Varietal Wine Information Blog

10:41 PM

April 2008 - Wine Flavors

A Featured Wine Flavors Article

Wine Cork Recycling














When a person thinks of cork, they may think of a variety of things. Some people may think of the material used for bulletin boards, while some may think of material used for coasters. Others, thoroughly confused, may simply think of cork as the other white meat. Chances are, however, when most people think of cork, they think of wine. Part of each others' lives, the two are nearly inseparable, especially without a wine opener.





What is Cork?





It would be easy to define a cork with a simple, unrefined answer. We could say that cork is "a lightweight, inert substance providing blockage of liquids" and leave it at that. But, because cork is an elemental part of wine, it is bestowed with certain elegance and sophistication. For this reason, wine cork deserves a more grandiose introduction: "Cork hails from the bark of the Cork Oak tree, Quercus Suber. Produced extensively in Portugal, cork enjoys being fire resistant, providing insulation, and the company of fine alcohol."





Since cork is very elastic and impermeable, it makes a great bottle stopper; for cork, just like for many of us, wine was destiny. Its adaptability, additionally, makes it an easy material to compress without change to the original shape. It was these qualities that intrigued Dom Perignon, a French Benedictine monk, to use cork in a bottle of champagne, thus influencing the world of wine from that moment on.





How Do Wine Corks Affect the Environment?





Wine corks are environmentally friendly, like a material that is always willing to lend a helping hand or an encouraging word to the ecosystem. This makes wine corks stand out from other forms of packaging, forms that often hinder their surroundings rather than help them.





Wine corks are biodegradable, natural, and renewable. They also don't go to waste, with each aspect of a wine cork having the potential to become something else. Even cork dust can be used for fuel and cork residue can be used to make other cork products.





Cork forests, where cork oak trees reside, are important to the balance of the ecosystems with several species, including endangered species, calling these forests home.





What is Wine Cork Recycling?





Many places, such as Europe and Australia, have programs set up for wine cork recycling. Dropping wine corks off in designated areas, the wine corks are granulated and turned into products such as pin boards, tile, engine gaskets, hockey balls, safety mats, and boat decks. Recently, wine cork has even been used in rocket technology.





Because wine cork is one of the easier materials to recycle, there seems little reason to not recycle it. However, the US does not routinely engage in wine cork recycling, leaving some environmentalists to wonder why.





This wonderment, not limited to individuals, has been adopted by a few US based companies. One of these companies, Yemm and Hart, a firm specializing in the recycling of products, is conducting an experiment asking for wine corks that they can recycle. Theorizing that cork is a valuable resource that should not go to waste, Yemm and Hart plan to begin manufacturing tack boards, coasters, plaques, and floor tiles all made from wine cork.





What Are Creative Ways to Recycle Wine Cork?





If the concept of wine cork recycling catches on, recycling wine cork in the US may someday be as simple as recycling newspapers or soda cans. In the meantime, however, those who live in America can recycle their wine corks through a few creative means.





While some people have donated wine corks to children's museums, for use in displays and dioramas, others have made wreaths and decorative pieces out of old wine corks. Some people wire together wine corks and make hot pads while others suggest gluing sliced wine corks to the bottom of vases and knickknacks, as a means to keep these items from scratching tables and shelves. People have even found old wine corks useful as door stops, knife scrubbers, and pin cushions.





Just as wine should never go to waste, neither should wine corks. A highly useable material, there are several ways wine corks can be recycled, even if it's not routinely done on a national level. With all the kinds of packaging that can destroy the Earth, cork is an exception. A special material, cork is able to protect wine and the world by putting a stop to wastefulness.









About The Author

Jennifer Jordan is the senior editor at http://www.savoreachglass.com. With a vast knowledge of wine etiquette, she writes articles on everything from how to hold a glass of wine to how to hold your hair back after too many glasses. Ultimately, she writes her articles with the intention that readers will remember wine is fun and each glass of anything fun should always be savored.








Short Review on Wine Flavors

Wine Tasting Like an Aficionado


Wine tasting is verisimilar to a fine art. It engages three senses to appreciate the aroma of the bouquet. There's a certain savoir-faire to letting w...


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Wine Flavors Products we recommend

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Headlines on Wine Flavors

The Naked Vine: Ringing in the New Year

Sun, 30 Dec 2007 09:26:44 PST
Some suggestions for sparkling wines for end of year celebration, deciphering types of these wines, and other useful information. All wines under $15.

Champagne and Sparkling Wine - How to Serve and Store

Fri, 04 Jan 2008 07:22:30 PST
Learn Wine Tasting and more...

