Flight School

with Tony

  • About
  • Blog
  • Site Search
  • Subscribe
  • Images
  • Contact
Front RMS.jpg
West-Front_Monticello-JLooney-26aug2013-0056_work.jpg

What You Are Drinking For NFL Week 3

September 20, 2017 by Tony Ambrosini in NFL Drinking Schedule

What the heck does a California middle school and Thomas Jefferson's estate have to do with football? This isn't a flashback to my history class, is it?

Let me be honest...getting adjusted to the back-to-school routine has been difficult. The combination of that plus some other classes I am working on at the store are taking up a good portion of my time. That being said, I have no excuse for not continuing to share how you can drink well when you have the window to enjoy an adult beverage. Fortunately, the football season helps write the script for me, and this week we have any easy inroad to include wine! Sunday night's matchup features the Oakland Raiders and the Washington Redskins; each city is a reasonable drive to several quality vineyards in Northern California and throughout Virginia (yes, I realize the Washington stadium is in Maryland, but whatever. It's my site).

Look, we can go to so many wineries for our choice to represent the Raiders, but understand something about this franchise. Late owner Al Davis always did things his way, and one of the things he had established in 1996 was to hold his team's summer training camp in Napa, Redwood Middle School to be exact. Yes, this is the same Napa where pristine, well-manicured vineyards that produce some of the most opulent and rich styles of wine found anywhere on earth are located. This brings me to a visit I took for my work-study trip after claiming my WSET Diploma. I never actually made a recommendation on what to taste from Cuvaison, which was one of my two winery visits. It is not easy to do, especially when my visit involved tasting a lot of different clones of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay (which led to the different cuvées that are now the finished wines available to you for purchase) inside of a brand-spanking new facility. The options are all solid. In the end, if you have a chance to get your hands on a Cuvaison Chardonnay or Pinot Noir, you are getting a shimmering New World example of pure fruit meeting intelligent use of barrel-aging, where the wine is not overwhelmed by oakiness and woodiness.

Virginia may not be well-known nationally along the lines of the west coast regions or even New York's Finger Lakes. However, the next batch of states that includes serious winemaking and viticulture know-how includes Virginia. Need proof? You can visit any of the 17 wine trails and have yourself a very good time. But for our purposes, it is difficult to discuss wine, especially Virginian wine, without including Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson was a wine-lover and President George Washington's Secretary of State. Prior to that role, he was a Minister to France; his trips to Europe opened his eyes to the world of wine, becoming quite knowledgeable to the point where he took such comprehensive notes and purchased so many wines to bring back to the United States, he helped build the President's wine cellar. Jefferson also had the dream to grow European grape varieties (the popular ones we all know and love) in the Eastern U.S. The goal never panned out before his passing, but today the Monticello wine trail might be the heartbeat of Virginia wine with the state's most popular winery of Barboursville leading the way. There is a great story on how a multi-generation Italian wine family left a lasting impact on this property's fortunes in the wine industry.

So today will be one of the few weeks I can make straight wine recommendations. No beer. No whiskey. Just great-tasting adult grape juice. Enjoy what should be another entertaining game along the lines of last week!

bbv viognier.png

Cuvaison Spire Carneros Pinot Noir ($55): Carneros is one of the cooler parts of the North Coast, with fog and mist that can linger until lunchtime, before giving way to warmth and abundant sunshine. The Spire Pinot Noir offers a foil to the brute force of a football game with elegance, liveliness, and ripe fruit. All of the berry fruits are in this wine, with baking spices and a touch of cola and smoke. It will give your senses something to focus on during the commercial breaks.

Barboursville Viognier ($22): No barrels. No malolactic fermentation (the process leading to buttery/butterscotch flavors in wine). Just pure fruit expression of the aromatic white Rhône variety, with some aging on the lees to add a layer of complexity akin to fresh baked bread. With Viognier's apricot, tropical, and floral aromas, this is a great example of what Virginia is capable of and it is totally worth the price tag. Drinking this wine is like enjoying jam and bread...really easy.

September 20, 2017 /Tony Ambrosini
Napa, Carneros, Virginia, California
NFL Drinking Schedule
Comment
gb.jpg
atlanta.jpg

What You Are Drinking For NFL Week 2

September 14, 2017 by Tony Ambrosini in NFL Drinking Schedule

Two very different cities with one thing in common: football teams with explosive offenses that are must-see television on Sunday night.

