" " " Types of Wines: July 2010 "

Customized Products For Bed and Breakfast-Lodge Owners

Bed and Breakfast or Lodge caters overnight accommodations and serves breakfast. Their frequent patrons are generally motorists or travelers from far away sites. Bed and Breakfast or B&B customers stay in that said establishment in a short while. So as a lodge owner, make sure that your clients will keep in mind their short stay. Aside from enhancing your amenities supply them tangible items that will make them remember their overnight experience B&B style. Here are some customized giveaways for your clienteles:

Keychain- This is a type of customized item that can be personalized. Customize your keychain by designing it using the best stuff that best embody your location. If your B&B business is situated in the state of Hawaii, produce a pineapple-shaped keychain. Good recall of the location also helps recall of your company.

Shirt- Custom Printed t-shirt with your logo on it is a great wheel of advertisement. Blueprint a good design that is eye-catching so your future customer would be encouraged to go back and refer your service to their friends. They say first impressions last, indeed.

Mug and Drink ware- This is an all-around personalized item for Bed and Breakfast clienteles. It comes in various forms and used in almost everywhere. Indeed, conventional mugs that hold the logo of your B&B business are remembrances to remember.

Pins- The most pervasive class of personalized product is button pins. Encourage couple, family or even a single motorist to take their image in a beautiful scenery within the area and lay it on a button pin. It is great keepsake that catches a valuable moment, indeed.

Wine- wine is an alcoholic drink and there are so many types of wines around the sphere. According to experts, tastes of wines differ depending on their land of origin. So if you have the budget, give a bottle of your promotional wine to chosen loyal customers or to those people from the other side of the globe. No doubt, they will never forget you.

Before your clienteles bid goodbye do not forget to give them these customized items that can serve as a reminder of a wonderful place that is your lodge.

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Sousa-Palooza! Corvallis Community Band concert on 6 July 2010

No, that's not really what the concert was called...but it could've been hee hee. This is a video of part of the summer concert in the park series put on by the Corvallis, Oregon Parks and Recreation department featuring the Corvallis Community Band. The theme of this particular concert was the music of John Philip Sousa. Many people rightfully equate Sousa's music with Independence Day as well as themes of patriotism, militarism and nationalism. After all, he was an American composer and conductor of the late Romantic era, known particularly for American military and patriotic marches. Because of his mastery of march composition, he is known as "The March King." However, at the band concert, I learned something new about Sousa's music: he was quite a prolific composer and that throughout his career he had composed a variety of non-military and non-political marches, songs, suites, operettas with a diversity of themes. He even wrote a tango (quite scandalous for the times, I might add)! At this specific concert, the band presented several of Sousa's rarely performed compositions in addition to some of his more well known works. I particularly enjoyed this specific piece of band music and thought I'd share with y'all here at youtube. This is a ballet movement in one of Sousa's more obscure suites from a 1909 operetta entitled the Bride Elect. It's entitled "People Who Live in Glass Houses." The conductor explained to the concert attendees that the song was not written ...

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Pillitteri Winery

A very interesting Corporate Video created for Pillitteri Winery in Southern Ontario. It highlights the different types of wines created by Winemaster Marc Bradshaw. This ambitious project was one of my favourite videos that I have produced to date. Despite it's length, the video seems to melt away and keeps the viewer entertained the entire time.

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Types of Dessert Wines : French Sauternes Dessert Wines

Learn about French Sauternes dessert wines in this free online video guide to dessert wines.

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Piemonte Italian Wines : How Piemonte Wines Are Made

During the wine making process, wineries use different types of barrels for fermentation. Learn how Piemonte wineries use barrels to make wine in this free winevideo from a professional sommelier. Expert: Mark Middlebrook Contact: www.paulmarcuswines.com Bio: Mark Middlebrook sells and writes about wine for Paul Marcus Wines in Oakland, California. Filmmaker: Sam Lee

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I Love German Wine and Food - A Rheingau Riesling Spatlese

If you are looking for fine German wine and food, you should consider the Rheingau region of central Germany. You may find a bargain, and I hope that you'll have fun on this fact-filled wine education tour in which we review a local Riesling Spätlese, literally a late-harvest wine but in fact one made from ripe grapes.

