The post A Very Incogvino Year appeared first on Incogvino.
]]>I’m not one for New Year’s resolutions and retrospectives. I used to be, when I was younger, but then I realised how bad I am at sticking to my lofty ambitions of bettering myself. So I stopped bothering. I pondered this post for a while. The idea was to write an end-of-year post before 31 December 2014. That never happened, partly because of my professional level of procrastination and partly because internet connectivity in Stilbaai was practically non-existent this year. Then I wondered if writing a 2014/2015 New Year’s post wasn’t going to be utterly boring and predictable; was I going to write one just because EVERYONE is writing one? Do I really have something to say, or would I just be rehashing the year and end up sounding hopelessly beige?
2014 was quite a year, both personally and professionally. Despite all the ups and downs, I had a big idea for 2014: Incogvino (you can read about how it all got started here, I won’t re-tell the story now). With some help from talented friends and by joining up with Andy Hadfield, we breathed life into a domain I had registered on a whim years earlier. It was a place where I could write freely on my favourite hobby: wine. The essence of Incogvino has been and will continue to be spreading word on all things wine: that wine is fun; that wine doesn’t have to be smothered in pompousness and snobbery.
Most importantly, I wanted to drive home the idea that wine is for everyone and anyone. We Are Incogvino. An unassuming character. With oft unassuming tastes. Sure, boxed wine isn’t for everyone. But then neither is Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Why should anyone be shamed for what they drink? To each their own, live and let drink etc. etc. Just because I don’t drink katembas doesn’t mean somebody else can’t.
2014 was a good year for Incogvino. From our first post in April, we’ve managed to drink some fabulous wines, visit some amazing wine farms, send our SuperFANS to some exciting events, give away some free things and continue the tremendous Twitter tastings.
None of this would have been possible without our incredibly impressive member farms: Warwick & Vilafonté, Haut Espoir, Beau Joubert, Lithos and Môreson. The concept of the Incogvino Twitter tastings (as begun by Real Time Wine) just took off this year. We had massively successful, fun and exciting tastings with Lithos, Haut Espoir, Beau Joubert and Vilafonté – the latter taking it to the next level with an interactive tasting seeing Mike, Sophia and co. setting up a webcam and leading the tasting via live stream. Tastings had 20 to 30 people from all over SA joining at any one time. Dinner parties were set up, menus planned and prepared to pair with the wines, restaurant bookings made and tweets and photos flying everywhere. That’s a far cry from the five or six app users that used to gather fleetingly – and without much ceremony – to sip two or three wines and send three or four tweets about them.
So that’s it for the look back. Now I have to look ahead to 2015. And to be truthful, I don’t know what to expect. I have plans and ideas. I have a small but capable army of immensely talented people who are backing Incogvino. I want to grow this little passion project and I want to see it turn the wine industry, or at least the writing/blogging part of it, on its head. Ok, maybe that’s me tilting at windmills. But I want to try.
I want to shake things up. I want to do more. Say more. Write more. More wines. More farms. More of the usual fun stuff. More events. More hidden gems. More giveaways. More people. But also more opinions. More on the things I disagree with. More on the things that are controversial. More on the things that really grate my proverbial cheese (or crush my proverbial grapes?). And learning. Lots of learning. Wine is magic; I don’t think anyone can ever really know ALL the secrets. But we can give it a damn good try.
Pop those corks, lovelies. Decant and let breathe. Polish the glasses. And hang on to your Panama hats.
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]]>The post A Visit to Lithos {Guest Post} appeared first on Incogvino.
]]>After one of our most interactive and exciting Twitter tastings with Lithos wines, one of our SuperFANS, Stephen Brierley, went along to the farm to discover where the magic is made. If you want to follow Stephen on Twitter for his magnificent tweets about wine, you can find him at @sbrierley75. If you’d like to visit Lithos, contact them at @wines_lithos or visit their website.
I had a long overdue engagement with Tim Hoek, the winemaker from Lithos wines and just under two hours in traffic from Century City to Somerset West was not going to stop me. The farm is on Old Sir Lowrys Pass Road, on Wedderwill Country Estate. The Estate has another wine farm on its property, but that is a topic for another post. Lithos wine farm is situated between the Schapenberg mountain range to the east, the vistas of False Bay, that go on and on all the way to Cape point, to the west.
Lithos is owned by Sean and Lorraine. Sean is a financier, who still spends time travelling around the country on business, while Lorraine is an artist and a dreamer and conceptualised the name of the farm. Lithos comes from the word Lithosphere which is the outermost shell of our planet. The terroir in the area is excellent, previously being submerged beneath the waves of the Agulhas and now comprises of a top layer of sandy loam, with clay beneath which requires very little or no irrigation during summer months. The vines were planted in 2003 by the previous owners, who made wine for their own consumption, and the farm was bought and developed by Sean and Lorraine in 2011.
