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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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Archive for our winegrowers – Page 3

laurent combier

By David Moore
Saturday, January 15th, 2011

laurent combier

Laurent Combier’s grandparents were fruit farmers in the Ardeche, the rugged department to the west of the northern Rhône. In the 1930′s, they moved to La Roche du Glun, a hamlet that sits on an island between the left and right banks of the Rhône near Tain L’Hermitage. The family took over 15 acres, 10 of which were planted to vines in the walled-in plot called Clos des Grives.

For over thirty-five years, the vineyards of the Domaine Combier have been farmed organically. When Laurent Combier took over from his father, the Crozes-Hermitage appellation was relatively unknown with a mixed reputation. Learning how to maximize ripeness in the impeccably farmed vineyards and modernizing the winery were Laurent’s first concerns.

The sandy, gravelly soil provides a perfect home for the old Syrah vines (some of which are over a century-old), and Laurent has been proving the worth of the appellation by producing subtle, polished wines unusual for a region dominated by co-operatives and négociants trading on the “Hermitage” name.

Posted by David Moore

Categories : learning, our winegrowers, rhône
Tags : learning, our winegrowers

grand cru sancerre…

By greg
Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Chene Marchand Label

Sancerre “Chêne Marchand” Domaine du Carrou
When the famous taster Pierre Bréjoux headed the I.N.A.O (the governing body that regulates wine in France), he observed that while tasting the greatest wines of Sancerre, “…one would like to have a throat as long as a swan’s neck.” His I.N.A.O never classified the vineyards of Sancerre, but if that ever happens, the chalky, sloping Chêne Marchand in the hamlet of Bué will be at the top of the list of its Grands Crus.

Dominique Roger has 0.37 hectares of forty year-old vines in Chêne Marchand, the crown jewel of his Domaine du Carrou. In most years, this tiny parcel yields fewer than 200 cases of round, elegant Sancerre.

dominique roger in sancerreDominique Roger:
If you visit Dominique Roger (photo) at his Domaine du Carrou in Bué, don’t expect to spend a leisurely time indoors tasting the latest vintage and hearing all about the new Vaslin press or the Tronçais barrels from a famous cooper in Burgundy. Dominique Roger won’t try to impress you with his tools. But if you can keep up with him on a brisk climb through his immaculate, steep vineyards, you’ll learn a lot more about wine, and maybe find that you suddenly care a lot more about who grows it and where it comes from than you ever did before.

This wine:
This citrine-yellow wine has delicate nectarine, white peach and pink grapefruit in the nose, along with a suggestion of cassis and walnut, which on the palate turns to pistachio. There is fine minerality in harmonious balance with what Klaus Peter Keller calls “inner density” and lively acidity. This is sublimely elegant Sancerre.

As always at Moore Brothers, this elegant Sancerre was shipped and delivered to us in refrigerated containers, so it tastes exactly the same as it tasted at Dominique’s home in Bué, when I drank it with the tiny goujons, gardons, and eperlans, – fresh from the Loire, that Danielle Roger dipped in milk and seasoned flour, then fried and served in heaping mounds on large heated plates.

I thank you again for your continued support of sustainable viticulture, and the stewardship of these special traditions.

Greg Moore

Categories : food with wine, learning, loire, our winegrowers
Tags : learning, loire, our winegrowers

“chablis premier cru…” von rheinhessen?

By greg
Saturday, January 15th, 2011

weingut keller gruner silvaner

Grüner Silvaner trocken Weingut Keller
…from where? Here’s another sleeper that I hope you try: one of the purest, most detailed expressions of a marly limestone vineyard that you will ever taste outside of Chablis.

If you have ever enjoyed a fine, unoaked Chablis Premier Cru, you don’t need to ask if you’ll like this classic Grüner Silvaner – at one third the price: a flinty, precise, and harmonious dry wine from Klaus-Peter Keller, who is by most accounts the greatest producer in Germany.

The grower:
When Klaus-Peter and his wife Julia took over at Weingut Keller in 2001, they had an enviable advantage: his parents Klaus and Hedwig Keller had laid a solid foundation for their future with their work in soil analysis and clonal selection, and their estate was already known as the best producer in Rheinhessen. But Klaus-Peter has taken Weingut Keller to even greater heights. In 2002 he received the International Award at VinItaly, and in 2003 was named “Winemaker of the Decade” by Gault Millau.

Of course, the king of grapes here is Riesling, and today, the single most sought-after (and expensive) cult wine in Germany is Keller’s dry “Riesling G-Max.” But Silvaner has a 350-year history in Rheinhessen, and Klaus-Peter believes that it sometimes is Riesling’s equal at expressing terroir, especially in these marly, clay limestone vineyards near his home in Flörsheim-Dalsheim.

