Corx Wine Bags Blog

12Sep/11Off

Corx Wine Bags: Pennywise Pinot Noir 2009

Has Anyone Tried Pennywise Pinot Noir?

wine tote
I saw this brand at my local wine shop.  My first thought was that this was going to be an American version of Yellow Tail, so I passed on by.

Then I saw it was reviewed by Wine Enthusiast...and the pinot got a 90 point score!  What?

Next time I'm at my wine shot, I'm going to pick up a bottle!

Cheers!

-K

++++++++++

Light brick red in color with hints of emerald, the 2009 Pinot Noir blend boasts aromas of cherries jubilee, root beer, rose petal, and cotton candy. In the mouth, flavors of delicate plum, freeze dried strawberry, watermelon rind, cream caramel, and vanilla bean. This blend finishes with delicate notes of fresh summer sweet strawberries that seem to linger endlessly.

Pair this wine with salads to pork chops to burgers with ease. Try this wine with rolled pork tenderloin stuffed with dried cherries and Brie cheese or a mushroom and sausage pizza. The possibilities are endless.

Blend: 94% Pinot Noir and 6% Syrah

critical acclaim:

"Surprisingly sophisticated for a Pinot Noir at this price. It's dry, light in the mouth and elegantly structured, with a nice bit of acids and tannins. The flavors are delicate in sour cherries, sweet tomato jam and dusty spices."

90 Points - Wine Enthusiast

2Sep/11Off

Superior Cellar Awards

If your in or are traveling to Oregon and are looking to take your Oregon Wine experience to some of the best restaurants dedicated to wine in Oregon then this is for you.  For a complete list of restaurants visit http://oregonwinepress.com/owp-scawards

Cheers!

- Brandon

wine bags

In September 2010, Oregon Wine Press launched its Superior Cellar Awards to recognize restaurants whose wine programs place particular emphasis on Oregon wines.

The introduction of these awards honoring the best Oregon wine lists was timed to coincide with our annual restaurant issue in September, and we were delighted by the response.

For the program’s first year — 2011 — we focused exclusively on Oregon restaurants. After all, it is local dining establishments that embrace our state’s own wine industry with the greatest support and enthusiasm.

After an extensive evaluation of restaurant wine lists around the state, Oregon Wine Press selected 40 restaurants whose commitment to Oregon wines stood out.

Though breadth, depth and diversity were obvious considerations, well-selected smaller lists qualified as well.

For 2012, we are pleased to announce that we will be partnering with the Oregon Wine Board and, by extension, the Oregon wine industry. As a result, we are moving forward with the national expansion of the Superior Cellar Awards.

This will be an ongoing process, which over time we fully anticipate will see more and more restaurants within the state, throughout the region and across the nation prove worthy of being honored with an Oregon Wine Superior Cellar Award.

It stands to reason that Oregon restaurants will always offer a larger, diversified portfolio of local wines and place more emphasis on them than restaurants in other states.

However, the growing reputation of our industry, enhanced in particular by the prestige of world-class Pinot Noir, appears destined to extend its reach and increase its influence throughout the country.

Obviously, it remains vitally important to the strength and stability of our statewide wine industry for Oregon restaurants to put as much support behind it as possible.

That’s what they do in European countries, so much so that from one region to another, many restaurants are likely to offer primarily or even exclusively the wines of that region.

In that regard, for an Oregon restaurant to retain its position on the roll of Superior Cellar honorees from year to year, its wine list must meet a higher standard than elsewhere. Being Oregon-oriented both in selection and recommendation is mandatory.

Owing to the wide range of wines produced around the state, a restaurant’s wine list could be exclusively Oregon and still be able to offer every basic type  — aperitif, sparkling, red, white, rosé and dessert.

Furthermore, by featuring local wines as well as farm fresh produce and locally raised meat and poultry, restaurants are truly presenting the best of Oregon’s bounty to tourists and other visitors.

As for our diversity of table wines, cumulatively around Oregon almost every major European wine region is represented through the propagation and production of their most popular varietals.

This includes France’s Burgundy, Bordeaux, Rhone, Loire, Champagne, Alsace and Provence, Italy’s Piedmont, Tuscany, Lombardy and Alto Adige, Germany’s Rhine and Mosel, as well as key varieties from Spain and Austria.

In our new relationship with the Oregon Wine Board, we are redoubling our efforts to seek out deserving restaurants in other states. However, it is inevitable that worthy candidates will be overlooked.

To that end, we welcome reader input. If you know of a restaurant in any state that would appear to meet Oregon Wine Superior Cellar award criteria, please let us know by e-mailing kklooster@oregonwinepress.com with the restaurant name and location.

This is an ongoing program and consideration of potential awardees will be conducted on a regular basis. To be named an award winner means the restaurant has risen above hundreds of contemporaries to emerge a champion of Oregon wines.