Yeah, last Sunday night was a snoozefest. Even Dallas Cowboys fans have to admit that was a boring show, but this week's Sunday night game is shaping up to be much different, especially to the casual fan.

This week's contest takes us to Atlanta, where the Falcons open up their brand new billion-dollar stadium against the Green Bay Packers. This is a rematch of the January NFC Championship game, where the Falcons ran the Packers out of the building before you could even warm your seat to the tune of a 44-21 final score. Now the Packers head back to the same city to exact some revenge. Each team is loaded with star players; quarterbacks Aaron Rodgers and Matt Ryan are recognizable and if you are a fantasy football player, chances are high you have someone you are counting on in what should be a game loaded with offensive fireworks.

So when we are looking for something to drink with a game that mass appeal to both the casual fan and the die-hard, we need to keep things simple. We want our beverage to taste good and be interesting, but we also don't need something to contemplate or analyze. Since Wisconsin and Georgia aren't wine country powerhouses, wine won't be in the equation. There are some fine distilleries in each state, but neither has strong enough nationwide distribution where I can make a recommendation for you to find easily. By default, we go to the old-school traditional pairing of football and beer.

Wisconsin has a long brewing history, thanks to German immigrants settling in the state and bringing their beer-producing knowledge to 1840s America. Within each town there was some kind of brewery/brewpub, but as quickly as business grew, Prohibition and The Great Depression closed the doors on many establishments. However, one brewery that managed to survive it all was Stevens Point Brewery. Located a two-hour drive northwest of Milwaukee, it was able to cope with Prohibition by manufacturing soft drinks and sodas, plus beverages known as "near beer" during the Dark Ages of alcohol production. Stevens Point has been in business for 160 years, but it wasn't until 1990 that it made its first sale outside the state of Wisconsin, which was their flagship Point Special Lager. By 2004, distribution expanded throughout the Midwest and demand for more products rose. Today, Stevens Point makes a fantastic range of solid-to-outstanding beers and non-alcoholic sodas that are worth trying when you see them.

When it comes to beers from Georgia, I had no experience with them until I took my first trip to Chattanooga, Tennessee. With a really cool downtown and waterfront area that is becoming quite the food and drink destination, Chattanooga has access to so many beers and spirits made by craft producers throughout the south. So when I walked into a Chattanooga grocery store for the first time and saw a display of beers from Atlanta's Sweetwater Brewing Company, I was intrigued and picked up a few. SweetWater produced its first beer back on April 20th of 1997, the 420 Pale Ale. It didn't take long for word to get out about how good their beers were, leading to quick growth at a time when craft beers were really making a name for themselves. Winning an award for Best Small Brewery at the Great American Beer Festival made a major impact as brewery expansion was needed to meet demand. In just 20 years, SweetWater established itself as one of the top craft brewers not just in the American South, but nationwide.

Trust me...I am not overlooking the wealth of craft brewers located in Wisconsin and Georgia. However, the best place to start if you are looking to get each state under your beer-drinking belt is to go with the breweries with the greatest amount of access. Stevens Point and SweetWater can do just that for you. Here are two brews that taste good, have great balance, and don't require a lot of thought while you are watching the game on Sunday.

stevens point ipa.jpg

Stevens Point Beyond the Pale IPA ($10/6-pack): Tropically fruity with a touch of maltiness to balance the refreshing quality and the hoppiness of the beer. 6.5% abv means you aren't rocketing through these beers, but it if the game is that interesting you will be taking it slow anyway.

420 extra pale.jpg

SweetWater 420 Extra Pale Ale ($10/6-pack): This golden ale is very aromatic with floral and earthy notes. It is a mouthwatering brew that will make you want to keep the salty snacks coming as you enjoy the game. 5.7% abv, which is on the lower end of the craft beer alcohol spectrum...as long as you aren't driving after the game is over, grab an extra one.

