Dear Friends,
Upcoming Fun:
First Fabbioli Cellars Wine
Dinner: Stone Manor outside of Lovettesville will be hosting
the first Fabbioli Cellars wine dinner on Sunday, July 29 starting
at 5:00pm for appetizers. This will feature four Fabbioli wines paired
with dishes from Chef Marcel along with a special aperitif blend to
go with the appetizers. The price is $80 all-inclusive and all profits
will go to the Bessie Ault Alzheimer’s Care Fund.
Beth Van Houtte and Spencer Ault have
been very dear friends of ours for a number of years. Their passion
to build a beautiful, sustainable retreat in western Loudoun has finally
come to fruition. You can check it out at www.mycountryretreat.com.
They have rooms available for the night to make your evening complete.
Call Beth at 540-822-3032, to reserve your spot at the table and a
bed to go with it. We are all really looking forward to this event.
Open House July 21 5pm to 9pm:
We enjoyed this summer evening event last year. This year we are going
to put a little more definition to it.
Food:
• We will be roasting corn and grilling hot dogs for all. There
will be some grill space available for those who wish to bring their
own meat.
• Bring a dish to add to the table as others will do the same.
• Bring your own non-alcoholic drinks please.
• Do NOT bring your own alcoholic drinks, please buy them from
us. State Law.
• We will have food going until 8pm?
Activities:
• 6pm soccer game
• 7pm Ultimate Frisbee
• 8pm vintage wine tasting featuring 2004 Tre Sorelle and 2005
Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon.
• 9pm explosive light show
Tony Lapera will play
his guitar for us with classic acoustic songs from my old album collection.
I will have some tables and chairs but you may want to bring your
own. This is a fun event that we look forward to hosting every year.
Oops, Doug makes computer errors:
Okay, I messed up good. For the home winemaking class
and grape purchases, I deleted the spreadsheet with
the names of those who signed up last time. PLEASE send me your info
again. I PROMISE that I will not screw it up this time. The wine class
will be August 5th at 2pm and cost is $35. Grapes will be available
this fall as they become ripe. Varieties are Cabernet Franc, Merlot,
Chambourcin and a little Sangiovese.
Saturdays at Fabbioli’s:
Things have been working pretty well. Good walk in customers,
some regulars, and a lot of fun. I am going to give walking vineyard
tours at 11 am each day. This will give those folks that are interested
a chance to see and taste where the wine is really made. The grapes
are getting bigger and the raspberries are ripening all the time now.
Come by for your tour.
Calendar for Fabbioli Cellars
-
Purcellville Farmers
Market: Thursdays thru October 4-7pm, 21st Street,
Purcellville
-
Our Tasting Room:
Every Saturday thru December 11am-5pm. No Appointment
Required.
-
Open House at the
Farm: July 21st, 5pm until dark. Food, fireworks,
tours.
-
First Fabbioli Cellars
Wine Dinner: Sunday July 29th, 5pm. Stone Manor,
Lovettesville. Four Fabbioli wines paired with dishes from Chef
Marcel along with a special aperitif blend to go with the appetizers.
Cost is $80, profits to benefit the Bessie Ault Alzheimer’s
Care Fund. Overnight accommodations available at www.mycountryretreat.com.
RSVP to Beth at 540-822-3032.
-
Home Winemaking
Class: August 5th, 2pm. Cost is $35, space is
limited, please RSVP.
-
Virginia Wine Festival:
Morven Park in Leesburg, September 15-16
Here is the latest Old Town Crier Column.
Enjoy and see you soon.
Doug, Colleen, Matt and Sammy
Old Town Crier
- July 2007
Life
of the winemaker in the summer:
Sometimes I feel that the planning for harvest is so much more difficult
than actually making wine. Bottling wines so more space is available,
construction projects, receiving new equipment, and setting up that
equipment always add to the work. The most rewarding part of this
time is remembering problems during last harvest and implementing
the equipment and the plans to avoid those problems for this harvest.
This works for quality issues as well. I put in a sorting table last
year that allowed us to remove the green stems that slipped through
the crusher destemmer. This added a quality step to the process to
keep us on track with ever improving wines.
Vineyard
Status: The grapes have flowered and the fruit is set. We
have been working regularly to “comb” the shoots, or canopy,
to allow the sunlight and air flow in the fruit zone. This makes for
healthy and ripe fruit down the road. You can see from the photo how
some shoots are trained upward and others are trained down. This gives
us the most usage of the sunlight and space on our trellis. We will
be dropping fruit over the next few months to keep the vines balanced
and the fruit zone clear. When there are clusters of grapes on top
of others, they can all go bad if left that way. Each cluster needs
its own space and dropping some can be the only way to be sure of
that space as the grapes grow.
Wine
festivals: I developed a disdain for wine festivals over
the years. They were always hot, dusty, full of drunk people and never
seemed worth doing at the end of the day. That is until I had my own
wines to sell. I have found a big variety of wine drinkers at the
festivals. There are those that come to drink their fair share, but
there are lots of others. I find folks that want to taste and learn
about wines that are new to them. There are people who genuinely want
to support the VA wine industry. There are people that have been truly
surprised by the high quality of wines at the festivals. I also come
in contact with a lot of restaurant, wine shop, hotel and tourism
people that will help to make our businesses and industry more successful.
Each festival has its own style and focus. I learned from other wineries
that the further south you go in VA, the sweeter the wines that people
want. Mount Vernon Wine Festival has always been a premier event for
building customers that like the drier wines. I think that the wineries
and promoters have as much to do with the festival style as the customers.
Vintage VA in Manassas was very successful for us despite the rainy
Sunday. The VA Wine Festival is coming up in September at Morven Park.
They are setting it up with big tents to protect from the rain and
give a nicer feel. I am looking forward to doing that one. I always
feel bad when we are pouring wines into a sea of hands with empty
glasses. I want to connect the hand with a face and the wine to connect
to us. The crowds can hurt us but I do find that people who like the
wines come back later to buy, whether it is that day, at a wine shop
or at the tasting room. I hope you enjoy your next wine festival and
remember that if you like the wine, take some home. It gives the wineries
that instant satisfaction they need sometimes.
Juanita
Swedenburg 1925-2007: Mrs. Swedenburg was one of the true
pioneers of the VA wine industry. Along with working the farm, growing
the grapes and making wine with her husband Wayne, Juanita led the
court case to allow us to ship our wines to customers across state
lines. This was as good for the spirit of the industry as it was for
the commerce of the industry. She showed us through her leadership
that we can rise above unfair business practices and stand united
as an industry. Thanks Juanita, you have earned your place in our
history.