Tim Hoek found his way as winemaker to the farm from Jordan, where he was the assistant winemaker for five years. Tim and his wife, also a winemaker, have spent time in Bordeaux, Napa, New Zealand and have also made sparkling wine in the UK. Tim was born in Swellendam and obtained his agricultural degree in Wellington.
Tim’s manner is cool, calm and collected. He had previous aspirations to make beer, if the wine industry turned out not to be for him. But fate dealt him good hand and he now produces both wine and beer for the farm. An unusual occurrence; a wine farm that produces beer, but as Lorraine states: “We make and sell beer during the off season when we are not focused solely on the wines”. Nothing wrong with a dual income, I say! The beer is bottled under the Lithos labels: a haunting set of winged designs which were conceptualised by Lorraine, but designed by Vim Botha.
The beer is an interesting offering and ranges from 3.5% to 5% in alcohol. The lightest is a Raspberry Weiss which Lorraine thinks should be aimed at the female market. It is clean and refreshing with the obvious hint of rasberries, which is by no means sweet and overpowering. Sunset Ale is their pale ale, which is snappish and has slightly more a finish to it than the previous. The Midnight Stout is sharp and bitter and was my favourite. I took a carry bag of this home with me. All the beers are fairly light and would go down well with a range of food dishes.
After the beer tasting (apt for recovering from a Friday spent in too traffic), we moved onto their wines. They offer a range of 3 wines. The first was a Blanc De Noir, made with Pinotage, Shiraz and Cabernet Sauvignon. It offers a strawberry fruit jam nose, light acidity and a layered freshness which was drier in terms of sugar content than a more typical rosé, but presents a good balanced between the three cultivars. This wine would go very well with a cream based pasta, or even a big hunk of salmon where the acidity would cut through the fat and oil.
Their Cape Blend, of which a limited quantity is available as they produced only 2100 bottles, is clean and balanced with Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz, Pinotage and Cabernet Franc grapes. The wine is fermented in 2nd, 3rd and 4th fill barrels, so it only had a hint of tannins and wood to it.
Their last wine on offer was the Syrah, which they referred to us such rather than a Shiraz as it was grown in the cooler climate of the area, which is generally 2-3 degrees colder than Stellenbosch. The wine gave me a wonderful delivery of plums on the nose, slightly moist biltong too and the mouth delivered a subtle smack of white pepper. It is a wine that is light on the palate with 40% matured in new oak.
Tim has recently produced a Cabernet Sauvignon with grapes bought in from Stellenbosch, which he matured in barrels for 28 months. He is not ready to release this yet, but the excitement of this new addition was evident.
I only managed to catch a glimpse of the landscape views on arriving at the Estate, but what I did see was breathtaking and worth a visit earlier in the day. Lorraine is an aspiring cook and offers food and wine evenings, where clients can sample the beer and wine with a hearty meal alongside. I could have spent more time with the family but sadly after 90 minutes I had to drag myself out and home, just catching glimpses of the most impressive scenery below before the sun disappeared from sight.
The farm is well worth the visit and is along the same road as other impressive estates in Journeys End and Waterkloof. The wines are available from Wine Concepts and Vino Pronto, but I would suggest a visit to the farm for the sights, sounds and warmth of Lithos wines.
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]]>The post #TasteLithos [Twitter Wine Tasting] appeared first on Incogvino.
]]>Another of our infamous Twitter Wine Tastings, hosted by AndyHadfield and the team from Lithos Wines, a new boutique winery in Somerset West – that brews beer in the down time! As usual, the Twitter tasting went down a treat and Lithos can now claim to be one of the most responsive wine farms on this medium. I heard afterwards that the team sweated a bit – but hey, that’s the game.
Huge thanks to Lithos for taking part. Here’s a gallery of some of the images shared during the Twitter tasting and the stats we achieved. And thanks again to the SuperFANS – SA’s greatest wine community
TASTING: Sunset Ale. Lithos Cape Blend. Lithos Syrah.
Follow Lithos on Twitter here.
Some of the SuperFAN comments:
lindakemp111: #TasteLithos I love this Shiraz. Dark chocolate, white pepper. Elegant, smooth, accessible but with real class. #wine140
xivoni111: #TasteLithos #wine140 Red Riedel better nose but harsher taste. White Riedel slightly closed nose – great taste. Restaurant glass: kak.
xivoni111: #TasteLithos @wines_lithos #wine140 @WeAreIncogvino Very classy Shiraz. Lovely elegance. White pepper, coffee-hint. Delicious.
