Thursday, June 10, 2021

 

 African Wine Country

by Jennifer VerPlanck

 



 

        Of the fifty countries on the African continent, eight produce wine. South Africa, a country roughly twice the size of Texas, is by far their most successful wine area and is the 7th largest producer in the world. It contains more than 290 conservation parks, 8 World Heritage sites and 8 distinct biomes.       

       The country’s wine history goes back to the 18th century, when their Constantia, a Muscat-based wine, was both the preferred, and most expensive in Europe, a favorite of Frederick the Great and Napoleon.  The industry faded almost into obscurity for almost two hundred years, and did not re-emerge until the late 20th century.  Later, boycotts, government interference, and the establishment of a huge and dominant wine grower’s cooperative (KWV), resulted in mostly lackluster, uninspired wines.  Winemakers even openly smuggled vines into their vineyards, called wine farms in South Africa, to bypass restrictions.



        Until quite recently, the region’s principal grape was Chenin Blanc, locally known as Steen, with half the harvest dedicated to produce brandy and spirits. Chenin Blanc is still very popular but now there is interest, value and investment in diverse and significant other quality wines as well.

         Through the 1980s, international apartheid sanctions severely restricted the export market.  The combination of the Mandela presidency and the growing demand for quality reds, changed everything.  The climate being very similar to the Mediterranean, it was relatively easy to start producing high quality wine.

         Probably the best-known region and the nearest to Cape Town is Stellenbosch, a pretty university town in a region best known for its red wines, mostly Cabernet Sauvignon-based, but also a good producer of Pinotage, the country’s signature wine, a genetic blend of Hermitage (Cinsault), and Pinot Noir.



          To the northeast of Stellenbosch is Paarl, a source of dessert wines, particularly Sherry-style solera wines.  Paarl’s south latitude is almost the same is the north latitude of Spain’s Sherry region.

          Between Stellenbosch and Paarl is Franschhoek, another area known for excellent wines, mostly Bordeaux-style blends of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. There is a distinct French winemaking influence in this region.  To the northeast is Robertson, which is quite hot and dry, but its proximity to the Breede River and its alluvial soil makes it an ideal source of big, sumptuous whites, such as Chardonnay, Gewurztraminer and Chenin Blanc.

          South Africa also has a large wine tourism industry, with spectacular vineyards, wine trails, including state parks and fabulous foods. If you have not yet experienced any South African wines, try some.  You will be pleasantly surprised. The Black Sheep Wine and Beer Shop has a great selection of S. African wines. 



Friday, June 4, 2021

 Maine Micro-breweries Are Big News


                                                 Maine Micro-breweries Are Big News

 

 Perhaps you’ve heard by now that Maine currently has more breweries per capita than any other state. The popularity of craft beer has propelled the rise in new breweries nationwide for the last decade. In 1983, when Geary Brewing opened in Portland, it was the first craft beer operation throughout New England.  Currently, there are some 156 active Maine breweries and brewpubs in the state. In 2013, Maine had only 35 registered breweries. Maine saw 10 breweries open up in Maine in 2020, despite the pandemic.  An economic impact study released in 2019, recorded the beer industry and related activities add $2 billion to Maine’s economy each year as well as nearly 16,000 jobs. We have a full- on beer culture now in America, and it’s a pretty welcoming one. You can find many of the best craft beers at The Black Sheep Wine and Beer Shop in Harpswell, Maine.   

  The simple ingredients for making a beer are just water, hops, malt and yeast. Many Maine brewers use homegrown hops, barley and oats; some even utilize wild Maine yeast. They also may add homegrown fruit such as blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, cherries, peaches for seasonal flavors and even wine, honey, seaweed, pumpkins, fresh oysters or pine needles for exceptional flavored handcrafted brews! Someone tell me there is a Maine beer made with lobster or potatoes and I’ll believe them!

