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Special Offerings

Keep current with "special offerings."

Special Offerings
Our direct, personal relationship with our winegrowers has always meant extra quality and value for our customers. Now, more wines than ever are available to Moore Brothers, but you may never know about them unless you take advantage of our "special offerings" through email.

Small lots of previously unavailable wines, or larger lots from our established winegrowing partners (with special pricing) are offered every week...but they sell out quickly!

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Author Archive for frank

elio grasso

By frank
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

elio grasso baroloPainting the thumbnail portrait of Elio Grasso is beyond my ken. Elio is a man of great character…and, well, a character.

Elio 's parents saved to send their eldest to university. But city life was not for Elio. He left a banking career to take over the family estate. A comfortable routine was replaced by the full workload of the farm (winery) with concurrent courses in oenology and agronomy.

Aided by his “treasure,” wife Marina, Elio Grasso developed his family 's great vineyards and small cantina into a model, modern Barolo estate.

Elio turned over the primary winemaker/cellar master duties to son Gianluca in 1999.

At age 70, Elio, though still the boss, prefers to be in the open air working and supervising in the vineyards. Now that there are two strong men on hand, the attention to detail here has brought Elio 's fine winery to a very special level.

-Posted by Frank Splane

Categories : our winegrowers, piemonte
Tags : learning, our winegrowers

puglia, and the search for “good” wine – part 1

By frank
Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

about puglia

There are two kinds of wine in the world: “good,” and the other kind

…paraphrasing Duke Ellington’s famous comment on music

The wines of Puglia’s Salento peninsula are based on the indigenous grape of the area, Negroamaro. The aromatic Malvasia Nera grape is the traditional supporting actor in Salento wines, giving lift and nuance to the rich, mellow Negroamaro. Red grapes such as Primitivo, Montepulciano, and Sangiovese also have been planted here for centuries. As Puglians have long relied on Rosato (rosé) as their wine for seafood and meatless pastas, clonal research on the indigenous white grapes Verdeca and Bombina has lagged.

La cucina of Puglia is abundant and varied. The flat fertile North provides cereal and pasta, lamb and sheep’s cheese come from the hills and plateaux, seafood from the Adriatic and Ionian Seas and a wide range of vegetables, fruits and herbs grow throughout Puglia. Puglia also is Italy’s premier producer of olive oil. Native cuisine itself has been influenced by Spanish colonization and Puglia’s proximity to both Greece and North Africa.

Puglia’s long hot summers, consistent (for Europe ) weather patterns and rather flat, easier-to-harvest land have made Puglia a provider of dark, high-alcohol reds that make up in potency what they lack in finesse. Even today, inexpensive, high-octane Puglian red magically appears to darken and enrich the modest color and soften the higher acidity of the Sangiovese grape in the wines of Chianti. The ubiquitous Merlot, Cabernet and Chardonnay vines have appeared on the scene as well.

Puglia’s potential for producing big, lush wines has brought on a wave of Australian flying-winemakers. These oenologists are hired to blend, sculpt and fashion wines of “mass-market appeal.” There are also plenty of native Italian “consultants-for-hire” to furnish a winery with a “line” from “bang-for-the-buck” straight through to “high-ticket, trophy” wine.

Next: Castel di Salve

Posted by Frank Splane

Categories : italy - points south, learning
Tags : italy, learning

puglia and the search for “good” wine – castel di salve

By frank
Thursday, January 13th, 2011

francesco marra and winspeare

Francesco Winspeare (at right in the photo) believes that there is a great place to grow Australian wine. It’s called Australia. He also believes that Puglia – and, indeed, Italy – has more than enough wineries whose wines lack a track record, but not a mission statement.

Meeting Francesco
(both of them)

Southbound, once past the beautiful baroque city of Lecce, Puglia’s landscape becomes nearly flat with outcrops of palm trees sprouting from ferrous reddish soil. This flat part of mountainous Italy has put many travelers in mind of North Africa, Greece and of the Middle East. So quiet was the atmosphere and stark the terrain that it did seem appropriate that winery be located in the hamlet of Depressa, just 8 kilometers North of Capo Santa Maria di Leuca, the very tip of the heel.

In the center of the three-street village of Depressa is the Castel di Salve winery originally built in 1879 by the Winspeare family and restored in 1992.

