New Study Suggests Red Wine Reduces COVID Infection Rates

What if that glass of Châteauneuf you’re sipping with dinner is also reducing your chances of contracting COVID-19? A new study analyzed health data on nearly 500,000 U.K. residents and found that subjects who drank one to two glasses of red wine a day had a 10 to 17 percent lower risk of contracting COVID than non-drinkers. Subjects who drank white wine had a 7 to 8 percent lower risk if they consumed five glasses or less per week, while those who frequently drank beer or cider had a 28 percent higher chance of contracting the virus than non-drinkers.

The study, published in the journal Frontiers in Nutrition, was conducted by a team of researchers in China at Shenzhen Kangning Hospital. They wanted to look at possible links between alcohol consumption and rates of COVID infection and mortality. They analyzed data from the U.K. Biobank Study, a comprehensive research project that has been collecting health and lifestyle information from nearly 500,000 participants in the U.K. since 2006.

“Adverse effects of alcohol consumption have been widely documented. [But] the observed relationships between alcohol consumption and diseases are often non-linear, with low-to-moderate alcohol consumption being protective and heavy alcohol consumption being harmful,” noted lead authors Xi-jian Dai and Yongjun Wang. “Several cohort studies have pointed out that people who have light-to-moderate alcohol consumption survive longer than abstainers.”

After analyzing the Biobank data, the researchers found that there was no significant difference in mortality rates from COVID between subjects who drank and those who abstained. But the differences in infection rates were noteworthy. In addition to the lower rates for wine drinkers and higher rates for beer and cider drinkers, the team found that people who drank five or more hard alcohol drinks per week had a higher risk of infection. And heavy drinking of any alcohol also raised the risk.

A study like this looks at correlation, not causation, so it’s unclear why red wine drinkers had a lower infection rate. It could be that other factors are at play: Red wine drinkers may be less likely to suffer from other COVID risks; they may exercise more or have better nutrition; or they may be more likely to be vaccinated.

But the authors suggest that the specific results for red wine compared to other types of alcohol suggest that compounds that set red wine apart from other drinks may deserve the credit. “Red wine provides additional benefits to other alcoholic beverages probably due to its higher polyphenolic content, by decreasing blood pressure, inhibiting the oxidation of low-density lipoprotein particles and other favorable effects on the cellular redox state, improving endothelial function, inhibiting platelet aggregation, reducing inflammation and cell adhesion and activating proteins that prevent cell death,” they write.

The researchers do acknowledge some limitations in their study. The U.K. Biobank is focused on people ages 49 years and older. And the data on drinking habits was collected before the pandemic—changes in drinking habits during the pandemic were unrecorded. The authors call for further study.


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Who Will Pick America’s Wine Grapes?

In the fall of 2020, the grapes in Alison Sokol Blosser’s vineyards were ripe—and she had no one to pick them.

Pandemic-related travel restrictions meant that none of her international harvest interns had arrived, and the local labor pool in Oregon’s Yamhill County, where the winery is located, was essentially nonexistent. “We had to get the grapes off, so I pulled my kids out of school and my nephews and my parents—who hadn’t picked grapes in 30 years—all worked in the vineyard.”

Grappling with a similar labor shortage in 2021, Sokol Blosser, like so many desperate vintners across the U.S., turned to farm labor contractors for hiring needs, which drove up seasonal costs exponentially. “We need solutions; the labor crisis is not going away,” she told Wine Spectator.

The labor crunch is being felt across California’s $43.6 billion wine industry too. “Transportation was our biggest challenge this year; we somehow managed to get fruit picked, but we couldn’t get it hauled,” said Bob Torkelson, president and COO of Trinchero Family Estates, one of California’s largest wine companies, farming over 10,000 acres of vines. “The last few harvests have seen the perfect storm.” Fires and other weather challenges have shrunk grape-picking windows and seasonal workers couldn’t travel from the Southern Hemisphere due to travel restrictions.

But all these challenges have merely exacerbated a chronic labor problem that has been worsening for more than a decade: Workers are leaving the wine industry for good. “Vineyard work is extremely difficult and people have a lot of options today,” Torkelson said. “We’ve seen farm workers leave for jobs in the service industry, construction and at huge delivery centers like Amazon.”

Winegrowers, who rely on seasonal workers as well as year-round labor to tend vines, are being forced to adapt. Some are replacing hands with machines, some are trying new ideas for attracting and retaining workers, and all are reimagining what work looks like in American vineyards.

A changing workforce

Amelia Ceja, president of Ceja Vineyards in California’s Carneros appellation, has watched the evolution play out from both worker and producer perspective. Born in Jalisco, Mexico, Ceja immigrated in 1967 to join her father, a farmworker in Napa Valley. She founded Ceja Vineyards in 1999, and has become an advocate for the fair treatment of farm workers.

“Our parents’ generation were all agricultural workers in Mexico and they loved working the land, but the next generation does not want to do it,” she said. “It’s back-breaking work, I know; I spent years planting and pruning vines.”

The undocumented workers who have historically powered American farms began leaving “by the thousands” over a decade ago, Ceja reports, because of the increased fear of deportation and increasingly hostile immigration policies. Legal residents are opting for new jobs because of “the traumatic wine country fires and cost-prohibitive housing” she said. “No one has stepped up to take these jobs.” A shortage of manpower means winery owners are paying higher costs.

Sadie Drury, general manager at North Slope Management, a vineyard company in Washington’s Walla Walla region owned in partnership with L’Ecole N° 41, Leonetti Cellar and Pepper Bridge Winery, has slowly watched her workforce change over the last decade. “The legal residents and green card holders of the 1980s are now in their sixties, so our current workforce is aging out—this is probably the biggest labor issue that needs to be solved.”

There’s another shift as well. “As young men leave for other industries, my crew is now close to 70 percent women.”

In Napa Valley, Jennifer Putnam, executive director and CEO of the Napa Valley Grapegrowers (NVG), has witnessed the same change: “When we founded the Farmworker Foundation in 2011 to support Napa’s vineyard workers, there were hardly any women doing this farm work. Women now make up more than one-third of this workforce.”

[article-img-container][src=2022-01/ns_sokol012022_1600.jpg] [credit=(Andréa Johnson Photography)] [alt=Sokol Blosser] [end: article-img-container]

Rise of the machines

Forced to make do with fewer workers at higher cost, many are turning to machines—particularly as those machines improve. Though California winemakers have mechanically harvested grapes since the 1970s, and today upwards of 80 percent of the state’s wine grapes are machine-picked, it was a long-held belief that hand-harvested grapes were superior.

