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    We are always looking for guest viewpoints! You don't need to be a professional writer; we'll help you edit and refine your piece. If you have an idea for an article, essay or travelogue please contact us at wwcb@tcsn.net.

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  • Critical Cloud
    "Read 'Wine and Pregnancy--The Lies Women Are Told' from the delightful Women Wine Critics Board website."
  • Fermentation
    In "Wine and the Devil's Child"--"The article at Women Wine Critics Board is strong. Read it."
  • Fork & Bottle
    "The BEST Web Read in a long time: 'Wine and Pregnancy - Lies That Women Are Told,' is a great article by Daniel Rogov over at the Women Wine Critics blog."
  • Slate Magazine
    In what could be seen as another indication that women are particularly frustrated with pointillism and cherry-and-berry tasting notes, a group called the Women's Wine Critics Board—composed of women wine professionals—is working on an alternative form of wine assessment, one more attuned to issues like cost and versatility.
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    "This article at Women Wine Critics Board wonderfully summarizes the debate about alcohol and fetal alcohol sydrome. Excellent references are given."
  • Vinography
    "Another excellent bit of writing on the internet, this time about a very interesting and controversial subject: drinking and pregnancy."

Our Contributors

  • Christian Miller, Full Glass Research
    Christian Miller is the owner of Full Glass Research and directs research for Wine Opinions.
  • Daniel Rogov
    Daniel Rogov is a well known European wine writer and author of "Rogov's Guide to Israeli Wines"
  • Jana Llewellyn
    Jana reviews books and life on her personal blog.
  • Katy Budge
    Katy Budge has over 20 years experience writing about the wine and food of California’s Central Coast.
  • Laura Ness
    Laura Ness is a regional correspondent for AppellationAmerica, and a wine educator.
  • Mary Baker
    Editor of the WWCB, and co-owner of Dover Canyon Winery in Paso Robles.
  • Michele Ostrove
    Michele Ostrove is the editor-in-chief of Wine Adventure magazine.
  • Natalie MacLean
    An award-winning wine writer, Nat's sense of humor infuses her writing and makes reading about wine an adventure everyone can enjoy.

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May 10, 2008

Feiring's Fantasy: Alice Feiring Saves the World from Robert Parker

Wine_and_love The Battle for Wine and Love
or How I Saved the World from Parkerization


Author: Alice Feiring

The font of the title is pleasantly wacky, and the title itself promises a dream-like escapade in which Feiring daydreams herself “saving the world” and falling in love with a superhero winemaker. Not a bad concept.

This is not a journalistic effort like other recently released wine books, To Cork or Not to Cork, The Billionaire’s Vinegar, First Big Crush, Wine and Philosophy. This is a personal essay on a personal point of view. The book is a small-format book—hardbound, 5 ½ “ by 8”, 258 pages exclusive of acknowledgments and index, and can easily be read in a few hours.

In the introduction she says, “I am hoping to intrigue those who want wines that truly have a story to tell. Once people experience these wines and winemakers, once they know that wine truly does have soul and character, it will be difficult for them to cozy up to wines made by the numbers and not from the heart.”

I hope that this book fulfills her mission.

Unfortunately . . .

Continue reading "Feiring's Fantasy: Alice Feiring Saves the World from Robert Parker" »

April 02, 2007

Cultivating a Life

163Susan Sokol Blosser's account of building a life in the Dundee Hills of Oregon speaks to me on many levels--as a woman working in the wine industry, a woman working with her husband, a woman running her own business, and a mother. Susan turns her trials into triumphs and exercises a sense of humor along the way. From the Great Goose Experiment to the day her tearful son rides his bike all the way to school by himself, this is a story that will transport you into "The Life" of owning a vineyard and winery, with a judicial salting of reality and romance.

In At Home in the Vineyard: Cultivating a Winery, an Industry, and a Life, Susan talks about their wild card decision to plant a vineyard in Oregon in the 1970's.  But it's also the story of a young, idealistic bride who has been groomed to "please" her husband and family.  Said bride is confronted with unhappy investors, disgruntled family members, distributor ennui, divorce, and disastrous vintages.  But along the way she collects some overly affectionate geese, useless peacocks, a three-legged cat, and some loyal staff members. 

By the end of the book, we see a woman who can confidently drive a vineyard tractor with her baby daughter strapped in beside her, navigate the corridors of politics, travel widely in support of her brand and her region, and take the reins as owner and CEO of her own company. 

If you dream of someday owning your own vineyard or winery, this autobiography should be part of your literary quest.  If you are a single, working mother you will resonate to young Alex' cry when he says, "Mom, why can't you stay at home and be a real mother like Wilma?"   But most of all, I was impressed by Susan Sokol Blosser's willingness to lay her heart on the table, to pour her sorrow, joy and fears into a glass.  It's one thing to critique a winegrower's wines.  Susan is offering her heart.

August 30, 2006

Red, White and Drunk All Over

Red_white_and_drunk_all_overThis week we are joined by award-winning wine writer Natalie MacLean, who has just published her first book, Red, White, and Drunk All Over: A Wine-Soaked Journey from Grape to Glass. Natalie joins us below for a Q&A session about her book, and if you have any questions for Natalie, please post them here!

From the book cover:

Natalie tastes sensuous pinot noir in the ancient cellars of Burgundy while discovering the mysterious tenets of biodynamic viticulture from such colorful characters as the tiny, ferocious Lalou Bize-Leroy, part-owner of France's acclaimed Domaine de la Romanée-Conti. She pulls on sturdy boots to help with the grape harvest at California’s Bonny Doon Vineyards—and gets to the root of the anti-establishment philosophy of winemaker Randall Grahm, notorious for his experimental wine techniques, love for unfashionable grapes, and fondness for naming his wines "Cardinal Zin," "Heart Has its Rieslings," and "Big House Red" (whose grapes are grown just down the road from one of California’s state prisons).

Natalie takes a job as undercover sommelier at a five-star French restaurant, spends a day helping customers in a high-end New York wine shop, wades into a famous feud between Robert Parker and Jancis Robinson, two of the world’s best-known critics and, back home, invites friends over for a casual wine tasting. Along the way she teaches us—painlessly and often hilariously—how to face a telephone directory-sized wine list without fear, what questions to ask to get exactly the wine you are looking, what those scores out of 100 really mean, and how properly to expectorate (it’s best to start out in the shower!)

At the 2003 World Food Media Awards in Australia, Natalie was named the World's Best Drink Writer. The competition received more than 1,000 entries. Natalie has also won four James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards for her writing, including the MFK Fisher Distinguished Writing Award, in memory of one of America's greatest food writers. Natalie has also won an unprecedented five Bert Greene Awards for excellence in food journalism, presented by the International Association of Culinary Professionals, four awards from the American Association of Food Journalists, four from the North American Travel Writers Association and three honorable mentions at the National Magazine Awards. Natalie’s e-newsletter is read by 50,000 wine lovers in 36 countries and was twice named one of the three best food and wine newsletters at the James Beard awards.

Continue reading "Red, White and Drunk All Over" »

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