Vinfolio Blog

 
28
May
2010

Choosing Wedding Wines

by Levi Hensel
Categories: How To

In light of Lettie Teague’s recent article in The Wall Street Journal, and my own impending nuptials, I thought I’d provide some additional insight into the process of purchasing wedding wines.

Having gone through the selection process just last week, I can accurately say that it isn’t easy. Finding wine, in quantity, at the right price points, and for a large crowd, is a tricky endeavor. Never mind the quest for wines that meet these requirements but which are also interesting.

As Lettie rightly comments, cost is the number one concern when it comes to making these selections. With any large event, the per bottle cost must be kept low in order to keep the total bill from spiraling totally out of control. I would also second her statement to, “have what everyone else is having.” I think this is a good rule of thumb for most couples. For our wedding, while we know there will be plenty of wine industry professionals and private collectors in attendance, their numbers still pale in comparison to the total number of people who, honestly, could care less about what they’re drinking.

Left with the difficult task of treading the line between finding something with broad appeal, but still with enough stuffing to hold the interest of people ‘in the know,’ we began doing some serious research. Holding the reception at a restaurant also meant that we could only select wines already on the restaurant’s wine list. This is a common situation, and is workable if you know what to look for. After scouring the list in detail, we set up an appointment with the restaurant’s Wine Director to taste through some potential wines and formulate a plan. For anyone in this situation, I would emphasize the importance of creating an open dialogue with the Sommelier or Beverage Director about prices, quantities, and wine options.

For our selections, we opted for one sparkling wine, one white wine, and one red wine. Further consideration was given to the fact that we would also be serving beer and cocktails. Having a wedding in early July also meant that we would weight the percentage of still wine in favor of white over red.

Sparkling:
This category is often over-emphasized at weddings. When you get down to it, the price of real Champagne (particularly with the restaurant mark-up) can be frightening. Furthermore, most people cannot tell the difference between Cava, Prosecco, the various Cremants, or Champagne, but only whether they like the way the wines taste vis-à-vis each other. Therefore, we purposefully selected lower price-point sparkling wines to try – searching for good QPR – in order to transfer the leftover per bottle cost to what we knew would be more expensive still wines.

White:
Initially I pushed hard for a 2007 Chablis. I’m enthusiastic over this vintage and classic Chablis can please a lot of palates – enough oak for new-world Chardonnay lovers, while maintaining the necessary minerality and acidity that serious wine nerds love – and they go well with a variety of foods. We asked the Wine Director to pull some wines for the tasting which met these qualifications.

Red:
We were more adamant on our red selection. Having spent significant time in Oregon prior to living in California, we wanted an Oregon Pinot Noir. Currently the market is flooded with wines from the 2007 vintage – a difficult one in the Willamette Valley – and the 2008s are just now becoming available, so we knew that finding a solid selection would be a challenge.

Our calculations were as follows:
185 Expected Guests
157 Expected Wine/Beer/Cocktail consumers
Avg. of 4 drinks / person (It’s a celebration!)
         Total of 628 servings of alcohol (70% Wine, 20% Beer, 10% Liquor)

Of the resulting 440 wine servings, we were aiming for 45% White, 35% Red, 20% Sparkling (These are good general percentages - switch the red and white for a cooler weather wedding.)
This comes out to 198 White wine servings, 154 Red, and 88 Sparkling.    
Avg. of 5 servings / bottle
         Equals approximately 40 bottles of White (3.5 cases), 30 bottles of Red (2.5 cases), and 17 bottles of Sparkling (1.5 cases).

Ultimately, we went with the following selections –

Sparkling: Our choice for sparkling wine came down to a toss-up between a Cremant de Bourgogne and a Cremant d’Alsace. We eventually settled on the NV Allimant-Laugner - Cremant d’Alsace Rose. With 100% Pinot Noir fruit, stellar color, and a crisp, flower-scented nose, this was the eventual winner.

White: The availability of 2007 Chablis which we liked, in sufficient quantity, became an issue, so we ended up staying in Burgundy and within vintage, but going a bit further afield. Our choice was the 2007 Domaine Auvigue – Saint Veran Les Chenes. Considered one of the premier winemakers in the Maconnais, Jean-Pierre Auvigue produced this tasty White Burgundy from “The Oaks” vineyard. Refreshing, with round Chardonnay fruit and a subtle minerality, we expect this to be a crowd pleaser.

Red: Due to the difficulty of the 2007 Willamette Valley vintage, we also opted to stay in Oregon but selected a Pinot Noir from the Upqua Valley, which is further south and had less inclement weather during the year. Our choice was the 2007 Brandborg – Pinot Noir Bench Lands. The wine has strawberry fruit, fresh mushrooms, earth and oak spice on the nose. The palate has cherry fruit with smoke, toast, and a lingering finish.

