Corx Wine Bags Blog

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

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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.

9Mar/11Off

Sonoma Wine Grape Growers Looking For Normal Season

Early news look good for wine grape growers in Sonoma County...let's hope the good news continues.

Cheers!

- Brandon

Sonoma County wine grape growers with larger acreages finished mechanical pre-pruning activities earlier last month, says Nicky Frey, president of the Sonoma County Wine Grape Commission at Santa Rosa, Calif.

Pre-pruning is done to reduce Eutypa dieback — caused when spores of the fungus infect fresh pruning wounds — by reducing the chance of rain spreading the spores. It is done more by machine than by hand in Sonoma County, speeding up the final selective pruning and allowing growers to prune large acreages in a very short time.

Growers have been non-selectively cutting canes to about 15 to 18 inches since November or December. Now, they’re doing the final selective pruning, cutting back to two-bud spurs on cordon-pruned vines.

Other growers, typically those with smaller operations, have been waiting to begin pruning until the apical buds begin to swell or even emerge.

“Pruning now tends to delay basal buds from pushing out for a week or two and reduces the risk of frost damage,” Frey says. “We’ve had excellent rains this winter and the soil profiles are fully charged. That’s always good going into a new season. Hopefully, we got good dormancy that will set us up pretty well for this spring so bud break occurs over a shorter period.’

Growers have begun setting out traps for the European Grape Vine Moth (EGVM), an invasive pest discovered for the first time in the U.S. two years ago in a Napa County vineyard.

Frey is encouraged by the low number of EGVM moths trapped last year — a total of just 53 in all three flights.

“If treatments were effective, there may be some areas where we won’t find the pest this year. We’ll see, but I remain optimistic that we can eradicate this pest from our county.”

Last year’s unusually cool growing season, interrupted by a few days of 100-degree plus temperatures in August, challenged the skills of even Sonoma County’s best growers. This year, they’re looking for a more normal season for producing wine grapes.

“Nothing suggests anything unusual this year,” Frey says. “At this stage, growers should be expecting an average crop.”

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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.

3Feb/11Off

White Burgundy Recommendation from The Bottle Shop

Our friends Amy and Joe over at The Bottle Shop in Wilmette, IL just put out this great pick for White Burgundy.  This wine is available at their shop, and they have an amazing wine selection to choose from. 

You don't have to be a millionaire to drink fine white Burgundy. You just have to do a little label decoding work and know a little something about the hungrier, more ambitious grower/producers like Jean-Philippe Fichet, who has pieced together his Meursault-based domaine parcel by parcel without a whole lot of fanfare, not because the wines aren't great -- they are unambiguously wonderful --, but probably because they aren't showy. In fact, they're kinda quiet and sneaky wonderful examples of white Burgundy and that's just the way we like it. 

And what we have here is Fichet's Bourgogne blanc, which is the sleeper in his lineup of mainly single-vineyard, lieu-ditand 1er Cru Meursault. It's tastes like Meursault because it basically is Meursault but instead of $50 a bottle (or more) it's only $25. It gets exactly the same careful vineyard work (severe winter pruning on low yielding old vines) and low and slow elevage(long and unhurried malo in neutral second and third use oak barrels) that the vineyard designate wines get. Not as fleshy as Lafon, but nothing like the imposing and severe marble slabs of terroir from the old boys (Ente, Jobard, etc.) either. He's carved out a style that's somewhere right in the middle: very revealing of Meursault's complex terroir but with a really light touch all the same. The wines have a crystalline transparency coupled with a tonic and propulsive (but very natural feeling) inner energy. 

The Burgundy wine cognoscenti seems to like the purity and openness of Fichet's wines too. Dig around and little bit and you'll find that Meadows ("among the very best and purest in Burgundy"), Robinson ("so unlike the buttery cliché that I and my counterparts were brought up to expect), Tanzer ("a Meursault-like outperformer"), and Schildknecht ("a great talent"), really, anyone of consequence who covers Burgundy, circles back to the unparalleled purity and openness of Fichet's wines. For all kinds of reasons, Fichet's prices have remained stable (thanks Great Recession! although I think that also has a lot to do with his wines not being "showy") and thanks to Rare Wine Company (Fichet's importer, who by the way also imports Huet in Vouvray, say no more), the wines are generally available in the US.

