Saturday, April 21, 2012

Souvenir's

In recent barossa happenings, I'm starting to put together my Souvenir's from Australia. Now I know i'll be here for another 2 months plus, but its never to early to start to get organised. I'm going to be bringing exactly 14 souvenirs home from Australia. I know what your saying, "14, what, thats so many you damn american consumer". 12 of them are bottles of wine. I'm focusing on wine from my winery and from smaller but still of great if not better quality than the bigger production facilities. A lot of the wines I can find in the US if i look hard enough and contact their disrtibuters. So it makes sense to ship home a case of wine that I could not for any reason get in the states. besides, it will be great having that wine for years to come as a reminder of this time in australia. souvenir #13, and rightfully numbered 13 is going to be a coopers t-shirt. I'f you have ever had coopers, you would understand. #14 is one that needed a bit more justification and the right timing. I'll set the stage for you. Matt and I are having a lovely day driving down to Adelaide. 25 (75 f), a few sporatic clouds. All of the vineyards sense the impending fall and have begun their sunset like color transformation into dormancy. We stop in at our favorite brewery for a pint of pale.  Adelaide is no different, people happily bustling about, jogging, biking, consuming, drinking, strolling, purchasing, chatting, and living: the best are doing up to 4. Matt's intentions in adelaide was to get a big ass cuban cigar for his harvest party, mine intention was of similar financial value yet not nearly as enjoyable as crossing another task off my bucket list. (already crossed the cuban cigar off, I mean, why not) I was finally going to make it to a store which might help me with my computer problem, and by problem I mean that is probably dead. 3rd store later i find the one that can help me with a mac, the only thing they tell me is that for 75 dollars they can send if off and have it diagnosed. I'm not going to pay them 75 dollars to tell me what I think I already know, that being that the hardrive is shot. So I have resigned to having it looked at once im back in the states. Thank you apple for providing me with a trendy, (typically) userfriendly, slightly overpriced and currently oversized paperweight to lug around australia for the next 70 days. The irony is that i'll take it in to the apple store and some genious will wave his hand over the top fixing it instantly. However, aside from maybe not being able to recover all my data, not having a computer as a constant pull is kinda a nice thing. I'm not neccisarily being more productive, but i'm not sucked in to its vortex pull all the time. An hour on the computer is an hour on the computer, whether your in australia, austria, or austin matters not. back to the main topic at hand, consumer spending for nostalgias sake. Upon deciding not to spend the 75 on what I think is a failed endevour, I walked down the road to Adelaide Hatters and purchased souvenir #14, An awsome Akubra Hat.  This is my awsome Akubra
Now for those of you who dont know Akubra, It is the Stetson of Australia. here you will find a link the Akubras Wikipedia page, and Akubras home page. take a minute of your time rediscover envy.
The Coorong, by Akubra
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akubra

http://www.akubra.com.au/


For those of you not wanting to click further, Akubra hats are made from rabbit felt (if my hat gets red paint thrown on it I swear I will eat nothing but meat for a week). Being made from rabbit felt they are water proof, and offer great sun protection, which if you know me, I need all the protection I can get. Another easy justification for purchasing this hat is that I will be spending an increasing amount of time out in vineyards. So why not get a great souviner that serves me a functional purpose back home. I anticipate that I will get a lot of good use out of this hat. 2 cool facts about this Akubra. As I wear it the band inside the will shrink and fit to my head. Cool fact #2 is that this style is made specifically for the Adelaide Hatters where I purchased this hat. Any store that has a large enough stock gets to stock their own style. this the Coorong, is named after a large lake/estuary at the end of the Murry river seperated from the ocean by a very long sandspit. I have seen the Coorong. So its an Australian hat, purchased in south australia at a store only selling that syle named after a famous south australian natural landmark that will go to great use as my vineyard time increases. Great Souvenir.
As for other happenings, work is fine, still doing a lot of cleaning and post vintage rackings and wine transfers. It will be nice to see a winery relax after vintage and what the "normal"workload consists of. The beer that Matt and I are making is progressing along nicely. we set out to make a cascadian dark ale and ended up with more of a hoppy porter. to quote my mother, "oh darn right". We are calling it Heaps Good Beer because South Australians say the word heaps heaps. Its somewhat of a running joke. Couple more weeks and we will be sharing it around, so more on that later.  Also i'm formulating travel plans, like for real this time. The only epiphany is that I'm looking to take the train from destination to destination, might take a little longer, but i could potentially bring my bike, its a more oldschool way to travel, and I would get to see a lot more of the countryside. I'll make my next blog topic about what the travel plans are in more detail.
I'm off to bed, raving for breakfast again tomorrow near from 166 year old shiraz vines. should be fun. I'll leave you with a sweet video that Cam sent me not so long ago. Its all people from burning man reciting different lines from the good Dr's "Oh the Places You'll Go". enjoy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ahv_1IS7SiE