This wine:
This Grüner Silvaner has a deep and attractive nose, with green apple, grapefruit zest, chalky minerality, and clean hay that reminds me of unoaked Chablis. On the palate the wine is medium-bodied, stony and crisp, with a refreshing combination of purity, intensity and transparency. The finish is long, with plenty of fresh acidity, depth, and cut. “Das ist mein Lieblingswein,” Klaus-Peter’s grandfather told me. “My favorite wine. I drink a bottle every day.”

And as always at Moore Brothers, this small-farm gem was shipped and delivered to us in refrigerated containers. It has evolved beautifully over the past several months, but remains as fresh and compelling as when I tasted it at lunch with Klaus-Peter and Julia, at their home last April.

I thank you for your continued support of the extraordinary people who grow fine, traditional artisan wine.

Greg Moore

Categories : germany, our winegrowers, tasting notes
Tags : learning, our winegrowers, tasting notes

weingut keller

By greg
Thursday, January 13th, 2011

Klaus Peter Keller tasting his wine in our New York store.

Klaus Peter Keller tasting his wine in our New York store.

In 2003, Gault Millau’s WeinGuide Deutschland (the “Bible” of German wine in Europe) – also known among some German wine geeks in the export market as the “Armin Diel Book” – presented Klaus Keller with an unprecedented award naming him “Winemaker of the Decade.”

Editor Armin Diel wrote: “no other estate in Germany can boast such an impressive record of high quality wine collections over the last ten years.”

For many it’s hard to believe that a winery located in the backwoods of the Rheinhessen, which is best known for Liebfraumilch and bulk wine production, should be listed among the finest producers in Germany. The 2002 VinItaly International Award and the Gault Millau award recognize that Weingut Keller in Flörsheim-Dalsheim is one of the finest wine producers in the world.

Moore Brothers Wine Company is the only store in the United State that can guarantee that the “Keller” wines you’re looking for are in pristine condition – we buy directly through our own, proprietary temperature controlled channel. This is true nowhere else. If you’re looking for the “real McCoy,” come see us.

Posted by Greg Moore

Categories : germany, our winegrowers
Tags : germany, our winegrowers, riesling

singing sauvignon…

By greg
Thursday, January 13th, 2011

domaine de la potine

Touraine Sauvignon Domaine de la Potine Vincent Ricard
Oh my, I do live a charmed life, and I’m grateful for it. But I don’t always pay as much attention as I should. Just ask Sue.

So for the days when I can’t remember what she told me she’d planned for dinner, I keep a few bottles of what I call “really adaptable” wines in the fridge. There’s usually a clean Provence rosé or a fresh Barbera available; and a dry Riesling, of course; but I always try to have a Loire Valley Sauvignon Blanc on hand. There is nothing quite as versatile. It happens that this amazing wine was there last night, just when I needed it to accompany a filet of hake roasted with a mustard and yogurt sauce.

Wow. I thought I knew my friend Vincent Ricard’s Domaine de la Potine inside and out, but this bottle was singing.

This is startling, terrifically concentrated wine, with aromatic complexity and minerality not found in Pouilly-Fumés at three times the price.

Vincent Ricard:
When he took over the family estate in 1998, Vincent Ricard immediately quit the Oisly-Thésée Cave Cooperative, which had been founded by his grandfather, and began estate-bottling the wines. He never looked back, and is now one of the Loire Valley’s most admired young producers.

The Domaine de la Potine comes from a 2-hectare parcel of Sauvignon Blanc planted on a gentle slope of sandy clay-limestone that looks over the river Cher. The farming is organic, incorporating practices taken from the discipline of  biodynamics,  which Vincent encountered during a brief stage with François Chidaine in Montlouis. The wine ferments in stainless steel cuves, and is bottled in late winter.

This Wine:
This hand crafted, organically grown Sauvignon Blanc has a limpid delicate yellow color with flashes of pale green. Grapefruit, lemon zest, boxwood, and fresh herbs dominate the nose, with Asian pear, bitter honey, and ripe black currant on the palate. A long, persistent finish. This is especially good with fresh goats cheeses, but the wine is very adaptable (I like it with red-sauced pasta).

As always at Moore Brothers, this wine was shipped and delivered to us in refrigerated containers. You won’t find it in better condition, even if you drink it at Le Bon Laboureur in Chenonceaux, one of the best restaurants in Touraine, only a few kilometers from the winery.

I thank you again for your continued support of small-farm viticulture.

Greg Moore

Categories : food with wine, learning, loire, our winegrowers, tasting notes
Tags : learning, loire, our winegrowers, tasting notes
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