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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.

18Jan/11Off

Tickle Your Tastebuds: Boston Wine Expo is 20

Calling all wine lovers!  If you live in or near Boston this is the weekend we have the wine event for you!  Nancy Olesin of The MetroWest Daily News gives us the scoop on this weekends Boston Wine Expo! 
  
Cheers!
- Brandon
BOSTON —

Visit the 20th annual Boston Wine Expo this weekend to taste more than 1,500 different wines and sample a variety of foods from around the world.

See celebrated chefs demonstrate how they whip up interesting dishes, including Natick resident Ming Tsai of Wellesley's Blue Ginger restaurant; Todd English of Olives, Figs and KingFish; Jasper White of Jasper White's Summer Shack; Michael Schlow of Radius, Via Matta and Alta Strada; Gordon Hamersley of Hamersley's Bistro; and Paul O'Connell of Chez Henri.

Learn about wine in 26 different seminars featuring experts like Ray Isle, executive wine editor of Food & Wine magazine; Leslie Sbrocco, founder of the Thirsty Girl website; Gloria Maroti Frazee, director of education at Wine Spectator magazine; and best-selling author Mark Oldman.

Can't stand the crowds? A more intimate Grand Cru tasting features wines costing $75 per bottle and more. It's a setting for serious wine enthusiasts looking to sample rare and expensive vintages before they purchase a bottle.

The Boston Wine Expo takes place 2 to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Seaport World Trade Center in South Boston. Tickets cost $110 for the Grand Tasting Saturday or Sunday; a two-day ticket is $145. Admission to the Grand Cru Wine Lounge is $175. For tickets and more information, call 877-946-3976 or visit www.WineExpoBoston.com.

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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.

9Dec/10Off

Holiday Gift Ideas for Wine Lovers

What do you do for the wine lover in your life this holiday season?  Well below are a couple of unique gift ideas on the Redding.com website.  However, I would be a little lax if I didn't say that a good addition to these recommendations would be one of our Corx Wine Bags. 

Cheers!

- Brandon

Cookbook is a Gift

The Shasta Cascade Viticulture Association has published its first cookbook, “Pleasures of the Vine,” just in time for holiday gift giving. For wine lovers who love to cook with wine, the book includes some 150 recipes such as Matson Winery & Vineyard’s “Pulled Pork in Zinfandel Sauce” and R. Merlo Estate Vineyard’s “Scallops in Wine Sauce.” Cost is $14.99 and may be purchased by contacting Linda Venable at 549-4849 or kishavon@aol.com.

Don’t Forget About Wine

While you’re frantically scurrying around town to complete your holiday shopping, don’t overlook the possibility of giving locally produced wine. Visit a local winery and pick up some extra bottles for family and friends, or visit some of the winery gift shops for specialty items. For instance, One Maple Winery in Lewiston offers gift baskets, pottery and gift certificates, as well as discounts on purchases of multiple bottles of wines. Call 778-0716 or visit www.onemaplewinery.com. Ringtail Vineyards & Winery also puts together gift baskets; call 474-5350.

Sip Wine to Holiday Music

Anselmo Vineyards in Inwood continues its Holiday Music Series from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday with performers Linda Bott, Rick Hill and Candace LiVolsi. The winery is located at 7 Hills Land & Cattle Company, 28740 Inwood Road, 20 miles east of Redding, off of Highway 44. Call 474-5546 for more information.

Avoid the Summer Crowds

Winter is a great time to visit the wine country, when a leisurely pace and uncrowded tasting rooms are yours to enjoy. The Calistoga Chamber of Commerce offers “Winter in the Wineries” passports for $50 per person, which are good through Feb. 6. The passports provide tasting at 16 wineries, as well as discounts on lodging and restaurants. Visit www.calistogavisitors.com or call 707-942-6333.

For Your Pleasure

The Wine Road of Northern Sonoma County offers one-day ($25) and three-day ($50) tickets to the Wine Road that are good for tasting, discounts and tours (offers vary) at more than 50 wineries during regular business hours. The date(s) of use must be specified at the time of purchase, but tickets are available year-round. Visit www.wineroad.com or call (888) 251-0560.

