• Jessica Dupuy: Cava’s Renaissance

    Last fall, Marta Casas joined fellow wine students for a two-day sparkling wine seminar in Austria, in preparation for the Diploma in Wines from the Wine & Spirit Education Trust (WSET). Following a handful of blind tastings, she heard many stude...
  • Neal Hulkower: The Cluster, the Whole Cluster, and Nothing but the Whole Cluster?

    Material other than grapes, or MOG, is assiduously avoided by winemakers. Leaves, bugs, pebbles, sticks, and other debris are removed before grape clusters are processed. But before the prevalence of destemming machines, stems, which strictly speakin...
  • Samantha Cole-Johnson: Beyond Sulfur: Viticultural Foliar Spray Programs

    The needling sensation started in the vineyard at Beaux Frères. I was walking next to winemaker Mike Etzel Jr., scribbling notes as he talked about biodynamic farming, when a tractor pulled up. Etzel ran into a shed, grabbed a carton of a myst...
  • Joe Kane: Understanding the Modern German Wine Landscape

    A cool-climate wine region steeped in Old World tradition, with origins dating to the Roman Empire. A detailed hierarchy of vineyards, with specific soil types that encourage two key grape varieties to flourish under optimal conditions. Wines with te...
  • Tom Stevenson: Champagne Classifications and Pricing

    There are currently 17 grands crus and 42 premiers crus in Champagne, and negociants work directly with growers to set prices in a completely free market. But the number of grands and premiers crus, the connotations of these terms, and the guidelines...
  • Elizabeth Gabay: Szekszárd

    The wines regarded as the flagships of Hungary are the sweet styles of Tokaj PDO and, increasingly, the dry Furmints from the same region. But their fame often means that wines from the rest of the country are overlooked. In Szekszárd, one of ...
  • Beverley Blanning: Cabernet Franc In the Loire

    Cabernet Franc has long taken a back seat to its dazzling offspring, Cabernet Sauvignon. So wildly successful has the latter become that for most of the wine-drinking public, the name Cabernet simply means Cabernet Sauvignon. Does anyone know, or eve...
  • Elizabeth Gabay: The Role of White Grapes in Rosé

    The idea of white grapes in rosé may come as a surprise to some. Surely not! Yet the blending of red and white grapes has a long history, and the practice is still used for many rosés. Combining Whites and Reds Beyond Rosé Making...
  • Susan Lin: An Introduction to Sake Rice

    Sake’s common nickname, rice wine, obscures that sake is brewed, not simply fermented. As with beer, sake brewers have many opportunities to dictate a sake’s final character. But while only the geekiest of beer fans would know the differe...
  • Jessica Dupuy: Defining a New Italy

    The road between Siena and Montalcino is a winding thoroughfare snaking its way through the earth-toned farmhouses and cypress trees. It’s a stretch of road Andrea Lonardi often takes to check on the handful of vineyard estates he oversees. As ...