Saturday, April 14, 2012

SURFING

Last weekend was easter weekend.  As we were close to finishing harvest all the casuals had 4 days off.
strange beauty in clear cuts
Friday went for a hike with housemate Alyssa, some some sweet wildlife (kangaroos) and of course lots of gum trees. Also saw a clear cut on the hike. Apparently Australia needs wood products as well. It was interesting how high up the clear cut was and how much it is hidden from either side of the valley. I don't know if they have replanting policies like they do in washington (can't imagine they do) but it would be nice to see. We were walking along the trail and got pretty up close and personal with a wild Roo. kinda startled us both but we were maybe 10 yards from him. Roo's are real cute, tasty, but can also hurt and even kill you, especially the big males. They will balance up on their tails and literally kick the shit out of you with those rather powerful legs. At this point I had yet to eat roo, so he really had no vendetta against me, and after a brief staring contest (I won) and some pictures, we kept along our trail and he bounded off behind us. Most likely to tell his other roo buddies that we were cool.
Saturday consisted of two things. thing one, dealing with a flat battery in Jackies car, 2nd. wine tasting throughout the Barossa with Jacki. Im starting to put together a case of wine to ship home (not cheap). I'm putting together a case of some of my favorite wines. Focusing on Barossa Shiraz, and a few other blends. more on that soon. its an ongoing thing.
For sunday and monday Alyssa Matt and I went down to the wine regions south of adelaide. Those being Mclarenvale and Langhorn Creek.  Drove down, tasted the wines. Its nice to taste wine from a different region in that region. As a whole we liked the wines. More tannic than those in the Barossa and with an ocean view.  The Mataro's were by far their best wines in our opinion with Oliver Taranga being our favorite.  Post wine tasting we hit up a local brewery called Goodesons. It seems that all the brewers we meet were at one time brewers for a large facility, and most likely after tasting "real" beer many of them have been starting up their own small operations. And thankfully they did, because matt and I get to taste the reward of their labor. We also find that most of the brewers we meet we end up talking to them about various things like their pumps/pipping/brewery setup/next product as apposed to the beer at hand. The day gets even better, post this we make our way our to the beach, Maslin beach (the first unclad beach in Australia). Not sure why we that beach was chosen, the nuddi part is up beach from the parking lot, but hey, it was a nice day and we wanted to swim. To my sweet sweet surprise there was a little local windswell rolling through, and lucky for me I had borrowed a surfboard from one of my winemakers. Surfing ensued. The waves were small, windy, had terrible shape, but I have surfed in Australia now. God I love surfing. (side note: the places you travel are made by the people you travel with. If I don't really have any travel plans with certain people i've decided that sitting on the beach and surfing in Byron Bay sounds like a damn good use of two weeks in june) Carrying one, that night we stayed at a YHA hostel (nicest hostels) in the small beach town of port elliot. Port Elliot is famous for its bakery. I don't think i've elaborated on an Australian bakery yet. Very different than what we think of in the States. Bakery's here consist mainly on Meat/gravy/veggies/salt/and such all contained within pastry. Its their version of fast food, and bakery's are serious business here. Matt spent close to 20 dollars on I think 5 different pastry variations. Matt likes to eat. I had what I akin to a meatball sandwich for breakfast. Thats another thing about Aussies, they seem to take everything that is acceptable and expected in the afternoon/evening, all food, drink, and social manner, and make it available in the morning in a socially acceptable way. thanks Australians for being awesome.
Monday followed with a trip up to Langhorn Creek, another wine growing region south of Adelaide. Interesting enough, Matt work at a winery down here in '10, so the intent of the trip was to visit that winery and hopefully get to taste some of the wine he helped make at a place called Bremerton. We did, and the wines were great.  Infact all the wines in the are were good, with Cabernet far and away being the best wines.
A few thoughts. One its nice to see the different areas really excelling in different wines. The Barossa reigns supreme with Shiraz, but Mclarenvale does Mataro (Movedre), Langhorn creek grows great Cabernet, Eden Valley Riesling, and the Adelaide hills grow pinot, I think.
Either way, a very pleasant weekend.
Tuesday, Matt and I got out beer stuff. yes, we are brewing beer all the way down here in Australia. our intent was to brew a Cascadian Dark Ale, nice dark beer full of flavor and full of hops, a concept that is just starting to be grasped down here. We got some chocolate malt to put into the beer, maybe a little more than we intended as it seems that the beer is taking on a slightly more mocha characteristic than was intended. Not at all a bad thing as the beer seems to developing lots of flavor and hops. Yay beer.
All and All it was a very successful weekend. look out for another blog in the next few days.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Kangaroo's