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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

1Dec/10Off

2007 “Chateau Smith” Cabernet Sauvignon – Columbia Valley

I have had several of Charles Smith's wine before such as "Boom Boom" Syrah and "Eve" Chardonnay.  My wife brought home a bottle of 2007 "Chateau Smith" Cabernet Sauvignon this weekend and we opened it up last night.  A little about Charles Smith before I trudge forward.  Charles Smith was named 2009 Food & Wine Winemaker of the year and his latest project Charles Smith Wines: The Modernist Project is a straight forward approach to wine with the philosophy of "It's just booze - drink it!".  Charles is a self taught wine maker, but his upbringing and life experiences has put him in the elite of next generation winemakers. 

Well...on to the wine.  What a great purchase...thanks honey!  The wine was a dark ruby red, with the taste of cherries, raspberries and a pepper and cinnamon finish.  This wine should do well through 2015, but as intended enjoy it now amongst friends.

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

26Nov/10Off

Jacuzzi Family Vineyards 2007 Pinot Noir (Sonoma County)

I had a chance to enjoy this wine again over Thanksgiving dinner yesterday.  I was first introduced to this winery at a restaurant call Black Pearl on Pearl St. in Denver, CO, and really enjoyed it.  This time around I picked up a bottle of their 2007 Pinot Noir (Sonoma County), typically a bit above what I would like to spend for a bottle of vino I snatched it up because I was able to get it for $13.00 compared to it's typical $20.00 price tag.  Well worth the $20.00 price point, but a steal at $13.00, this wine delivers a beautiful ruby red color, and wonderful floral aroma.  The taste is earthy, with red fruit qualities hinting of cherry and raspberry.  This wine is a bit tight upon opening, so my recommendation is to decant the wine or open it and let it sit for a bit before enjoying.  All in all a nice addition to our Thanksgiving table.

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

2Nov/10Off

Wines from Italy’s Piedmont: beyond Barolo and Barbaresco

This is a great article by Patrick Comiskey providing insight into the growing popularity of Italian wine.  Thanks so much Patrick!

Cheers!

- Brandon

The region has been called the most exciting wine zone in the world. Wines made from the Nebbiolo, Barbera, Dolcetto, Freisa, Pelaverga and Ruché grapes are gaining ground in the U.S.

Wild yeast, natural winesWine experts define natural wine differently but agree on one thing: "The yeast comes from the grapes."

(Robert Lachman / Los Angeles Times)

By Patrick Comiskey, Special to the Los Angeles Times
November 4, 2010

For the last 30 years, the red wine spotlight in and around Italy's Piedmont region has been dominated by its big guns, Barolo and Barbaresco. And rightly so: These majestic wines are some of the country's noblest. But there is also an unsung retinue of alternative bottlings, both from the Langhe (the region where the Barolo and Barbaresco growing areas are located) and from lesser-known areas beyond its borders. These areas are finally gaining a toehold in the American market and are proving just how amazingly diverse the region is.

Indeed, northwest Italy almost seems like a confluence of several great European red wine regions, possessing red wines with the majesty of Bordeaux, the suppleness of Burgundy, the stature of Hermitage and the charm of Beaujolais or the Côtes du Rhône. It's why Nicolas Belfrage, in his book "Barolo to Valpolicella," makes the case that northwest Italy is the most exciting wine zone in the world.

Geographically, of course, it is one of Europe's most dramatic. To the north the Alps loom like a grand fortress of granite, glacier and ice; their formation accounts for ancient glacial terrains, dramatic river valleys, a bewildering array of soils as well as every angle and hillside aspect a vine could ask for.
Throughout most of the region, the warmest, best-exposed hillsides and hilltops have been traditionally reserved for Nebbiolo, the noble grape variety in whose name lurks the Italian word for fog, nebbia, (which hints at harvest weather conditions, in mid- to late fall).

Nebbiolo's pinnacle of expression has long been the famed regions of the Langhe, but those are by no means the only place the grape is grown. Indeed, to the north a handful of cooler, higher-elevation areas have been sources of Nebbiolo for generations, places such as Ghemme, Gattinara, Lessona and Bramaterra.