I was kept waiting for my appointment as a meeting wrapped up between a handsome 40 year-old Italian with reddish brown hair dressed casually but well in an olive plaid sport-jacket and khaki pants speaking English with a distinct British accent, and a rotund, bald older Englishman nattily attired in an olive corduroy jacket and tan pleated pants, a loose ascot subbing for a tie. I exchanged pleasantries with the Oddbins’ agent for Italy and on his departure he introduced me to the Italian, Francesco Winspeare.

I was incorrect in assuming that Winspeare had bought a promising estate in the Mezzagiorno (Italy, South of Rome) or moved down from Chiantishire. Though Francesco went to university in London, the Winspeare family has lived and promulgated in Italy since ancestor Charles Winspeare arrived as part of the British consulate in Livorno in 1695.

And what a family it is. Succeeding Winspeares became Governor of Calabria, a General in the Army of the Russian Czar who battled Napoleon, and a famous jurist who after writing a treaty settling a dispute between the King of Italy and land barons in the South was made a baron himself. The exploits of Francesco Winspeare’s great-grandfather, Antonio (deceased 1918) ties us to the present. In recognition of his service to Garibaldi’s forces in the Risorgimento, Antonio was made Governor of the region of Puglia. He married a Princess of Puglia, from which union was inherited the land that became the Castel di Salve estate.

In addition to the fruits, vegetables and nuts extant on the property, vineyards were planted in 1867, the original winery built in 1879 and the first wines bottled in 1885. As the family was not pressed financially and themselves ate the produce of their own land extending nearly 100 hectares, the Winspeares developed a keen interest in agronomy. Francesco, in fact, has a degree in Agronomy acquired in Italy to accompany the one acquired in Business Administration in England.

When young Francesco succeeded his father as manager of their family farm in 1990, the great majority of Castel di Salve’s grapes were sold to large wineries and négociants. He became increasingly frustrated that his premium quality produce received the same price – or a mere fraction more – than the ordinary high yield crop of his neighbors. He shared his frustration with a neighboring farmer, Francesco Marra, his close friend “since we were 3 years old,” says Winspeare. Marra is a bit of an “international man” himself, having worked for a few years at a (plant, mostly trees) nursery in Miami after Agronomy school in Italy.

Together they teamed up as business partners to revitalize Castel di Salve as an estate bottler. Approximately half of the grapes come from Francesco Marra’s land (a few kilometers to the west) and half from Winspeare’s Castel di Salve estate.

Winspeare’s plot of land lies on the peninsula’s Adriatic side. It is composed of reddish ferrous soil with a high degree of sand. Cool breezes from the Adriatic preserve acidity in the grapes and freshness in the wines.

Across a smooth ridge no more than 100 meters altitude and running parallel to the peninsula lies Francesco Marra’s land. Here the soil turns more beige with a higher concentration of clay, a bit of limestone and far less sand. Grapes here have more tannin and provide wines of structure.

It is the norm for Winspeare and Marra to combine the grapes of the two vineyards according to the intended wine (cuveé). Forty-five of the winery’s potential 62 hectares of vineyard land are under vine. Marra and Winspeare have determined that production will not exceed 15,000 cases. Thus they have continued and will continue to sell grapes for cash flow and to assure that the best fruit remain in their hands.

They assure me, with a satisfied smile, that they exact a better deal for their fruit than did their fathers.

Categories : italy - points south, learning
Tags : italy, learning, our winegrowers

corzano e paterno

By frank
Sunday, May 6th, 2007

aljoscha goldschmidt

The farm “Corzano & Paterno” lies among the gently, undulating hills near San Casciano Val di Pesa, about 10 miles south of Florence. The property runs along the ancient Via Cassia and the River “Pesa” which separates Corzano’s vineyards from the “Classico” region of Chianti. “Corzano” is a family farm dedicated to the production of fine wine, olive oil and pure high quality sheep’s cheese.

In 1969 the Swiss architect Wendelin Gelpke, in love with Tuscany since his adolescence, went to see the farm that his friend, the Marchese Ippolito Niccolini of Florence, was forced to sell to satisfy the family’s many heirs. He bought “Corzano” on the proposition to revive the vineyards and restore the buildings without dividing the estate.

In 1976, the noble Rangoni-Machiavelli family sold the adjacent castle and medieval hunting lodge “Paterno” to Gelpke subject to the same conditions. The “Paterno” property provided the perfect site for Gelpke to introduce a herd of select Sardinian sheep.