Australians love their kangaroos, especially cooked rare with a berry sauce. It's like their deer/beef/eagle all warped into one. It's their deer because they enjoy jumping out in front of moving vehicles. They are their beef because they enjoy eating them. And akin to an eagle as the Australian national animal.
Over the long weekend I had lots and lots of Kangaroo encounters as such. Went for a hike, saw some kangaroos, went on a weekend trip and visited an animal park where we were able to feed Kangaroos. Then on tuesday when Matt and I were brewing beer we bbq'd a Roo roast. Lots and lots of Roo.  In all the roo discussions I was referred by Alison to Skippy the Bush Kangaroo. A australian children's show from the 70's where skippy the roo helped solve crime. most definitely youtube Skippy the Kangaroo, its well worth the entertainment.
Kangaroo's are really pretty cool animals, they have some of the most efficient locomotion ever, have incredible pregnancy traits, use their tail to stand on, and i mean come on, its so cool when they just hop away. I figured the last blog was increasingly long, so this blog is going to be a little bit about kangaroo's, and more about the sweet pictures of the increasing interactions with kangaroo's that i've encountered
roo feeding

Back home for good beer, or stay in australia with this little guy

too cute

the only country that eats they national animal

just wave it over the flame

Friday, April 6, 2012

"march in a nutshell" the written version

Alright, I'm finally writing a new blog. so for all my loyal fans out there. your welcome. I suggest reading parts of the blog, I anticipate length. Reasons for not writing a blog for over a month include Harvest (no need really to explain the hard work), awsome weekends and downtime (some of which i'll elaborate on), and really the most important, a broken computer. I also Apologise for not posting any pictures to go along with this blog. Go look at my facebook if you want to find the picutres. I've posted some new ones there.
Let me start with the broken computer. About a month ago now, it started acting up and freezing. This freezing was due to the Hardrive, it would start making an uncomfortable clicking noise, followed by no activity.  Ironically it started while I was trying to do a softwear update on my security, well played Apple. To further the ironic twist it completely died on my attempt to back up my pictures to my hardrive. Now when I "turn it on" the main white loading screen with the apple comes up then after about  seconds the hardrive begins its rythmatic clicks. Did I also mention that the nearest Apple store I beleive is in Melbourne. Thats about a 10 hour drive or two weeks bike ride for those of you not up to date on Australian Highways.  After ignoring my computer quite succesfully now for  weeks I have started looking and found a computer shop in adelaide that services Mac's. At this point im pretty sure the computer is done, and I really just want to recover my data. I did however give all my pictures to a fellow intern before he left, So I at least wont loose any of my australia pictures, everything else is backed up on my computer.  Other than breaking my 6 or 7 year old RayBans thats really the only bad news.
In Great news, St. Hallett (the winery I work for for those of you who forgot) has asked me to stay on after harvest till june 1st-ish. Of course I accepted. More time, more money, more experience. I like the crew I work for, I like the facility, there is still more I can learn and I can probably sit in on some blending actions. I booked my origional plane flight home for june 30th, so working till the 1st gives me a solid month of travel. There is a chance I might extend that 2 more weeks (making it 6 months in aus)due to tax purposes (that two weeks could be worth upwards for 4k depending on how the tax laws read. more on that later.  The Other very good news is that I have secured a harvest position for 2012 North American harvest at Ridge Vineyards. I will be working both in Sonoma and in the Santa Cruz mountains. I'll be helping out with vineyard sampling in sonoma and the santa cruz mountains then getting to make the wines up at Ridge's Monte Bello Facility.  Its going to be a smaller harvest in regards to tonnage but the winemaking practices, quality, and learning experience appear like they will be the best yet. Words can not describe how excited I am to get to be part of making the Monte Bello wine and living near enough to santa cruz again. More on all that later as it develops. Oh, and you could probably all visit, its a lot closer than oregon. Do yourself a favor and check out the Website for Ridge Vineyards, they have some very cool vineyard maps and a nice display of the wines.
