Monday, February 24, 2025
What's In Your Glass? Here Are A Trio Of Our Recent Wine Pours
Monday, February 10, 2025
Add Spice To Your Valentines Day With This Trio Of Wines
These three Portuguese wines from Silk & Spice are just what you need to make your Valentine’s Day one to remember.
We first discovered Silk & Spice wines four years ago, tasting the 2018 vintage of their original red wine. Today it is the best-selling red Portuguese blend in the US. The wine made such an impression that when we learned three new wines were available, we jumped at the chance to taste them.
Silk & Spice wines are perfect
for Valentine's Day.
Silk & Spice is a tribute to the adventurous spirit of the Portuguese navigators who explored the world in the 15th century and opened up the silk and spice trade routes. The wines combine native Portuguese grapes in mouthwatering combinations at very reasonable prices.
If you are searching for a spark for Valentine’s Day, check out these three wines. One (or more) may be perfect.
Silk Route Red 2021
Playing off the brand name, this wine delivers a smooth ride that begins with the aromas of red fruit and chocolate. On the palate, there are fresh red cherries and plum plus some savory notes and a touch of pepper.
The blend is 40% Tinto Roriz (Tempranillo), 40% Baga, and 20% Merlot. The wine is very well-balanced. The Tinto Roriz and Merlot contribute to an ultra-plush finish while the Baga provides the tannins for a nice structure.
This is ideal with snacks, salads, meat, or grilled vegetables
White Blend 2023
This was a surprise for me. Outside of Vinho Verde and Alvarinho, I am used to sipping red wines from Portugal. In my own journey of discovery, I found this to be a fresh and bright white wine – perfect for casual dining or chilling out.
Blended in this wine are 35% Arinto, 15% Alvarinho (Albarino), and 50% Bical. Peach and melon flavors dominate with touches of white blossom. The mouthfeel is rounded rather than acidic. The wine is fermented in stainless steel but does spend some time in American oak on fine lees.
Silk Route smooth red blend.
A lower ABV (12.5%) means this is a food-friendly wine. This will be perfect with grilled vegetables, sushi, grilled chicken, or pasta with cream sauce.
Spice Road Red 2021
Spice Road indeed! This wine takes its name seriously. A blend of 20% Touriga Nacional, 50% Alicante Bouschet, and 30% Shiraz, this wine is a salute to the most important spices traded during the Portuguese voyages of exploration, which are now found around the world.
The Alicante Bouschet makes this wine big and bold. Flavors of blackberries and blueberries mingle with notes of chocolate and profound spices. To taste this is to experience the exotic spices of the Silk Route in a glass.
This wine is made with their finest grapes, which undergo additional maceration after fermentation. The result is a deep, beautiful purple. This wine is for the adventurous.
It is a chance to break out of the bubble of conventional wines and enjoy unfamiliar but delicious grapes. Another tasty aspect is that each bottle costs only $13.99. At this price, you can afford to get all three to go big this Valentine’s Day.
Full disclosure: These wines were received as a marketing sample.
Friday, February 7, 2025
Lessons from the Winescape: Emerging Wine Regions Must Rely on Artisanal Ethos
By Dave Nershi, CSW
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| China is an emerging wine market. |
"In my research, I’ve always studied emerging and transforming regions and looked at their infrastructures and environments,” said Eric Patterson at the Southeastern United Grape and Wine Symposium, recently held at Surry Community College in Dobson, NC. As a student at California’s UC Davis, it was natural that he would see how this applied to the wine world. “I did preliminary research, and it just exploded. I knew this would be a path.”
Patterson is pursuing a cultural anthropology doctorate as a PhD student at UC Davis. His research focus is emerging wine cultures and their social, political, and economic impact.
In his work, he uses a concept known as winescapes, first developed by Vander Valduga, Sarah Marroni Minasi, and Gui Lohmann in the Routledge Handbook of Wine Tourism in 2022. If wine terroir is a chess game, a winescape is three-dimensional chess.
According to Patterson, a winescape is a
multifaceted wine region defined by its unique local culture, terroir, and
winemaking practices. It stretches beyond mere geography to encompass the
social dynamics and economic factors that shape wine production, appreciation,
and consumption.Eric Patterson in a
North Carolina vineyard.
A winescape can have geographic boundaries but transcends a regional focus. It is more holistic, including culture, creativity, and winemaking practices.
The winescape framework “helps you understand
how a wine region will flesh out,” said Patterson. “It includes all the things
that affect the wine region. It allows the region to reach its maximum
potential.”
Emerging wine regions are gaining prominence as they bring fresh perspectives and innovative approaches to viticulture and oenology. These areas contribute to economic growth and diversify the global wine landscape, offering distinct flavors and stories.
Two winescapes visited during Patterson’s fieldwork couldn’t be more different: China and North Carolina. Both are considered emerging wine regions. Both are unlocking creativity in their growth.
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| Erik Martella's Summer Kitchen. |
In North Carolina, wineries are embracing creativity and artisanal style. Raffaldini Vineyards, in the Yadkin Valley, specializes in Italian grape varieties. For some of its wines, it uses the appassimento, drying the grapes before fermentation. The raisinated grapes provide a wonderful depth of flavor.
Carolina Heritage Winery takes a creative approach to be more sustainable. The local county doesn’t have a recycling plan, so the winery uses new sustainable packaging options including eye-catching paper wine bottles. The bottles use 94% recycled material.
Rather than trying to duplicate European wines, winemaker Erik Martella is creating something entirely new. In southern states, muscadine wines have traditionally been produced in a sweet style and even contain added flavors. Martella is taking these grapes, which are naturally disease-resistant and come in about 150 varieties, and applying fine wine techniques. He uses carbonic maceration, aging on the lees or seeds, and extended aging. His goal is to craft fine wines from these native grapes.
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| Chinese vineyard. |
Formerly, Chinese wine consumers preferred Bordeaux or Australian wines. In 2020, China placed an embargo on Australian wines with a stiff tariff. The embargo was lifted in 2024, but this disruption proved to be a boost for the Chinese wine industry, still in its infancy.
A growing number of Chinese winemakers have graduated from foreign or domestic wine programs. This increased knowledge has boosted the understanding of how to make quality wine. China has become an innovator in the field. They are pushing innovation surrounding sustainability, varieties, and winemaking techniques that bring in more consumers, especially younger ones.
There is a growing middle class in China, and through community engagement and adaptive marketing, the niche is being successfully targeted. Chinese consumers are more aware and hungrier to understand what role drinking wine as a hobby and social activity means to them.
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| Chinese wines are marketed to a growing middle class. |
He sees an inflection point coming, perhaps triggered by the changing climate, where established regions will need to think beyond rigid frameworks and embrace the creativity needed for their next stage of growth.
Emerging winescapes like North Carolina can be the future model for wine regions, said Patterson. “It’s a mix of tradition and new. The region is trying to do it differently because it can’t do it like everyone else.”
Most photos courtesy of Eric Patterson. Martella wine photo by Dave Nershi.