For 2012, only 60 elite eateries around Oregon have been selected as Superior Cellar Award winners. Of them, 20 new names now share the list with 40 current ones, whose level of excellence has earned them a continued place among the honorees.

They are joined by 10 elite eateries beyond our borders, whose commitment to Oregon is commended by the industry and is hereby recognized. We look forward to seeing many more earn the right to enter their ranks in the future.

1Sep/11Off

Start Your Own Winery

I was fascinated with this simple concept, which could only help to bring about some interesting wine offerings in the years to come. 

Cheers!

- Brandon

Winery Investing Beyond Cashing-Out

Micro-lending and crowd-funding make opening a winery possible without needing a personal fortune.

Published on Aug 30, 2011

By Janice Fuhrman

 

Today, possessing a large fortune is no longer the only means to start your own winery.  While millions of retirement dollars or capital gains can score you the winery of your dreams in California, New York or Virginia, concepts such as crowd-funding and micro-lending could get you through the cellar door for much less. 

Crushpad, a custom wine-making facility based in Sonoma, California, recently instituted its Syndicate program, which provides the business tools including private investment agreement and business and compliance models to start a wine brand. 

Through crowd-funding, the leveraging of communities of investors, a small wine brand producing 50 to 2,500 cases annually can be formed using Napa Valley grapes for as little as $20,000. 

“We’ve found that the more investors there are in a wine brand, the more people there are promoting the wine because they have pride of ownership,” says Michael Brill, Crushpad founder. “Our clients are very busy and even 50 cases require a lot of effort to sell. So if you’ve got 10 investors promoting it, you’re better off.” 

Before the current economic downturn, Sonoma vintner Ross Halleck attempted to use micro-lending to raise money for Halleck Vineyards through Prosper, a person-to-person lending marketplace. Previously, he came up with only $1,000 from micro investors, which he turned down because “it wasn’t worth the trouble.” 

Today, Prosper reports that its small business loans jumped 83% in the last six months, including loans to wine-related ventures. The recent trend is for small business owners to seek personal loans and use the capital to fund small businesses, notes Prosper spokesman Laurie Azzano. 

Small investors can also buy into the wine business by acquiring shares of publicly-traded wine companies, such as Constellation Brands or Treasury Wine Estates. “You have more fluidity with a publically-traded company and it’s easier to buy and sell,” says Richard Hogan, a managing director with Merrill Lynch in San Francisco. 

For those who envision the scale of Napa or Sonoma wineries, the economic downturn has created buying opportunities, though not exactly fire-sale prices. Rob McMillan, founder of Silicon Valley Bank’s wine division in St. Helena, California, says, “As we make the long, hard slog out of this recession, people are buying and selling wineries, and financing is available.”
 

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com

9Aug/11Off

Historic Undurraga Family Back in Chile Wine Making

The notorious Undurraga family is back in the wine making business.  This is another reason the world needs to take notice of Chile's ever growing international wine  presence.

Cheers!

- Brandon

Wine: Chile's Undurraga family back in wine business

By FRED TASKER — McClatchy Newspapers

Chile's pioneering Undurraga family has been in the wine business since Francisco Undurraga planted his first vines in the foothills of the Andes Mountains in 1885. By the 1980s, it was one of Chile's biggest producers and most popular exporters to the United States. By 2005 it was making 1.5 million cases a year.

But when the fifth generation came along in the 2000s, there were 12 brothers and sisters, only four of whom were really interested in the grape. So the family board voted to sell the business in 2005. It left family patriarch Alfonso Undurraga and sons Alfonso, Max and Cristobal with pockets full of money and great wine reputations but nothing to do.

"For the first time in our lives we were out of wine," says the younger Alfonso Undurraga, co-owner. "We were lost."

So they started not one, but two new wineries, both in Chile's cool Colchagua area, both now entering the U.S. market.

One of them is Terrapura, making value-priced wines in the $10 range, aiming at 300,000 cases within five years.

The second is Vina Koyle, making premium to super-premium wines in the modest $17-to-$25 range, aiming for 30,000 cases.

Terrapura's wines are made in the international "fruit-forward" style with little oak aging, focusing on tasting like the grapes from which they are made, Undurraga says.

Vina Koyle's wines aim for greater elegance and complexity, with aging in French oak barrels, giving the terroir - the area in which they are made - its chance to influence the flavors.

Both wines are made in the Colchauga, Curico and Maipo areas of Chile, about 100 miles south of Santiago in the low foothills of the Andes at altitudes of 1,200 to 1,600 feet, seeking the cooler weather and more powerful sun at relatively high altitudes.

Both wines aim at crisp acids, light-to-medium body and restrained levels of alcohol, making them easy to drink with food, more likely to persuade the diner to order a second glass.

