Miyerkules, Pebrero 1, 2012

Thoughts on wine collection Part 2

In the past I have discussed proper wine storage, but this is certainly not the same as longer term wine storage for maintaining a wine collection. Proper storage without a wine chiller is possible, like storing wines laid down, in the coldest place of your house, away from sunlight, vibration, and odorous substance, and other practical guidelines. But this can make wines last for months at most, and definitely not intended for aging wines as in for years. Humidity and temperature fluctuations will catch up soon to destroy the wine, or as I heard often in my last US trip, one may end up committing the crime of `vinocide’. Below is my practical take on starting a small wine collection for those overzealous wine enthusiasts, who like me, do not have the benefit of a wine cellar.

Tips on Wine Collection (more for personal consumption, and not for reselling): Invest in a wine cabinet. While the most ideal is to build a real cellar, it is obviously not a feasible proposition for us - regular folks. Besides, for a cellar to make sense, one should be looking at a minimum of four digit wine inventory to be worthwhile of the investment. A simple wine chiller that can store 36 to 72 bottles would do. Prices of wine chillers are not as expensive as they were before, unless you want a Sub-Zero brand. You can buy a 24 bottle China made Haier brand for just over P10,000.00 to hundreds of thousands for American brand Sub-Zero.

Ensure the logistical integrity of the wine source. This may be from the wine shop, the supermarket or even a direct wine importer (preferred) – it is so essential to know how the wines you are buying are stored and transported. So often, we buy good wines, only to find out upon opening that these wines are already aerated and oxidized. It would have been a huge crime to have kept some wines for so many years, when these same wines to start with were already off-quality due to poor storage and negligent transporting. I suggest checking thoroughly your wine source. Sadly, several supermarkets in town fail miserably in storing wines even remotely close to what is ideal.

Buy what you would drink, and not what others would. I have always heard wealthy wine enthusiasts go buy expensive Grand Cru burgundies, only to complain that they wanted the Bordeaux wine body and the Cabernet nose. Sure, burgundies may be `hot’ now, but if you are not into Pinot Noirs nor Chardonnays, you will not enjoy these wines, whether to drink now or to drink later on after keeping. Drop the concept of collecting what others enjoy. Wine selection and collection should be personal.
Buy in 3s or 6s. If there is a wine you loved immediately after tasting, particularly one of present release younger vintage and still of good value, get more than your usual one or two bottles. The vintage will change soon, so if you see the same wine you enjoyed, take advantage of its current vintage’s availability. Now, it goes without saying that the wine should be able to age, at least a reserve level with ample oak aging, and not your usual entry level wine. Keeping a similar wine to drink at different times can also help a drinker determine whether aging helps improve or regress the same wine.

For very consistent or reliable wines as experienced from having drunk different vintages of the same wines in the past, it will be good to also store multiple vintages of these wines. This I admit is one of my best pleasures, as no matter how good the wines are, there will always be negligible or significant differences vintage to vintage, more so with old world wines. The discovery of a specific vintage outperforming another vintage is very self-fulfilling. Having different vintages of the same wine is called a vertical collection.

Read about the wines before buying. While I am not really in favor of relying on magazines like Wine Spectator, Robert Parker’s Wine Enthusiast, and other wine authority magazines, it pays to do your research too before buying wines. Wine reviews and notes are so accessible now, and doing your homework can help on wine decision making, especially from lack of exposure to wines of certain regions. But I do suggest that information-filtering is to be consciously done. Also, note that wines change when it travels, so tasting notes, no matter how accurate it could be when tasted by the wine critic, will not be the same when it finally come your way.
Concentrate on what I consider mid-premium wines from P1,200 to P2,000 /bottle ($25 to below $50) range to store and collect. All these wines are at the minimum, reserve level, oaked and 95 percent age-worthy. This is a huge range and includes several great wines from almost every noteworthy wine regions. Some of the `must-haves’, without going specific brands are Napa California Cabernet Sauvignons, Sonoma Zinfandels, Barossa Shirazes, Coonawara Cabernet Sauvignons, top Grand Reserve Chilean Cabernet Sauvignons, Grand Reserve Argentinian Malbecs, Rioja Reservas and Gran Reservas, Ribera del Duero Crianzas, Chianti Riservas, Barbarescos, Cru Bourgeois Bordeauxs, Northern Rhone wines and some great sweet whites like Barsacs and German Spatlese Rieslings.