The Rheingau region is the most central of Germany's thirteen wine regions but comes in eighth both for vineyard area and the volume of wine produced. It has quite a special terrain. The majestic Rhine River runs mostly in the east-west direction and has excellent exposure to the summer sun. Furthermore the heavily wooded hillsides block cold air. The Rheingau is known for its Riesling which makes up over 80% of its total wine production. Pinot Noir (Spätburgunder) comes in second with a measly 10%. But this is Riesling country and has been since the Middle Ages. And since the late Eighteenth Century it has been making Spätlese and the sweeter Auslese wines.

If you are in this region you should visit Öestrich-Winkel about thirteen miles (twenty-one kilometers west of Wiesbaden, the main city in the Rheingau region. Öestrich is home to the largest vineyard in the Rheingau. The nearby Brentano Haus has a special room devoted to the writer Goethe, but you need an appointment to visit. North of the town you'll find Schloss Vollrads, the oldest (we're talking almost seven hundred years) private wine estate in Germany with a tower and moat that were inhabited for centuries. And don't miss the nearby Schloss Johannisberg, described in a previous article in this series.

Before reviewing the Rheingau wine here are a few suggestions of what to eat with indigenous wines when touring this beautiful region.
Start with Riesling-Käse Suppe (Riesling and Cheese Soup).
Continue with Bauernente (Farmer's Duck).
For dessert indulge yourself with Riesling-Torte (Riesling Torte).

OUR WINE REVIEW POLICY All wines that we taste and review are purchased at the full retail price.

Wine Reviewed
Letitz Rudesheimer Berg Roseneck Riesling Spätlese 2004 7.5% alcohol about $25

Let's start by quoting the marketing materials. Tasting Note: Wild floral aromas combine with guava, cinnamon and nut oils. The luscious tropical fruit flavors along with a bacony tang come across as lively rather than sweet. Succulent and long on the finish. Score - 90 (Joel B Payne, International Wine Cellar, Jan./Feb. 2006) And now for my review.

The first sip was deliciously sweet with plenty of citrus. I really felt that I could finish the bottle; what a headache that would give me. My first meal consisted of packaged vegetarian lasagna covered with grated Parmesan cheese. The taste of tropical fruits remained in my mouth for a moderate period of time. The wine's sweetness melded with the lasagna's tomatoes. For dessert I had a French-style lemon pie with a very buttery crust. The two somewhat different citrus tastes meshed; I got some pear notes as well.

I next tried the wine with a mushroom, pepperoni, and Italian sausage pizza. The Spätlese was too sweet for the pizza. It actually went well with the toppings but there wasn't a lot of tomato. As always, I don't blame the wine for an unorthodox (read weird) food pairing.

The final food pairing was with a commercially barbecued lightly-herbed chicken breast accompanied by roasted potatoes cooked in chicken fat, and a fairly spicy tomato, garlic, green pepper, and lime juice salsa. This time the wine was lovely with sweet acidity and an excellent citrus taste. It did a fine job of cutting the potatoes' grease, and believe me, they are greasy. This Riesling was a chameleon; it became spicy when faced with the salsa. In the presence of fruit juice candy the wine was quite round but somewhat short. It seems to go well with almost everything. I did something that I don't usually do. I repeated this delicious meal with the same great results, leaving only a tiny bit of wine for the cheese tastings. No way that I was going to waste a quarter bottle of this wine on cheese pairings.

I first tried this Riesling wine with a Havarti cheese. The wine enveloped the cheese and wasn't overly sweet. But frankly, why bother? Marbled Cheddar cheese increased the wine's acidity.

Final verdict. Yes, yes, and yes. Maybe I am tired of $10 wines, but frankly most $20-$30 wines don't even come close to this delicious bottle. I not only would buy it again, but am actively looking for such a wine. I do have a Rheingau Auslese (a true late-harvest wine) that I will review shortly.

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How to Choose a Red Wine

The staff of OneStop Wines and Liquors in Johnson City, TN, explains how to taste and choose a red wine.

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