The Ultimate Guide to Wine Tasting + Books, Films, Accessories, and Recipes to Inspire Your Trip (Sponsored)

This post is sponsored by UncommonGoods, an online marketplace offering creatively designed, high-quality merchandise at affordable prices. (Bonus: $1 of every purchase is donated to one of several charities including City Harvest, an organization working to end hunger in New York Ctiy.) Read on to discover my top 10 tips for wine tasting, recipes, books, and films to inspire you at home, and accessories to tote on your next adventure.


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I like how wine continues to evolve, like if I opened a bottle of wine today it would taste different than if I’d opened it on any other day, because a bottle of wine is actually alive. And it’s constantly evolving and gaining complexity.
— from Sideways

I was fortunate to turn 21 in a town devoted to food and wine, at which point my extracurricular activities started including tasting classes and picnics in nearby Santa Ynez. Ten years and four wine clubs later, my husband and I have learned a thing or two about how to taste and travel in wine country.

You don't win at wine country the same way you do at the blackjack table in Vegas. Wine country pays in landscapes, relaxation, and in a few good bottles to take home. It's an experience worth savoring, and if you do a small amount of advanced planning (with time booked to see where the road takes you, too), you'll walk away feeling like you can't wait to go back. 


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10 Tips for Wine Tasting

1. Map it out. When it comes to planning an excursion in wine country, know this: You'll spend a lot of time driving, so the best course of action is to plan ahead. A good rule of thumb is to start at the winery farthest away from where you're staying and work your way back. Look up the wineries on Google maps and plot a route that doesn't have you going back and forth from one valley to the next. 

2. Conserve your palate. Three to four wineries per day is the most ideal. Five at the absolute most. Any more than that and your palate starts to dwindle, which means wine in the second half of the day will start to taste the same, and the wine you'll order at dinner won't be the shining star the sommelier promises. 

3. Avoid tourist traps. Steer clear of any wineries themed like a medieval castle (or equivalent), or whose tasting rooms feel more like gift shops. If there's a charter bus parked out in front, head down the road, or be prepared for a less-than-ideal tasting room experience.

4. Trust the locals. This goes for restaurant recommendations, attractions, and other wineries. When you're chatting with the guy pouring your wine, ask him where he goes after work.  

5. Dress appropriately. A visit to wine country can include a fair amount of walking, especially if you're participating in winery tours. Outside the tasting room, wineries have dirt, dust, and uneven terrain. You can still look cute, just be comfortable (translation: leave your heels at home, ladies!). 

6. Timing is everything. To experience fewer crowds and enjoy a more personal tasting experience, visit during the week or during non-peak seasons (avoid weekends in summer and early fall). Many smaller, family-run wineries require appointments, so start making them up to two weeks in advance of your trip. 

7. Don't feel obligated to drink everything.  The purpose of wine tasting is to taste wine. Sipping versus guzzling is recommended, and buckets are provided for a reason. No one will be offended if you take a taste or two and pour out the rest. For couples, share tastings. A pour is plenty for two, and can save you money, as tastings can range anywhere between $5-$25 on average.

8. Engage. The best tasting experiences are ones where you can get to know the staff and learn something along the way. Ask questions about how the wine was made, the philosophy of the winemakers, and food pairing recommendations. Most staff are eager to share their knowledge, and you'll walk away better informed and inspired. If you're in the market, this is also a good time to ask about wine clubs. You don't have to sign up on the spot, but take the brochure home so you can compare them with a level head.

9. Take notes. You can do this between tastings, but it helps to pull out a notebook, or start a note on your phone to record key findings, like the best white wine you tasted that you'd like to order for your next backyard party, or how the flavors change in a Cabernet that's been decanted for an hour. The more wine you taste, the harder it will be to keep track of them throughout the day, so record the star bottles or any wineries you'd like to revisit. 

10. Marvel. If you're in a rush, you'll miss what the region has to offer. Slow down, enjoy your tasting, and linger on the patio to take in the view. 

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Wine Accessories

UncommonGoods has a great selection of wine accessories, many of which are made from recycled materials. From notebooks to carrying bags, they have you covered indoors and out. 