“I questioned whether people would pay $80 for a bottle of machine-harvested wine, but when I saw the quality that machines can give us today—it’s grape caviar,” says Sokol Blosser, who has invested in a Pellenc grape harvester and two row sprayers to reduce labor needs.

Chris Indelicato, president and CEO of Delicato Vineyards, one of California’s largest producers, began transitioning to machines many years ago in response to what he describes as the “historic numbers of unfilled positions” he started to observe back in 2008. “We are pushing for mechanized solutions for anything we can successfully automate,” he said, and has replanted his vineyards so they can be mechanically harvested and maintained. Mechanical pruning can slash costs by 90 percent, according to a U.C. Davis study.

Torkelson says that Trinchero has been experimenting with driverless tractors and other autonomous vehicles and using drones and robotic software to assess vineyard health.

Working with workers

Yet machines will never fully replace people, particularly in ultra-premium regions like Napa Valley, argues NVG’s Putnam. “We have always had greater needs year-round than other crops and other wine regions, because of the level of attention to each vine.” She believes that Napa has partially solved its labor problem through higher wages—seasonal workers in Napa earn a median wage of $18.50 per hour and year-round workers earn $20.31, compared to California’s minimum wage of $12 per hour.

Opus One winemaker Michael Silacci (who also serves as NVG’s current board president) believes the higher wages are worth it. “Grape quality has the largest impact on wine quality,” he said. “Skilled vineyard workers are like sculptors, and consumers respect the hands-on aspect of premium winemaking. Are consumers willing to pay higher prices for that? I believe they are for high-end wines.”

Vintners have also found that offering workers free English classes, better housing options and assistance with navigating the school and legal systems are equally compelling benefits. “Simply raising wages is not the answer to this labor crisis,” said Indelicato. Offering paid holidays and paternity leave, full family health insurance, 401K plans and university scholarship programs for his workers has had “a huge impact over time” for Delicato, he reports. “We continue to focus on the work environment and culture, and provide opportunities for workers to grow their careers.”

With more women and mothers in the workforce, offering greater flexibility has also become critical. “People can’t always work from 6 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., and we have found being flexible to work with people’s schedules has been enormously effective, particularly for my young mothers who had no childcare or school during the pandemic,” said Drury.

Other wineries reported giving employees more control over their own schedules, offering four-day work weeks and offering childcare to improve work-life balance for their teams.

Addressing the health needs of a workforce that has traditionally had limited access to health care—and has been traumatized by high-risk work in wildfire zones in recent years—is another way to support workers. Napa’s Silver Oak Cellars partnered with the Botanical Bus, a nonprofit mobile clinic that provides health and wellness services to farmworkers. “We need to find ways to cultivate this very eager-to-work population,” said Putnam.

Looking where the workers are

A growing number of vintners are turning to the government’s H-2A visa program to bring in temporary workers from Mexico. Seghesio Family Vineyards’ owners have filled all of their needs with one highly skilled group of workers from a 50-person extended Mexican family that has come to live in a large hacienda on the winery’s Sonoma property from March to November each year since 2005.

Employers in the H-2A program are required to first try to recruit domestically. “It’s not a question of offering higher wages, we just do not see local applicants,” said Ned Neumiller, Seghesio’s viticulture director.

Costs have increased—the hourly wage set by the Department of Labor for guest workers jumped from $14.98 to over $16 in 2021 and then to over $17 in 2022—but Seghesio winemaker Andy Robinson says it is an overall cost savings and he’s convinced it is the best way to secure legal, highly skilled, committed workers. “We saw our neighbors Dutton Estate Winery and Martinelli Winery using the program and we now recommend H-2A to many of our growers who are struggling to find a crew.”

Many advocates argue that the government must reduce the burdensome bureaucracy of the H-2A program so that producers of all sizes can more easily bring in foreign workers, and change other laws to make it simpler for guest workers to get here. “We need immigration reform that would allow for workers to come here to do the work that people in this country don’t want to do,” says Ceja. “It is the right and humane thing to do for migrant laborers, but also for small American farmers.”

A more nuanced understanding that the best interests of worker and winery are inextricably linked—and a new spotlight on the humanity of the farmworker—could be the upside to the labor struggles plaguing producers.

“Behind every bottle of wine there is a person who tended that vine, and we need to help wine drinkers see the humanity of the people who do this work,” says Drury, who launched a Farmer Fridays series on her Instagram account, featuring a photo and bio of a different employee each week. “We are not just here to take care of the land and the business, but the people who farm the land. I think labor practices will become a much bigger part of the conversation, particularly as younger consumers drink more wine.”


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Anthony Barton, Legendary Bordeaux Winery Owner, Dies at 91

Anthony Barton, the charismatic owner of second-growth Château Léoville Barton and third-growth Château Langoa Barton, has died. He was 91.

“Anthony Barton was the perfect gentleman, always smiling and gracious,” said Jean-Christophe Calvet, co-owner of négociant Aquitaine Wine Company and a longtime friend. “He told hilarious stories about the wine business and he had a terrific ability for observation of his visitors and customers. Above all, he was extremely modest about the incredible success of his two estates in St.-Julien. He was a man of distinction, quiet determination and elegance. We miss figures like Anthony Barton so much.“

Anthony was a gifted raconteur, charming wine lovers with his personality and his clarets. Charm and ambition ran in the family. His ancestor Thomas “French Tom” Barton arrived in Bordeaux in 1725 and soon launched a trading firm that spawned a family fortune. At the time, Ireland was the second-largest export market for Bordeaux wines, after Holland.

Thomas’ grandson Hugh inherited the business, but nearly lost his life and business during the French Revolution. He escaped prison and the guillotine, fled to Dublin, and transferred ownership of the company to his French shipping partner Daniel Guestier. When it was safe, Hugh returned to France, eventually acquiring Château Langoa in 1821. Five years later, the vast Léoville estate was sold, and Barton acquired a large section of the vineyards, creating Château Leoville Barton.

Anthony cut a dashing figure in the wine trade for decades. He moved to Bordeaux from Ireland in 1951 at age 21, as the heir to his uncle Ronald, who had inherited 40-acre Langoa Barton and 124-acre Léoville Barton in St.-Julien and managed the négociant firm Barton & Guestier.

When Anthony arrived in Bordeaux, he worked for Barton & Guestier while his uncle managed the estates. The war had left Langoa and Léoville running at a loss. Profits were slim for many years to come. Barton & Guestier wasn’t doing much better.

