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8:03 PM

April - Wine Definitions

Another Great Wine Definitions Article

Wine And Fruit Baskets


Lush, elegant and evocative, wine and fruit baskets are hugely popular gift offerings that thrill and titillate. The sight of those colorful fruits snuggled around impossibly mouth-watering wines hits the senses immediately. Who can look at these distinctive gift baskets without a pang?



Your goodwill and generosity of spirit are ideally conveyed through wine and fruit baskets during the holiday season, as well as at weddings, housewarming parties, birthdays or other personal celebrations. It speaks of the mutual joy and happiness that you share with the recipient, and a call to celebrate with vigor!



Seasonal and tropical fruits, usually crunchy pears, crisp red apples and juicy oranges from renowned sources, take the top spot in a classic wine and seasonal fruit basket. Royal Fuji apples from Japan, South African baby pineapples and chocolate-covered cherries or blueberries are other exciting fruits that make for a basket with a difference.



Dried fruit assortments, nuts, cheese and chocolates are added to the fresh fruits to make a heady combination. Fruit preserves, dips and savory mixes are also integrated into this creative basket to cater to a family or office team and to linger long after the fruit and wine have been consumed.



A full-bodied Cabernet Sauvignon, a smooth Chardonnay, Pinot Noir or other sparkling wine bring out the multiplicity of fruit flavors. Champagne, fruity, dry wines or sweet dessert wines also work well with fruits.



Another intriguing innovation that adds to the magnetism of these baskets is to offer combinations of fruit and wine that result in a new product. Pineapple and passion fruit juice or kiwis and lime, when combined with white wine, can result in a delightful Sangria that will leave your loved ones dazed. Fruit wedges, sliced peaches, and strawberries with chilled white wine can result in a memorable super-fruity sangria. Traditional mimosa drinks are another alternative with fruit and wine. Your beloved champagne with orange juice can result in a heady mimosa that will embellish a Mother?s Day brunch like never before.



So weigh your options, look at your budget and decide how best you want to toast the occasion. Unleash your creativity and zest for life with the ideal wine and fruit gift basket. Let your popularity soar, and may you bask in oceans of eternal love and friendship!





Wine Baskets provides detailed information on wine baskets, wine gift baskets, wine picnic baskets, wine and cheese baskets and more. Wine Baskets is affliated with Bakery Management.

Wine Definitions and More

How About Adding a Wine Cellar to Your Home?


If you love wine, you might just want your very own wine cellar. Before you start hammering, there are a few things you should probably know and think...


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Wine Definitions Products we recommend

Louis Affre Bourgogne Haute Cotes de Nuits Futs de Chene


The wines of Dufouleur in Nuits St. Georges are some of the most consistent in Burgundy's Cote D'Or. We have been offering the firm's "Louis Affre" label for several years, and this recent addition is another admirable French Chardonnay from their portfolio of fine wines. We found this "futs de chene" dry white wine to have oak flavors that have been well integrated with the ripe fruit, and not domineering. This is a well rounded and deeply flavored Chardonnay from the upper vineyards of the Cotes de Nuits which can hold its own from fine wines from Chassagne or Meursault. Great gift! BHCN02 BHCN02


Price: 37.99 USD



News about Wine Definitions

Wine of the week: 2005 Syrah "Le Pousseur" (California, $18) (The Beaufort Gazette)

Tue, 15 Apr 2008 21:02:24 PDT
I knew that the 2005 Syrah "Le Pousseur" (California, $18) was going to be a big, fruit treasure from the aromas filling the room once it hit the glass.

Wine of the week | Try this wine with steak and veggies (The State)

Tue, 15 Apr 2008 21:06:40 PDT
2005 Syrah “Le Pousseur,” California, $18 I knew this was going to be a big fruit treasure because of the aromas that filled the room when the wine hit the glass. I sat next to the wine while dinner was being delivered, and I noticed blueberry-pie and clove aromas. The flavors were robust with dark jam and cedar nicely framed by a touch of white pepper. The finish lingered and was very soft. ...

Wine of the Week: 2006 Red Rock Reserve Merlot (Winston-Salem Journal)

Tue, 15 Apr 2008 22:32:02 PDT
The 2006 Red Rock Reserve Merlot (California, $12) is a medium-bodied red wine. It is no paragon of complexity, but it's a very pleasant merlot with generous black-cherry flavor and solid structure at an affordable price. It finishes with good length and provides just as much satisfaction as many California merlots that cost two or three times as much. Serve with steak, hamburger or pasta.