Winemakers: Paris Hilton Not a Good Poster Girl for Prosecco

Thu, 10 Jan 2008 13:09:41 PST
Italian winemakers are saying that Paris Hilton is not a worthy poster girl for Prosecco white sparkling wine. Hilton stars in the advertising campaign for Rich Prosecco, nude and painted in gold in one ad reminiscent of actress Shirley Eaton in the James Bond film "Goldfinger".

Science of Champagne Bubbles

Sun, 13 Jan 2008 12:27:13 PST
This was my New Year's Eve post on champagne. (I just learned about Digg). It explains why bubbles form after you uncork the bubbly, and points to new research about bubble patterns. And it has a few words about "champagne" vs "sparkling wine".

How to Serve Wine

Mon, 14 Jan 2008 04:02:38 PST
Wine is an exceptional type of beverage that can turn any dinner into a festive occasion. Whether one fancies red or white wine, sparkling or non-sparkling, there are many different options when it comes to choosing the perfect wine to accompany a meal...

EU Destroys 3,200 Bottles of Andre Wine

Wed, 16 Jan 2008 04:20:16 PST
Belgian Customs seized and crushed 3,200 bottles of California sparkling wine because the word Champagne was on the lable, violating European Union trade rules.

Soap Opera-Style Feud Splits Wine Dynasty, Stuns Napa Valley

Fri, 18 Jan 2008 08:25:46 PST
The Davies family has been making Schramsberg sparkling wine fit for kings and world leaders for more than 40 years. After years of living quietly overseas, middle son John Davies has suddenly re-emerged with a tale of betrayal, stock manipulation and dementia. Please don't let a family battle ruin my favorite domestic sparkling wine!


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8:23 PM

Thursday April 17, 2008 - Shiraz Wine

The Best Articles on Shiraz Wine

Father of the California Wine Industry


Father of California Wine Industry

?Hungarian nobleman leaves indelible mark?

Agoston Haraszthy made an impression wherever he went. After serving as a member of the Royal Hungarian Guards of Francis I, Emperor of Austria-Hungary in 1830, he was forced to flee Europe for fear of being branded a revolutionist.
In 1842, he returned to Hungary and convinced his father to liquidate their considerable holdings so the entire family could immigrate to America. When they arrived in Sauk City, Wisconsin, they were among the best-capitalized immigrants of the 19th century.
Along with his other entrepreneurial investments, Haraszthy began agricultural experiments and achieved considerable success in sheep raising and growing hops.
Even with his considerable success, he was still disappointed at not being able to establish the high quality vineyards of his native Hungary. The tug of the western frontier pulled at the Haraszthy family, and they headed, by wagon train, to California in 1848.
Agoston was the wagon master of the train, which included about sixty immigrants. Without serious incident, the wagon train arrived at Warner Hot Springs, in San Diego County.
Colonel Jonathan Warner, a former militiaman who established Warner Hot Springs in 1844, apprised Haraszthy about the agriculture and the politics in the San Diego area. A scant 650 people, mainly vaqueros, Yankee sailors who had jumped ship, and a few Mormon soldiers from the Mormon Battalion populated San Diego.

Haraszthy?s family now included his wife, six children, his father and stepmother, and Thomas W. Sutherland, former U.S. Attorney for Wisconsin Territory, who was now Haraszthy?s stepbrother.
The Polish immigrant purchased a plot of land adjacent to San Luis Rey Mission, and, with his sons, Attila and Arpad, first planted a large fruit orchard. He later bought 160 acres more in Mission Valley and planted peach and cherry trees sent to him from New York State.
Haraszthy never ceased his investment activity as well as his interest in community politics. With Don Juan Bandini, Haraszthy set up the first regularly scheduled omnibus transit system and established a livery stable. He established a very profitable butcher shop.
With other real estate speculators, he helped establish the subdivision of Middletown. Haraszthy Street existed there until the early 1960s when it was wiped from the map by the construction of Interstate 5.

When San Diego County was chartered in 1850, Haraszthy was elected the first City Marshall, while his father, Charles, was elected Magistrate and Land Commissioner. His stepbrother, Tom Sutherland, became San Diego?s first City Attorney.
In 1851, he was elected to the State Assembly and resigned his other offices. While in the legislature, then meeting in Vallejo, Haraszthy succeeded in getting funding for the expansion of San Diego Harbor and the county?s first public hospital.
He was the first legislator to introduce legislation to divide California into two states; North and South. Because of powerful political interest in Northern California, that bill died.
All the while, Haraszthy continued searching for land more suitable for agriculture than San Diego?s subtropical desert land offered. Early in 1852, he purchased 210 acres near San Francisco?s Mission Dolores. He moved the entire family there at the end of the Assembly Session.
Haraszthy?s noteworthy accomplishments didn?t stop. He introduced the ?Zinfandel? red wine grape and the ?Muscat of Alexandria? raisin grape to California.
He invented an efficient gold refining process, and was founding partner in the Eureka Gold and Silver Refining Company. The firm became one of the major contract refiners for the San Francisco Mint.