Work on a budget. This is a bit tough as we all have our own style of budgeting. But people can get carried away. If you go to the more high-end wine shops, you can easily be talked into purchasing more than you wanted. A simple swipe on the credit card here and there may not hurt, until the billing statement comes in the mailbox. So, it is best to have a monetary budget ceiling in mind. I would peg it at P1,000 per your chiller’s bottle capacity. If you have 72- bottle capacity, budget P72,000 from the onset—obviously, since I suggest the mid-premium range, you cannot fill your chillers up all the way to the last bottle space with this budget. Instead I suggest filling up 75 percent or 54 bottle for a 72-bottle capacity, to always allow room for new wines in case some caught your fancy on chance encounters.
And finally, have the discipline to keep your collection for months, so as not to defeat the concept of wine collection. At least some wines should last for a few years. Choose the ones with longevity, like a good recent vintage Bordeaux 2008 (if still within the mid-premium range). And believe me these wines will be great to savor with a few years of waiting.

If you have huge chillers, wines can be kept longer. But if you have limited space, keep only those age-worthy wines. Regular everyday drinking wines, those in the P300 to less than a P1,000 range can be kept outside of the chiller, but still at my previously advised short term storage guidelines. And if you happen to overbuy those premium wines because of good bargains or due to recent trips to Hong Kong that will exceed your wine chiller capacity, you may have to choose which ones to store and which ones to drink earlier. Otherwise, you might have to buy another chiller that will take extra space away from your living room or kitchen. This is one issue the husband has to convince the wife on... I should know.

www.manilastandardtoday.com

Heritage Tour For Tawason Elementary Kids

Making Cebu’s puso (hanging rice). Listening to Cebuano folklores. Developing Cebuano pride in the children while exposing them to Cebu’s prime heritage sites.    AboitizLand, Inc. through its You Can Be A Hero Program in cooperation with Aboitiz
      
Foundation, Inc. and Ramon Aboitiz Foundation (RAFI) time travelled with Don Calixto Yangco Sr. Elementary School Grade 6 students back to the past through a remarkable heritage tour

.Forty one (41) kids of AboitizLand’s adopted school, Don Calixto C. Yongco, Sr. Elementary School (DCCYES) explored urban Cebu’s heritage touch points such as Mandaue’s Bantayan sa Hari, Cebu City’s Casa Gorordo and Fort San Pedro last January 28.

Jeanne Ouano, AboitizLand’s Vice President for Corporate Planning said that through visiting these heritage sites, “AboitizLand puts into action its brand promise of nurturing communities, in this case, the old Sugbo, ensuring that it lives on and that the kids, too, understand their role in sustaining communities today and future generations.

The class visited Bantayan sa Hari, Mandaue’s 1800-old watchtower built to warn residents about impending pirate attacks. Jonhsen Yamac, one of the top students of the class was in awe. Jonhsen marveled at “the fresh air and the beauty of the Bantayan sa Hari, but most of all, it is unbelievable that egg whites were used to make stabilize the coral stones that made up the fort.”At the Casa Gorordo Museum, the kids had a fun time learning from the kids of Barangay San Roque, Cebu City, who taught them how to weave the palm leaf gracefully enveloping the famous hanging rice or puso. After spending considerable time in getting the tricks of the puso making, the AboitizLand employee-volunteers treated the kids with Cebuano folktales leaving the kids with lessons on humility and thoughtfulness. 

