Barefoot Wine Information Blog

10:33 PM

2008 - Wine Accessory

Today's Wine Accessory Article

The Basics of Wine Tasting Tours


Wine is one of the oldest drinks associated traditionally with many festivals and celebrations. Today, it has become a common household item and is found everywhere from bars to kitchens. Many people have gone on wine tasting tours not out of any professional obligations but out of sheer love for this particular drink. Wine tasting tours are organized so that wine tasters may have the chance to evaluate the quality of different wines based on criteria like feeling, aroma, and color. People who go on wine tasting tours have a well-developed sense of smell and taste and they can tell even minor details about a wine through simple smelling and tasting.

Besides determining the taste of the wine, wine tasting tours also offer the opportunity for determining the proper placement of the wine based on other ingredients like alcohol content, tannin, acidity, and the collective balance between such elements. Wine tasting involves the use of equipment like aroma bottles and blotting strips that are the stock in trade of everyone who goes on wine tasting tours.

Wine tasting tours are a kind of minor festival unto themselves among wine lovers. While there are many wine tasting events that are taking place all over the world, the best thing for wine tasters are the events combined with their vacations. Wine tasting tours are conducted for people who wish to vacation in spots close to wineries and enjoy a vacation while indulging in their favorite form of recreation and relaxation. These tours have become well established and include some of the most famous wineries and vineyards. Some wine tasting tours are organized around specific wine tasting festivals that take place in specific parts of the world and within certain hotels and restaurants.

The good news is that many of the leading wineries in the world have tied up with tour organizers to offer wine tasting tours for wine lovers. The best way to find out about wine tasting tours is to search on the Internet or to ask your own travel agent for information about these tours. Remember that wine tasting tours are not like regular tours and the packages, transportation, accommodation, duration, and destinations are all a little removed from regular tourist destinations. There are several travel agents that offer many exciting wine tasting tours that cover wineries in places like Mexico, Italy, Spain, France, and even California. There are so many wineries in the world that your choice is practically as unlimited as regular tourist destinations. In some cases it is even possible to customize your own wine tasting tours by selecting wineries, accommodation, and tour duration. In case you are visiting wine festivals then you could choose which events you would like to attend.

Like most everything else, the Internet has made the location and booking of wine tasting tours easier than it ever was. Not only can you find the tours that suit you best but through online communities you can even exchange comments with people who have been on those tours before and pick up tips that could save you time and money and also prevent you from committing some common mistakes.

James Arthur is a wine consultant for www.winestoragecredenzas.net. Visit the site for great information on wine credenzas and other wine related products.



Another short Wine Accessory review

The Basics of Wine Tasting Tours


Wine is one of the oldest drinks associated traditionally with many festivals and celebrations. Today, it has become a common household item and is fo...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Featured Wine Accessory Items

The FTD Perfect Compliment Bouquet - Deluxe


The perfect blend of tone and hue (and fragrance too)! Simply gorgeous yellow blooms tightly arranged in a planter. B22-3278D


Price: 66.99 USD



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2:39 AM

September 2008 - Serving Wine

Today's Serving Wine Article

Eggnog, Wassail, Hot Wine -- Oh My!



It is a cold winter night outside while inside a group of family and good friends is clustered around a crackling fire, thinking how wonderful the party foods look, tucked here and there throughout the living room. The genial host grandly sets down a huge bowl of Christmas cheer on the table near the fire. What is this? Eggnog! The crowd good-naturedly surges forward as one to the punch bowl, eagerly clamoring for a cup of alcohol-enhanced ambrosia. Such a fantastic tasting experience! If it is eggnog, then we are celebrating the holiday party-filled days between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day. Happy times for all are coming.


Reaching back in history to about 1775, eggnog enjoyed popularity on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, from England to America. The word "no" in eggnog is thought to have come from an object known as a "noggin," a small mug made of carved wood. This wooden mug was used to serve drinks to the tavern patrons seated at tables; tankards were used to serve drinks at fireside. (Was this elementary fire protection, assuming the tankards were constructed of metal or some other fire-resistant material?) The eggnog drink itself is descended from a hot British drink known as "posset" which contained eggs, milk, and ale or wine. (Sugar was added some time down the timeline.) Eggnog is used as a toast to ensure everyone's good health in the year to come. It had many silly-sounding (but memorable) names including egg-flip, egg-hot, and of course eggnog.