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1. Single Wine Tote. Carry your favorite bottle in style to your next picnic or event. 2. Wine Tasting Notebook and Pen Set. Remember the nuances of your favorite bottles in a made-for-wine-lovers notebook. 3. Wine Cork Place Holders. Set the table for your next dinner party in wine country style. 4.  Silicone Wine Glasses. Unbreakable cups are perfect for a meal outside. Take them to a concert or the beach, and never worry about cleaning up broken glass.


Books About Wine

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Napa: The Story of An American Eden by James Conaway. A historical look at the rise of two family dynasties, the Mondavi's and the Gallo's, in a story about money, land, power, and prestige.

The Billionaire's Vinegar: The Mystery of the World's Most Expensive Bottle of Wine by Banjamin Wallace. Based on the true story of a 1787 Château Lafite Bordeaux—supposedly owned by Thomas Jefferson—this book reads like a mystery for wine lovers.

A Good Year by Peter Mayle. This novel was turned into a film (see below), and follows a London banker on a quest to find out what's important in life.

The Hungry Ear: Poems of Food & Drink by Kevin Young. This new anthology of poetry  is about "everything else that accompanies food: the memories, the company, even the politics."


Films About Wine & Films to Watch While Drinking Wine

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Bottle Shock. The true story of the 1976 wine tasting that pitted French wine against American, and the Chardonnay from Chateau Montelana, "kids from the sticks" in Calistoga took home the grand prize. 

A Good Year. This book-turned-movie is set in Provence. Pack your bags for a romantic tour through the countryside. It might make you want to buy a winery, too. 

It's Complicated.  Set in idyllic Santa Barbara, the film follows the complicated relationship of a long-time divorced couple. Meryl Streep's character, Jane Adler, also runs a local bakery, shops at the farmer's market, and makes croque monsieur during a romantic date.

Sideways. Merlot sales plummeted after the lead character refused to drink the varietal, but Santa Barbara wine country tourism peaked shortly after Sideways was released in 2004. This indy film follows Miles and Jack, two friends on a bachelor party weekend in Solvang.  

Ratatoullie. In this Pixar film, a French rat with an exceptional palate finds lands his dream job in a Paris kitchen. 


Recipes with Wine

In wine country, farm to table dining is a way of life. Local ingredients shine, menus change with the seasons, and cooking can often involve pouring a cup or two of your favorite varietal into the pan. Try these five recipes at home to bring wine tasting into the kitchen.

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1. Rose-steamed mussels from La Domestique are a lovely twist on the classic white-wine version. 2. A luxurious sauce from The Kitchn adds elegance to scallops with white wine buerre blanc and lemon orzo. 3. My leek risotto is a community pick on Food52, and uses a secret ingredient to make the finished dish extra creamy. 4. A refreshing treat from Martha Rose Shulman, raspberry rose sorbet will end your next dinner party in style. 5. The Italian Dish's Drunken Pasta puts your favorite bottle of red to good use.


Do you have any tasting tips? Share them in the comments! 

Introducing Literary City Guides!

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Today I'm excited to unveil a new feature on Eat This Poem! Literary City Guides will introduce you to the best bookstores, libraries, restaurants, and other spaces that make a city unique. Your tour guides are local writers and bloggers with a passion for their towns, and I'm certain that a quick peek will have you packing your bags before summer ends.

We're kicking things off with three guides. I'm navigating the large expanse of Los Angeles, Stacy Ladenburger has enticing recommendations for San Francisco, and Tim and Shanna Mallon explore the charming streets of Nashville. Click on the photos below to visit these great literary towns!

New cities are already in the works, but please email me if you'd like to be a tour guide for your town!


visit nashville!

visit nashville!


visit los angeles!

visit los angeles!


visit san francisco!

visit san francisco!

"Looking for Melville Winery" by Nicole Gulotta + Mushroom Quesadillas with Brie and Honey

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I've written this blog for a year and a half without so much a word about my own poetry, and there's a good reason for that, a simple reason. I stopped writing it.  

