the web and the most popular websites out there. Must be a question of how reliable they are and whether in fact the postings are all real. Raises also several legal questions including free speech and who is posting and who is monitoring. Are overly positive posts being made by public relations agents for the establishment or strongly negative ones by competitors or ex-employees with their own agenda? Much more personal to rely on a close friend or an IWFS member who can be trusted for reliable tips from their home city. Magazines and local newspapers can sometimes be good references for the best current up to date information. There is an interesting site that lists and reviews their Top Ten Restaurant Review Websites at www.restaurant-website-reviews.toptenreviews.com. They list Zagat, Yelp, Urbanspoon, Gayot, Dine.com, and Fodor’s as their top 6 but leave out of their list Trip Advisor, OpenTable, Chowhound, Foursquare, and others. Nothing beats personal knowledge of a place. However, I will sometimes look at Trip Advisor, Wine Spectator and Zagat for a rough indication taking these reviews usually with a grain of salt. Vancouver Magazine and scoutmagazine.ca do a good job in this part of the world. Do you have a personal recommendation for what helps you make your decision on which restaurant to visit locally and while travelling?


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Churchill on wine

Winston Churchill and wine
By Joseph Temple

More than fifty years after his death, Winston Churchill, the larger-than-life prime minister who changed the entire course of the Second World War still galvanizes us with his words and his deeds. From the famous battle cries in 1940 to his prophetic Iron Curtain speech, very few leaders have possessed Churchill’s oratorical skills, which is why he continues to fascinate scholars and historians to this day. With a tremendous gift for the spoken word, no book of famous quotes is complete without at least a couple from this iconic British leader. Whether the subject is success, failure or socialism, Churchill can provide inspiration to future generations with a plethora of pithy observations.

Of course, anyone who has studied the man knows that when it came to alcoholic beverages, the prime minister was never one to abstain. Along with allegedly smoking up to ten cigars a day, he also became infamous for his drinking habits, which included a love for spirits—and only the finest wines from France to Bulgaria. So it’s not surprising that he would have a few things to say about one of his favorite libations. “In wine there is wisdom,” noted Churchill. “In water, there are germs.”

One specific wine that England’s great wartime leader could never go without was champagne. Drinking his first glass of Pol Roger in 1908 as a young cabinet minister, Churchill quickly made it his preferred brand and even named one of his racehorses after what he called “the world’s most drinkable address.” Considering the 1928 vintage to be the very best, Odette Pol-Roger, the grand dame of this champagne house gladly sent a case to the PM every single year as a birthday present. And following his death in 1965, all bottles shipped to the United Kingdom contained a black border on the label to mourn Churchill’s passing. With this sort of affinity, was it any surprise that he invoked the region when telling soldiers “Remember gentleman, it’s not just France we are fighting for, it’s Champagne!”

Churchill wine quote

In terms of dollars and cents, Peter Clarke in his book Mr Churchill’s Profession offers us some staggering insight into how much was spent on such a guilty pleasure. “In 1935 Churchill’s bills show four hundred pounds for wines and spirits supplied to Chartwell and just over one hundred for Morpeth Mansions, the Churchills’ London flat,” writes Clarke. “The total was thus £515, or ten pounds a week—about three times the earnings of a male manual worker at the time, or enough to employ half a dozen female domestic servants at Chartwell.”

With this sort-of unquenchable thirst, whenever Churchill decided to go abroad, he never traveled light—or dry! Before entering politics, the future prime minister would work as a correspondent for The Morning Post covering the Boer War. Of course, from his past experiences in Cuba and India, he made sure this trip was a well-lubricated affair by following the old Boy Scout motto of being prepared. Days before his departure to South Africa, Churchill placed an order that included six bottles of champagne, eighteen bottles of wine and another eighteen of ten-year old scotch. “When traveling to a potential war zone, one had to bring along creature comforts,” wrote author Simon Read.