September 14, 2017 /Tony Ambrosini
Wisconsin, Georgia, Beer
NFL Drinking Schedule
Comment
nyc.jpg
Dallas-D-Red-Skyline-635x423.jpg
brooklynbrewry.jpg
Balcones+Distillery+018.jpg

What You Are Drinking For Sunday Night Football Week 1

September 07, 2017 by Tony Ambrosini in NFL Drinking Schedule

The glamour and glitz of New York and Dallas are overshadowed by a strong community brewery in Brooklyn and a humble distillery 95 miles south of "Big D" in Waco. Image credits (L-R): Business Insider, D Magazine, Brooklyn Brewery, The Beer Haul

You (hopefully) just read my in-depth analysis of the teams playing in tonight's NFL Kickoff game, and what you can drink from the respective cities/regions involved. I finish up the Opening Day special with the two teams playing on Sunday Night, which will be the norm for this series; I would be here all day and night if I tried to come up with recommendations for every game of the season!

Where Sunday's score will be settled this week in prime time. Image credit: Dallas Cowboys

Where Sunday's score will be settled this week in prime time. Image credit: Dallas Cowboys

The first Sunday night game that counts in the 2017 standings is being played by two teams Eagles fans wish would be wiped off the face of God's green earth: the New York Giants and the Dallas Cowboys. These are two teams that drive massive ratings anytime they are on television (to the chagrin of the Eagles fan) and hail from two states that are booming in all three phases of alcoholic beverages: beer, wine, and spirits. It's not going to be an easy decision.

8_shelf_Oktoberfest-12oz-LR_original.png

The Giants call themselves New York, but play in New Jersey, so I have been given some leeway with where I can choose from. However, I am going to stick to my place of birth for the New York/New Jersey choice. I was born in pre-trendy Brooklyn, New York that looks nothing like it does today. When Brooklyn Brewery first opened for business 1988, the goal was to revive the brewing scene in New York City that was hit hard by both a hop shortage and then Prohibition. Co-founder Steve Hindy took the approach of donating his brews to local events, mostly in creative arts like music, theater, and museums, but also in other business launches, according to their web site. The foundation was formed through ties to the Brooklyn community and spread from there. Today, you can find Brooklyn beers on the shelves nationally, with a killer range of products.

brimstone-2016.png

For the Dallas area drink of choice I head south to Waco, where Balcones Distilling is located. I had made mention of their Texas Single Malt Whisky in the past, but never really went into great detail about the company. Balcones got started in an old welding building in 2008, knocking down walls, bringing in copper stills and started distilling by 2009. The goal was simple: make authentic Texas whisky (note the lack of 'e' in whisky, sort of an homage to the Old World), where malted barley plays a key role in their products as it does in Scotch whisky production. However, the hot days in Texas offer an aging environment different from Scotland, where the spirit matures in barrel faster, leading to a different flavor profile. Balcones also uses corn in their products as is common in Bourbons from Kentucky, but sourcing in the American Southwest leads to a different flavor from Kentucky Bourbon. In a mere nine years, Balcones has put itself on the map as a fantastic whisky producer with distinct products.

So I'll be honest: I am a Giants fan. I will be sitting on the couch rooting for my team with beer in hand, but in a showing of support for the greater good of alcoholic beverages, I will recommend a Balcones whisky for you and I to enjoy...it's just really good and impossible to ignore! Here's what you (yes, you too, Eagles fans!) are drinking Sunday night:

Brooklyn Brewery Oktoberfest ($10/6-pack): Malty and creamy, but balanced with the right amount of hops. It's like drinking a loaf of dark, crusty bread with a touch of baking spice. Enjoyable on a cool, late-summer night.

Balcones Brimstone ($70): This is a deep, bold, unique whisky that imparts an incredible smokiness thanks to a proprietary process using local Texas scrub oak. Tobacco, red chiles, tea, and a flavor I can only describe as "Texas BBQ rub" based on black pepper with a long savory finish. If you are a fan of strong, upfront flavors and aromas in your whisky (I am looking at you, IPA beer drinkers), this is one to sample!

 

September 07, 2017 /Tony Ambrosini
New York, Texas, Beer, Whisky
NFL Drinking Schedule
Comment
kansas city.jpg
mystic seaport.jpg
boulevard-brewery-danner.png
William_McCoy.jpg

Kicking Off A New Season Of Drinking

September 06, 2017 by Tony Ambrosini in NFL Drinking Schedule

From urban revitalization to quaint villages, there is a stark contrast between the two regions of Western Missouri and Coastal New England. Image credits (L-R): Lawnstarter, MysticSeaport.org, VisitKC, Wikipedia

Editor's Note: The author is a huge professional football fan and is about to make mention of this sport in a new weekly series. Fear not, non-football fans; the focus is on the aspects of drinking delicious alcoholic beverages from all across America.