Vinogirl's Rambling...a blog for the newbie wine-o!

Tue, 15 Apr 2008 22:59:10 PDT
Enjoy this bitchin' 30something California chick's blog about all things WINE!

WINE Wine experts debate second labels vs. bulk sales (The Santa Rosa Press Democrat)

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 01:06:08 PDT
To bottle excess wine as a second label or sell it as bulk wine or offer it only by the glass that question sparked a lively discussion in front of nearly 300 people at the Business Journal s 2008 Wine Industry Conference on April 9.


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4:46 PM

Tuesday - Wine Industry-

Wine Industry For Your Reading Pleasure

Making Wine From Grapes



In the ordinary way, recipes for wines made entirely from grapes are not a practicable proposition. This is because grapes are merely crushed and fermented without either sugar or water being added. Provided you have enough grapes, making wines from them is the simplest winemaking of all-that is, of course, provided they are fully ripe. Small unpruned bunches often contain a lot of small undeveloped fruits between the large juicy ones and these must be removed before the bunches are crushed. The whole bunches, stalk as well, are used as these add something to the wine. The yeast forming the bloom on your grapes may be the kind that will make excellent wine, but we cannot be sure of this owing to the near-certainty that wild yeast and bacteria are present with it. As we have seen in previous chapters, we must destroy these yeasts and bacteria and add yeasts of our choice to make the wine for us.


You will need at least twenty pounds of grapes to be assured of a gallon of wine-and this amount may not make one gallon of wine, though it make one gallon of strained 'must'. Therefore the more grapes you have the better.


If enough grapes are available, the process is as follows:


METHOD: Put all grapes in a suitable vessel and crush them, making sure each grape is crushed. Measure as near as you can or judge as accurately as possible the amount of pulp you have and to each gallon allow one Campden tablet or four grains of sodium metabisulphite. Dissolve this in an egg cupful of warm water and stir into the pulp and leave for twenty-four hours.


After this, give the mixture a thorough mixing and churning and then add the yeast. The mixture should then be left to ferment for five days.


Following this, the pulp should be strained through a strong coarse cloth to prevent bursting and wrung out as dry as you can. The liquor should then be put into jars and fermented the same ways as other wines.


A good plan when doing this is to mix a quart of water with grape pulp and to crush this well to get as much from the skins as you can. If you do this, you must add one pound of sugar and dissolve it by warming the juice just enough for this purpose. This thinner juice may be mixed with the rest but before the better quality juice is put into jars.


Where grapes only are used with water (as suggested above) it must be borne in mind that to get enough alcohol for a stable wine we must have between two and two and a half pounds of sugar to the gallon. Juice crushed from grapes rarely contains this much, therefore it would be wise to add one pound when the fruit is crushed and before the juice is put into jars. If the wine turns out dry, it may be sweetened.


We may use a hydrometer to find the sugar content so that we know how much to add to give the amount of alcohol we need, but this is not for beginners without previous experiences in this sort of thing. The better plan is to follow my suggestions above, and if the wine is dry to sweeten it and then preserve it with Campden tablets or metabisulphite.


Since the color comes from the skins, if we want a red wine from black grapes we ferment the skins as directed earlier in this chapter. A white wine from black grapes is made by crushing the grapes and pressing out the juice and fermenting the juice only. The difference in the process already described is that instead of fermenting the skin for five days, the juice is pressed out after it has been allowed to soak for twenty-four hours.
If you happen to be making some of the fruit wine such as elderberry, plum, blackberry or damson, at the same time as making grape wine, it would be a good idea to put the strained fruit pulp which would otherwise be discarded into the 'must' of the other fruit and let it ferment there.

About the Author


Gregg Hall is a business consultant and author for many online and offline businesses and lives in Navarre Florida with his 16 year old son. For fine wines and wine accessories go to http://www.oldworldvineyard.com

Another short Wine Industry review

Keep Wine Chilled - Use a Wine Cooler


Wines taste best served at the right temperature. From 7?C for non vintage sparkling to 18?C for vintage port. Different types of wines need to be ser...