In 1954, Seagram acquired a 50 percent stake in Barton & Guestier. Anthony continued to work as export director until 1967, when he left to start his own business, Les Vins Fins Anthony Barton, and Seagram took full control. Anthony’s daughter Lilian joined him at Les Vins Fins Anthony Barton fresh out of school, and they shared an office for decades. Anthony once said that he’d never had an argument with his daughter in all those years working together.

In 1983, Anthony inherited châteaus Léoville Barton and Langoa Barton from his uncle, and he lived at the château from 1986 with his wife, Eva. Lilian managed the négociant business while Anthony devoted himself to improving the vineyards.

His talent for managing the estates soon paid off. In 1994, Wine Spectator ranked Château Léoville Barton 23rd on its list of top 50 Bordeaux estates, praising the improvements Anthony had made. The Barton wines had always enjoyed a fine reputation, but Anthony soon propelled Léoville Barton to “super second” status, winning consistently high praise for his wines.

In 2006, Château Léoville Barton 2003 was No. 3 on Wine Spectator‘s Top 100 Wines. In 2012, Château Léoville Barton 2009 was No. 6. And in 2019, the 2016 vintage was Wine Spectator‘s Wine of the Year.

In recent years, as Anthony’s health declined, Lilian gradually assumed management. Her husband, Michel Sartorius, also works in the family business, as do their grown children, Damien and Melanie. Lilian and Michel acquired Château Mauvesin Barton in Moulis in 2011.

Anthony is survived by his wife, Eva, along with Lilian, Michel, Damien and Melanie.

[article-img-container][src=2022-01/ns_barton011922_1600.jpg] [credit=(Deepix Studio)] [alt=Anthony Barton] [end: article-img-container]


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2021: In Memoriam

Before we look ahead to whatever 2022 may bring, Wine Spectator‘s editors would like to remember the wine industry pioneers, innovators, leaders and chroniclers we lost this year, some of them to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year we bid farewell to Steven Spurrier, organizer of the famed 1976 Paris Tasting, as well as Châteauneuf-du-Pape star Philippe Cambie and Barolo champion Pio Boffa. We also lost California wine pioneers David Bruce and Au Bon Climat co-founder Jim Clendenen, and Hollywood producer-turned-Oregon vintner Mark Tarlov. We’ll fondly remember these members of our community that we lost in 2021.


[article-img-container][src=2021-12/mc_sandy121021_1600-2.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Legal Sea Foods)] [alt= Sandy Block excelled at his job because he held a deep passion for all of wine’s myriad aspects, from science to history to service.][end: article-img-container]

Alexander “Sandy” Block
The longtime Legal Sea Foods wine director was warm and personable, with a knowing twinkle in his eye.


[article-img-container][src=2021-04/ns_pio041821_1600.jpg] [credit= (Sandro Michahelles)] [alt= Pio Boffa was driven from a young age to help his family’s winery innovate and grow.][end: article-img-container]

Pio Boffa
The visionary leader of the historic Pio Cesare winery converted his family’s négoce operation to one focused on Barolo and Barbaresco’s top vineyards.


[article-img-container][src=2021-05/ns_bruce050421_1600.jpg] [credit= (Melissa Barnes)] [alt= David Bruce believed the gorgeous Santa Cruz Mountains, south of San Francisco, were an ideal terroir for Pinot Noir.][end: article-img-container]

David Bruce
The Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot Noir pioneer balanced a medical practice with a life in wine, cultivating grapes 2,100 feet above the Pacific Ocean.


[article-img-container][src=2021-12/ns_cambietall122021_1600.jpg] [credit= (Jon Wyand)] [alt= Philippe Cambie could be warm and friendly over a good meal and a glass of wine, but he took grapegrowing and winemaking very seriously, pushing his clients to realize their dreams.][end: article-img-container]

Philippe Cambie
The larger-than-life winemaker was the driving force behind many Châteauneuf-du-Pape wineries raising their quality.


[article-img-container][src=2021-05/ns_clendenen051721_1600.jpg] [credit= (Steven Freeman)] [alt= Au Bon Climat co-founder and winemaker Jim Clendenen was honored at chef Emeril Lagasse’s Carnivale du Vin charity event.][end: article-img-container]

Jim Clendenen
From his Au Bon Climat winery in Santa Maria Valley, Clendenen helped raise the quality of California Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.


[article-img-container][src=2021-12/ns_eloi120121_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Domaine de Trévaillon)] [alt= Eloi Dürrbach farmed without chemicals before it became trendy, and when the local wine regulations were changed, he simply sold his outstanding red as a vin de pays.][end: article-img-container]

Eloi Dürrbach
The founder of Domaine de Trévallon did things his way, making gorgeous red wines for decades.


[article-img-container][src=2021-05/ns_alejandro052521_1600.jpg] [credit= (Claes Löfgren)] [alt= Alejandro Fernandez was proud of his hometown and his region in Spain, working to raise its profile in the wine world.][end: article-img-container]

Alejandro Fernandez
The Spanish vintner put the Ribera del Duero region on the map with powerful, outstanding Tempranillos.


[article-img-container][src=2021-12/1638899732_rc_franchetti120721_1600.jpg] [credit= (Molchen Photo)] [alt= Andrea Franchetti bought his Tenuta Trinoro farm as a retreat with the money he made selling a painting. The idea of planting vines came later.][end: article-img-container]

Andrea Franchetti
After creating a cult wine from the remote Val d’Orcia hills of Tuscany at Tenuta Trinoro, he became a key figure in the renaissance of Sicily’s Mount Etna at his Passopisciaro winery.


[article-img-container][src=2021-01/bsd_goldberg011221_1600.jpg] [credit= (Thomas Matthews)] [alt= Howard Goldberg in 2018.][end: article-img-container]

Howard Goldberg
The longtime New York Times editor and wine writer was knowledgeable and kind, with a quick wit.


[article-img-container][src=2021-01/ns_benjamin012821_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Edmond de Rothschild Heritage Group)] [alt= Ariane and Benjamin de Rothschild were married for 27 years and together built an empire of wine and philanthropy.][end: article-img-container]

Benjamin de Rothschild
The head of his branch of the famous banking family owned seven wine estates in Bordeaux and beyond.


[article-img-container][src=2021-03/rc_sonninoportrait031621_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of Castello Sonnino)] [alt= Tuscan aristocrat Alessandro de Renzis Sonnino, affectionately known as “the Barone,” will be fondly remembered.][end: article-img-container]

Alessandro de Renzis Sonnino
The elegant, silver-haired and bearded Tuscan aristocrat took over his family’s Castello Sonnino and its Chianti vineyards in Montespertoli more than 30 years ago.


