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June 2015
Rosé Weekend – Stock Up and Save!
This won't be the last weekend, but it will be the last one for quite some time for you to stock up on Rosés and save some dough. For the days of Saturday, June 6 and Sunday, June 7 we will be offering 20% off of 6 bottles or more of any our roses. You can mix and match, or purchase one brand, either way you save. After this weekend the special discount will go away and the rosés will…
Find out more »Loire Valley Weekend + Tasting
Flowing from the interior highlands of the Massif Central west to the Bay of Biscay west to the North Atlantic Coast, the Loire Valley is France’s most diverse wine region. With the exception of its famous Sancerre and Pouilly Fumé, however, the wines of “The Garden France” tend to lack the attention they deserve, an oversight that Colonial Spirits’ Wine team hopes to correct. Therefore, on Saturday, June 27nd, and Sunday, June 28th, we will be offering 20% off of…
Find out more »July 2015
Loire Valley Weekend + Tasting
Flowing from the interior highlands of the Massif Central west to the Bay of Biscay west to the North Atlantic Coast, the Loire Valley is France’s most diverse wine region. With the exception of its famous Sancerre and Pouilly Fumé, however, the wines of “The Garden France” tend to lack the attention they deserve, an oversight that Colonial Spirits’ Wine team hopes to correct. Therefore, on Saturday, June 27nd, and Sunday, June 28th, we will be offering 20% off of…
Find out more »New Zealand Weekend + Tasting
New Zealand is one of the most isolated wine producing regions on the planet. It’s also one of the smallest, accounting for less than 1% of the world crop. In spite of such apparent disadvantages, the Kiwis manage to sell two thirds of their crop in the world market. Obviously, they’re doing something right. To find out what that might be, stop by the store this Sunday from 1:00 to 4:00 pm and sample some New Zealand Sauvignon Blancs, the…
Find out more »August 2015
Alsace Weekend 08/08-08/09
Imagine that you have been transported to a wine region in Northern Europe bordered by the Rhine River. The towns and villages have names like Heiligenstein, Kirchheim, and Zellenberg, and Riesling is the dominant grape. Given the circumstances, you’d probably think that you were in Germany, but you would be wrong. The place is Alsace, and although it has been occupied by Germany at various times throughout history, the region, its spirit and wines are decidedly French. However, unlike…
Find out more »September 2015
Pinot Grigio/Gris Wine Weekend
Although most wine drinkers are familiar with the popular Italian white varietal Pinot Grigio, few are aware that the grape is a mutated form of the Pinot Noir from the Burgundy region of France, where it’s called Pinot Gris (grey pinot). This widely disseminated and increasingly fashionable grape is grown around the world to make a soft, gently perfumed wines with more color and substance than most other whites. This coming weekend, the Colonial Spirits wine team is offering customers…
Find out more »Sangiovese Wine Weekend
It’s safe to say that even people who rarely drink wine have sampled or at least know the name Chianti. Strangely enough, however, few wine enthusiasts are familiar with Sangiovese, the grape from which Chianti, and a number of other Italian wines, is made, either as the sole grape or as part of a blend. This lack of awareness is due to a number of factors, starting with the fact that Sangiovese, the most widely planted grape in Italy, is…
Find out more »October 2015
Malbec Weekend
Not since the California Chardonnay boom of the 1990s has the wine industry experience a New World success to match the popularity of Argentine Malbecs, the grape that put Argentina on the wine map and helped make the country the world’s fifth largest wine producer. What most wine enthusiasts don’t know, however, is that the Malbec grape originated in France, either Bordeaux or Burgundy, but it is Cahors that Malbec calls home. Cahors produces an excellent wine made from a…
Find out more »Rhone and Rhone Style Wine Weekend
Although they share the same river, the Northern and Southern Rhône Valley are quite different in terms of climate, soils, topography, and grape varieties. There are also significant price differences between the wines of the two areas, with those of the North being more expensive. The Southern Rhone, on the other hand, is much more important in terms of quantity. Not only does the region produce more than 53 million gallons of wine annually, its appellations -- from Côtes du…
Find out more »November 2015
Southern Italy Sale and Wine Tasting
Most wine enthusiasts today are familiar with the wines of Tuscany, the Piedmont, Lombardy and other northern regions of Italy. In ancient times, however, Southern Italy was the center of the wine world, thanks to the efforts of Greek colonists who introduced grapes and winemaking techniques to regions of what most people know today as the foot of the Italian boot. With the fall of the Roman Empire, however, southern wine production, along with the region’s economy, entered a period…
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