Now on its second year, Don Calixto Yongco, Sr. Elementary school remains an active partner of the company as one of its adopted schools. The Heritage Tour is part of AboitizLand’s “You Can Be A Hero" program, which includes learning sessions conducted by AboitizLand employee-volunteers every Friday afternoon teaching Math, Science, English, self-development and art appreciation. The tour supplements classroom instruction as it allows participants a first-hand experience of the concepts that are taught during their learning sessions.Amazing Love Race Dashes Through The Persimmon Plus And Pueblo Verde



Federal Land eyes resort in Mactan

CEBU CITY — Federal Land Inc., the property development arm of the Metrobank Group, is interested to develop a resort facility in Mactan Island through a joint venture to complement its business hotel in Cebu City, the Marco Polo Plaza Cebu.
Officials said the company is currently in talks with two Cebuano families for prospective locations in Mactan. ”We are still on the exploratory stage. Apart from seeing growth in our apartment buildings and hotels, we are open to opportunities of building a resort facility here,” Metrobank chairman and group vice chairman Antonio Abacan Jr. said. Abacan said the development of the resort hotel will complement Marco Polo Plaza Cebu, whose core market is the corporate segment.
He said they want to tap Cebu’s growing leisure market. ”There are two properties being offered. One is a 12-hectare property,” he said. Abacan, however, declined to disclose more details of the negotiations.
Federal Land, which operates Marco Polo Hotel in Cebu, diversified its portfolio to include development of condominiums.
According to its website, the firm launched the P5-billion high rise project “The Residences” in Nivel Hills. The Residences is the first of the five-tower residential project beside Marco Polo Plaza Cebu.
Metrobank vice chairman Francis Sebastian said the first tower of The Residences, which has 250 units, is already sold out.
With the quick sales take-up, Sebastian said they are already working on the second tower, which also has 250 units. He said the company will continue the development of the 10-hectare property but will be cautious in the market. ”We are still on the planning stage but we are slowly putting in place our projects here,” he said. Sebastian said the company will focus on strengthening the position of the Marco Polo Hotel in the hospitality industry.

CAMELLA PRISTINA OPENS EXPANSION

The country’s most preferred home development brand, Camella, has mobilized a strategic expansion program that will further strengthen its leadership position in the real estate industry across the country in 2012, starting with the launch of Camella Pristina’s expansion in Imus, Cavite.

Company officials said this is a much awaited opening of new family homes, being just 15 minutes from the Manila South Coastal Road, and being offered for as low as P8,000 per month.

They noted that Camella, for almost four decades, has enhanced and bolstered the Filipino family life with its distinctive residential community developments, value-for-money home offerings, and an unparalleled investment opportunity for home ownership. It has continuously focused on building thriving communities that embody excellent quality of life with the best of Filipino family traditions, creating a ‘legacy of value’ for generations to come.

Camella Pristina located right along Aguinaldo Highway has lush greenery and calm surroundings reminiscent of a Spanish hacienda, with open spaces, a clubhouse, parks and playground, commercial area, family-oriented amenities and 24-hour security — ideally suited for discerning home owners. Camella Pristina, now open for reservations and property viewings, is expanding due to increased property demand for gated communities and affordable house and lot packages in the Cavite area, with more people appreciating the eco-conscious and modernized upgrades to Camella’s exclusive collection of Mediterranean-style single family homes and townhomes. Home models Marga, Rina, and Reana feature contemporary components and space-saving elements that allow convenient flows and efficient usage, with two bedrooms, a full bath, living room, dining and kitchen and service areas for all family members to enjoy.

Considered to be one of the most sought after townhome properties south of the Metro Manila area, Camella Pristina has access to various transportation hubs that can take you to and from the city with numerous options at all times of the day and may be reached within 30 minutes via Daang Hari Road that leads right to Aguinaldo Highway. It is only a 15-minute ride to Alabang and Las Piñas and about 30 minutes from Manila and Makati

Major commercial centers in Zapote, Bacoor, Las Piñas and Alabang are in close proximity and provide innumerable shopping and entertainment choices. Just a few minutes away are conveniences like the Alabang Town Centre, SM City Bacoor, SM Hypermart Imus, and SM Molino, with major medical centers such as St. Dominic Hospital, Imus Medical Center, Our Lady of the Pillar Hospital, and Imus Family Hospital. Nearby schools include St. John Fisher School, General Emilio Aguinaldo High School, Queen of Angels Learning Center, Our Lady of Pilar Seminary, Imus Institute, and Informatics.