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Wine Industry Items For Viewing

Arbios Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon


Willam Arbios is a perfectionist. His vineyard is the highest in Sonoma county: a place where grass becomes stunted and oak trees take on a grayish palor. As he says: "Thin soil and scan water threaten the life of my grapes each year. These grapes give my wine the balance of character, finesse, and structure that's born from their constant struggle to live. I can never make much wine from here, but I can make the kind of wine that I have always dreamed of producing." Cherry, red-currant fruit with warmth of new French oak barrels. This Cabernet Sauvignon from California is a perfect gift to buy online! If you are a dry red wine lover, it is the right choice for you! ARB01 ARB01


Price: 61.99 USD



Wine Industry in the news

Beer could supplant sacramental wine in historic church

Sat, 05 Jan 2008 09:49:21 PST
A local businessman wants to convert the Ottawa Valley's oldest Protestant house of worship, a deconsecrated Anglican church, into an industrial brewery and brew pub with nightly entertainment

Big wine distributors spell doom for small family vineyards.

Mon, 07 Jan 2008 13:37:14 PST
Three small Massachusetts distributors are trying to make room for small winemakers in the crowded marketplace currently dominated by big companies that command the industrially-produced wine (and brand name liquor) market.

Legislators discuss session

Mon, 14 Jan 2008 14:46:13 PST
When the Legislature convenes Monday, representatives expect to wrangle with budget numbers, fight over immigration, discuss health care initiatives, consider a smoking ban, explore tax rates, provide relief for a slew of recent natural disasters, attempt some ethics and transparency reform, and even try to help the state's growing wine industry.

Two drinks a day limit wrong: winemakers

Sun, 20 Jan 2008 20:43:40 PST
New drinking guidelines which recommend no more than two drinks a day do not take into account the physiological and biological differences in people, the wine industry says.

Phylloxera- what is all the fuss about??

Mon, 21 Jan 2008 17:29:58 PST
Big news in the Australian wine industry is the past few weeks has been the recent outbreak of Phylloxera found in the Macedon Ranges of Victoria. Sarah Dalkin provides some insight into this serious pest to the Australian wine industry.


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6:19 AM

The matter on Calorie Counter written here has been written in such a way that it facilitates easy memorization. This memorized matter can later be used.

Another Great Calorie Counter Article

Wine Basics - Find Great Wine Values


Ever felt discontentment and agitated after paying too much for a bottle of wine? Getting a good deal on this kind of product is like getting a good deal on any other. It feels simply good. In fact there is an air of satisfaction just knowing that you have found true wine values in your purchases.

Wine values involve more than finding the least costly brand on the shelf. One must remember the less money you spend does not assure you the feeling of satisfaction that getting a good, open deal does. If that were the case, people would just buy the cheapest bottles on the shelves. Well this does not happen.

While for some would argue that there are wine-snobs floating around who only like a brand if it costs an exorbitant amount of money. Now this can be the case for a select few who find their wines by the cost rather than the wine values. Despite the fact that it is more expensive it does not always mean more value. There are certainly more things to consider than the price.

First in order to truly find wine values you have to look at the grand scale. You do not necessarily want the cheapest brand on the market despite the fact that you can find decent quality in the cheapest brand on the shelf. You also do not always find the best quality for the money with a high-priced purchase. Obviously the balance is getting the most bang for your buck. If you are faced with questions like; what is the finest quality product available for the most reasonable price? You may pay out a little more than the bottom-shelf brand but you will in fact appreciate the selection because of its superior quality. You will also value the idea of knowing that your snobby neighbor paid nearly twice as much for the same quality varietals found in your economically-sound wine values.

Experimenting a little bit is definitely an excellent way to finding good wine values. Instead of automatically looking at the commonly more expensive Chardonnay or Cabernet Sauvignon try looking into a Pinot Blanc or a Pinot Noir instead. You will be pleasantly surprised by trying less popular varietals as they can lead to great discoveries.

You may also want to consider wines from different regions as well. Australia and New Zealand boast wonderful wines for fairly little money. Check out local winery, too.You can truly uncover some treasures locally and you can also choose to buy wines by the case. Often wineries give a discount if you buy in bulk.

In any case, the best wine values are subjective in nature. You may love the simple boxed wine that many would avoid. Your enjoyment is primary in the value of your purchase.

James L. Paleta provides readers with up-to-date commentaries, articles, and reviews for drinks, food as well as other related information.



Calorie Counter and More

Learn to Purchase Wine Online Easily


Creating the perfect mix between wine and food can be a challenge if you're not entirely sure what you're doing. With such an array of wine and food a...


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Featured Calorie Counter Items

The FTD Floral Burst Arrangement - Standard


This multicolored bouquet delivers a wide assortment of garden blooms. Orange gerbera daisies, pink spray roses, orange carnations, purple asters and more are sweetly arranged in a handled basket. A terrific way to brighten someone's day. C21-3463S


Price: 59.99 USD




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Posted by Jim Smithson | 0 comments