"It's better to sell three bottles than one," Undurraga says.

Highly recommended:

2007 Koyle Cabernet Sauvignon Royale, Alto Colchauga, Chile (85 percent cabernet sauvignon, 13 percent malbec, 2 percent carmenere): a classic bordeaux-style red wine with complex flavors of cassis, black plum and bitter chocolate, full body and bright acids; a great steak wine; $26.

2007 Koyle Syrah, Maipo and Colchauga, Chile (87 percent syrah, 13 percent carmenere): opaque purple color, hint of oak, flavors of black raspberries and spice, hearty, creamy, long finish; $17.

Recommended:

2007 Koyle Cabernet Sauvignon, Maipo and Colchauga, Chile (88 percent cabernet sauvignon, 12 percent carmenere): hint of oak, flavors of black raspberries and milk chocolate, soft tannins, long finish; $17.

2010 Terrapura Sauvignon Blanc, Central Valley, Chile: light and crisp, with tart pear and green melon flavors; $10.

2009 Terrapura Merlot, Central Valley, Chile: light body, very dry, black raspberry flavors, firm tannins; $10.

2009 Terrapura Cabernet Sauvignon, Central Valley: classical cab flavors of cassis and licorice, light and fruity, spicy finish; $10.

Read more: http://www.centredaily.com/2011/08/08/2871760/wine-chiles-undurraga-family-back.html#ixzz1UUu208xx

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com

6May/11Off

Royal Family to set up Vineyards

Royal Family hysteria continues...although I find this a bit more exciting!

Cheers!

Brandon

Royal family to set up vineyard in Windsor Great Park

Original article can be found at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-13307566

More than 16,500 vines bearing champagne grape varieties will be planted in 3 hectares (7.4 acres) of the park, owned by the Crown Estate.

Laithwaites Wine, tenant farmers on the royal estates, said they were "extremely proud to be invited by the Royal Farms" to work on the project.

The first harvest is predicted to be in about three years' time.

In a private seeding event, the wine company will plant chardonnay, pinot noir and pinot meunier varieties on an unconfirmed date next week.

'Coup' for country

Michael Roberts, chairman of English Wine Producers, said the royal family's interest was a coup for the country's vineyard owners.

"This is the sincerest form of accolade to a whole industry.

"It's interesting to see how enthusiastic they must be to actually allow a small part of Windsor Great Park to be planted," he said.

Laithwaites spokesman Simon McMurtrie added: "As champions of English wine we are delighted to do what we can to help boost its production and popularity in this country at this time."

A Windsor Castle spokeswoman confirmed the vines were being planted but said no further comment would be given as it was a "private estate" matter.

English wine and sparkling wine was served at the royal wedding on 29 April.

+++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com

29Apr/11Off

Oregon wineries, Wines and Wine Country

Great resource on Oregon wine regions.

Enjoy!

-K

++++++++++++++++++

http://www.winesnw.com/orhome.html

Oregon wineries are generally small and decentralized within each official wine region of the state.  They are often winemaker- or family-owned. Most Oregon wine regions lie in valleys between the southern Cascade Mountains that run through the stateThe Red Hills of Dundee in Oregon's Willamette Valley appellation and its Coastal Range to the west.

The northwest portion of Oregon wine country is celebrated for its cool-climate grape varieties, including Pinot Gris, Riesling, Chardonnay, and especially Pinot noir.  The Southern Oregon appellation (AVA), starting south of Eugene, includes the Umpqua Valley AVA, the Red Hill Douglas County AVA, the Applegate Valley AVA and the Rogue Valley AVA, all located in the southwestern portion of Oregon State.  These regions, along with the vineyards of the Columbia Gorge AVA, are generally higher, much warmer and significantly drier than those of the northwestern quadrant of Oregon State including the Willamette Valley AVA.

It wasn't until early 2005 that the Southern Oregon appellation (AVA) was federally authorized as a macro viticultural area, encompassing the previously authorized regions of the Umpqua, the Applegate and the Rogue Valleys.

The rich variety of  "micro climates" in southern Oregon (as well as in the Columbia Gorge AVA at Oregon's north central border) provide distinctive vineyard locations capable of nurturing high-quality Bordeaux and Rhone grape varieties, as well as French Burgundian varieties such as Pinot noir and Chardonnay.   The Columbia Gorge appellation, located on both the Oregon and Washington sides of the Columbia River, was authorized as an official American Viticultural Area (AVA) for both states in June 2004.

++++++++++++++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

28Apr/11Off

2008 Ciconia Syrah/Argones

This is a nice and inexpensive Portuguese Red Table Wine that I found at my Costco liquor store this past weekend.  For under $8.00 it is remarkably complex with good structure make this wine well rounded and balanced.  If your looking to find this wine nationally reach out to F.B McDonald Imports based in Aspen, CO (970-920-3216).

