| Wine
tasting parties can be a great way to get your friends, families,
co-workers - anybody - together for a unique event. There are
plenty of wonderful wineries that you may never have heard of but are
worth knowing.
TIPS
Get some
interesting facts about wines and the wineries in Santa Barbara to toss
out now and again. It makes you look smarter and gives your guests
the impression that they're enjoying something really hot -which they
are!
Stop by a
tasting room and ask which wines are hidden
treasures. We visited several during our travels and found the
staff to be well educated and enthusiastic about SB County wines.
Or choose a winery that offers a spectrum of wines that you really enjoy
and feature their wines exclusively. Mosby
Wineries, for example, consistently produces excellent Cal-Ital
wines (they also share their wonderful recipes so you can get a jump
start on your menu.) Out of the five we tasted five were
excellent. Plam/Mission Meadow
also fell into the five for five category, but it really depends on your
tastes.
Serve a
variety of palette cleansing foods such as crackers, cheeses, and fruits
in addition to whatever main meal or finger foods you're planning.
Make sure there's chocolate for the Cabernet Sauvignon - they're natural
best friends and the best 'bad day fixer upper' we know about.
Get
or make glass IDs. Most tasting rooms sell them and it's very easy
to make your own. This will cut down on how many glasses you have
to wash at the end of the night.
Provide ceramic jars and pitchers of water
so tasters can rinse or dump as they choose.
Remember
the light whites to dark reds procession of tasting, leaving the sweeter
desert wines.
Don't
forget the desert wines - there are several excellent late Rieslings
produced in the county that would be a shame to miss. Also,
Buttonwood's winemaker Michael Brown also offers a few bottles under his
Kalyra label that would be a great addition to any after dinner lineup.
Don't pour the glasses as full as you might want. Guests can ask
for more if they really love a wine but five or six tastings should
equal a glass of wine.
Make sure to have information available on the wineries. You
probably aren't going to go into commissioned sales for the winery, but
the idea behind a tasting party is to sample wines you might not
normally get to sample. A computer printout of the wines and the
wineries that produced them would be a nice touch - as would be leaving
room for the guests to write their notes!
As with anytime you serve alcohol, designate drivers, take keys and keep
a couch or two available. The point of tasting parties isn't inebriation
but everybody has different tolerances. One glass of wine can
effect some people very strongly.
As the host, you shouldn't drink much, if anything. It will allow
you to keep a clear head and maintain your judgment.
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