Above: Brett Zimmerman, founder of the Boulder Burgundy Festival, presents the Friday night dinner at last year’s gathering.
It gives me great pleasure to share the news that our good friend Elaine Brown will be a featured speaker at this year’s Boulder Burgundy Festival (Nov. 11-13).
She will be joined by Esther Mobley, San Francisco Chronicle wine columnist, and Carlin Karr, wine director for Frasca Food and Wine, for the long weekend’s first seminar, “Sustainability in Burgundy.”
And she will also be moderating the Sunday morning seminar, “Burgundy’s Rising Stars: Chassagne Montrachet & Volnay.”
But the coolest thing will be getting to rub shoulders and raising a glass with her throughout the three days of tasting and breaking bread — and many snails — with her and a simpaticissimo group of Burgundy collectors and lovers.
If you’re reading a wine blog right now, Elaine needs no introduction.
She’s someone who reshaped the way we think about wine blogging as she pushed the envelope of digital enography over the course of more than a decade.
First through her groundbreaking work as an illustrator and then her reimagining of the blogosphere as a medium for personal, thought-provoking and socially conscious narrative, her voice has become a model for a new generation of wine-focused creators.
Over the years, she’s always been keen to remember back to an early blogger trip to Friuli where her own new voice found its cadence. One such occasion was Jancis Robinson’s announcement that Elaine had joined her corral of top wine writers in 2015. In that post, they share a deeply moving early essay by Elaine that many veteran enonauts will remember fondly. I highly recommend it.
Check out the festival site for more info and registration. Hope to see you there! Happy Labor Day Weekend.
Image via
Image via
Enrico Selmin had used electric fences to protect his five hectares of organically farmed grapes — his first commercially viable crop.
“The Sreja 2022 died before it was even born,” wrote
For more than a decade, the Boulder Burgundy Festival has quietly grown an extremely loyal following among top Burgundy collectors and wine lovers.
Above: winemaker Gianluca Cabrini of Tenuta Belvedere in Oltrepò Pavese
Above: Lake Iseo in Brescia province as seen from Mt. Orfano in the south of what is now the Franciacorta appellation. Its morainic “lean” soils, as they were described in the Middle Ages, contributed to its reign as a top zone for wine between the 14th and 16th centuries.
What will come as a surprise to contemporary readers is that neither Tuscany or Piedmont figure as top centers for wine production. Tuscany would become an elite region for wine as the Medici family’s power grew. But it was still far from dominant when Dante began writing the Comedìa. Piedmont was centuries away from becoming a top wine region.
Grape harvest in the north of Italy began this week.
Lila Jane, happy birthday! You are nine years old today! We love you so much and are so proud of you, sweet girl!
When you Google “Riccardo Fabbio,” the first result is a video interview by an Italian YouTuber entitled
Another Italian-focused wine blogger who’s in my feed is Kevin Day, author and editor of