A blog by the ladies of Via Girasole Wine Bar with wine recommendations, upcoming events, and lots of wine!
Friday, January 22, 2016
Via Girasole Wine Bar Gives Back!
Since only having been open since the beginning of August 2015, Via Girasole Wine Bar has already hosted many events to support great causes in their quant but elegant space. Via Girasole Wine Bar offers their space to local charities like Guilda’s Club, McQuaid Jesuit High School and now the March Of Dimes for a fundraising event.
On February 23rd between 6 PM - 8 PM they will be hosting the first “Wine Therapy Night for a Cause.” Wine Therapy Night for a Cause is an event that will be held each month and it will support different charities. This month’s cause for support is March of Dimes. March of Dimes was originally started by President Franklin Roosevelt as the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis; this was developed for vaccine research and aid to those with polio. Following the success of the polio vaccine, March of Dimes changed its focus to preventing birth defects and infant mortality, it works to raise awareness and research the cause of premature births.
By visiting Via Girasole Wine Bar on February 23rd you can help support mothers, babies, and their families in need. More than 30% of each ticket sold to this event will go to March of Dimes from Via Girasole Wine Bar. There will also be handmade jewelry and gifts for sale at the event, which will also give proceeds towards the March of Dimes. Via Girasole Wine Bar is proud to support this great cause! To purchase tickets and/or for more information visit http://www.viagirasole.com or call Via Girasole Wine Bar at (585) 641-0340.
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
To Sparkling Wine or to Champagne? That is the question.
Written by Maureen Bayer, CS, CSW, CWP
Working in the wine
industry many people know when someone says Champagne it may not be what they
mean. Especially with the holidays quickly approaching you might want know what
you are really looking for and what to bring to your holiday party. Often
people will walk in saying “I want Champagne”, then we show them our offerings and
they quickly realize that is not the price point they imagined. Champagne is a sparkling
wine but not all sparkling wine is Champagne.
It’s like your square and rectangle situation. To be called “Champagne” the
wine must come from the region of Champagne in France and be made up of
specific grape varietals.
So what can you do when
you want to celebrate with bubbles but do not want to break the bank? There are
several awesome options of Sparkling Wine to choose from!
Prosecco: Is a sparkling
wine that comes from the Veneto region in Northern Italy. To be a designated
wine of Prosecco (which is also a region; how confusing!) it must be produced
as a white wine. In order for Prosecco to be called Prosecco it must be made up
of 85% of the Glera grape. The remaining 15% can be made up of the Verdiso,
Perera, Bianchetta, Glera Lugna, Pinot Nero or Chardonnay grapes. Prosecco is
made using the tank method to keep the fresh fruity characteristics of the
grapes. This will be a fruitier style with notes of peach and apricot that both
sweet and dry drinkers will enjoy. This wine has slightly larger bubbles than
those of Champagne and is an excellent choice for mimosas!
Sommelier Pick: Bocelli Prosecco
Cava: A sparkling
wine from Spain. Cava can only be made in eight regions of Spain. This is
unique to Cava because most designations are within a specific region, rather
than throughout the country. The primary region, making 95% of Cava in Spain,
is Catalonia. Cava is made from the Macabeo (also known as Viura or White
Rioja), Xarel-lo and Parellada grapes, these are all white grapes. The only red
grapes allowed to make Cava only as a Rosado are Pinot Noir, Garnacha, Monastrell,
and Trepat. Approximately half of all Cava production is made as brut. Cava is
made in the traditional method or metodo tradicional. Bottles must be cellared
at least nine months on the lees to be considered Cava. To be labeled Cava
Reserva bottles must be aged on the lees a minimum of fifteen months and must
be brut or drier. There is approximately only 15% of this style made into
production. To be labeled as Cava Gran Reserva, bottles must be aged on the
lees a minimum of thirty months and must be brut or drier. This makes up less
than 5% of production and is only made in excellent vintages. Being made in the
same method as Champagne, Cava will be an excellent choice for those that want
that style at a lower price range.