25
May
2010

Vinfolio Announces New Investor Revolution LLC

by Mike Jellison
Categories: Company update
I am pleased to share some very exciting news with you.

Today Vinfolio announced that we received funding from Revolution LLC, the investment company created by AOL co-founder Steve Case.

Revolution’s mission is to invest in companies that are driving transformative change by shifting power to consumers and building significant, category-defining companies in the process. Vinfolio, specifically through our Marketplace, is doing just that by providing wine enthusiasts and collectors like you with a revolutionary new channel to buy and sell fine wine and in doing so creating greater access and transparency in the fine wine market.  

Already a Vinfolio customer prior to investing in the company, Steve gained firsthand knowledge of the cutting edge technology used by Vinfolio in both our VinCellar cellar management and Marketplace platforms.  Through this customer experience, he saw the potential to further Vinfolio’s transformation of the fine wine industry by providing the resources to support the company’s growth.

I firmly believe that Revolution’s investment will help Vinfolio fuel our growth by providing financial resources as well as invaluable expertise in customer driven e-commerce initiatives. In an effort to do just that, Revolution’s David Golden and Philippe Bourguignon will join Vinfolio’s current Board of Directors N. Colin Lind, Jon Moramarco and Jean-Michel Valette.  As members of the Board, they will work with Vinfolio’s Sr. Management team to help us build on the lessons from the world’s most popular recommendation engines, auction marketplaces and social media platforms, as we seek to simplify a fragmented, confusing market and make fine wine purchasing and exchange easier for everyone.

I invite you to visit the news section of our Web site to read the complete press release and learn more about Revolution’s partnership with Vinfolio.

I look forward to sharing more exciting developments with you in the future and thank you for your continued patronage.
21
May
2010

BuyNow in the Wine Store for Faster, Easier Transactions

Categories: Marketplace , New Feature

Buying and selling wine online with Vinfolio has just become easier! You might have already noticed that Marketplace BuyNow wines are fully integrated into our regular wine store listings, giving customers a wider range of choices when purchasing fine wine. Prices, fulfillment times, and locations are now surfaced when you click the Buy button. Choose quantities from Vinfolio stock or offsite or storage locations based on your timeframe and desired price.

Selections will be added to your shopping cart, allowing easy checkout for Marketplace BuyNow wines. Gone are the multiple bid screens with terms and conditions! Still here are the “Your bid placed” and “Your bid won” emails (for the time being).  

 

Should your order contain both Marketplace BuyNow and wine store purchases, the checkout process will separate the wines out. Arrange shipping on your wine store purchases immediately, and wait for fulfillment of your Marketplace wines to decide exact shipping days.

In short, the streamlined process should be a more convenient one for buyers and sellers. If you’re a seller and haven’t set BuyNow prices for your Marketplace wines, now is the time to do so! Increase sales exposure, speed up transaction times, and get paid quicker!
 

19
May
2010

Giorgio Rivetti of La Spinetta Visits Vinfolio

by Ann Feely
Categories: Tasting Event
Everyone knows that the best way to understand a wine region is to visit. The best way to learn about a producer is to go, see the vineyard, taste the wines and – if you’re lucky – talk to the people who grow the grapes and make the wine. The opportunity to sit and talk to a producer about the vineyards, the wines and their business is rare, but it builds a bond and an understanding – and ultimately a greater appreciation of the wine when you enjoy it years later.
At Vinfolio, we want to make that distance between producer and consumer just a little bit smaller by bringing you that experience as we talk to select producers and ask the questions you would ask. 
We recently enjoyed a visit in our San Francisco offices from Giorgio Rivetti from La Spinetta and were able to ask him about his wines and his business – including the proverbial “what keeps you up in the middle of the night?” I had been expecting an answer along the lines of cash flow or any number of things that could go wrong when you expand a family business, but his answer was “quality”. Nothing else seemed to matter but quality, as if all of the worries of running a business in this current economic climate were trivial in comparison.
Watch our full interviews with Giorgio here and don't miss newly available La Spinetta wines available in the wine store.
14
May
2010

Comparing 2009 Bordeaux Barrel Scores

Categories:
Now that we have barrel scores on the 2009s, it’s time for a little critical comparison.  With prices on the major chateaux yet to be released, we can only speculate on increases over 2008 levels, but if online musings prove correct, serious price increases are on the way, most likely for the vintage’s highest scoring wines.  If you’ve registered a wish list with BBR through Vinfolio’s partnership, it’s likely these top wines are on it.  
The visual below represents the highest barrel scores of Robert Parker (98-100), James Suckling (97-100), and Jancis Robinson (18.5+) for easy comparison. Wine Spectator’s James Suckling was the most generous with triple digit range scores and Jancis Robinson the least, though all of her potenially perfect wines overlap with either Parker or Suckling.      
12
May
2010

