Saturday, December 17, 2011

Magritte and Margrit

It's Christmas time at the winery.  December means lights, parties, family and carolers.

This time of year one of our over the row tractors gets decorated for the Calistoga tractor parade.

 Reggie loads up the tractor with decorations from every angle.

It also plays music.

 This is Reggie working on making the tractor festive.

 An ode to Rene Magritte.

 After it's all dressed up it is driven on a larger tractor up to Calistoga.

 Also last week we had our Holiday Party.  It was so lovely that I forgot to take pictures.

 Except this one of me and my BFF Margrit Mondavi enjoying dinner.

 This week my family from Guatemala visited the winery for the first time.

The last festive thing I will share is carolers in the ferry building in San Francisco.

I'm going to South Africa tonight,
I can't wait to see their wine country, also, Air Jaws.

Happy Holidays.

-Lucia

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Wine + Grape Expo

At 6am on November 16th I was at the Wine and Grape Expo.  In case you'd like to revisit the hilarity, here is the video promoting the event.


This is what the trade show looks like at 6am.  Creepy.  Eerily quiet.  Like that Stephen King Movie, The Langoliers where the entire airport has been deserted except for like 5 people.  It was totally like that.

 Like The Langoliers movie, The Wine and Grape Expo was at an airport, the Napa airport, which explains all the airplanes and winemaking equipment.

 I made the mistake of thinking it would be, I don't know, inside.  I guess it was technically inside the hangar, but the doors were wide open.  It was freezing.

 I, along with other volunteers were there early to help register and hand out name badges.

 Which meant that I got to watch planes take off into the sunrise, so that was pretty cool.

 By 9am my duties were done and I went to explore the show.

 Here I am in a harvester.  This is what they mean by machine vs hand picked fruit.  Instead of a team of people in the vineyard cutting individual clusters off the vines, they can send in this behemoth.

 Everyone who is remotely related to wine is at the trade show.  This company makes tin capsules and metal wine labels.

 Here we can see the size variations for the bottles from a capsule for a split to a magnum sparkling bottle.

 These are the metal labels and embellishments for wine bottles.

 I like the look of it, but I get the impression they are a pain in the butt to apply since it looks like they all have to be applied by hand.  However that may not be a big deal since some companies apply the paper labels by hand too.


Besides packaging companies (glass, labels, foils, cork), there were also nurseries who sell young vines and are involved in viticulture.

Then there were companies selling lab instruments (my lab is all stocked up, thank you very much) and more serious equipment like this reverse osmosis machine.

These bags (also reverse osmosis) work for alcohol adjustments.  If the alcohol level is lower than desired, they can take some water out and concentrate the wine.  However ff the alcohol level is too high you can't just add water to dilute it, it will taste like you added water to wine.  


Lunch break! Check out the awesome bird plane.  So awesome!


In addition to the trade show (where we get to see what new products and technologies are available) there were several seminars (where we get our learn on).

 A big part of getting our learn on involves getting our tasting on.  It is extremely common to have wine samples to illustrate whatever the seminar is talking about.

 New seminar topic . . . .

 new wine samples.

I regret that November has been light on postings.  It has been a combination of extreme busyness and extreme laziness.

I have high hopes for December.  Although I will be out of the country for the second half of the month, so maybe not.

-L

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Trip to the Pumpkin Patch

 I love October.  It means gargantuan pumpkins.

Another giant pumpkin on the same day!  Chelsea and I are very excited.

 This is work-related in that we took a work day afternoon to visit the local pumpkin patch.  Our goal was to find and bring back pumpkins to carve and decorate for our Harvest Party.


A third giant pumpkin! We hung out with a lot of giant pumpkins.

 Gords were beautiful but difficult to carve, so we kept looking.

 These were a little too ordinary.

 This one is French.

Shoot, I knew I should have take that tractor driving class.

 Seriously, fall is awesome.

 Variegated maize ears.  Yay for genetic diversity.

 Pumpkins as far as the eye could see.  Well, pretty far anyway.

 Duck gords.  Also tough to carve.

 Oh, also, there were piglets.

 Growing up in the city, the novelty of farm animals has yet to wear off.

 Piglet butts are so adorable.

Another tractor, another missed opportunity.


Then we took our pumpkins back to the winery to carve.  Some were harder than others.

 Once I showed him who was bass, my little guy didn't give me any trouble.


AC/DC ala Bill Burr.

-L