All of these regions are closer to the Alps, where the soils are composed largely of alluvial and glacial residue rather than the clay and limestone of the Langhe. The soil composition and cooler climate render a lighter, more ethereal expression of the grape — and, thankfully, most of the producers in these regions haven't yet embraced a riper, rounder "international" winemaking style, typically marked by the heavy toast of new barrels. In aroma, and especially mouth feel, the Nebbiolos of the region seem wonderfully delicate and authentic at once, classical in the best sense.

Certainly the wines from the vineyards around Lessona and Bramaterra, produced by the area's oldest winery, Tenuta Sella (founded in 1671), reflect this authenticity. Their young winemaker, Cristiano Garella, makes these wines in a traditional manner. The native varieties Croatina and Vespolina add a softly bright fruit top note to these lean, well-structured reds redolent of rose petal, balsamic, red plum and black tea.

Just east of Lessona lie the better known areas of Ghemme and Gattinara, which straddle the Sesia River north of Alba. Both are traditional strongholds of the Nebbiolo grape — in fact, in the 19th century, the fame of Gattinara wines far exceeded those of its neighbors to the south. Both regions have seen marked improvement in quality in recent decades. These wines by and large are driven by acidity, rendering them fairly austere in cool vintages but especially nervy and powerful in a warm year.

Aside from the Nebbiolo grape, Piedmont is well known for its earlier-ripening grape varieties Barbera and Dolcetto, which usually occupy the slopes beneath the better-situated Nebbiolo vineyards. But a handful of other native varietals are gaining traction in American restaurants, most notably Freisa, Pelaverga and Ruché.

Freisa can be made as an oddly frothy pink bubbly of limited use or availability in the U.S. But as a dry, lighter red, the wine has come into its own with a pleasingly spicy bouquet, bright berry flavors and plenty of structure. Like Nebbiolo, its lighter color and lack of depth belies its tannic strength and persistence on the palate, of the sort that would pair well with a light braise of rabbit or fricandó, a traditional Piedmont veal stew. I've had terrific versions of this wine from traditional Barolo producers such as Brovia, G.D. Vajra and Giuseppi Mascarello.

Wine aficionados have traditionally referred to Dolcetto as the Beaujolais of Piedmont — an association that's as misleading as it is unmerited. If anything deserves the comparison, it's Pelaverga, a thin-skinned, light, delightfully spicy red wine that is found principally in an area just north of Barolo called Verduno. Like Beaujolais, the wines give off a fine herbal scent and peppery, mildly earthy tones, supporting delicious, exuberant red-fruit flavors. As with Freisa, it's the traditional producers who have kept these wines current, such as G.B. Burlotto or the cooperative bottling from Castello di Verduno called "Basadone" (an allusion, perhaps, to the charms that await: the name means "woman-kisser").

Perhaps the most brooding of this alternative bunch is Ruché (or Rouchet), a traditional variety found in the Castagnole di Monferrato area and one of the rarest wines in all of Piedmont. This variety carries a distinctly floral, almost rosy scent, with an amaro-like bitterness so food-friendly that it practically induces hunger pangs with just a sip. Seek out bottlings from Cascina 'Tavijn, or the smoky "Terra del Ruché" from Montalbera.

One of the most compellingly untrammeled wine regions in northwest Italy — certainly the tiniest and most obscure to find its way to market in recent years — is the mountainous Valle d'Aosta, tucked against the Alpine borders of France and Switzerland. It is so high that Mont Blanc, the Alps' tallest peak, anchors the region's western end. Composed largely of a single valley (the A5 Autostrada, connecting Italy with France, runs through it), the region contains some of the highest-planted vineyards in Europe, composed of imported Swiss and French varieties, as well as indigenous plantings found nowhere else.

Red grapes from the nearby Rhône Valley, such as Syrah and Grenache as well as Pinot Noir, can be found growing on Valle d'Aosta's terraced hillsides. Two of the indigenous red varieties set the region apart. Petit Rouge is a plummy, slightly herbal variety that is blended into wines from Torrette, in the heart of the valley. Fumin, as its name suggests, has a pronounced smoky scent along with dark fruit flavors and seems tailor-made for a late-season barbecue.