   It didn’t take long for a coalition of brewers to form the Maine Brewshed Alliance to ensure the quality and supply of the pure water from our lakes and aquafers. Sebago Lake is the source for all of Portland’s craft breweries, so clean it doesn’t need to be filtered and happens to have the mineral content of the water used by most Belgian beer brewers.  

  Maine has earned its beer mecca reputation, building over the last 30 years, with some Maine breweries internationally recognized for their quality and craftsmanship and other newcomers rising to the top fairy rapidly. The beer world is both a competitive and companionable industry. The fun for drinkers is in the exploration and on- site experiences. You can sample one- of- a -kind beers from any point in the state, many adding some food options varying from lobster and fried clams to wood-fired pizza and rotating food trucks. There is a Beer Trail as well as some micro-brewery tour busses in the major cities. Every brewery has its unique style and character. Cross brewery collaborative brews are not rare as well as small batch seasonal or limited release experimentation. The industry is always yielding new discoveries. There are over 400 types of beer. Which makes sense when you think that beer has been made for 7000 years.

   A custom built 40 ft. refrigerated shipping container, The Maine Beer Box, with 78 taps for craft beer, was created and used as a kind of global marketing and goodwill initiative by the Maine Brewers’ Guild. It has been shipped to Iceland, England and Canada so far, with a return load of their counties beers for Maine drinkers to enjoy here. How cool is that?

  Most people don’t know that marijuana and beer hops are from the same family of plants. Both cannabis and hops are members of the Cannabaceae family. A couple of new Maine brewing partnerships are also experimenting now with producing some cannabis-infused beers. The non-alcoholic craft beer is infused with THC oil and steeped using grains and hops. Because of a process called nano-emulsification, drinkers will feel the psychoactive effects in 15 or 20 minutes, with 5 mg of THC per bottle, having a stronger effect than that of a traditional cannabis edible or other product. Perhaps we have to make way for another new industry, Maine. It’s not your grandfather’s beer, that’s for sure.

Monday, April 2, 2018

                                 Marsala, Mt. Etna, Opera and the Black Pearl



by John and Jennifer Verplanck,The Black Sheep Wine and Beer Shop


The short flight from Rome crosses over the island and loops back to land at Palermo, Sicily’s largest and capital city, and after Naples, Italy’s second worst traffic.  The taxi crawls its way into the city amidst honking horns and at least a billion motor scooters. Of course there is opera, too. The iconic Teatro Massimo in Palermo is the largest opera house in Italy and the second largest in Europe.


Sicily’s best known wine, by far, is Marsala, created oddly enough, by an Englishman, John Woodhouse, in 1773.  The innocuous cooking wines of the same name are poor reflections of the real thing and have given the wine a bad reputation.  The most popular Marsala sipping wine is sweet, fortified, silky and sensuous. There are many styles of Marsala, even some that are unfortified, produced by the ancient perpetuo method, similar to Solera Sherry. You’ll find the city of Marsala west of Palermo. Donnafugata has a large Marsala cellar there with tastings and Marco de Bartoli offers the original perpetuo style.



Sicily is the largest island in the Mediterranean and a treat. Along with stunning vistas, great cuisine, spectacular beaches and nature preserves, world heritage sites and ancient architecture, there are hundreds of wineries in Sicily! Although wine has been produced here for millennia, in the past most wine was sold wholesale, “vini da taglio”, or literally, wines of cut, for cutting or blending purposes.  There is a renaissance in wine production now, with renewed focus on quality as well as the cultivation of over 20 different indigenous grapes.




 The island of Sicily is a diverse place with many different patches of unique “terroir”. As well as discovering new great wineries, you may want to try the famous ones, Planeta, Regaleali and Donnafugata.  Planeta, itself, has six boutique wineries all over the island, each showcasing a distinct wine place. You’ll find extremes from mountain to beach, volcanic, sandy or clay soils and accompanying temperatures and humidity.



