Sometimes
you just have to go with the flow.
We
had been planning to go with Sara and Christian to the Chateauneuf-du-Pape wine
fair on Sunday, and then have a picnic in the vineyards. But our plans changed, and kept on changing.
First
my doctor invited us to a private tasting at his friend’s winery, so we decided to
skip the fair. We figured the tasting
would take about an hour, so we could do that and then have our picnic.
Then
the weather turned rainy, so we decided to have the picnic indoors at Sara and
Christian’s instead of in the vineyards.
Then
on Sunday morning, when we got to Sara and Christian’s, they told us they had
decided to grill lamb for lunch. So much
for all that picnic food we had brought.
Then
we all drove to Chateauneuf-du-Pape and met my doctor, ready for our private
tasting. Instead, he handed us tickets to the wine fair, so in we went. We weren’t sure what was happening with the
private tasting. Maybe we would just
taste the wines at the fair?
Then,
after a couple of hours of tasting many different wines, none of which were
from the winery with the private tasting, my doctor invited us to lunch. But what about the lunch at Sara’s? Ok, another change of plans. Lamb for dinner sounds good!
Then,
when we finished lunch, my doctor said he had to leave. Soooo…now what? And then voila! It was time for our private tasting.
Despite
its twists and turns, the day turned out to be great. The wine fair was better than expected, with every
winemaker from Chateauneuf-du-Pape participating - all 90 of them. You got a glass at the front door and went
from table to table, tasting wine after fabulous wine.
It
was fascinating to taste all these wines and really understand their
differences. I was like a kid in a candy
store, but this was way better than gumballs and licorice whips, believe me.
As
we worked our way through the fair we kept being introduced to people - my
doctor’s family, his friends, his friends’ friends, various winemakers, people
from the village, it just went on and on.
We even met the lady who owns the local distillery, who gave us a tour
last year. It was kisses all around when
we saw each other.
But
the best part by far was the private tasting.
It was just Val, Sara, Christian and I with Françoise, the president of
the winery and its winemaker. She is the
seventh generation to run the winery, as well as the president of the local
women’s winemaker’s association.
For
someone so talented and accomplished, she was remarkably warm and humble. And so generous with her time! She spent several hours with us.
First
she drove us to her winemaking facility, several miles outside of town. We got a tour and explanation of every step
of the process, from the picking of the grapes to the shipping of the finished
bottles.
She
answered all of our many questions, sharing her obvious enthusiasm for
winemaking. And she explained the
business side as well. She told us how
25 years ago, she and her father made an enormous bet by taking on huge debt
and buying a bunch of new land. She said
that servicing that debt was a real burden until just a few years ago.
Then
the best part - we did a barrel tasting.
I was in heaven! She pulled
barrel samples for different grapes and different parcels so we could compare.
Trust me, 2015 is going to be one
helluva year. And the grenache from Le
Crau – o la la ! I was transported.
After
all this, Francoise drove us back into town to her tasting room and spent
another hour leading us through a flight of wines from earlier years.
It
was after 6:00 when we finally got back to the car and rescued poor Mica. We had brought her along because we thought
it would just be an hour or so of wine tasting.
We figured she could hang in the car, then go back to Sara’s and play with
her boyfriend Ugo. Hm, slight
miscalculation.
When
we got to Sara’s, Mica and Ugo played while we had our delicious dinner (with
more wine, of course). Christian is an
enthusiastic chef and so it was appetizers, then a salad of shrimp and
grapefruit, then lamb with flageolets, then salad and cheese, then dessert,
then coffee. Ok, I’ll admit that was
better than the picnic we had originally planned.
It
was after 11:00 when we finally made it home and crashed. We realized that it had been an entire day of
speaking French. That and a glass or two
(or twelve…) will really do you in.
But
what a wonderful day! It was really
unforgettable. It was one of those
magical days that comes around all too rarely in life.
KVS
So
much wine, so little time
In the cave with Françoise
Lovely parting gifts
and, all because a squirrel made a daring dash in front of your bike!! good thing you were able to tip that wine glass up. sounds like a very exciting day.
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