Layout Image
  • shop in new jersey |
  • shop in delaware |
  • shop in new york |
  • directions to our stores |
  • videos |
  • byob |
  • search |
  • employment |
  • contact us

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!

Make sure you get email from Moore Brothers - don't miss out!
To see what's current (or what you missed!),
click here.

Share

stories

  • byob
  • food with wine
  • france
  • germany
  • italy
  • learning
  • spain

Archive for tuscany

more on the brunello “scandal”

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

fake brunello scandal in brunello

The recent scandal in Brunello is still simmering, and now our “esteemed American wine ‘journalists’” find themselves having to explain why they couldn’t spot the frauds when they were busy “rating” the latest (suspect) releases.

Seems the suspected fraudulent Brunellos were those “rated most highly” by these nimnods, and now, rather than face the music for not knowing their behinds from holes in the ground, these idiots want to blame Sangiovese for not being “noble enough” on its own to achieve the coveted 90+ points that the “journalists” bestowed on the fakes.

This is not only hubris, this is scandalous in itself. To Mr. Suckling (and the others), I have this to say: “STOP WRITING ABOUT WINE AS IF IT WERE SOMETHING YOU HAVE KNOWLEDGE OF.”

The reason DOC and Appellation laws exist in Europe is because everyone knows that the manufacturers of large-production, “food-processed wine” and their distributors are prone to fudge the facts – after all, there’s money to be made.

Just like the old days when Bordeaux was (literally) the “new kid on the block” and pumped up much of its wine with Madiran and Cahors from further south, and when the négociants of Burgundy pumped up their Pinot with Syrah and Grenache from the Rhône, the addition of Cabernet and Merlot (both much easier to farm, and quicker to ripen than Sangiovese) to Brunello is FRAUD. It is unconscionable that these “journalists” who write about Italian wine without knowing anything about it would blame the “Real McCoy” for being what it’s supposed to be, rather than admit being wrong.

Further, their response will likely lead to a “changing of the rules” to allow for what is now considered fraud.

So Brunello in the future will likely taste like Napa Cab, thanks to these bozos, and Brunello will stop being the unique expression of a place and a culture. Just what we need, another anonymous, expensive red wine.

Posted by David Moore

Categories : dave's soapbox, industrial wine, tuscany
Tags : learning, tuscany

brunello scandals

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

brunello di montalcino

Thanks to customer, Isaac Rivera for pointing out this little report of fake Brunello (no, really?) that’s making some waves in Italy

Seems some famous, “top” producers of Italy’s storied, famous, and most expensive wine have been “juicing up” the wines for the “American market.” I find this particularly amusing since apparently the “experts” in our “wine press” have happily continued to “rate” the fraudulent wines positively, and have no clue that the wines are, in fact, fake.

This just brings up yet another example of self-proclaimed, self-aggrandizing “experts,” who have no real “knowledge” to impart, just repeating pablum so that they can be “plugged into” the wine “scene.”

It’s also, yet another example of how luxury has lost its luster. So much “wine” that’s marketed to us is bulls**t, fake junk, trading on the name of a place that was once special.

My “expert” advice is as follows:
Don’t buy anything without knowing the “provenance.”
Whether it’s wine, olive oil, or food, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to rely on the marketing budgets of multi-national, publicly-trade corporations to provide us with truthful information.

Posted by David Moore

Categories : industrial wine, learning, tuscany
Tags : learning, tuscany

chianti classico isole e olena

By David Moore
Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

isole e olena chianti

At the heart of Paolo de Marchi’s wine-making philosophy is his sense of what is typically Tuscan. Amid the over-extracted, cabernet-influenced wines produced in Tuscany today, Paolo’s elegant renditions of Chianti quietly exalt the beauty of Sangiovese.

Supple, well balanced, and perfumed in every vintage, they have become an illustration for younger producers of what pristine agriculture, high-density vineyards and meticulous fermentation can achieve. Fennel, and porcini-infused earth form the backdrop for fine, black cherry fruit, while silky tannins and mouth-watering fruit acids allow Paolo’s wines to linger gracefully on the palate. Roasted sausage and Sugo di Coniglio are natural accompaniments.

Regional History

Chianti Classico map

Tuscany’s influence on viticulture has been profound and indelible. Etruscan artifacts and the fossilized remains of indigenous vinifera rootstock indicate an advanced wine culture as far back as 800 BC. Their methods profoundly influenced the Romans, whose tenacity spread them throughout most of the Mediterranean and as far north as the Rhine. Rome’s penchant for agricultural inventiveness refined the Etruscan techniques (mostly how vines were best pruned and trained) and set the stage for succeeding developments in the wine trade.

The Rinaiscimento brought to prominence many of the noble Tuscan families: Antinori, Ricasoli, and Ruffino became symbols of Tuscany’s political and economic importance and were responsible in good part for the expansion of trade and increased respect for Florence’s wines.

References to Chianti as a “wine from a particular place” appear in the trading documents of Francesco Datini in the fourteenth century, but its present boundaries were not defined until Cosimo III, Grand Duke of Tuscany, issued an edict in 1716. The same boundaries still define Chianti “Classico” today.

Regional Foods

Tuscany is perhaps the quintessential Italian landscape. Its gentle, rolling hills are graced with fields of sunflowers, grapevines, and olive orchards. The region’s beautiful hill towns still mesmerize travelers with the promise of an extraordinary meal.

The Chianina cattle, (used in the famous bistecca alla Fiorentina ), chickens known as Livornesi, rabbit, wild boar, pigeon and woodcock are all raised or farmed in the region. But olive oil is what makes Tuscan food so unmistakably Tuscan. Rather than a dressing, the oil is the basis for nearly every dish. Food is sautée and fried in it, soups are finished benedette – given a last-minute benediction by spooning oil into them – and every vegetable is made tastier with a couple of tablespoons of local olive oil.