Gelpke’s nephew, Aljoscha Goldschmidt, is the estate’s vineyard manager and oenologist. Corzano & Paterno’s red wines are Chianti Terre di Corzano composed of Sangiovese and Canaiolo grapes, the Chianti Riserva I Tre Borri (100% Sangiovese), and the Il Corzano a blend of Sangiovese and Cabernet Sauvignon. A little white, Il Corzanello is made from Trebbiano, Malvasia, and Chardonnay. Production from the 72 acres of vine is a scant 8 thousand cases per year.

Posted by Frank Splane

Categories : our winegrowers, tuscany
Tags : our winegrowers

london layover: a lesson in wine

By frank
Thursday, April 5th, 2007

neals yard dairy

A layover in London gave me an opportunity to visit a special shop to procure a few tasty gifts for my Italian hosts. Over the years, I’ve offered up vino Americano, pancake mix (there’s no equivalent in France or Italy), Vermont maple syrup, New York Yankees caps, and Ray Charles CDs.

It had been a while since I’d bought a wedge at Neal’s Yard Dairy in London, one of the planet’s finest cheese shops. I remember my initial visit to Neal’s. All I knew was that the place was a showcase for “farmhouse” British cheese, scrupulous in its conservation of goods, and synonymous with quality. I was not then – nor am I now – a card-carrying cheese connoisseur. I looked around Neal’s a bit, asked a few questions about some of the more recherché fromages, and made a selection of cheeses from Albion’s fields (albeit somewhat off the beaten goat-path).

The clerk had been as enthusiastic about the select Wensleydale and Caerphilly as about the Cheddar and Stilton. To cap off my visit, the Neal’s clerk suggested a farmhouse Cheddar made by an Ian Something-Jones in Somerset. The clerk’s appreciation of Ian’s work (accrued over a decade of visits to the small, country farm) was obvious.

I was informed that trusty Ian had delivered his most recent wondrous wheels of Cheddar only a fortnight past. As the clerk continued to sing the praises of Ian’s cheese, consistently fine, year in and year out, I reflected on my explanations as to why good wine can be made (by passionate folk) in “off” or “normal” years, and conversely, why disappointing wine is so widely available from much-heralded “good” or “great” years. The intrepid clerk pressed on, to my somewhat jet-lagged attention. I pictured contented cows munching away in bucolic English meadows. Are there “good years” for grass?

Speaking of philosophy, at this point one might note that Kirkegaard had only the match-up of herrings and aquavit to fret over

In the end, I did not find Ian’s Cheddar to be as “rich” or “creamy” as Camembert. Should it have been? Could this mean that Camembert is “better” or “more serious” than Cheddar…or vice-versa? Is “classic,” French, rich-cream-sauce cuisine “better” or more “serious” than Italian, olive-oil-based cucina? Is French “bistro fare” (say, Burgundian coq-au-vin) or a southern Italian red-sauce lasagna dish inherently unworthy of the culinary cogniscenti? Should I be concerned that I enjoy both Cheddar and Camembert, while my usual preference is for Chèvre or Parmigiano-Reggiano?

Such philosophical hand-wringing is as irrelevant to cheese as it is to wine. (Speaking of philosophy, at this point one might note that Kirkegaard had only the match-up of herrings and aquavit to fret over). Wine should be one of life’s pleasures, not a source of angst. Wine is no more – and no less – complicated than food. And enjoying wine or food is not a contest, nor should it be. Sicilian blood oranges are not in competition with Florida navels. So should we care if Marvin Shanken, Robert Parker, or Regis Philbin organizes an “International Squeeze-Off” declaring “Sun-Kist” victorious over “Palermo-Pride”?

Of course not! And it would never even occur to Neal’s Yard Dairy to suggest an International “Cheese-Off”! The rich varieties of cheese (and wine, along with other foods, for that matter) provide occasions of wondrous discovery. What initially seems bizarre may turn out to be a perfectly natural choice once it’s actually experienced through the senses. Until a few years ago, my Uncle Frankie Ciconte thought “kiwis” were a couple of guys he served with during WWII in the Philippines. Nowadays, this tasty New Zealand fruit is as familiar and welcome as any other. All of which goes to show: the broader the palette of flavors, the more the palate can savor.

And like Neal’s Yard Dairy in London, we at Moore Brothers stand proudly behind all of our selections. (Fortunately, we are not required to stand behind the Limburger.)

Posted by Frank Splane

Categories : food with wine, learning
Tags : food with wine, learning
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