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Wear your grape
My pals Steve and Deborah De Long, who many of you will remember as publishers of the innovative Wine Grape Varietal Table, have recently launched a series of four shirts that make it possible for wine enthusiasts to wear some of our favorite grapes on our chests.
The Wine Grape Varietal Table, you'll recall, is a large, artful poster that mirrors the familiar periodic table of the elements, categorizing a world of wine grape varieties by color and weight, from the dark-purple Grenache/Garnacha all the way to watery-pale Savatiano. The T-shirts display the "Varietal Table cell" for your choice of four grapey favorites.
The shirts come in any color you like, as long as it's white, and are available in small, medium, large and X-large. The designs vary to approximate the color of the grape: Yellow-gold Chardonnay, sunny yellow GrüVe, reddish-violet Mourvèdre and paler-purple Pinot. (The Pinot Noir T-shirt image is pictured above.)
They're $17.99 plus shipping, and - as with our Amazon.com book selections - we'll earn a small commission to help pay the rent at WineLoversPage.com if you should choose to buy one (or several) through this link:
For more about the Wine Grape Varietal Table, click to:
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TALK ABOUT WINE ONLINE If you prefer to comment privately, feel free to send me E-mail at wine@wineloverspage.com. I'll respond personally to the extent that time and volume permit. Now, as long as we're talking about strange and wacky wine grapes, here's a report on an absolutely delightful Loire rosé made from one of the oddest, Pineau d'Aunis. This variety is a personal favorite for its consistently stylish, subtle blend of delicate fruit and remarkable minerality. If only it wasn't so rare and hard to find!
![]() This is a very pale but pretty blushing-pink wine with a light copper-salmon hue. Subtle, intriguing scents offer fragrant white pepper over delicate strawberries; and there's a floral note, too, rosewater and spicy potpourri, with a minerally note that carries over to the palate with that seductive "rainwater over rocks" character that I love in Pineau d'Aunis. Crisp, dry and fresh, white pepper and rose petals in the finish; this stylish and subtle Loire delight ranks among my favorite pink wines. U.S. importer: LDM Wines Inc. (Louis/Dressner), NYC. (Aug. 11, 2005) FOOD MATCH: Excellent for sipping on its own, just lightly chilled - ice-cold service would mute its delicious subtlety - or with delicate seafood dishes. A slab of pecan-smoked sea bass went well enough, although I'm still solving the mysteries of my stovetop smoker and would have liked it better with a little less assertive smoke. VALUE: I would buy a case of this at $12 a bottle. Next question? WHEN TO DRINK: No matter how complex and intriguing, rosé wine still serves best while it's young and fresh. I'd drink it up this summer, then wait for the '05.
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Friday, Aug. 12, 2005
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