[article-img-container][src=2021-03/tm_spurrier031821_1600.jpg] [credit= (Getty / David M. Benett)] [alt= Wine merchant Steven Spurrier will be remembered most for organizing the 1976 Paris Tasting, but he was a dedicated educator as well.][end: article-img-container]

Steven Spurrier
The British champion of all things vinous was best-known for organizing the 1976 Judgment of Paris.


[article-img-container][src=2021-08/ns_tarlov081121_1600.jpg] [credit= (Shannon Sturgis)] [alt= Mark Tarlov speaks at the 2018 New York Wine Experience during a panel discussion and tasting of Oregon Pinot Noir.][end: article-img-container]

Mark Tarlov
Passionate about Pinot Noir, the movie producer spent his later years founding the Evening Land, Chapter 24 and Rose & Arrow wine brands.


[article-img-container][src=2021-08/ns_becky082021_1600.jpg] [credit= (Jon Wyand)] [alt= Becky Wasserman often hosted Burgundy newcomers at her house for lunch or dinner, ready with advice to help them get started in the wine business.][end: article-img-container]

Becky Wasserman
From her farm near Beaune, she represented small winegrowers from around France to U.S. importers and consumers, and was a valuable mentor.


[article-img-container][src=2021-12/ns_ziliani122921_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Berlucchi)] [alt= Franco Ziliani, seated, gathers with his children—Arturo, left, Cristina and Paolo—who now run the sparkling winery he helped found.][end: article-img-container]

Franco Ziliani
The winemaker and co-founder of Berlucchi was a Franciacorta pioneer.

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A Father of Franciacorta: Franco Ziliani, Pioneering Winemaker of Italian Sparkling Wine, Dies at 90

Franco Ziliani, the winemaker and revered “founding father” of Northern Italy’s Franciacorta sparkling wine appellation, died of natural causes over the weekend at his home on the shores of the appellation’s Lake Iseo. He was 90.

Ziliani’s passing came at a historic milestone, 60 years after making his first groundbreaking vintage of a Champagne-style sparkling wine for Berlucchi, the winery he came to own through his long partnership with Count Guido Berlucchi. That wine demonstrated that the region could produce high-quality sparkling wine, in a similar style to French Champagne. Today, Franciacorta is considered one of Italy’s top sparkling styles.

Silvano Brescianini, president of the Franciacorta wine industry consortium, described Ziliani as the visionary who transformed a historic but languishing winegrowing area in Lombardy into an Italian answer to Champagne. “Above all he deserves credit for having believed and invested in something that did not exist—namely Franciacorta,” Brescianini said in a statement.

Maurizio Zanella of Ca’ del Bosco, who launched his family Franciacorta winery in the 1970s, adds that Ziliani’s greatest contribution was in helping to improve the image of Italian wine, particularly sparkling wine, among Italians. “It was not considered elegant to drink Italian. You had to drink French like Veuve Clicquot or Moët & Chandon,” Zanella told Wine Spectator. “But Franco Ziliani broke that dogma, because when you drank Berlucchi in the ’70s and ’80s it was so fashionable, so chic.”

Ziliani, who studied enology in Piedmont in the postwar years of the 1940s and 1950s, turned Berlucchi into a success story on all counts. Today Berlucchi is Franciacorta’s leading winery, producing about 330,000 cases annually from organically farmed grapes grown on its 270 acres of vineyards and another 1,000 vineyard acres it manages.

Earlier this month, the non-vintage Guido Berlucchi Brut Rosé Franciacorta ’61 (91 points, $36) earned a spot among Wine Spectator’s Top 100 Wines of 2021.

Ziliani often spoke of developing an admiration for Champagne while studying enology in Alba. After attaining his degree in 1954, he went to work for his family’s wine merchant company, which did business throughout Brescia province, including the area that became the Franciacorta appellation. In 1955, Ziliani was recruited by the elegant Count Berlucchi to improve the Pinot Bianco produced in his 17th century cellars in Borgonato. Berlucchi’s rustic white was plagued by instability problems that the young Ziliani traced to the release of iron and calcium from the walls of the winery’s cement fermentation tanks.

Ziliani didn’t stop by solving that puzzle. He famously suggested that to valorize his vineyards, Berlucchi should use the wines as a base for sparkling wine in the “French style.” After three years of experimenting, Ziliani produced about 3,000 bottles of 1961 vintage Pinot di Franciacorta Methode Champenoise Brut. In later interviews, Ziliani recounted how the count’s butler complained the wine would take 20 years to unload. Instead, it sold out in months.

With production and demand climbing in 1965, Guido Berlucchi formally created an eponymous wine company in partnership with Ziliani and another business associate, Giorgio Lanciani. The company set to work replanting and acquiring vineyards and expanding and renovating its cellars.

Berlucchi’s image made it something greater than the nascent Franciacorta. And in 1976, Berlucchi withdrew its wines from the appellation it inspired in order to source additional grapes from the Oltrepò region of Southern Lombardy and from the mountainous Trento area of northeast Italy. It wasn’t until the year 2000—at the urging of Ziliani’s children— that the winery began again producing Franciacorta appellation wines again and returned all its production to the area before Berlucchi’s 50th anniversary in 2011.

Following Berlucchi’s death in 2000, Ziliani became company CEO and embarked on a new era, aided by his three children. He gradually purchased the count’s business shares from his foundation. In 2017, at 86 years old, Ziliani retired, selling nearly all his shares to his children, while maintaining the title of company president. His son Arturo remains CEO today.

Ziliani is survived by his three children—Arturo, Cristina and Paolo—who all work at Berlucchi, as well as eight grandchildren, two of whom work at the company.

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Top New Wine Videos of 2021

While our top videos of 2020 highlighted creative ways to pass the time at home, 2021’s favorites focused more on getting out and about and meeting big names in wine in their element. Whether it was riding along on vineyard visits with winemaker Thomas Rivers Brown, talking wine with NBA legend Dwyane Wade or seeing Italian comedian Maccio Capatonda go overboard in pursuing wine expertise, we covered many aspects of wine education and enjoyment. Our top videos also included an inside look at the Wine of the Year, an exploration of European wine regions and how to master the cheese board. So raise your glass and enjoy this year’s favorite clips!

