DavenLore Winery

Apr 22 / 2010

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Wine

First the name and introductions… “DavenLore” is taken from the names of the owner Joan Davenport (Dr. Dirt) and Gordon Taylor. Joan or “Dr. Dirt”- which is how her card reads- has a PhD in Soil Chemistry from the University of Guelph in the mid 80’s in Ontario, Canada. Joan is employed here in Prosser at the WSU Irrigated Agriculture Research & Extension Center and has been since early 1997. The two meet while Gordon was working up at U of Guelph after receiving his Ag Degree.

Apres Vin (French for “After the Wine”)

Apr 21 / 2010

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Cooking

Being a Chef here in the Yakima Valley we get to meet some great people who are doing some really cool things. A couple of friends of mine who are doing just such a thing are Eric Leber, Ph.D. and Lori Ramonas, Ph.D. In early 2000 while a professor at Heritage University in Toppenish Leber challenged his students to come up with productive ways to utilize the waste of the growing wine industry. Many ideas were hatched with this project. One idea squeezed from the rest of the students in particular was to later become a business endeavor for these two semi-retired Ph.D.s called Après Vin- which is French for “After the Wine”. What Après Vin does is produce some incredible, healthy products from the waste produced after the grape has done its original job. Grape seed oil, produced by varietal, goes through a slightly complicated process; the grape seeds are collected from some the area’s finest wineries, kept separated by varietal, dried and later cold pressed with some of the finest imported oil presses in the world.  “It takes 3,000 lbs of grapes (enough for 300 gallons of wine) to yield the 75 lbs of dried seeds needed to make a single gallon of grape-seed oil.”- Apres Vin

Learning From a Chef

Apr 13 / 2010

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Stories

Have you ever wanted to ask a chef “How did you do that, you make it look so easy?” Or “Would you mind showing me that trick?”  Well let me tell you about the place where you can ask just such a question or two, try some great wine and even taste some incredible food. At a Cooking Class/Chef Demonstration which seem to be happening all over the place.

Tapas, Tapas and Tapas

Apr 6 / 2010

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Cooking

Tapas is the Spanish name for small bite; salted almonds, olives, a small wedge of Manchego or little piles of food on top of toasted bread.  When I hit the Tapas bar, it’s all about the small taste… a glass of wine and a few tapas, it’s a great way to taste a wine with a few amazing small bites. The name Tapas comes from a lid or cover (sometimes a slice of bread) used to keep fruit flies out of your glass of wine between sips.