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Saturday, January 13, 2018


We’ll Always Have Paris

By Jennifer Laskey Verplanck




      Some people say that the 1942 film, Casablanca, is the best film ever made.   Although it’s been around for 75 years, it still has great authenticity, a suspenseful plot with an exotic location, complex characters, many of them shady, romance, betrayal and political intrigue, a great score and theme song, and the irresistibly alluring Ingrid Bergman.


    Perhaps you haven’t seen this one, but you may have heard some of the often- quoted lines: “Play it (again), Sam”, “Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine”, “Round up the usual suspects”, “ Here’s looking at you, kid” and “We’ll always have Paris”. The rich dialogue is just one of its charms. The characters smoke and drink like there’s no tomorrow, while they desperately connive and deal for precious ‘letters of transit” they need to escape Morocco and the dangerous Vichy regime. It’s bittersweet that Rick and Ilsa are destined to be kept apart but they will always have the memories of their idyllic time together in Paris.  
  


   There is talk about a sequel. I’m not sure it could ever match the magic of the original film; the expectations would be impossibly high. What do you think? The ending has to rank as THE classic ending, though. It’s one of those things that is so perfect that I would rather they left it alone.

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A Bottle of Amontillado



By John and Jennifer Laskey Verplanck

            How about a short trip back to your high school English class, and Edgar Allen Poe.  Montresor, feeling insulted by Fortunato, gets him drunk and lures him into his cellar to sample “A Cask of Amontillado,” whereupon he chains the hapless man into an alcove which he then closes with bricks.  Mean, huh? The man had issues.

            The Black Sheep has no casks, but we do have bottles of Amontillado, just one of a number of Sherries. Sherry has become so popular that there are over fifty Sherry bars in London now.  Sherry, named for the town of Jerez, is probably Spain’s best-known wine, and produced exclusively in Andalusia, Spain.  Made from the Palomino grape, the wine undergoes its initial fermentation before being fortified with grape spirits and transferred to a solera.


            So, what is a solera?  It is a series of connected barrels, often stacked vertically, all of which the wine must pass through as it ages, for years.  As Sherry is drawn from the bottom or last barrel, an equal amount pours in from the barrel above.  When the topmost barrel drains into the one below it, new wine may be added.  A solera may consist of five or six barrels, but sometimes as many as fifteen.


            The lightest and driest Sherry is Manzanilla, and comes only from the bodegas of Sanlúcar de Barrameda on the Bay of Cadiz, which is also famous for their horse races on the beach. This dry sherry has a delicate, fresh, slightly salty tang. Served chilled, it pairs beautifully with shrimp, crab or salads. The next driest version of Sherry is Fino, not quite as light and dry as Manzanilla, but still very fresh and crisp with a savory character; it's an ideal aperitif and will pair well with any cured meats, fried foods and seafood.

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California’s Central Coast Wine Trail:  Paso Robles


California’s Central Coast Wine Trail:  Paso Robles
By John and Jennifer Verplanck



         Stretching from Santa Barbara to Monterey, California’s Central Coast is a diverse region that includes some of the premier vineyards in the country. At the heart of this region is Paso Robles, a unique microclimate with warm, sunny days and cool, coastal nights, closely matching the climate of the Rhône Valley and of Napa’s Rutherford district. There are over 200 wineries, 80% of which are planted with red varietals.



            Route 46 from Paso Robles over to Cayucos is one of the loveliest drives in California, not long, but beautiful.  At the summit, you can pull off and get a sweeping panorama of the coast from Cambria down to Morro Bay. Morro Rock rises majestically from the bay of the same name.  It is one of a string of peaks, two of which are under the ocean, and running all the way to San Luis Obispo.


            Along Route 46 and amongst the surrounding hills are some of the state’s best wineries.  Just west of Paso Robles is Peachy Canyon Vineyard, best known for their Zinfandels, but with a host of other excellent wines. Just within this area on Live Oak Road are L’Aventure and Hope Family Estate and nearby is Opolo, all who produce superb wines.