Capture Wines

by Levi Hensel
Categories: Education , Wine Reviews

One of the most exciting new Califoria producers, Capture Wines is already making its mark in the industry. The winery website provides a great deal of information about this fledgling operation, but here are a few of the highlights on the estate's history:

"When Mike and Carol Foster first visited the rugged slopes of Pine Mountain, they knew they had discovered the perfect home for their family and the perfect place to grow world-class Bordeaux wine grapes. They founded Capture Wines in 2008, on a parcel of land that rises 1,600 to 2,400 feet above the Alexander Valley floor - a picturesque spot with breathtaking views and a rich winegrowing heritage. Their mountain estate, historic Tin Cross Vineyards, has been planted to vine since early homesteaders first settled here in 1855. In keeping with the legacy of these pioneers, Mike and Carol - together with Vineyard Manager Glenn Alexander - work hand-in-hand with the earth, using sustainable farming methods that result in mountain-grown wine grapes of uncommon intensity. In the winery, time-honored Bordeaux methods from the renowned winemaking team of May-Britt and Denis Malbec - give these grapes their finest expression for wines of depth, nuance and complexity."

Capture Wines’ motto is “Bordeaux Tradition. Frontier Spirit.” Once you taste the wines produced by May-Britt and Denis (formerly PR Manager and Cellar Master at Chateau Latour) from the rolling hills and mountain peaks of California’s North Coast, you’ll understand why this is such an apt description. Denis produced the Chateau Latour vintages from 1994 to 1999 including some of the highest-scoring wines of recent decades. Currently, this dynamic team is creating Bordeaux-style reds from the Tin Cross Vineyards, high upon Pine Mountain, and Sauvignon Blanc from Kick Ranch and Windrem Ranch Vineyards. Although there are multiple wines from the estate currently in production, the red wines will not be released until 2011. Your only chance to try these exclusive California wines with First Growth pedigree are the recent 2009 releases of Sauvignon Blanc -the Tradition and Les Pionniers.

2009 Capture - Sauvignon Blanc Tradition - $29.95

Although only 875 cases of this wine were made, this is currently the largest production wine from Capture. Aged sur lie for 5 months, with weekly battonage, the Tradition shows subtle aromas ranging from pink grapefruit to elegant Meyer lemon and tangerine orange. The delicate scents of passion fruit, pear and gooseberry linger with the creamy texture of the wine. Try this wine well chilled, and then enjoy its shifting complexity as the wine slowly warms. The 2008 (inaugural) vintage of this wine was scored 91 points by Wine Spectator, and 92 points by International Wine Cellar

2009 Capture - Sauvignon Blanc Les Pionniers - $35.95

Considering that a scant 360 cases of this wine are produced, it is no wonder that this is a mailing list only offer. Also aged sur lie and stirred weekly, Les Pionniers shows bright fruit expression and an impressive mouth-feel. This Sauvignon Blanc has a nose rich with aromas of stone fruits such as apricots and peaches, along with a floral touch of orange blossoms. The palate has an extraordinary balance and a long finish, where the minerality declares it a “vin de terroir.”

For some more excellent information on this winery, check out these great video spots:

Forbes

NBC Bay Area

CNN International

To be the first to know about future "mailing list only" exclusives from Capture, sign up for their mailing list here.

 
RSS Feed Generator
 
Please choose a name for your RSS feed:
Name rss feed
RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication". It is a way to easily distribute a list of headlines, update notices, and sometimes inventory changes to a wide number of people. Think of it as a one-stop shop for all the stuff you want to read online. For the consumer, an aggregator or reader, either web-based or installed on your computer, ties it all together.

To make use of this information, you have to download and install an RSS feed reader like SharpReader. Every so often, the aggregator checks the RSS feeds you selected. You log on to the aggregator and see the updates to your favorite sites, blogs and stores, all in one place. For more information on RSS, please visit:
http://rss.softwaregarden.com/aboutrss.html
RSS Feed Generator
Click on icon to add RSS feed:
Or copy this URL into your RSS reader:
Newly Available Wines
Vinfolio Priority Program
The Vinfolio Marketplace
Watch Staff Wine Tasting Videos
Become a Vinfolio fan on Facebook
Trust E Certified
Forgotten password
 
Enter your email and we will send you
your password