Sommelier Pick: Aria
Cava
Sparkling Wine in
America: As Champagne made stricter guidelines on the term Champagne it forced wineries to change
the title to Sparkling wine. There are only a few wineries left that were
grandfathered in and are allowed to continuing using the term Champagne on
their label. Most will say sparkling wine and have some sort of reference to
which method was used but it is not required. Also, there no restrictions as to
which grapes can be used for sparkling wine. However, most wineries stick to
the classic grapes of Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Pinot Meunier. Mendocino in particular has become very well
known in the United States for its sparkling wine production, since it is a
cooler region. Many sparkling wines in the United States can resemble those of
Champagne if made with the same grapes and in the same method, as the Signal
Ridge is. However, there are also many sparkling wines that are unique and can
be fun to explore since there are few regulations on how the wines are made
into sparkling wine in the United States.
Sommelier Pick: Signal
Ridge Sparkling Wine
Champagne: is a
sparkling wine from France. To be called Champagne it must come from this
region in France. Other sparkling wines made in France will be called cremant.
The grape varieties used for Champagne are primarily Chardonnay, Pinot Noir,
and Pinot Meunier. Other grape varieties also allowed are Pinot Blanc, Pinot
Gris, Petit Meslier, and Arbane. Champagne is made in the traditional method
(because that’s where it started of course!) Champagne must be aged for at
least fifteen months. There is a requirement of a minimum of twelve of those
months to be left on the lees. Vintage Champagne must age on the lees a minimum
of three years. Wines are not ranked in Champagne as they are in many other
French regions; however the villages are in grand cru or premier cru. Champagne
has toasty and nutty aroma with a creamy texture and fine bubbles. These wines
can age for years but are also ready to drink when you are!
Sommelier Pick:
Monopole Heidsieck & Co Blue Top
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Wine with Christmas Cookies!!
Written by Maureen Bayer, CS, CSW, CWP
It’s the most wonderful time of
the year! With Christmas just around the corner there will be cookie exchanges
and desserts galore! So rather than binge eating that cookie tin, let’s have a
little fun and try some pairings! Leaving out the right glass of wine for Santa
is sure to get you on the nice list rather than a glass of milk.
Ginger Bread Cookie –
Thousand Islands Winery Riesling
We will start with a classic holiday cookie, the ginger
bread cookie. Whether you are decorating a little cookie man or building a
house out of frosting and gummies, ginger bread is the ultimate holiday cookie.
Riesling pairs well with many Asian cuisines and what is a primary ingredient
there? GINGER! The slight sweetness in the wine contrasts perfectly with the
spice coming from the ginger. The Thousand Islands Winery Riesling is a New
York State wine that falls into the sweet section of the IRF scale but can
still be enjoyed by drier wine drinkers. The citrus and apricot in the wine
bring out the nutmeg and cinnamon in the cookie. Why does this pairing work? The
sweetness of the cookie tames the sweetness in the wine.
Peanut Butter Kisses
– DOW’S Late Bottles Vintage Porto 2007
Peanut Butter Kisses are my all time favorite cookie! There
is something special about the chocolate and peanut butter combination that
just seems heavenly. Port is an
excellent choice of wine to go with desserts because it is going to be sweeter
than the food. This way the sweetness in the food is not masking the sweetness
in the wine. The DOW’s LBV Porto is expressing its dried fruit characteristics
that pair well with the chocolate kiss in the center of the cookie, while the
nutty and oxidative notes will pair with the peanut butter cookie.
Butter Cookies – Peirano
Estate Vineyards Chardonnay
The category of butter cookie includes tea cookies,
shortbread cookies, and spritz cookies. As you can imagine the primary
ingredient in these cookies is butter! The Peirano Estate Vineyards Chardonnay
is coming from Lodi, California. This Chardonnay is made in both French and
American oak giving it flavors of vanilla and grilled pineapple that will pair
with the simple butter cookie. It also goes through 50% malolactic fermentation
giving it a creamier texture and a toasted buttery flavor to match the butter
cookie.