Top 10

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Wine of the Year 2021

Once again, wine lovers around the world tuned in to see Wine Spectator‘s Wine of the Year reveal. Senior editor James Molesworth, lead taster for California Cabernet and Bordeaux, unveiled the Dominus Estate Napa Valley 2018, the Yountville project of Right Bank Bordeaux leader Christian Moueix, who brought decades of experience, patience and good instincts to a benchmark vintage for Napa Cabernet. For more information on all Top 100 Wines of 2020, check out our Top 100 video page to hear from our senior editors about what makes the Top 10 wines special and explore other regions, grape varieties and wine styles featured in this year’s list.

Video Contest Winner

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Sommelier: Don’t Try This at Home

For our 2021 Video Contest, filmmakers got their creative juices flowing to bring their personal wine stories to life. In this year’s winning submission, Italian winery Caviro and Volio Imports brought together Italian wine professionals and famous comedian Maccio Capatonda to show what happens when we attempt to seem like an expert instead of just being ourselves. “Sommelier: Don’t Try This at Home” proved to be the favorite among voters, followed by “High Tannins” and “finalists and honorable mentions!

Wine 101

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How to Build a Better Cheese Board

As friends and family began gathering again in 2021, it was time to break out the special treats—like a beautiful charcuterie board overflowing with fine cheeses, enticing meats, fruits, nuts and more. Our editors shared 3 keys for constructing a winning cheese board, tips on how much you need, an easy hack for stunning salami rosettes and 4 wine-pairing recommendations. Find more cheese tips and get your charcuterie on!

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How to Poach an Egg

Take your breakfast to the next level with perfect poached eggs. We headed to the chicken coop at Vegetable Power Farm for this quick and easy recipe!

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How to Make Dalgona Coffee

Do you like your coffee extra creamy and frothy? We shared a recipe for this instant coffee–based Korean treat to go along with the full story on this Internet sensation in our June 15 & 30, 2021, double issue of Wine Spectator!

People

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Cellar Talk with Dwyane Wade

This fall, NBA legend and Napa vintner Dwyane Wade joined senior editor MaryAnn Worobiec in Wine Spectator‘s Napa office for a deep dive into Wade’s journey into wine appreciation and then production, as well as what he hopes to accomplish as a new U.C. Davis board member. Learn more about what he aims to bring to the wine industry!

Wine Regions

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ABCs of Cariñena

No matter how long you study wine, there’s always a new region to explore or an old region to rediscover, and guiding wine lovers through them is a core part of Wine Spectator‘s mission. Learn about one of Spain’s historic winemaking regions: Cariñena. Check out its fascinating history, demanding terroir and signature grapes.

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ABCs of Prosecco Superiore

As New Year’s approaches, Prosecco takes the stage. But how do you find the best of this booming Italian sparkling wine category? Senior editor Alison Napjus walks viewers through the Prosecco DOCG’s terroirs, top classifications and terms, so you’ll know exactly what to look for on the bottle before you snag one for upcoming festivities!

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ABCs of Trentodoc

While Prosecco has become widely known, there’s much more to Italian sparkling wine. Our editors introduced viewers to the traditional-method sparklers from Italy’s mountainous Trentino region. Get to know this historic area, its winemaking traditions, key grapes and what makes these bubblies so exciting!

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ABCs of Sicilia

With its diverse culture, incredible cuisine and a long history of wine production, this Mediterranean island has broad appeal. Learn more about Italy’s Sicilia D.O.C. with senior editor Alison Napjus and associate editor Julie Harans as they explore the history of the wines, important indigenous grapes, food pairings and more!

In the Vineyard

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Napa Vineyard Ride-Along with Thomas Rivers Brown

California’s most sought-after winemaker offered an inside look at three different Napa Cabernet vineyards—demonstrating pruning techniques and showing the impact of drought—as senior editor James Molesworth rode along this summer. Plus, watch a bonus video of Brown and Schrader Cellars founder Fred Schrader from the 2018 New York Wine Experience!

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Eleven Madison Park’s London Counterpart Closes

Davies and Brook, chef Daniel Humm’s restaurant in London’s Claridge’s hotel, will close at the end of December. Opened in late 2019, it was the first international venture for Humm’s New York–based Make It Nice group, which includes Wine Spectator Grand Award winner Eleven Madison Park.

Since Humm’s transition to a completely vegan menu at Eleven Madison Park in June, Davies and Brook has been the only place where guests can still order meat-based dishes from the chef, like his iconic dry-aged duck glazed with honey and lavender. Humm planned to change that and make the vegan pivot in London as well, but with pushback from Claridge’s, the teams decided to part ways.

“We completely respect and understand the culinary direction of a fully plant-based menu that Daniel has decided to embrace and champion and now wants to introduce in London,” read a statement from the hotel that was shared with Wine Spectator. “However, this is not the path we wish to follow here at Claridge’s at the moment, and therefore, regretfully, we have mutually agreed to go our separate ways.” Claridge’s hinted at a replacement restaurant but did not provide any details.

A more casual-leaning concept with options for à-la-carte dining, Davies and Brook still built up an expansive wine collection, one that has held a Best of Award of Excellence since the restaurant’s first year in business. Wine director Gabriel Di Bella has been managing the 1,800 selections with highlights in Burgundy, the Rhône, Italy, Bordeaux and California.—Julie Harans

Lazy Betty Team Opens Juniper Cafe in Atlanta

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The team behind Atlanta Award of Excellence winner Lazy Betty opened a new Vietnamese concept, Juniper Cafe, on Dec. 15. Located in the West Midtown neighborhood, the café-bakery offers Vietnamese classics, homemade pastries and a small but robust wine list.

“Because of the French influence on Vietnamese culture, I decided to focus on French and American wines,” Juniper Cafe and Lazy Betty beverage director Carl Van Tyle Gilbert told Wine Spectator via email. “We are highly focused on sourcing from smaller producers with strong business ethics centered around making natural, biodynamic and organic wines.”

Overall, Gilbert has built a program of 20 food-friendly wines, 17 of which are available by the glass. The 200-bottle inventory includes a diverse range of sparklers and whites, as well as reds from Argentina, California, Burgundy, Bordeaux, Oregon and Washington. There’s also a Verdejo–Sauvignon Blanc orange wine. These join a larger selection of natural sodas, beers, sakes, sojus, makgeollis (Korean sparkling rice wine) and Vietnamese-inspired cocktails. “Our focus is on flavor and assuring that each wine is a great representation of either the varietal or the region,” Gilbert said. “The wine experience is very casual, but stands out based on flavors and quality.”