I am entering my favorite part of the year: the humid summer weather will be going away, my kids are back at school, and the football season is getting underway. When the calendar flips to September, the big red wines become more frequent than white wines, and the spirits cabinet morphs from Tequila and rum to Scotch and brandy. My beer preferences change from the refreshing wheat ales to hearty stouts. Despite all my efforts to convince you that there is no need for "seasonal" drinking, guess what? I still do it...and I don't care. With that in mind, today I debut a new series revolving around the teams playing on NBC's Sunday Night Football. Since Week 1 has kicked off every year on a Thursday night since 2002, I will be including the Thursday night game in my opening post. 

Gillette Stadium: the site where the opening conflict gets resolved.

Gillette Stadium: the site where the opening conflict gets resolved.

2017's opener gives us the Kansas City Chiefs and the Super Bowl Champion New England Patriots. Aside from outstanding barbecue, some of my favorite items coming out of Kansas City is the beers of Boulevard Brewing Company. The founder of the brewery, John McDonald, was a carpenter by trade, but he drew inspiration for what he was about to build from a European trip in 1984. After sampling many Belgian-style ales from overseas, he was ready to turn his dream into reality. McDonald built his brewery in an old brick building on Southwest Boulevard (where the brewery takes its name from). By 1989, the first keg of Boulevard Pale Ale was ready. 

Thanks to word of mouth, beer-lovers soon discovered how good McDonald's beers were. The company flourished so much, Boulevard outgrew that old brick building by 2004. An expansion of the brewery and addition of state-of-the-art equipment was part of the revitalization of this Kansas City neighborhood. Today, Boulevard boasts an impressive lineup of brews, whether they are available year-round or in limited releases.

For the New England beverage of choice, well I have many states and cities to choose from, with anything from New Haven north and east all the way up to Maine. I do realize that the craft brewing scene is unbelievable throughout New England, but with the weather still a bit muggy and warm lately I will give you a rum to enjoy!

Back when I did some events for a private club in New London, I remember being introduced to filmmaker Bailey Pryor, who produced The Real McCoy: The Legend of Bill McCoy and the Rum War at Sea. In a nutshell, it was the story of a rum-runner during the Prohibition Era, constantly beating the authorities in the spirits trade, all while gaining such a well-regarded reputation for providing uncut spirits, the buyer always knew he was receiving "The Real McCoy." It's a fascinating piece, and if you have about an hour to check it out, you should click the link above.

Pryor worked with Richard Seale, Master Distiller at Foursquare Distillery in Barbados, to develop a rum that could live up to the name "The Real McCoy." While the distillery is down in the Caribbean, the company operates out of Mystic, Connecticut, offering a range of rums that includes 3 Year, 5 Year, and 12 Year age statements. Certainly great for mixing cocktails, I chose one that I really enjoy sipping on its own. 

So who do you have...Kansas City or New England? No matter who you root for, you can't go wrong with either of these two beverages. Stay tuned for Part 2, which includes what to drink for the Giants-Cowboys game. Cheers!

boulvardtank7.jpg

Boulevard Brewing Company Tank 7 Farmhouse Ale ($13/4-pack): When I went to Florida on vacation this summer, it seemed as though all of the restaurants in or near the theme parks had Boulevard's Tank 7 Farmhouse Ale. So after spending a week in Disney World passing on Tank 7 every time, we went to Universal Studios Orlando only to see this beer on our lunch menu at Cowfish. I was happy to have finally tried it; citrusy and lively, Tank 7 has some body and richness (at 8.5% abv) to it, but it finishes bone-dry and made me want to eat everything in the restaurant. Boulevard also has a "Great Eight" variety pack, which includes Tank 7 and three other beers from the Smokestack Series (The Calling Double IPA, Tell-Tale Tart Sour Ale, and the Imperial Stout) that should cost you about $20 if you can get your hands on it.

realmccoy5.jpg

The Real McCoy 5 Year Old Rum ($26): A tasty range of dried fruits (mango, pineapple, papaya) on the palate are complemented by the flavors from the ex-Bourbon casks used to mature the rum. Vanilla and brown sugar come through, but the finish is nutty and spicy...it's like drinking French toast! 

September 06, 2017 /Tony Ambrosini
Missouri, Connecticut, Beer, Rum
NFL Drinking Schedule
Comment

Powered by Squarespace