I'll spare some of the minutia, but shortly after my chapbook, Migration, was published in 2009 (it won the annual contest from Flyway: A Journal of Writing and Environment), my writing experienced a tectonic shift from poetry to food. That shift is partially responsible for leading me here today, confirming once and for all that there is a reason for everything. 

When I started Eat This Poem, my soul longed for poetry again. Not the writing of it myself (at least not yet), but the reading and enjoyment of it. The power. I've always believed that when the time was right, when enough poetry made its way through my veins like a daily dose of Vitamin D, I would put pen to paper again. I haven't gotten there yet. Right now it's just fragments, a line or two now and then, or maybe a draft of a poem that needs some attention, but nothing whole. 

Maybe sharing today's poem will help start me down that path again. As an Eat This Poem offering, I have "Looking for Melville Winery," from the aforementioned chapbook. Re-reading this poem five years later is like being thrust back in time. I wrote this after our first visit to Melville in the Santa Ynez Valley, a winery my husband and I are now club members of.  

The first time you make the drive off highway 246 towards Lompoc, you'll think you passed the winery entirely. The road is a long stretch, about 10 miles, and you might doubt your directions, or in our case, make a wrong turn and find yourself in the driveway of a farm, watching horses.  (We were also using a real paper map, not our iPhones.)

We called for directions and eventually arrived. As the poem describes, everything about the place was inviting. The vines were golden, the tasting room Dijon mustard yellow, and when the sun set, it cast a blanket of warmth over trees.

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Looking for Melville Winery

by Nicole Gulotta

The tasting room is honey, Mediterranean
stucco, vines the color of a coriander seed.

Small rocks split under the pressure of our tires
as we roll toward the tasting room. 

I press our map against the dash, watch wind
waft through the drape of a horses
                                                                 tail.

The world of this animal—nothing to do but gallop
into the shade of an oak

this gentle morning. 

 

Poem first appeared in the chapbook, Migration, published by Iowa State University Press. Reprinted with author's permission. 


During the first pick-up party for our wine shipment in January 2012, Melville hosted club members in the barrel room, and in addition to serving library wines (poured by Mr. Melville himself), the catering team passed around truffled French fries and quesadillas filled with mushrooms and drizzled with local honey. I never forgot it.

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When I pulled my chapbook from the shelf and lingered on this poem, I was surprised to have used the word "honey" to describe the tasting room approximately four years before honey would appear in an appetizer there. When I wrote this poem, Melville's wine club hadn't even been established yet.

It just means the world goes 'round, and hopefully you'll be able to look back and see the course, know it led you in the right direction. This need not last for days. We just need a long pause now and then, to take a deep breath and remember that every choice made built upon another like a ladder, and one day we'll emerge from the hanging and the climbing, the effort of it all, and just stand at the top of the hillside for a brief moment, full of nothing but peace and satisfaction.

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Mushroom Quesadillas with Brie and Honey

Spelt tortillas have become a favorite of ours, but use any tortilla you'd like. Normally, I cook quesadillas on the stove top, but I find that browning the tortillas, then melting the cheese in the oven helps get a nice assembly line going, and everything finishes at the same time.

Makes 4

 Extra virgin olive oil
1 package cremini mushrooms (about 8 ounces) 
1/2 teaspoon rosemary, minced
Salt and pepper
4 tortillas (fajita size)
8 ounces brie, thinly sliced
Warm honey, for drizzling
Parsley, for garnish

Preheat oven to 300 degrees and have a sheet pan ready. 

Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil over a medium low flame. While the oil warms, thinly slice the mushrooms and add them to the pan as you go. Stir, season with salt and pepper, and cook for 5 to 7 minutes, until tender and golden. Scrape into a bowl.

Heat a bit more olive oil and brown the tortillas on one side only, then place them on the sheet pan. Now you can assemble. On each tortilla, place 4-5 slices of brie on one side, followed by a couple of spoonfuls of mushrooms, then a few more slices of brie. Sprinkle with salt and pepper before folding the other half of the tortilla over the top. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the brie is melted. Before slicing and serving, drizzle the quesadillas with honey and parsley (if using).