As corporate chef and culinary director, respectively, owners Aaron Phillips and Ron Hsu have put together a modern Vietnamese menu. Day-to-day, executive chef Timothy Rufino (formerly of Lazy Betty) prepares dishes like summer rolls with Chinese pork jerky, a lemongrass pork chop, banh xeo (a savory coconut crepe) and Vietnamese hot fried chicken. There are also several bahn mi and pho options, plus many pastries to choose from. For now, Juniper Cafe is only serving breakfast and dinner, but will be adding lunch service in the near future.

Gilbert says that while both restaurants are built on a “come as you are” mentality, Juniper Cafe is more casual than Lazy Betty. This relaxed feel is evident in the ambiance of the brightly colored space, featuring modern takes on traditional Vietnamese design elements.

With Juniper Cafe open, Hsu, Phillips and Gilbert are working toward opening their American-cuisine restaurant, Humble Pie, in spring 2022.—Collin Dreizen

Gordon Ramsay and Mandarin Oriental Opening Ramsay’s Kitchen Boston

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Celebrity chef and restaurateur Gordon Ramsay is set to debut Ramsay’s Kitchen at Boston’s Mandarin Oriental hotel in January. The Back Bay restaurant is Ramsay’s first venture in Boston, and joins a group that includes Award of Excellence–winning Gordon Ramsay Steak locations in Baltimore and Atlantic City, N.J.

“I absolutely love the energy of Boston and consider it a premier dining destination in the country,” Ramsay said in a statement, adding that he “couldn’t be more excited” for the opening.

Overseeing the 300-label, international wine list will be Crystl Horton, director of wine and spirits for Gordon Ramsay North America. “[The wine program] will build on and enhance the relationships and wine programs that we have existing in other Gordon Ramsay restaurants while maintaining a distinct personality of its own, influenced by Gordon’s own travels and experiences,” she said.

The 2,500-bottle inventory includes wines from California, Bordeaux, Burgundy and Italy, spotlighting rarer bottlings akin to those found in Ramsay’s personal cellar. Horton expects the list to evolve and expand as the restaurant team learns more about guests’ preferences, and Ramsay will take part in the program’s ongoing development. “We want this to be a warm and welcoming experience where you feel that the sommelier has only your best interest in mind.”

Diners can pair these wines with executive chef John Holloman’s menu, which will incorporate seasonal ingredients and, like the wine list, draw from Ramsay’s career and travels. The kitchen will serve Ramsay signatures like his beef Wellington alongside dishes with a local twist, like lobster and clam bouillabaisse. According to Christina Wilson, vice president of culinary for Gordon Ramsay North America, local produce will be emphasized as well. “It’s a chef’s dream to have these high quality ingredients right in the backyard,” she said.

The 7,000-square-foot space features a raw bar, a bar and lounge, a patio and private dining areas, in addition to its upscale-yet-comfortable dining room. The design is largely inspired by Boston itself, with blue marble details that evoke Boston Harbor, brick elements to match the city’s architecture and a back bar modeled after the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge.—C.D.


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Can Added Sulfites in Wine Actually Prevent Headaches?

Why do certain wines give people headaches, even when consumed in moderation? Wine intolerance has long been a mystery and a nuisance for many wine lovers. For researchers, it’s proven difficult to determine what exactly causes the symptoms, which can range from headaches to nausea to wheezing and even anaphylaxis. While studies have pointed to a few culprits, many consumers have blamed sulfur-dioxide (SO2), or sulfites (the family of compounds that include SO2).

Some SO2 is produced naturally during fermentation. Many winemakers add some too, as a preservative that inhibits the growth of bacteria. For some wine lovers, being for or against added SO2 has become almost a religious stance. The rising popularity of low-intervention and natural wines has made the debate even more heated. Natural wine proponents point to no-added sulfites as a plus.

But multiple scientific studies have provided evidence that a set of naturally occurring molecules called biogenic amines (BA) are typically the cause of wine intolerance symptoms, not sulfites. And a new research paper by Sophie Parker-Thomson, a winemaker and Master of Wine, suggests that additions of SO2 could help reduce BA levels and lower the risk of wine intolerance symptoms.

In proper quantities, sulfites might be the cure, rather than the cause.

Parker-Thomson became inspired to delve deeper into the cause of wine intolerance while researching for a seminar on sulfites with her husband and business partner, Matt Thomson. (Together they own New Zealand’s Blank Canvas Winery.) “Although the wine intolerance landscape is complex, it became obvious pretty quickly that the likely culprit was biogenic amines,” Parker-Thomson told Wine Spectator. “At toxic levels, which vary from individual to individual, they can trigger allergic-type responses that are identical to wine intolerance complaints.” She submitted the research to the Institute of Masters of Wine, which reviewed and published it.

Noting that a majority of research failed to connect the use of sulfites to BA levels, she set out to collect her own data. Parker-Thomson collected 100 samples of Sauvignon Blanc from across the country. She then separated the samples into groups based on sulfite levels and when sulfites were added to the wine. The subgroups considered zero additions of SO2, low additions (less than 40 milligrams per liter), more than 40 mg/L and over 65 mg/L, plus whether sulfites were added before alcoholic fermentation, after malolactic fermentation or before bottling. The samples were then tested for three types of BAs: histamine, tyramine and putrescine.

She found that wines made with zero or low additions of SO2 had the highest BA levels, while wines with over 65 mg/L added sulfites had the lowest levels. Additionally, data showed that total BAs decreased noticeably when as little as 30 mg/L of SO2 were added before fermentation. Because BAs occur in the presence of bacteria, it is likely that the antibacterial properties of sulfites are responsible for the drop.

While the data shows a clear correlation between BA levels and the amount of added sulfites, Parker-Thomson’s research takes understanding this relationship a bit further, showing the significance of when sulfites are added in the winemaking process.

“I was very surprised at the magnitude of results between the different sub-groups and very surprised just how high the BA concentrations were in the wines that had had no SO2 at all or no SO2 before fermentation,” she said.

While Parker-Thomson notes that more research and robust clinical trials are needed to determine what level of BAs trigger wine intolerance, she hopes her study helps to bring the effects of BAs to the forefront and heighten consumer awareness of wine intolerance. Though this may include the difficult process of creating regulations or third-party certification systems similar to organic and Fairtrade, Parker-Thompson is hopeful for the future of low-BA wines.

“[This] presents an opportunity for the wine industry,” she said. “To both take action in reducing general BA levels in wines by following the BA management protocol, and potentially also create a specific low-BA category to cater for BA-sensitive consumers so they can enjoy wine again.”


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Is Inflation Coming for Your Cabernet?

Wine has been largely absent from the raging debate over inflation in recent months. While the wholesale price of beef is up by 20 percent and gas costs are at their highest level in seven years, a bottle of wine has been one of the few products consumers could count on to stay stable.

