Wine Style Experiment Offers Palate Redemption
January 20, 2011 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, Wine Tastings, Wine Values, WineZag
Raging self doubt and curiosity fuels an unremitting panoply of cross examinations intended to dig up the root cause of my shifting preference in wine style. Have I fallen victim to trend and popular fashion? Is my palate simply evolving? Or, have I discovered regions and varietals I once dismissed without fair chance? Did I subconsciously succumb to a new breed [...]
Authentic Wines Advance Palate and Stir Soulful Wine Appreciation
October 5, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, WineZag
I repeatedly ponder two questions about wine appreciation. First, I query myself about my evolving preferences, wondering if my shift to more authentic old world wine is palate driven or trend inflicted. Secondly, I ask myself how so many practical people get so wrapped in wine minutia, devoting large chunks of their waking time studying, tasting, [...]
Wine-Searcher.com Turns Joys of Wine Shopping into Risky Anonymity
August 10, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, Wine Marketing/Selling, Wine Retailing, WineZag
If wine-searcher.com has its way, their claim and grip on wine market transparency will replace the joyful pleasures of physical wine browsing and shopping. Wine enthusiasts will be relegated to replaying memories of crouching dusty floors and scavenging Sam’s (Chicago wino history) original North Avenue location’s end bins for discoveries and deals. No longer will [...]
Connecting Intellectual and Palate Learning: Tasting Two Sakes and California Cabernet
July 28, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Restaurants, Sake, Wine Geeks, Wine Tastings, Winery, WineZag
An insatiable hunger for discovery and wine education is rewarded every time I taste wines in peer groups. Without the chance to examine lots of wines every day over an extended period, even frequent tastings of one wine per sitting lays down hurdles to thorough assessment most easily cleared via contextual, side-by-side tastings. The most [...]
Uncovering Boston BYOB and Wine Berserkers
June 13, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, WineZag
Late edit and FYI: Disappointingly, Mark Squires unfriended me on Facebook minutes after publishing this post here and sharing the link on Facebook. To Mark Squires: Sorry if you were offended by anything I have mentioned here, it was not my intention. Please refriend me on Facebook, I enjoy the information you share there. Open [...]
Zalto: Wine Glasses for the Cosmic Connoisseur
Somewhere in between making wine and storing wine, service plays THE crucial supporting role in a wine’s performance. Mistakes in temperature, aeration, and glassware can foul things up as easily as contaminated or cooked cork can. Conversely, it is not secret that great glassware can pump up a tasting experience like sluggers on steroids. That [...]
Bottle Age Challenge: 1985 Lynch Bages vs. 1985 Chateau Montelena
March 13, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, Wine Tastings, WineZag
I opened two $20 wines, one from Napa Valley and one from Bordeaux’s Paulliac appellation, for a few remaining tasters hanging around after our challenging 2007 Southern Rhone tasting. Don’t let the retail values throw you; price tags are acquisition costs for the 1985 Chateau Montelena Cabernet Sauvignon and the 1985 Lynch Bages that I [...]
Open Offer to Taste My (Malcolm's) 1982 Vieux Chateau Certan
February 4, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, Wine Reviews
I consider myself “wine fortunate”, acquiring wine and friends over the years that fuel hedonistic and intellectual wine passions. One of those friends is Malcolm. I don’t see Malcolm regularly, yet each year for the last 15 we manage to find opportunities to get really silly and drink ridiculously excellent wine together. It was great to see [...]
Putting Simple Wines to Tests of Age and Environment
January 23, 2010 by adamjapko
Filed under Featured, Wine Geeks, Wine Values, WineZag
Ever wonder what would happen subjecting simple wines, intended for immediate drinking pleasure, to extended aging terms in unsuitable environments? It’s a risky wager and not a fully recommended strategy, even with careful wine selection and pristine cellaring conditions. While vinous curiosity has driven some oddball aging decisions in the hopes of padding my stash with more bottles showing advanced flavor and aroma nuances, (you can read more about when wine is ready to drink in this post at Palate [...]
A Case for Avoiding the Wine Rating Mousetrap
November 22, 2009 by adamjapko
Filed under Wine Business, Wine Geeks, Wine Industry, Wine Marketing/Selling, Wine Media, Wine Research, Wine Reviews, Wine Tastings, WineZag
Leave it up to an expert on randomness and a statistician turned winemaker to make an astonishing case that wine ratings are inconsistent and unreliable. The debate on ratings value has been legitimately extended by a couple of primary and secondary research studies presented by Robert Hodgson in the Journal of Wine Economics. Hodgson’s work and conversations with a few high profile wine critics [...]