Chocolate Crinkle
Cookies – Francis Ford Coppola Winery Pitagora
The chocolate crinkle cookies are a very rich treat covered
in powdered sugar. The Pitagora Red Wine Blend is primarily Syrah but also has
Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, and Petite Sirah. This red
blend gets its fruit from a variety of locations in Sonoma California including
Dry Creek Valley, Alexander Valley, and Knights Valley. Each grape adds a
different component to the wine; it has everything from floral notes to spicy
aspects with dark fruit and a high tannin backbone. This bold red blend can measure
up to to the rich chocolate crinkle cookie.
Snowball Cookies – Santa
Cristina Pinot Grigio
Snowball cookies can be a variety of things to different
people, some people would call them Russian Tea Cookies, others the Italian
Wedding Cookie, to me they are snowballs. They are a relatively neutral cookie
and may even fall into the butter cookie category but they are covered in
powdered sugar and have chopped walnuts or almonds in them, depending on your
recipe. The Santa Cristina Pinot Grigio is coming from the Delle Venezie region
in Italy. It is a fairly neutral wine with flavors of green apple and citrus
(classic white wine description am I right?!?) but these cookies will bring out
a slight nuttiness in the wine.
Sugar Cookie – Chloe Prosecco
DOC
Sugar cookies another basically neutral cookie shared at
Christmas time! These are great because you can decorate them as ornaments,
trees, snowmen, Santa, etc, etc. Since the cookie itself is rather neutral the
frosting is the key pairing, whether you do a butter cream topping or almond
frosting it will pair with BUBBLES! The Chloe Prosecco is a DOC wine from
Italy. This fresh and fruity sparkling wine will prepare your palate for each
bite of that delicious sugar cookie.
Friday, November 27, 2015
Candle Light Night Pittsford
The Candlelight Crawl!
Via Girasole Wine Bar
will be part of the first Candlelight Crawl in Pittsford! The crawl will be on
Candle Light Night, Tuesday, December 1st, 2015 starting at 7:15 PM.
Pub crawl wristbands may be purchased at Via Girasole Wine Bar for $5.00 which
will get you specials throughout the night. The proceeds from the wristbands
will be going toward the Pittsford Food Cupboard. Via Girasole Wine Bar is
participating in the Candlelight Crawl along with our neighbors at Lock 32, Label
7, Pittsford Pub, Del Monte Lodge, and Thirsty’s. The Via Girasole Wine Bar
will be offering 10% off your purchase for wristband participants.
Pittsford Wine and
Spirits Free Tasting
Our sister store
Pittsford Wine and Spirits will also be participating in Candle Light Night.
Pittsford Wine and Spirits has been one of the most exciting places in town to
stop for years. They offer complimentary wine tastings from a variety of their
distributors. This year they will have a representative from Lauber Imports,
Southern Wine and Spirits, The Winebow Group, Empire Merchants, Latitude
Beverage Company, and MS Walker Fine Wine and Spirits. Each representative will
have a few wines to share and a great knowledge to compliment each. This is an excellent opportunity to taste
wines before purchasing them and to try something new that might not have
interested your palate in the past!
Friday, November 20, 2015
Thanksgiving Day Recommendations
– Written by Maureen Bayer, CS, CSW, CWP
Thanksgiving is the ultimate holiday for those who love food
and wine. As we all know nothing brings people together better than that. With
family all around the table, it is important to have just the right wine to
pair with that meal you have been cooking all day. Whether you are hosting or
if you are attending what could be your future in-laws for the first time you
want to impress everyone with your awesome selection of wine.
As a sommelier, Thanksgiving is both exciting and dreaded.