Cheers!

- Brandon

++++++++++++++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

27Apr/11Off

Chateau Ste. Michelle Horse Heaven Vineyard Sauvignon Blanc 2009

This Columbia Valley Sauv Blanc can be found on deal through out the year at $12-13.

Enjoy!

-K

++++++++++++++++++++

winemaker's notes:This Sauvignon Blanc from our Horse Heaven Vineyard delivers aromas of citrus and green apple with lively herb spice notes. We used partial stainless steel fermentation to preserve the Sauvignon Blanc's vibrant varietal character and fresh, crisp quality. For me, this wine represents the classic Washington style of Sauvignon Blanc with a crisp citrus character and a soft mouthfeel.

critical acclaim:

"In 2009 this single vineyard offering includes 11% Semillon, It has wonderful texture, and a mix of light herbal flavors that run through a gamut from celery to lemongrass and up into tart citrus fruit. The acidity is generous but not searing;it penetrates but never overpowers. A quintessential food wine."

90 Points

Wine Enthusiast

++++++++++++++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

18Apr/11Off

In the Wine World, $15 Is the New $25. Now Why Might That Be?

This is not surprising at all considering the state of our economy...some good insight from Brad Tuttle.

Cheers!

Brandon

Sales of bottles of wine in the sub-$20 price range are soaring. And in related news, hundreds of people were recently given blind taste tests and asked to identify whether wines were cheap or expensive. Participants were right about half the time—the same odds as if flipping a coin.

The LA Times declares that, whereas the sweet spot for a decent bottle of wine used to be in the $25-$40 range, $15 is the "new normal" that really hits the spot among wine drinkers nowadays. Wine stores report changing their floor layouts and dedicating sections to a rotating stream of wines in the $10-$15 and $15-$20 spectrum. It's these sections that have become the most popular parts of the store.

That gibes with an earlier report that the industry's fastest-growing segment has been bottles of wine in the $9-$12 range.

Why have consumers been scaling back? Duh, the economy. But also, since the economy forced folks to scale back in all sorts of ways, consumers have come to realize something: The cheaper wines are pretty darn good. So naturally, this is an easy area to keep up frugal habits, even as the economy bounces back.

Also, while the cheaper wines do the trick just fine for most imbibers, the flip side is that few people even seem able to tell apart the cheap from the expensive stuff. And if you can't tell a difference, why in the world would you pay extra for one wine over another?

The Guardian reports that in a survey conducted recently at the Edinburgh International Science Festival, hundreds of participants were asked to taste wines. (Probably really tough to round up volunteers.) Some of the wines were cheap, and some rather expensive, ranging anywhere from about $10 to $50. Volunteers were able to distinguish the cheap from the expensive 53% of the time when tasting whites, and 47% of the time with reds.

One of the researchers told the Guardian:

"The real surprise is that the more expensive wines were double or three times the price of the cheaper ones. Normally when a product is that much more expensive, you would expect to be able to tell the difference," Wiseman said.

++++++++++++++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

17Mar/11Off

US Becomes Largest Wine Consuming Nation

With the hits the wine industry has taken over the past few years, it is very exciting to see these signs of recovery.  With an ever increasing younger consumer base the future of wine looks extremely good!

Cheers!

- Brandon

The U.S. passed France as the world’s largest wine-consuming nation for the first time, lifted by its larger population and an interest in wine-and-cheese culture among young Americans.

Wine shipments to the U.S. climbed 2 percent to 329.7 million cases last year, according to Gomberg, Fredrikson & Associates, a wine-industry consulting firm in Woodside, California. That compares with 320.6 million for France.

While the French still eclipse Americans in per-capita consumption, the U.S. wine industry is benefiting from a domestic population of almost 311 million people -- five times the size of France’s -- and a surge of young people becoming interested in the drink. Marketers also are using social media to reach a new generation of consumers, said Jon Fredrikson, the firm’s president.

“Wine is really gaining traction in the U.S. -- it’s becoming an accepted part of everyday life,” Fredrikson said in an interview. “That’s a radical change over the past two decades.”

The retail value of U.S. wine sales rose 4 percent to $30 billion in 2010, according to Gomberg Fredrikson. California’s output accounted for 61 percent of the volume. The state’s worldwide wine shipments climbed 2 percent to 241.8 million cases.

“With the U.S. being the biggest, it means we’re a target for everyone in America and around the world that produces wine,” Fredrikson said. “Everyone wants to be here.”

This original article by Ryan Flinn can be found at http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-15/u-s-passes-france-for-first-time-as-world-s-biggest-wine-consuming-nation.html

++++++++++++++++++++

About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.