Eduard Pié Palomar started to work in 2009. A bona fide oenologist who likes clean wines and old-fashioned technique, he works exclusively with anfora, some buried, some not, then transfers... read more →
The tiny Champagne village of Romery is on the right bank of the Marne River, barely north of Epernay. It is there that Aurélien Lurquin reclaimed his family’s vines from... read more →
On the Tarlant property six Georgian qvevri are planted outside and another three from Spain are inside. They are used to make a tiny series of wines under the Argilité... read more →
Corrado Dottori is making some stellar wines in the Marche. If he’s not on your radar, please correct that. This skin contact number is from limestone soils and is a... read more →
The new releases of La Garagista won’t disappoint, but which ones to buy first? Well, get your favorites, of course, but the Loup d’Or is really speaking to me these... read more →
Shavkapito is most definitely a Georgian sentimental favorite but until I tried this particular bottling, I’ve been impervious to its charms. Fermented and aged in qvevri in the old-fashioned way,... read more →
Even by Georgian standards, Mgaloblishvili is a rare grape. For years it didn’t do much of anything in Archil’s vineyards until his daughter, Nino decided to make it her own.... read more →
Lapsed biologist Nacho Gonzalez’s wines get better with each vintage. Amazing what he is able to do with beautiful grapes and clay and steel tank. But this particular wine gets... read more →
When I asked Antonio of the Les Vignerons wine shop in Rome’s Trastevere what’s new that I’ve got to taste, he handed over this cloudy bottle with a minimalist label.... read more →
Just when I thought all was lost for kosher wines, there was Camuna. The couple behind the wine, Eli and Molly, work for a kosher Californian winery, Covenant, and use... read more →