On to what i've been up too.  Since the last post, which was like middle of Febuary A lot has happened as you would expect. Harvest was in full swing, we now have only  fermenting tanks left, all the other wine is in tanks in various stages of going into or out of barrels spread across the tanks of the winery.
 My main job for the last month has focused on pressing the reds since we finished getting in all of our whites a month ago or so.
Red Wine Pressing in a nutshell:
1. things to remember, red wine is fermented on the skins, so we do not press it off right away like we do white grapes.
2. First we must drain the wine not soaked up in the skins (the skins float creating what we call a cap.
3. Then we must get all the skins into one of the various presses we have through any number of processes. This is usually the most physical part involving scrapping, digging, pulling, cursing, poking, crying, shoveling, kicking, crumpling, throwing, followed by more cursing. Some tanks are harder than others, and some grape varieties create a more or less dense cap. it also depends on how long its been in the fermenter.
4. Press the shit out of it. because we are making a giant, bold, flavorful, tannic wine. (Dads favorite style) we literally press the shit out of it. Making Shiraz is not the finnesse winemaking that Pinot Noir can be. We beat the crap out of our grapes to make the style of wine the Barossa is known for.
5. empty press of the dry skins, which get taken off by another company who distille it make an number of alcohol based products including spirits which we then use to fortify some of our wines.
6. clean. The press, lines, tanks, flood, clothes, all need to be cleaned after this is done.
I like pressing, Its a pretty fun job with a lot of parts to it and you get to taste the wine right as it becomes dry wine.
Now to go weekend by weekend highlighting all i've done. Now I say weekend loosly because I really only have had sundays off until the last week. But Matt (intern who i worked with at elk cove) also has sundays off, and his winery gave him a car. we have not yet had a bad weekend.
The weekend of March 2nd started with a mexican feast due to the number of Americans Present. I think out of 12 there were 5. Thank you to Syd (reasercher for Gallo) for providing the excuse to make homemade Mole Sauce and slow cooked chicken and pork. If you know me you know that Mole is my favorite flavor, combine that with slow cooked pork and some great Reisling I was in food heaven. As were most people around the table. I proudly ate the leftovers for breakfast/lunch/dinner. That next day being sunday we wine tasting, including a trip to Jacobs Creek (pretty much some of the worst wine possible, but they are synonomous with the Barossa valley. It was worse than we all imagined, and we expected bad. Then we Follwed all the asian tourists to their next mandatory stop at Penfolds. Penfolds is another large famous winery in the Barossa known for "Grange", a 700 dollar tannin bomb meant to age 30 years. we refered to that day as our corporate tasting.
The weekend of march 9th consisted of Matt and I going down to Adelaide in search of the Coopers Brewery. We found it, but apparently on sundays they arn't open for a tour, tasting, or t-shirt buying. Bummer. My only two souvinears from Australia are going to be a steriotypical aussie hat to wear out in the vineyards and A coopers T shirt. Upon Failing to make it to the brewer we just went and walked around Adelaide, I found some boardies, made our way out to The beach at Glenelg, swam in the ocean for the first time, and found a beachfront pub to enjoy some hoppy beer and a burger. Not a bad sunday.