Eggnog, in the 18th century, was considered a beverage for the well-off. Milk was quite expensive and therefore economically out-of-bounds for most people. When eggnog made its way over to America, it became easily accessible to all classes because of the large numbers of milk cows there. To give the drink a little "oomph," rum was often mixed into the eggnog. Rum was relatively inexpensive compared to other alcoholic drinks and easy to obtain, making it the perfect additive.


American Colonial history dictates that there were at least a few special occasions involving eggnog and high society. In Baltimore, Maryland, etiquette demanded the practice of young men calling upon all their friends on New Year's Day. At each visitation made, the men were offered a cup of eggnog. Not wanting to offend anyone by refusing the proffered cup of cheer, the gents became, in a word, "sloshed" and could barely get back to their own homes.


It was also accepted as doctrine that President George Washington, the Father of America, was an extreme fan of eggnog. He concocted his own version of eggnog which included sherry, rum, and rye whiskey. Only the bravest of his friends were willing to try it.


When thinking about eggnog on a cold winter night, we should always remember the joys of wassail and hot mulled wine, as well as their companion, hot hard cider.


Rather than originally being a drink, wassail first embraced caroling. Some centuries ago, groups of carolers brought cups with them, and while they performed at the doors of the rich, a servant would fill their cups with hot spiced ale, frequently topping off the drink with a floating roasted apple slice.


Hot mulled wine has been popular for centuries. "Mulled" means heated and spiced, making this drink perfect for those cold winter nights. In medieval times, these drinks were named after Hippocrates, the father of medicine, public opinion being that hot wine must be healthier than drinking the polluted water which was available to the masses.


By 1500, cookbooks included various methods of mulling wine. In addition to French wine, honey, cinnamon, cardamon, and galingale (a pungent, aromatic plant related to ginger) were added to the warming mixture. In Victorian England, "Negus," a version of mulled wine, was served to children at their birthday parties. Mulled wine has been a party drink for hundreds of years.


Some mulled wines are similar to today's sangrias, sometimes using white wine in place of red. All sorts of things are added in, including oranges, cloves, twelve spice, and more. Do not forget a couple of sticks of cinnamon.


Last, but certainly not the least, is cider. Its use was known of in England before the time of Christ. The apples used to make the cider were rumored to have come from sacred trees.


There was no such thing as alcohol-free cider in years past. Everyone, including pious clergymen and small children, drank cider as matter of course. The cider was not sweet, as there was no refrigeration available. Modern refrigeration has made sweet (nonalcoholic) cider extremely popular. Alcoholic cider is now known as "hard" cider.


Be sure to buy pasteurized cider for your holiday parties as E. coli can lurk hidden in unpasteurized cider.


To your good health! Cheers! L'chaim! Skoal! Bottoms up! Have a happy, healthy, and prosperous New Year.

About the Author


Terry Kaufman is Chief Editorial Writer for Niftykitchen.com, Niftyhomebar.com, and Niftygarden.com.


?2006 Terry Kaufman. No reprints without permission.

Short Review on Serving Wine

Eggnog, Wassail, Hot Wine -- Oh My!


It is a cold winter night outside while inside a group of family and good friends is clustered around a crackling fire, thinking how wonderful the par...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Serving Wine Products we recommend

The FTD Glimpse Of Nature Basket - Standard


This natural garden basket is the home for cymbidium orchids, lilies, and birds of paradise. Limited availability. C26-3231S


Price: 165.99 USD



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EdenVale Winery Rogue Valley Oregon Reserve Chardonnay 2006 By edenvalewineryEDEN VALE 2005 RESERVE Chardonnay ROGUE VALLEY OREGONEdenVale Winery is nestled between Ashland and Medford amidst the best vineyards in the Rogue Valley amp;amp;ndash; a region worldrenown for theatre, pears and now fine wines.Crisp fruitforward character with hints of vanilla and toast ushering in sun ripened stonefruits. Creamy mouthfeel for lingering finish. By Jonathan H. Newman 2006 EdenVale Rogue Valley Reserve


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