Not for long. Because grapes are harvested just once a year and wine reaches the market through a multitier distribution network, price pressures have simply not caught up to consumers yet. When they do, the perfect storm of inflation (up 6.2 percent in the United States in the past year, the highest rate in decades), supply chain bottlenecks, a small global grape harvest and a surge in demand will mean consumers should brace themselves for spikes in wine prices.

“I’ve never seen inflationary pressure like this,” said Rocco Lombardo, president of Wilson Daniels, an importer that represents wineries like Biondi Santi, Domaine de la Romanée-Conti and Champagne Gosset. “The massive escalation in the cost of dry goods—glass, corks, labels, cardboard—is actually hyperinflation. Labor and energy costs have skyrocketed. No producer, region or part of the wine industry is immune, and you will see price increases very soon.”

Wine isn’t as volatile as other consumer goods, so it’s historically less subject to price fluctuations. While the overall inflation rate between 2004 and 2021 was 2.11 percent, wine prices only climbed 0.73 percent.

But today’s market challenges have left producers little choice, says Miguel Torres Maczassek, general manager of Familia Torres, one of Spain’s leading wine brands. “There is a sense of caution among producers as nobody is interested in price increases, especially in the middle of the post-pandemic recovery,” he told Wine Spectator. “But for many, there is no option. Costs keep going up and most distributors around the world have already absorbed the higher costs for shipping wines. They must pass them to the market.”

Most winery owners say they have done everything possible until now to maintain pricing. “We held our prices in 2021, but will have to take increases in 2022 within the first part of the year,” said Enore Ceola, CEO at Freixenet Mionetto USA, a leading sparkling wine company. “Everyone worked to delay increases just before the holidays but we will see prices going up between 10 and 15 percent, or even 20 percent on some wines.”

Imported wines feel the cost crunch

Imported wines are battling the most challenging issues. “Price increases are going to be commonplace on imported wine in 2022 because the cost of containers and general freight are up in excess of 100 percent,” said Marc Taub, president and CEO of Palm Bay International and Taub Family Selections, which represents dozens of brands including Cavit and Castello di Fonterutoli.

Disastrously small harvests in regions such as Burgundy, the Loire and Provence, will compound price pressure. Taub says his winery clients are “attempting to be as modest as possible,” but he warns consumers to expect prices to start edging up early in 2022. “Fierce competition in the wine industry will keep the increases moderate, but prices across all wine categories will absolutely go up,” he said.

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Consolidation in companies that control ocean cargo shipments, along with the steadily climbing cost of crude oil, has driven shipping prices up. “When oil barrel prices get to the mid-$80s, that has a big impact,” said Lombardo. “It used to cost us approximately $10 to ship a case of wine from Western Europe to the U.S., and it’s now $15—that’s a 50 percent increase.” Other importers, like Taub, report jumps even higher than that.

Many retailers know what is coming—and see high demand adding fuel to this fire. “We are seeing the beginnings of some serious price hikes,” said Cyrus Tolman of Houston Wine Merchant. “I think they will most impact the regions in highest demand: Bordeaux, Burgundy, Tuscany, Rioja and Napa. Wine buyers could end up with prices that skyrocket 20 to 25 percent within a year.”

Brooke Sabel, wine director at Gary’s Wine & Marketplace in New Jersey, is already seeing wine prices “increasing at every level.” For national brands, that bump is between $1 and $3 per bottle, she observes, and even higher for boutique brands.

And forget about deals. “An overlooked repercussion of this is that retailers can’t get access to large volumes of certain brands at a quantity discount, so we are unable to offer any discounts to our customers—particularly with Champagne,” Tolman adds.

None of this, however, will dampen the appetite for elite wines one bit, insiders project. These are regions that have seen prices inching up for many years, unrelated to inflation. “We have not seen any slowing in the super-premium category at all; there is a very strong demand for luxury wines from Burgundy, Piedmont and Tuscany where prices have been climbing for years,” Lombardo said. “There is a thirst for quality wines from great producers and that is not changing.”

What about everyday wines?

Domestic wines won’t be spared price hikes either, nor will wines in the value end of the spectrum, which will be forced to take bigger percentage step-ups. “We haven’t raised prices in five years, but that is all changing now starting with constrained grape supply based on back-to-back short harvests in California,” said Jeff O’Neill of O’Neill Vintners & Distillers, which owns many wine brands and also operates as a grape supplier to other brands. High-end wines benefit from a cushion of larger margins, and “have always increased price based on exclusivity and scarcity, a slightly different model,” he said.

For wines in the $8 to $30 price range, O’Neill anticipates, at a minimum, 10 percent higher pricing across the board. “Many wines today that sell for less than $30 per bottle move through the system pretty fast,” and reflect a changing economy more quickly than wines that age longer in cellars before release, he explained.

“For certain wine categories like our single-vineyard wines, it is true that the impact of a short or a large harvest is something that might not come into the market for many years,” said Torres. “Younger wines don’t have much flexibility, as the production time is shorter.”

While Champagne is experiencing its own headaches of shortages and logistics nightmares, within the world of affordable sparkling wines like Prosecco and Cava, price increases loom large on the horizon: Ceola estimates that consumers will see increases of $2 to $3 per bottle for wines in the $10 to $17 range, and a $3 to $5 bump up for those falling between $20 and $30.

Just how long will higher prices stick around?

The U.S. Federal Reserve and many market analysts advise that inflation won’t last, as it’s merely the result of “transitory factors,” including shutdowns and restarts in multiple economies. Some in the industry take a similar view. Blake Leonard, vice president of her family’s eight independently owned retail stores, Stew Leonard’s Wines & Spirits, told Shanken News Daily, a sister publication of Wine Spectator that, although her business is seeing these rising costs coming, she believes “this is a temporary disruption and our stores are not raising prices because we anticipate it will all settle.”

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Others are not so sure. “This is not transitory,” said Lombardo. “We are now going into three quarters of these inflationary pressures and I think it is going to be longer term. Until demand is depressed, I think we will continue to see price escalation.”

Besides, Ceola adds, because there is only one wine harvest per year, “which dictates pricing for the next one to five years, it’s a slower process than other consumer goods.”

Even by conservative estimates, prices will remain elevated for more than a year. “Overall price increases will be felt throughout 2022 and 2023,” says O’Neill.

Yet in spite of high demand for wines across the price spectrum, and relatively short supply, the fierce competition within the wine market will keep runaway pricing in check. There remains an abundance of choice for wine drinkers, says Taub. “Wine is different from most other consumer goods. There is wine sold at every price tier, and there are an inexhaustible number of wine choices out there,” which is why producers are reluctant to increase prices.