Thursday, May 19, 2016




Dirty Little Secrets 
by John VerPlanck and Jennifer Laskey VerPlanck

  So, what is dirt or soil? It is the sediment of the earth’s surface capable of supporting plant growth. It consists of rock particles, the chemically altered remains of plant and animal matter and varies in porosity and permeability.    Soil does not always sit on bedrock. There are frequently layers of stones or rocks beneath. Grape vines hate wet feet; good drainage is essential.
 So what are the soils that work best for wine grapes?  Grapes are like Russian novelists, they like to suffer. Good fertile soil, beneficial to other crops, is not what you need for wine grapes. The famed Left Bank in the Bordeaux appellation is little more than gravel and sand; one area is actually named, “Graves “, for its characteristically gravelly land. Gravel has good drainage but poor fertility so vines planted in this type of soil must reach down deep to find nutrients and minerals in the subsoil.



Grapevines have deep root systems that get their nutrients down deep, not from topsoil. Deep roots help make the vines impervious to severe weather, they cannot freeze, and they can still find water in very dry conditions. The vines need enough nutrients to encourage good root growth but not abundant leaf or vine growth in order to produce more and better fruit. Cabernet Sauvignon is the star of the Left Bank and thrives there.

    The Right Bank of Bordeaux is dominated by clay based soils which have good water retention ability with some limestone and sand for drainage. The soil is often very cool and high in acidity, suitable for Merlot grapes, in fact they produce some of the world’s best Merlot and Cabernet Franc.
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Who’s Your Daddy?
by Jennifer Laskey verPlanck and John VerPlanck

            A few years back we visited the Serego Alighieri Winery, north of Verona, Italy.  It was founded in 1353 by the son of the poet Dante Alighieri, best known for his Divine Comedy.  Still in the family over six hundred years later, it is hardly unique in continuous family-owned wineries.  Chateau de Goulaine in France’s Loire valley, has been making Muscadet, Vouvray and Sancerre since 1000 A.D. The winery of Barone Ricasoli was founded in 1141 A.D., and Feudi San Gregorio has been family run since 590 A.D.  These are all noted producers, and all still in the same family.
             Families have operated wineries through the Hundred Years war, the Black Death, the Napoleonic wars, the Norman invasion, the Crusades and the discovery and settling of North America.

            We can hardly match that in our country, but there are many examples of estates still in the family after one hundred years or more. 

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Sunday, July 20, 2014

BLACK SHEEP WINE AND BEER SHOP







Harpswell, Maine , United States
We are Jennifer and John VerPlanck.
We live in a small house in a small town on the coast of Maine. We own and operate The Black Sheep Wine and Beer Shop, specializing in small production wines and beers as well as artisan chocolates and cheese.We choose all the products in our store for quality; our shelves are not stocked by sales reps with quotas,  if we don't sell it , we drink it!
Although we're not a large super -store we do have an extensive, thoughtful wine selection, with over 500 different wines from around the world and a large selection of Maine craft beers. 
We host regular free wine tastings at our store.
Black Sheep also stocks fine quality chocolates, cheeses, crackers and a selection of tasty treats to match the wines and beers we sell.

Thanks for visiting our site! John and Jennifer VerPlanck
Our retail store hours are:Tuesday through Saturday
*Summer/Fall hours are10 -5;Winter/Spring hours are 12-5  
We are closed Sunday and Monday and most holidays.
Our location is : 105 Mountain Road, Harpswell, Maine, Zip 04079

Photo Credits: Black Sheep Wine and Beer Shop, Deborah Boschert

HUGE 2014 CRAFT BEER FESTIVAL,FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 5-10 PM , PORTLAND,MAINE

HUGE 2014  CRAFT BEER FESTIVAL,FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 5-10 PM , PORTLAND,MAINE
Sooooooo many craft brews , it's ridiculous!!

 BUY TICKETS HERE: http://beercamp.sierranevada.com/festival/new_england_edition