Weekend of March 16th, St patty's weekend, we out with the Two Hands Crew, thanks guys for making me really feel that ten pounds of fat i've lost. drank green beer, went wine tasting on sunday to some cool spots, including giving a tour at St. Halletts to Matt and another intern friend Ashley. Went to Matts place for an impromtu bbq only to be joined by his Swiss houemates and some backpackers picking nearby vineyards. Not every day you show up to an impromtu bqq only to find a Case of 1998 Cab Shiraz, 6 europeans, the 3 of us americans, great food and some good laughs. Just thankful to be where I am with the experiences gained. Oh, and we used a 1000 ml erlenmeyer flask as a decanter.
March 24th. Mission, finding good beer. Not hard for Matt and I to do. We Found it, at the BierHaus in a town in the hills behind Adelaide. The Brewer was a great guy, we tasted through his lineup, which included a double IPA. Now the Aussie beer (coors/bud equivelent) is equally as bad as it is in the states, only they drink more to their local shitty beer.  The Microbrew scene is just developing, this places being on of the more respecet and In my opinion better locations around. Matt and I are so used to drinking insanly hoppy beers that that is our standard. they are coming around to that here, just not quite as intense as what we are used to. In some ways though they are making a more accessable well rounded beer, not the alcoholic hop water we sometimes used to. In other beer related news, Matt and I are going to brew a black IPA hopefully on tuesday. We cheating slightly by using half extract due to limitations in our soak, but hey, we still going for it. Unfortunally as I write this our ingredients are sitting in the post office which is closed for 4 days due to easter weekend. I know my stuff is there, I just cant get it till tuesday afternoon, bummer.
March 28th: The Harvest Party. Oh Barossa winery parties. The first one I went to killed my phone, so I was mentally prepared and took extra percautions for this one.  For our end of harvest party we all went to the local country club for a friendly round of Golf. Now I like golf, I was pretty pumped on getting to go for a round. I have not yet surfed in Aus, but i sure have played a round of golf. The costume theme for the party was "formal to the waist, the rest in bad taste", it did not matter which "to your waist" was formal and which was in bad taste. I went with more of a tacky golfer look. Each team played the best shot out of their teams hits. so driving, approach, and putting were all played off the best shot for each. that made team oriented and a lot of fun. That and the Winemaker driven beer cart that would come around almost every hole. My team ended up with a bogy on every hole except the last which we got par. Not bad. the winning team was 3 over Par, but also consisted of a lab tech who is from St. Andrews.  Were were bussed back to the winery, where there was pig roasting on a spit, more beer, a bottle of mezcal with a scorpian in the bottom, and a 6 liter bottle of 1998 Old block (so so so good) Dinner of course was great, speeches were given, thanks were given, I recieved the Hose Rose trophy for what my bosses said was for my hard work and positive attitude. My name will forever be engraved onto a homemade trophy sitting at St. Hallett's winery in South Australia. needless to say I Broke a peice of the Trophy off later on... oops. but hey, for that night it was mine to break. And easily fixable peice.  Kareokee, deserts, dancing on the cellar door bar, more wine and Mezcal were consumed until our ride home became our ride home.  Normally I would not post drunken stories onto this Blog for various reasons, and except for one very unfortunate 4th of july incident involving Brennan Davis and a beer pong table, are usually pretty tame in in control. To me this was just to funny not to tell. first off it doesn't involve me persay as the drunk culprit, but another intern. We are being drivin home by one of the winemakers, making a stop at a town opposite mine first. This other intern starts to throw up in the car, I tell the driver to pull over and pick us up on the way back pushing the overly inebriated eployee out the door. it took me all of about 5 seconds to realize that if the winemaker does not come to pick me up, this is going to be a decent walk home. Anyway, the drunken intern is busy stumbling around and "fertilizing"some