Because of his reputation for fairness and honesty, Haraszthy was appointed Assayer of the Mint in 1855.
He developed the first large, high-quality grape vineyard at Crystal Springs in San Mateo County. At this new ranch, Haraszthy designed and laid out a nursery and horticultural garden, which he named Los Flores.
With his son?s help, he planted fruit trees and shrubs imported from the east. At about this same time, he received a shipment of six choice rooted vines and 160 cuttings from Hungary.
In the shipment were two small bundles. One was the Muscat of Alexandria and the other was said to be the famous mystery grape, the Zinfandel. Today the Zinfandel is the most widely planted wine grape in California.
In 1857, while visiting General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo at the General?s Lachrima Montis estate, Haraszthy was introduced to the Sonoma Valley. This valley especially appealed to him because its weather, topography and soil were so similar to his Hungarian homeland?s high quality vineyards.
In Sonoma, he established the Szeptaj Estate (Buena Vista). That Buena Vista Winery is today a state park and historical site.

In 1861, He was appointed to a California commission to improve agricultural methods and to collect vines and fruit tree stocks in Europe. During a European tour with his son, Arpad, he purchased, with his own money, 100,000 grapevines representing 1,400 varieties, along with small selected lots of planting stock for olives, almonds, pomegranates, oranges, lemons and chestnuts.
When he returned, Harper & Brothers, of New York, published Haraszthy?s report, ?Grape Culture, Wines and Wine Making upon Agriculture and Horticulture. It remained the winemaking classic authority in the English language until well into the 20th century.
The Haraszthy family planted vineyards for European immigrant friends and wine growers, including Charles Krug, Emile Dreser and Jacob Grundlach.
In 1863, Agoston?s sons Attila and Arpad Haraszthy were married in a double ceremony to the twin daughters of General Vallejo.
Later, after one of his wine cellars containing vintages of two years was destroyed by fire, Haraszthy traveled to Nicaragua where he bought a sugar plantation. There, he wife contacted yellow fever and died.
Agoston Haraszthy died July 6, 1869, near his estate, Hacienda San Antonio, at Corinto, Nicaragua, while trying to cross a crocodile infested rive.. His family believed that he fell into a river while attempting to cross and was dragged away by an alligator. His body was never found.

(Alton Pryor has been a writer for magazines, newspapers, and wire services. He worked for United Press International in their Sacramento Bureau, handling both printed press as well as radio news. He traveled the state as a field editor for California Farmer Magazine for 27 years. He is now the author of 10 books, primarily on California and western history. His books can be seen at www.stagecoachpublishing.com. Readers can email him at stagecoach@surewest.net.)



Shiraz Wine and More

Why Don't We Use Our Good Wine Glasses?


Why Don?t We Use Our Good Wine Glasses?OK, ladies... the $64,000 Question (are you old enough to remember that game show)...Last night I go to pour my...


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Shiraz Wine Products we recommend

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Headlines on Shiraz Wine

RECIPES (The Columbus Dispatch)

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 00:38:43 PDT
FROM THE COVER

More News (Gazette.Net)

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 06:35:45 PDT
Outside, a custom Grecian in-ground pool offers an ideal spot for summer entertaining, complete with a Trex deck and fenced-in yard. Brick and siding cover the outside of the home, where a walkway leads to the front door. The two-story foyer inside is both large and welcoming.

Contemporary kosher: It's not your bubbe's Passover anymore. (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 07:03:13 PDT
By AMY CULBERTSON It's not your bubbe's Passover anymore. Just take a look at the recipes in a half-dozen new books on kosher cooking released this spring, in time for the Passover observance: Persian charoset with pistachios and pomegranate juice; shiitake mushroom matzo balls; garlicky Swiss chard and mushroom matzo kugel; and Italian carrot-pecan torta. Kosher cooking is becoming more ...

Living Green: Host an ECOcktail party (Juice)

Wed, 16 Apr 2008 10:26:42 PDT
Becoming an ambassador for living green is as easy as playing host for the night. Entertaining in an eco-friendly way is right on trend, and it’s a...


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