It is exciting because the food and wine possibilities are endless. It is also
dreaded for the same reason there are just so many great options, how can you
only pick a few? Then you have your mom who will only drink sweet wine and your
sister who will only drink red wine and your husband who would rather have a
beer! To help with this conundrum, we have made selections for you that will be
appreciated by everyone and compliment all parts of your meal.
Jean-Charles Boisset
No.69, Rose -
We will start with the sparkling wine choice. Jean- Charles
Boisset (JCB) No. 69, a sparkling rose made from Pinot Noir and Chardonnay
coming out of Burgundy, France. If I could start every meal with sparkling wine
I would! This sparkling wine has the complexity of Champagne but a price range
we are willing to share with that “box wine only” drinking family member. The
delicate fruit along with medium acidity in the JCB make it an easy choice to
pair with every part of your Thanksgiving dinner. The bubbles are just an added
bonus clearing your palate for each bite of food.
Victorianbourg Wine
Estate, Gewurztraminer -
Being the American holiday how can we not have a local
favorite on the table? Victorianbourg Wine Estate Gewurztraminer is the New
York State style of a classic German grape. With beautiful fruit and floral
notes the Gewurztraminer will be a crowd pleaser with your roasted turkey and
gravy. Although fermented to complete dryness, this Gewurztraminer is the sweet
and spicy grape that even your sweet only mom will love!
JJ Vincent Bourgogne
Blanc -
France makes some of the best food friendly wines in the
world. The JJ Vincent Bourgogne Blanc coming from the regions of Maconnais and
Beaujolais in France and is made from the Chardonnay grape. Adding a little
more body to the table this wine will please even your beer drinking husband.
The Bourgogne Blanc has earthy characteristics that will compliment all types
of potatoes, corn dishes, and other earth based dishes. The classic French oak
notes and a creamy texture compliment along side your turkey, gravy, stuffing
and so much more!
Stephane Aviron
Beajolais Village -
We are back to France with the classic Thanksgiving pairing
of Beajolais. The Stephane Aviron Beajolais Village that is located in
Burgundy, France is not your typical Beajolais served on Thanksgiving. The
fresh and fruity Beajolais Nouveau that is released the week before
Thanksgiving every year is an easy drinking wine but it does not have the
complex characteristics of this Beaujolais Village. The Beaujolais Village
still has the fruit characteristics but they are darker fruits and have more
depth to them than that of the Nouveau. This is a red wine that those people
who only drink whites can enjoy. It has low tannin helping it not power over
some of your lighter dishes but it still has enough backbone to stand up to
some of the fatty foods as well.
90+ Cellars Lot 75,
Pinot Noir -
Now we travel back to America with an excellent wine from
90+ Cellars. The 90+ Cellars Lot 75 Pinot Noir is made up of grapes from the
Russian River Valley in Sonoma County, California. This wine is sure to impress
that wine snob you know will be there! The fruit ranges from baked cherries to
raspberry jam, in addition to hints of vanilla and cocoa along with a subtle
violet. This wine can pair with almost any part of your Thanksgiving dinner
because of it’s upfront fruit and well balanced body.
Sebastiani Vineyards,
Zinfandel -
Although not actually an American grape Zinfandel can be
known as the great American wine. The Sebastiani Vineyards Zinfandel hailing
from Sonoma County, California is going to be the red wine lovers pick at your
table. For us at Via Girasole Wine Bar, the Sebastiani holds a special place in
our hearts because that is where the owner Nicole had her beautiful wine
country wedding. This wine has tannins that will make it stand up to full
bodied dishes with fruit and earthy characteristics that make it manageable for
the lighter food options. Zinfandel was one of the first vitis vinifera grapes
to thrive in America and make quality wine, which is why everyone should have a
bottle at their Thanksgiving table.
All of these wines can be purchased at Pittsford Wine and
Spirits, your wine shop on the canal.
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