Layout Image
  • shop in new jersey |
  • shop in delaware |
  • shop in new york |
  • directions to 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 tasting notes

meursault clos de mouches rouge domaine henri germain

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

This fine Meursault domaine was established in 1973 when Henri Germain, brother of François Germain of the Château de Chorey-les Beaune, set up on his own. The Clos des Mouches is a monopole of the estate, and a relatively new wine for the Germain estate. This half-hectare parcel is located between the village and the well-known premier cru Santenots, which borders on Volnay. The fruit of this vineyard provides a wine which is supple, with rich red raspberry and earth flavors, and concentration that comes from the low yielding 50 year-old Pinot Noir vines. The racy textures and aromatics of this wine are enhanced (but not masked by) a perfect balance of old and new barrels.

region

Regional History
Viticulture in Burgundy was well established by the second century AD, and likely predates the arrival of the Romans. By the late Middle Ages, the influence of the monastic orders had organized wine growing in Burgundy as nowhere else in Europe. It was the monks who recognized that certain individual vineyards consistently produced distinctive wine.

Land reform came with the French Revolution, and the Code Napoléon abolished primogeniture, establishing that all inherited property be shared equally among siblings. As a result, the ownership of many of the finest vineyards is fragmented, with some growers owning just a few vines in many different vineyard sites.

Until the 1930s, most fine Burgundy was bottled by négociants, who buy grapes or wine from the growers and market it under their own “brand.” Today, with few exceptions, the finest wines of Burgundy are all estate-bottled: that is, sold by the farmers who grow the grapes. Halfway between Beaune and Santenay, Meursault is a prosperous, attractive village comprised mostly of vineyards.

Regional Foods
Burgundian cuisine is relatively uncomplicated; it relies on the high-quality ingredients that adorn the countryside. These include naturally raised chickens from Bresse, beef from Charolais cattle, and game and fish from nearby forests and streams. Wine, of course, is used for making sauces a la bourguignon, usually with onion, mushrooms and lardoons (salt pork). Boeuf Bourguignon and Coq a Vin follow this pattern. In contrast, sauces without mushrooms are called Meurette and are flambéed with marc (eau-de-vie made from grape must). Meurette sauces are excellent with fish, eggs, and poultry. Escargots are raised nearly everywhere in Burgundy and usually prepared in a slow braise, then stuffed with garlic and parsley butter. Other specialties include parsley-flavored ham from the Morvan hills and white-wine-poached fish finished with lardoons. Epoisse, Citeaux and Aisy Cendre are the best-known cow’s milk cheeses and Charolais the best-known goat’s milk cheese.

© 2007 Moore Brothers Wine Company

Categories : burgundy, learning, tasting notes
Tags : burgundy, learning, tasting notes

meursault perrieres domaine henri germain

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

henri-germain-meursault-perrieres

Henri Germain farms small parcels in Beaune, Chassagne-Montrachet, and Meursault, with holdings in the Premiers Crus of Bressandes, Morgeots, Perrières, and Charmes. The Perrières holding is farmed for low, healthy yields of ripe Chardonnay. The classic nutty and honeyed aromatics are enhanced, but not masked by a perfect balance of old and new barrels.

region

Regional History
Viticulture in Burgundy was well established by the second century AD, and likely predates the arrival of the Romans.

By the late Middle Ages, the influence of the monastic orders had organized wine growing in Burgundy as nowhere else in Europe. It was the monks who recognized that certain individual vineyards consistently produced distinctive wine.

Land reform came with the French Revolution, and the Code Napoléon abolished primogeniture, establishing that all inherited property be shared equally among siblings. As a result, the ownership of many of the finest vineyards is fragmented, with some growers owning just a few vines in many different vineyard sites.

Until the 1930s, most fine Burgundy was bottled by négociants, who buy grapes or wine from the growers and market it under their own “brand.” Today, with few exceptions, the finest wines of Burgundy are all estate-bottled: that is, sold by the farmers who grow the grapes. Halfway between Beaune and Santenay, Meursault is a prosperous, attractive village comprised mostly of vineyards.