Orlando vineyards (think of this next time you drink Jacobs Creek people). we get picked up, thankfully, drunken intern has nowhere to stay and he isn't staying with the winemaker, so he gets to stay at my house, yay. One of my biggest pet peeves is when people go out drinking as such without arrangments for a place to say. In hindsight he should have slept in his car. back to my front door im not convinced he is done throwing up, and im not letting him sleep on the nice couches in such a state. so i get a glass of water and we go for a walk. Impatient drunk me decides that drunk intern should do jumping jack's and pushups to relieve any discomfort that his stomach may still have. It worked. And then he slept on the couch. We will head this as a warning that if your drunk ass ever gets put into the very capable yet impatient hands of my drunk ass you probably will end up doing some sort of calesthetic excersise to prevent the potential for throwing up anywhere inside my house.  I think the winemaker just took the pressure washer to the inside of his car. Oh end of Vintage Parties.
March 29th: Hung Over
April 1st. Alyssa (my housemate) turns 23. We made a big brunch consisting of some damn fine bacon/eggs/muffins/fruit most of which was made on the bbq, went tasting at a Small Zin Producer then swam/lounged around at the Lengmeil pool for most of the afternoon. It was also in that Cellar door which we were asked to join the 15 person pyramid. (refer to my facebook album Australia) Also ot sunset we went up to a local lookout for some cheese and bubbles to celebrate another one of us interns leaving to go back to New zealand for harvest. Really just a lovely day.
April 3rd. Matt and I found our way to Adelaide to take a friend to the airport and found a pub run by a couple of beer loving lesbians called the Wheatcheif. This is so far the only place in South Australia we know of where you can get a plethora of american microbrews. we had a pint of some western australian beer called Hop Hog.
April 6th: being today, good friday, nothing is open, Alyssa and I drove up to this local protected area and went on a hike. We saw 4 kangaroos and some nice views. The more and more i look at the local trees and plants the more it looks different from those back home. Maybe i'm noticing the differences more, but they remind me less and less of back home. that brings us to right now. the rest of this weekend for me is going to consist of wine tasting up in the Claire Valley and Down in Mclarenvale. the other two significant wine growing regions in South Australia.
Some other happenings:  Since starting work NOT at 5am like the first 5 weeks for so, but at 7, im comfortably able to ride my bike to work, which I have been doing for the last 3 weeks. thats helping to stay in shape as well as getting that little adrenaline rush in the morning. It makes biking up to the markets that much easier. also seeing as how its my only real form of trasnportation thats kinda of it.  I'm also putting a little bit more muscle back on due to the bike, and as I've said before with the decrease in good beer and fried food, i've lost 10 lbs or so being in this country.  Another thing i've done periodically over the last month or so is drive. Let me remind you that here in australia they drive on the opposite side of the road from what we do back home. so that means just about everything is opposite. It started with me volunteering to be a DD so i could drive and has extended beyond that on a number of occasions. Driving on the opposite side of the road looses its novelty after about 30 seconds, then it just becomes driving. Having now logged somewhere between 3 and 4 hours of driving time, i dont even think twice about pulling onto the correct side of the road. Parents you would be very proud of me that almost all of that driving has been done in manuel cars. Just about the only thing thats not different is the manuel gear box. First is still far left moving twords you, same as it is stateside.  Thats it about now. the only other news is that I borrowed a surfboard and may getting a session in on monday morning or sunday evening, or ideally both. i'll do what i can to stay more on top of my blogs and maybe put some pictures up, but really check out the pictures via my facebook.