And as England’s leader, Churchill was never timid when asking for these comforts either. One interesting story dates back to December of 1941 when as a guest of President Franklin Roosevelt, the prime minister was invited to spend the Christmas holidays at the White House, where the two leaders would plan out their strategy for the wars in Europe and the Pacific. Speaking to butler Alonzo Fields, Churchill gave an explicit order during his stay at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. “I must have a tumbler of sherry in my room before breakfast, a couple glasses of scotch and soda before lunch and French champagne and 90 year old brandy before I go to sleep at night,” demanded Churchill at a time when rationing was about to come into effect across the United States.

Winston Churchill champagne quote

In today’s world, these drinking habits would no doubt result in several whisper campaigns and quite a few calls for the leader’s resignation. But it’s interesting to note how unapologetic Churchill was when confronted by both his friends and enemies about this subject. When General Montgomery said, “I don’t drink or smoke and I’m one hundred percent fit,” the PM told him “Well I smoke and drink and I’m two hundred percent fit.” Or the time when accused by a fellow MP of being “disgustingly drunk,” Churchill fired back by saying “My dear you are ugly, but tomorrow I shall be sober and you will still be ugly.” Very few could match his wit—drunk or sober from before the Gathering Storm to after Triumph and Tragedy.

Across the world, streets have been named and statues erected in Winston Churchill’s honor. But in terms of wine, the greatest tribute came in 1975 with the introduction of Cuvee Sir Winston Churchill by Pol Roger, a blend that is “one of immense character, a robust structure of maturity and great class.” After all, as one of England’s most revered leaders, Churchill always told us that when it came to wine, his tastes were simple: “I am easily satisfied with the very best.”

Sources:

Button, Roddy & Oliver, Mike. Wine – 101 Truths, Myths and Legends. Luton: Andrews UK Limited, 2013.
Clarke, Peter. Mr. Churchill’s Profession. London: A&C Black, 2013.
Goodwin, Doris Kearns. No Ordinary Time: Franklin & Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2013.
Hammond, Carolyn. 1000 Best Wine Secrets. Naperville: Sourcebooks Inc., 2006.
MacNeil, Karen. The Wine Bible. New York: Workman Publishing, 2015.
Paterson, Michael. Winston Churchill: Personal Accounts of the Great Leader at War. Newton Abbot: David & Charles, 2005.
Read, Simon. Winston Churchill Reporting: Adventures of a Young War Correspondent. Cambridge: De Capo Press, 2015.
Vine, Richard. The Curious World of Wine: Facts, Legends, and Lore About the Drink We Love So Much. New York: Penguin, 2012.
Watkins, Richard & Deliso, Christopher. Bulgaria. Ediz. Inglese. Oakland: Lonely Planet, 2008.


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Ask Sid: Best Wine Gifts for the Holidays?

Ask your question here The International Wine & Food Society

Best Wine Gifts for the Holidays?

Question: I live in Victoria BC Canada looking for some special holiday wine gifts to buy to give to good friends and advisers all costing under $100 for each bottle. Please give me a knowledgeable tip for a quality white and a red Sid?

Answer: Like your hospitable idea of giving wine and especially your generous budget. Lots of candidates. I admire the 2013 Chablis Vaillons Cuvee Guy Moreau (80+ year old vines) from Christian Moreau at BCLDB specialty store in Victoria selling at $43.99 (or if you can still find it the more intense 2012) as a great value white for current enjoyment but even better with a few years more age. For the red I recommend the outstanding vintage of 2010 for Brunello di Montalcino Castelgiocondo from Marchesi de Frescobaldi $54.99. A tip is to save 5% by ordering 12 bottles at the same price as BCLDB from Everything Wine (www.everythingwine.ca) who deliver free for orders over $200. You can give some away and keep some yourself for cellaring. This wine though 15 alcohol is packed with ripe fruit and received high marks from most wine critics including James Suckling who gave it 97 and picked it as his #1 wine for 2015. K & L Wine Merchants in San Francisco have it at the same price of $54.99 but in US funds. Enjoy!


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