Regional Foods
Burgundian cuisine is relatively uncomplicated; it relies on the high-quality ingredients that adorn the countryside. These include naturally raised chickens from Bresse, beef from Charolais cattle, and game and fish from nearby forests and streams.

Wine, of course, is used for making sauces à la bourguignon, usually with onion, mushrooms and lardoons (salt pork). Boeuf Bourguignon and Coq a Vin follow this pattern.

In contrast, sauces without mushrooms are called Meurette and are flambéed with marc (eau-de-vie made from grape must). Meurette sauces are excellent with fish, eggs, and poultry.

Escargots are raised nearly everywhere in Burgundy and usually prepared in a slow braise, then stuffed with garlic and parsley butter. Other specialties include parsley-flavored ham from the Morvan hills and white-wine-poached fish finished with lardoons.

Epoisse, Citeaux and Aisy Cendre are the best-known cow’s milk cheeses and Charolais the best-known goat’s milk cheese.

© 2007 Moore Brothers Wine Company

Categories : burgundy, tasting notes
Tags : burgundy, learning, tasting notes

montepulciano d’abruzzo fonte cupa camillo montori

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

montepulciano montori fonte cupa rosso

Camillo Montori’s appreciation of the history and traditions of Abruzzo is apparent in everything he does. His winery houses a museum dedicated to agricultural and winemaking equipment from the southern Adriatic, and he is helping to restore a 17th century monastery-shuttered and forgotten for decades-in his hometown of Controguerra.

Camillo’s Fonte Cupa is composed of selected parcels of old-vine fruit that give the wine a natural, earthy intensity.

Aged for twelve to fifteen months in botte (large, neutral oak barrels), the wine shows rich, smoky fruit balanced by silky tannins. It is a beautiful pairing with grilled lamb sausages or roasted game.

region

Regional History
Abruzzo was originally inhabited by the pre-Indo-European culture of the Piceni and subsequently by various Italic tribes.

Known in ancient times as Samnium, the name was changed by the Emperor Frederick in the 12th century to Listitieratu Aprutii and made part of the Kingdom of Southern Italy. It remained an indistinct part of the Southern kingdom (though under the rule of Spain, Austria and, finally, France) until 1860, when Garibaldi united modern Italy.

Although Abruzzo is known for high-production industrial winemaking, modern small estates have been established that celebrate the cultural and agricultural traditions of the region.

Regional Foods
Abruzzo and Molise have always been considered one region, culturally and gastronomically. Two distinct cuisines have evolved: a coastal tradition based on fish and olive oil and an inland tradition based on pork and sheep.

Porchetta (suckling pig), Prosciutto d’Aquila (similar to Serrano Ham) and ventricina (a sausage made with the stomach of the pig flavored with chili pepper, wild fennel and orange) are especially popular.

Lamb is roasted or prepared a catturo – in a traditional copper pot, with basil, onion, sage and chili pepper – and abbacchio, freshly weaned young lamb, is a prized delicacy.

Shellfish, anchovies, octopus, mullet and cuttlefish are served ai ferri (grilled over olive wood) or al vapore (steamed and drizzled with olive oil).

Pasta, based on the hard durum wheat of Chiettti, has cemented Abruzzo’s culinary reputation. Pasta all’arrabiata (fresh tomatoes and the local hot pepper know as diavalicchio), all’amatriciana (fresh tomatoes and the local pancetta), and alla carbonara (egg and pancetta) are all staples of Abruzzese culinary tradition.

© Moore Brothers Wine Company

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

mâcon-villages domaine corsin

By David Moore
Thursday, January 20th, 2011

domaine corsin macon villages

As the pre-eminent cellarmaster in southern Burgundy, Gilles Corsin’s obsession with winemaking drives him to brilliance in the cellar – even as he seems never to be perfectly content with his wines. His brother Jean-Jacques’ vineyard work is equally meticulous, and the resulting wines are among the finest Chardonnays produced in the Mâconnais. This is the “little” wine, from the domaine's holdings in Pouilly-Fuissé, Saint-Véran, and Davayé blended together, and steel-fermented.