© 2011 Moore Brothers Wine Company

Categories : tasting notes, tuscany
Tags : tasting notes

know your place

By patmcnally
Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Whenever two seemingly identical bottles (usually two bottlings made from the same grape(s) are on the “rack” at the same time, I’m often asked, “What is the difference between these two wines?”

Beyond offering descriptions of the flavors, scents and textures in our wines – with and without food – there are a litany of other factors that can contribute to the differences between two bottles sitting next to each other on our racks. (And unless you indicate to me that you’re already 15 minutes late for your dinner reservation, or the kids are out in the car with the windows rolled up, I will do my very best to elucidate those things for you)

A major factor in wine, and a word you will hear often at Moore Brothers, is “place”. (‘Our wines have a sense of place,’ and ‘Barolo is a place’).

Having recently traveled to Tuscany and Piemonte in Italy, the importance of “place” became glaringly apparent. The climate, the scents, the surrounding environs, the altitude – all there, washing over you, all contributing to that sense of “place”. But again, what makes those two bottles of wine from the same producer, of the same grape, seemingly from the same place, different?

On a drive after our morning visit with Sergio Germano in Serralunga D’Alba in Piemonte’s Barolo zone, and a brief stop for lunch on our way to visit Gianluca Grasso in Monforte, I saw it: a large part of the answer, in all it’s stark, chalky glory. I pulled the car over, as Sue (I think we’re all married to a Sue at Moore Brothers) sat wondering what kind of goof she’d married. Who would stop to take a picture of a hill of dirt, amongst all the other natural beauty of Piemonte.

In this picture of a vineyard site, that has been ripped up for replanting, you see varying soil compositions that yield very different characteristics from the same grapes, grown side by side, row by row, all in the same “place”.
barolo vineyard replanting

As Paolo DeMarchi (of Isole e Olena in Tuscany), so eloquently states, wine is made in the vineyards. Accordingly, a talented producer will recognize these variations in his/her land and can produce wines that are perceptibly different from what most people would consider the same “place”.

(Also, see François Barmès in the little “What is Wine?” video for more on this subject- DM)

As if the sight of this hill was not enough of a visual explanation, ironically the point was further clarified in the tasting room of Paitin the next morning in Barbaresco.


In this photo, you can see they offer visitors a look at samples of their various soils, in large jars, right alongside the bottles of wine produced from their respective vineyard sites.
paitin-pesquera-elia-barbaresco

Here, you can see and taste the “place” all at the same time. What a great way to learn!

Posted by Pat McNally


Categories : learning, piemonte, travels, tuscany
Tags : learning, piemonte

rosso di montalcino maurizio lambardi

By David Moore
Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Lambardi Rosso di Montalcino

Vibrant, explosively fruity Sangiovese Grosso from the prestigious hamlet of Montalcino, in southern Tuscany. Maurizio Lambardi farms this 10-acre estate, located in the subdistrict of Canalicchio, and has offered excellent wines year in year out. This vintage’s rendition of this new Tuscan classic, is no exception.

The wine is harmonious and well-balanced, with generous fruit and fine tannins, ideal for medium fare like fresh pasta with hare ragout or white meats.

region

Regional History
Tuscany’s influence on viticulture has been profound and indelible. Etruscan artifacts and the fossilized remains of indigenous vinifera rootstock indicate an advanced wine culture as far back as 800 BC. Their methods profoundly influenced the Romans, whose tenacity spread them throughout most of the Mediterranean and as far north as the Rhine Valley.

Rome’s penchant for agricultural inventiveness refined the Etruscan techniques (mostly how vines were best pruned and trained) and set the stage for succeeding developments in the wine trade.

The Rinaiscimento brought to prominence many of the noble Tuscan families. Antinori, Ricasoli, and Ruffino became symbols of Tuscany’s political and economic importance and were responsible in good part for the expansion of trade and increased respect for Florence’s wines – known colloquially as Vermiglio.

Ironically, early references to the wines of Monte Lucini and Monte Alcino are to white wines. Little is mentioned of red until well into the Nineteenth Century when Ferruccio Biondi-Santi began his great experiments on an obscure sub-variety of Sangiovese – called Brunello for its dark, dusky color.

Ferruccio, a veteran of the Risorgimento (he fought with Garibaldi at Bezzecca), took his grandfather Clementi’s work with this new clone at IL Greppo, reduced the normal yields, fermented it without governo, and aged it in large Slovenian oak barrels. He is still credited with creating the first modern Tuscan red.

Rosso di Montalcino is produced frpm the same Sangiovese clone (the brunello), but yields may be higher, and there is no requirement of barrel aging. The wines are generally much more forward in their youth than Brunello.

Regional Foods
Tuscany is perhaps the quintessential Italian landscape. Its gentle, rolling hills are graced with fields of sunflowers, grapevines, and olive orchards. The region’s beautiful hill towns still mesmerize travelers with the promise of an extraordinary meal.

The best beef in Italy, Chianina, is farmed in the Chiani River Valley west of Brunello. There is also excellent chicken known as Livornesi, as well as rabbit, wild boar, pigeon and woodcock.

But olive oil is what makes Tuscan food so unmistakably Tuscan. Rather than a dressing, the oil is the basis for nearly every dish. Food is sauté and fried in it, soups are finished benedette – given a last-minute benediction by spooning oil into them – and every vegetable is made tastier with a couple of tablespoons of local olive oil.

© 2007 Moore Brothers Wine Company

Categories : learning, tasting notes, tuscany
Tags : learning, tasting notes, tuscany
Next Page »
Moore Brothers Wine Company
Copyright © 2012 All Rights Reserved