Inflation could also drive experimentation and may benefit lesser-known regions. “This will lead more people to look outside some of those blue-chip wine regions in search of better value,” said Houston Wine Merchant’s Tolman. “While there are diehard collectors of Burgundy that will only ever purchase Burgundy, many collectors and everyday wine drinkers are looking for new bottles that deliver more wine for less money. Maybe this is the catalyst that will tilt the scales in favor of smaller producers and less famous wine regions.”


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Grand Award–Winning Acquerello Team Opens More Casual Sorella in San Francisco

The team behind Wine Spectator Grand Award winner Acquerello in San Francisco opened Sorella (Italian for “sister”) on Dec. 1. “After spending 32 years perfecting the fine dining experience at Acquerello, we are ready for a new challenge,” co-owner Giancarlo Paterlini told Wine Spectator via email. “The time feels right for us to introduce a more casual, versatile restaurant experience that translates to the next generation of diners and allows our team to grow and evolve in new ways.”

Acquerello wine director Gianpaolo Paterlini is curating the new restaurant’s 60-label program in a consulting role. Like Acquerello, Sorella’s wine list centers on Italian appellations, such as Chianti Classico, Barolo and Barbaresco. This includes bottles from well-known estates like Piedmont’s Fratelli Brovia and Tuscany’s Fontodi. The 500-bottle inventory is largely sourced from Acquerello’s cellar, though the plan is for Sorella’s wine collection to eventually become its own entity, and Paterlini expects it to grow to about 1,000 bottles.

“We want wine to be fun and approachable for our guests, so the list focuses on classic regions and low-intervention winemaking,” Gianpaolo Paterlini said. “But I’m always on the lookout for exciting new producers that innovate with respect to tradition and terroir.”

The list will change regularly to represent a wide range of producers, mostly at prices ranging from $50 to $95 per bottle. “At Acquerello, we have over 2,000 selections from every region in Italy and verticals are a huge part of the program, as we want guests to come to us knowing they can find just about anything they’re looking for,” Paterlini said. “At Sorella, we hope that a concise list with very fair prices will encourage a new generation of wine drinkers to discover new wines while seasoned wine lovers will find some of their favorite classics.”

The wines complement executive chef Denise St. Onge’s menu, which primarily consists of house-made pastas. But guests can enjoy other Italian-influenced options too, like pumpkin minestrone soup, potato-and-leek focaccia, striped bass and cicchetti (Venetian-style snacks meant to accompany drinks). Sorella will also feature a signature Acquerello dish: Warm parmesan budino with sunchoke, hazelnut, truffle and brown butter.

Designer Tava Lloyd of Harbour Creative helped create the restaurant’s interior, which features a handmade partition between the bar and the dining room, and a neon “Sorella” sign. “We designed Sorella to be lighthearted, lively and neighborhood friendly,” St. Onge said. “The kind of place that checks the box for a weeknight dinner as well as Saturday night cocktails and bites.”—Collin Dreizen

Jean-Georges Vongerichten Makes His Nashville Debut

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Chef and restaurateur Jean-Georges Vongerichten opened Drusie & Darr at the Hermitage Hotel in Nashville, Tenn., on Nov. 17. Vongerichten’s first Southern location outside of Florida, the restaurant joins his namesake Grand Award winner in New York, as well as his other Restaurant Award–winning concepts: Jean-Georges Steakhouse, the Mark Restaurant by Jean-Georges and Jean-Georges in Philadelphia.

“It’s an honor to be part of the growth of Nashville’s prominent food scene,” Vongerichten told Wine Spectator via email. “With Drusie & Darr, I wanted to contribute my style of cuisine, but also incorporate the tastes and flavor preferences of Nashville.”

The chef’s corporate wine director, Rory Pugh, currently manages the 90-label list, though a new wine director for Drusie & Darr will be appointed soon. As with Vongericthen’s other restaurants, the list focuses on French regions like Burgundy, Bordeaux, Champagne, the Loire and the Rhône Valley. It’s rounded out by wines from California, Italy and Spain. “[The] wine list has a focus on the classics with newer discoveries placed throughout,” Pugh said. “We wanted to show off a range of our guests’ favorite wines.”

Executive chef Kelsi Armijo oversees the menu of approachable American- and Asian-influenced dishes, which highlight organic and seasonal ingredients from local sources, such as the Hermitage’s garden at Glen Leven Farm near Nashville. This includes ahi tuna tartare, roasted black sea bass, mushroom risotto and warm chocolate cake. Several pizza options are available as well, cooked in the restaurant’s wood-fired oven.

Drusie & Darr’s dining room was crafted by designer Thomas Juul-Hansen with muted colors and bold lighting that accentuate the space’s vaulted ceiling. A few original Beaux Arts details from the historic space have been preserved, including the restaurant’s oak walls.

Named after the children of the Hermitage’s former general manager, Dick Hall, Drusie & Darr was developed as part of a wider restoration of the nearly 112-year-old hotel. Additionally, Vongerichten will open a café in the hotel called the Pink Hermit in January 2022. “It’s a privilege to be in Nashville, a city that welcomed me so warmly,” Vongerichten said. “I hope to give that and much more back.”—C.D.

D.C. Hospitality Group Debuts All-Day Cafe

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Knead Hospitality + Design, the group behind Restaurant Award winners Succotash and the Grill, debuted another restaurant in Washington D.C.’s District Wharf. Opened last month, Bistro du Jour brings a classic, Parisian café experience to the multipurpose waterfront development.

The menu by chef Treeven Dove features time-tested bistro staples like steak frites, coq au vin, French onion soup and duck confit, while the restaurant’s partnership with New York City-based bakery, Mah-Ze-Dahr, will supply morning pastries and treats.

The beverage program is led by Knead’s beverage director, Darlin Kulla. In addition to a strong selection of French aperitifs like Lillet, Bonal and Suze, it features a nearly exclusive French wine selection of 60 labels, with additions of traditional method sparkling wines from around the globe. This includes Thibaut-Janisson’s Extra Brut Blanc de Blanc from Virginia, South African Cap Classique Brut from Graham Beck and traditional-method Brut from Ferrari in Trento, Italy. At just over 40 labels, the bottle list offers picks from across France, including lesser known regions like Jura and Corsica. The remaining 17 selections are available in 5- or 8-ounce carafes and also span the entirety of France, but highlight sparkling wines.—Taylor McBride


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