region

Regional History
Viticulture in Burgundy was well established by the second century AD, and likely predates the arrival of the Romans. By the late Middle Ages, the influence of the monastic orders had organized wine growing in Burgundy as nowhere else in Europe. It was the monks who recognized that certain individual vineyards consistently produced distinctive wine. Land reform came with the French Revolution, and the Code Napoléon abolished primogeniture, establishing that all inherited property be shared equally among siblings. As a result, the ownership of many of the finest vineyards is fragmented, with some growers owning just a few vines in many different vineyard sites. Until the 1930s, most fine Burgundy was bottled by négociants, who buy grapes or wine from the growers and market it under their own “brand.” Today, with few exceptions, the finest wines of Burgundy are all estate-bottled: that is, sold by the farmers who grow the grapes. The AOC Mâcon-Villages covers over 40 towns in southern Burgundy. The grapes for this wine come from three of these villages; Fuissé, St. Veran and Davayé.

Regional Foods
Burgundian cuisine is relatively uncomplicated; it relies on the high-quality ingredients that adorn the countryside. These include naturally raised chickens from Bresse, beef from Charolais cattle, and game and fish from nearby forests and streams. Wine, of course, is used for making sauces a la bourguignon, usually with onion, mushrooms and lardoons (salt pork). Boeuf Bourguignon and Coq a Vin follow this pattern. In contrast, sauces without mushrooms are called Meurette and are flambéed with marc (eau-de-vie made from grape must). Meurette sauces are excellent with fish, eggs, and poultry. Escargots are raised nearly everywhere in Burgundy and usually prepared in a slow braise, then stuffed with garlic and parsley butter. Other specialties include parsley-flavored ham from the Morvan hills and white-wine-poached fish finished with lardoons. Epoisse, Citeaux and Aisy Cendre are the best-known cow’s milk cheeses and Charolais the best-known goat’s milk cheese.

Posted by David Moore

Categories : burgundy, tasting notes
Tags : burgundy, learning, tasting notes

bardolino corte gardoni

By David Moore
Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

corte-gardoni-bardolino

West of Verona on Lago di Garda in the Veneto region of Italy, Bardolino is both a charming village and a fragrant red wine. A blend of Corvina and Rondinella, this is a polished, beautifully scented and silky wine with pure red-berry flavors and a mildly spicy finish.

Like other agricultural communities where the cuisine is complex and varied, Bardolino has evolved into a versatile, food-friendly wine.

region

Regional History
The ancients believed Venetians were directly descended from the survivors of the Fall of Troy. Like the Trojans, they were tremendous artisans, and their agricultural ability was particularly admired. More likely, the Venetians came from the vast diaspora of peoples out of the Carpathian Mountains around 1500 BC.

It was homage to these people that prompted the Romans to name the Tenth Imperial Region after them: the Veneti. Pliny, Virgil, Suetonius and Martial all refer to Reticum and Acinaticum, the direct ancestors of modern Veronese wine.

Directly west of the city of Verona, on the southeastern shore of Lake Garda are Bardolino and Bianco di Custoza. The poor quality of the soil, composed mainly of gravel, clay sand deposited by melting ice at the end of the last glacial period, is the unique microclimate that is responsible for the fragrance and charm of these wines.

Regional Foods
Veneto touches the Adriatic Sea at Venice and runs north through the Dolomites to the Austrian border. Its southern and western limits are the large alluvial plain formed by the Garda basin and the valley north of the Po River.

This tremendous variety of landscape has provided Veneto with an equally varied cuisine: seafood from both Lake Garda and the Adriatic; game, mushrooms and mountain herbs from the Dolomites; the best vegetables of Northeastern Italy – as well as its two staples, corn and rice – come from the Po Valley.

Polenta was introduced in the 17th century and was prepared in much the same way as other grain flours that preceded it. It can be plain, grilled or fried and paired with meats, game and fish.

Rice, introduced by the Venetian traders as early as 1400, is the inspiration for as many as forty different risottos. Rice is also prepared with fish and vegetables. One of the fonder pairings of rice and vegetables is Risi e Bisi, or rice and fresh young peas.

© Moore Brothers Wine Company

Categories : tasting notes, veneto/alto-adige/etc...
Tags : italy, learning, tasting notes, veneto
Next Page »
Moore Brothers Wine Company
Copyright © 2012 All Rights Reserved