Konfytbekkie: I’m trying to #wine140 about this @wines_lithos Syrah but I actually can’t be arsed because it’s just TOO good to describe.
AntonyStiglingh: Based on the @wines_lithos 2012 Syrah reviews, you best get to the cellar soon or compete in a trolley dash of death. #wine140 #TasteLithos
Konfytbekkie: Cape Blend: fresh and green but deliciously so. Ready to drink now but gut says a few years will REALLY perform magic #Wine140
GrapeWhine: #TasteLithos @wines_lithos #wine140 Syrah is delicious white pepper and mango nose with a more spicy and meaty mouth
andyhadfield: ’12 @wines_lithos Cape Blend. Perfumey spicy Shiraz dom blend. Kinda tour-the-world flavours. Well priced. Will age. YUM (decanted) #wine140
Photos and stats below…
All ready for tonight #TasteLithos waiting for @WeAreIncogvino @SeanPaulEmery @Tankerhoek pic.twitter.com/d12RLqsSQK
— lorraine Emery (@lorraineEmery1) July 10, 2014
@lorraineEmery1 @WeAreIncogvino @SeanPaulEmery @Tankerhoek Have found some remaining stock & rearing to #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/m4V8giK7vx — Brian Arentsen (@Bargainstein) July 10, 2014
Sunset Ale poured well after sunset, but looking good. Decent aromatic head! Cheers #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/cvJtotnZTq
— Brian Arentsen (@Bargainstein) July 10, 2014
We going for it! #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/PNcDjLpSfC
— Lithos Wines (@wines_lithos) July 10, 2014
Ostrich Rump to go with the #TasteLithos twitter event @wines_lithos pic.twitter.com/FzK3k7LEyY
— Andy Hadfield (@andyhadfield) July 10, 2014
@greenlydia @wines_lithos @Bargainstein @WeAreIncogvino #tastelithos here is a desperate worker! pic.twitter.com/DJE05xZ9xz
— Sean Emery (@SeanPaulEmery) July 10, 2014
#TasteLithos Tim's 1st beer batch- tiny set up- increased in size since then! @wines_lithos @Tankerhoek pic.twitter.com/gdzu1m65y2
— Vanessa Hoek (@V_hoek) July 10, 2014
#TasteLithos @WeAreIncogvino some workers just cant get enough! i guess we must be doing something right pic.twitter.com/6egHPI3Ia1
— Sean Emery (@SeanPaulEmery) July 10, 2014
@WeAreIncogvino @wines_lithos @Konfytbekkie LDE – Lees die etiket pic.twitter.com/JzynBttMYm
— Antony Stiglingh (@AntonyStiglingh) July 10, 2014
#TasteLithos the originals of the inspiration behind the labels pic.twitter.com/fdFhbFWfIi
— Vanessa Hoek (@V_hoek) July 10, 2014
Cooking, tweeting & tasting. Has it's rewards…rump trinchado ready for the Syrah. #TasteLithos @WeAreIncogvino pic.twitter.com/qljiy2Lpab
— Brian Arentsen (@Bargainstein) July 10, 2014
This is happening right now. #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/upVZLyOiJj
— Lydia Coetzee (@greenlydia) July 10, 2014
@Konfytbekkie @WeAreIncogvino boom! pic.twitter.com/PGXvyEd884
— Antony Stiglingh (@AntonyStiglingh) July 10, 2014
@WeAreIncogvino @wines_lithos we're making pizza, the blue cheese one is a good pairing pic.twitter.com/APo2WSyPsf
— Linda Kemp (@lindakemp111) July 10, 2014
#TasteLithos Blanc de Noir being bottled #blancdenoir pic.twitter.com/u4qOohBtWi
— Vanessa Hoek (@V_hoek) July 10, 2014
View from @wines_lithos – tough life #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/C7M1bitDoc
— Incogvino (@WeAreIncogvino) July 10, 2014
Scenes from @wines_lithos (farm visit sounds like a good idea, ja?) #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/EbTbnJ3UiI
— Incogvino (@WeAreIncogvino) July 10, 2014
Seen on the labels of @wines_lithos & on the farm. Can I hear a Hoo Hoooo? #TasteLithos pic.twitter.com/e3tP8bRAUa
— Incogvino (@WeAreIncogvino) July 10, 2014
#TasteLithos more views from the farm @wines_lithos pic.twitter.com/kkFb3uwhYZ
— Vanessa Hoek (@V_hoek) July 10, 2014
The post #TasteLithos [Twitter Wine Tasting] appeared first on Incogvino.
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