For decades, what few wines could be found from Valle d'Aosta were imported by Neal Rosenthal — notably the wonderful, exotic wines of Grosjean Frères, which, as the name implies, has a decidedly French accent on its portfolio. But that's changed in recent years. A few of the other, better producers in the region are now being imported — such as the remarkable wines of Les Crêtes, one of the larger noncooperative wineries that makes a Fumin and a Torrette, as well as Syrah, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and other bottlings.

And Oakland importer Oliver McCrum is bringing in wines from a pair of even smaller producers — the Cave di Barró in St.-Pierre, and the remarkable Didier Gerbelle, whose Torrette Supérieur "Vigne Tsancognein," made from Petit Rouge and Fumin, with two other indigenous varieties, is practically haunting with its exotic spice and focused, almost gentle elegance — from a tiny corner of the world that has found a way to grab some of the spotlight from its more illustrious regional neighbors.

Where to buy Piedmont reds

Here are some of the places you can buy the wines mentioned in the story.

2007 Chateau Feuillet Valle d'Aosta "Torrette": Wine Expo in Santa Monica, (310) 828-4428, http://www.wineexpo.com, and the Wine House in West Los Angeles, (310) 479-3731, http://www.winehouse.com, about $25.

2007 Didier Gerbelle Valle d'Aosta "Vigne Tsancognein Torrette Supérieur": Woodland Hills Wine Co. in Woodland Hills, (818) 222-1111, http://www.whwc.com, and Manhattan Fine Wines in Manhattan Beach, (310) 374-3454, http://www.manhattanfinewines.com, about $28.

2005 Tenuta Sella Lessona: Wally's Wine & Spirits in Los Angeles, (310) 475-0606, http://www.wallywine.com, and Hi-Time Wine Cellars, Costa Mesa, (949) 650-8463, http://www.hitimewine.net, and Woodland Hills Wine Co., about $35

2003 Tenuta Sella Bramaterra I Porfidi: Wine House and Hi-Time Wine Cellars, about $45.

2004 Ca' Nova Ghemme: Wine Expo in Santa Monica, about $55.

2009 Comm. G.B. Burlotto Verduno Pelaverga: Wine Country in Signal Hill, (562) 597-8303, http://www.thewinecountry.com, and Wine House, about $18.

2008 Castello di Verduno Pelaverga "Basadone": Wine House, Wally's and Manhattan Fine Wines, about $22.

2009 Cascina 'Tavijn Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato: Domaine LA, Los Angeles, (323) 932-0280, domaine547.com, about $25.

2007 Brovia Langhe Freisa "La Villerina": Larchmont Village Wine, (323) 856-8699, and John & Pete's Fine Wines & Spirits, West Hollywood, (310) 657-3080, http://www.johnandpetes.com, about $30.

2007 G.D. Vajra Langhe Freisa "Kyè": Wine House, El Vino Wine Shop, Venice, (310) 396-9705, http://www.elvinowines.com, about $40.

—Patrick Comiskey

 

 

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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

24Sep/10Off

Gourmet Chicago 2010 – Millennium Park

Another great activity for foodies and wine lovers in Chicago starting this evening at 6PM in Chicago's Millennium Park is Gourmet Chicago.  This is shaping up to be an exciting event with over 300 wines to try, food tasting, cooking demonstrations and informational seminars.  Cat Cora, Rick Bayless and many others will be on hand so head on down and enjoy this event that is becoming bigger each year.  To learn more check out the video below or visit www.chicagogourmet.com for event specifics.

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

19Aug/10Off

We told you drinking wine will make you more intelligent…..

This is a short clip highlighting a seven year study conducted in Norway testing cognitive skills in women who drink wine versus those that do not.  Now I know why my wife is so smart:) Are we encouraging you to drink yourself into oblivion in hopes of becoming the next Albert Einstein or Steven Hawking, not exactly.  It is exciting though to see more health benefits tied to that bottle of wine we keep opening.  So the next time dinner chit chat turns mentally stimulating is it really us, or is it the wine talking?  Hmmmm...makes you wonder.

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