The wine/food event of the year is still 3 ½ months away but by the way the talk is going, it may as well be next week. The San Diego Bay Wine
and Food Festival will be with us November 20 to November 24 for its 10th year. I’ve seen them all and the stage gets bigger and grander every year.
Local and national wine and food celebrities will gather at over 20 events in the heart of downtown San Diego to fill your appetites for the largest culinary extravaganza in Southern California. The alert I have for you now is that tickets just went on sale for this luxury wine and food festival.
Make sure the Grand Tasting is highest on your list of events to see. It’s at the Embarcadero behind Seaport Village at the Marina. You will be able to taste over 200 wineries, breweries and spirits and 70 local restaurants and gourmet food companies. Highlight is the Chef of the Fest Competition where San Diego’s best chefs compete for the title.
New this year is the California Classics Cult Wine Tasting featuring Screaming Eagle & Master Sommelier Fred Dame with commentary education, and the story behind each cult wine.
Tickets are now available for all events online at www.sandiegowineclassic.com. For more information, call 619-342-7337.
The Best of the Recent Crop
The last week in June, the TASTE OF WINE FIRST HALF TOP TEN was unveiled with winning wines from Italy to Sonoma. So what have I got for you lately? Here’s my “pick six” for July:
– Chateau St Jean Chardonnay, Robert Young Vineyard, Sonoma, 2010. $18. Single vineyard in the Alexander Valley, rich in oak aging.
– Grgich Hills Merlot, Napa Valley, 2009. $42. Concentrated flavors, this is a Merlot for Cab drinkers. Certified Organic and Biodynamic.
– Kendall Jackson Grand Reserve Cabernet, Sonoma, 2010. $28. 16 months in oak. Blend of mountain, ridge, hillside and beachland grapes. Best estate vineyards.
– Lava Cap Petite Sirah, El Dorado, Placerville CA, 2010. $30. Mountain grown grapes in the Sierra Nevada Foothills. Rich with full flavors to awaken your senses.
– Pedroncelli Mother Clone Zinfandel, Dry Creek Sonoma, 2011. $17. Over 100 years of parental care from ancient vines go into the flavor profile of this wine. Add 12% Petite Sirah for good measure.
– Thornton Nebbiolo, Temecula Valley, 2011. $46. Carefully crafted Italian grape from the gifted Piemonte country of Italy and the premium grape of Barolo and Barbaresco. Cheers to John Thornton for bringing this master wine to Southern California.
Wine Bytes
– Temecula Wine Country continues its musical parade in August as Baily Winery has the band Fandango on Sat. Aug. 24 from 5 to 8pm during dinner. Call 951-972-9758. Briar Rose Winery has its Sat. Night Sunset on Sat. the 24th from 6 to 9pm with the Get Down Party Band. Paninis on Wheels provides the made to order meals. And Thornton Winery Sat. the 24th has Chris Botti jazz from 7 to 10pm. Call 951-699-0099 for tickets.
– Il Fornaio in Coronado presents a Mondavi Wine Dinner Thurs. Aug. 22. Reception 6pm, dinner 6:30pm. 5 courses, live Neopolitan music and Mondavi wines, including the Napa Valley Cabernet and Carneros Pinot Noir. Chef Loverde presides over a custom menu. $65. pp. RSVP at 619-437-4911.
– Wilson Creek Winery in Temecula will have a “free Cruise Tasting” of its wines Sat. Aug. 24 at 5:30pm. They will present details on two river boat cruises it is hosting on the Rhone and the Danube Rivers in Europe in 2013 and 2014.
Call in for an RSVP at 951-699-9463.
The 20th Annual Grape Stomp is at Orfila Vineyards and Winery in Escondido, Sat. Aug. 24 from 4 to 8pm. Includes
a dinner buffet, live dance music, wine tasting, tractor rides and hilarious grape stomping. Cost is $85. Phone for reservations at 760-738-6500 x22.
Frank Mangio is a renowned San Diego wine connoisseur certified by Wine Spectator. He is one of the leading wine commentators on the web. View and link up with his columns at www.tasteofwinetv.com. Reach him at mangiompc@aol.com.