Monday, December 23, 2013

Casillero del Diablo

Description on the bottle:  Casillero del Diablo Reserva Privada is a limited edition assemblage of selected grapes.  The wine is comprised of 70% Cabernet Sauvignon from Pirque in Malpo Valley, the origin of Casillero del Diablo, and 30% Syrah from the hillsides of Peumo, in Rapel Valley.  Casillero del Diablo Reserva Privada has been aged in French oak barrels for 14 months.

Sarah says:  That's a lot of fancy words, all I know is, I like it.  It's smoother than I would have expected, but it definitely has a bit of a kick at the end.  It's not overly strong, but has a little something to it.  I like it!  I'm very glad that I'm expanding into the world of reds.

Overall rating:  Thumbs up!

Sarah says:  On this Eve before Christmas Eve, I need to share a conversation that Liam and I had a few weeks ago.  This topic has been highly debated and discussed, so I figure, why not throw my thoughts into the mix!

Here's the conversation (this was a few days before Thanksgiving):
Liam:  Mom, how many more days until the holidays?
Me:  Which holiday, there are several coming up?
Liam:  Christmas.
Me:  Why didn't you just say Christmas?
Liam:  "So-and-so" calls it the holidays.  How many more days?
Me:  Well, we call it Christmas, so from now on, how about you say that, ok?
Liam (never to miss an opportunity to ask this question):  Why?  Why does "so-and-so" call it holidays but we call it Christmas?  How many more days?
Me:  Well, some people feel more comfortable with holidays, I feel comfortable with Christmas.  You can call it either, but I prefer that you call it Christmas.
Liam:  Why?  How many days??!!
Me:  31 days until Christmas.  I think of the holidays as the season, Christmas is the specific date you are asking about.
Liam:  Ok, 31 days, I'm going to play outside.

Sarah says:  So I realize he was really just trying to get the number of days he has to wait for Santa to deliver his bounty of presents, but it still has the holiday vs. Christmas debate at hand.  Per the New Jersey News, 67% of American's prefer Merry Christmas, while a mere 18% pick Happy Holidays.  The remaining 15% would rather not say anything.

So, if the majority of people prefer Merry Christmas, how come it's so taboo to say it?  I try to stay as far away from religious and political debates as possible, but for some reason this one catches my attention.  I grew up saying Merry Christmas, and I want my kids to do the same.  I fear that if they start saying Happy Holidays now, they will never feel comfortable with Merry Christmas.  To me, it isn't about forcing Christianity on those that don't believe, it's about us celebrating what we DO believe.  It's kind of like Santa, kids believe, adults don't.... but you don't see a bunch of adults telling kids not to believe.  No way, we embrace their belief and try to get them to believe as long as possible.  Why can't those that don't believe in Christmas, just be happy for those of us that do believe, and leave the rest alone?

To my Jewish friends, Happy Hanukkah!  To my African friends, Happy Kwanzaa!  I'm not trying to take away anyone's beliefs, why are some trying to take away mine?

Is it Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays for you?

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Acres of Land Vidal Blanc

Description on the bottle:  In the spring of 2002 the Wiseman family helped plant our Vidal Blanc vineyard.  In thanks to their efforts and in memory of the patriarch of the Wiseman family we offer you A. I. Vidal Blanc.

Sarah says:  While this wine is much sweeter than what I would generally prefer, I'm totally liking it.  I think it helps that I'm not eating, and haven't eaten in several hours, it a nice "after hours" wine.  I wouldn't pair it with food.  I'm also loving the description on the bottle.  It's short and sweet, but totally expresses their gratitude.  I'm a sucker for the personal touch.

Overall rating:  Thumbs up.

Sarah says:  This bottle isn't from my wine club!  I actually forgot I had this, which is totally crazy, I know, it won't happen again.  The problem is, we keep our wine rack on the top of our cupboards, so the kids won't accidentally knock something over, and I have a really hard time seeing what is up there, so I thought this was just another bottle from the club.  Imagine my surprise (and pleasure) to see this!  This bottle actually brings a lot of good memories to me.  As you may remember, we drove from Michigan to Disney World this summer.  On the long drive back, somewhere in mid-Kentucky, we started seeing signs for this Winery.  On a total carefree whim type moment, we stopped, and because it's not exactly appropriate to do a testing with kids in tow, we just crossed our fingers and grabbed a bottle.  This one to be exact.  And then, apparently, we forgot to drink it.  In our defense, we were exhausted when we got home, we probably just put it in the rack and it got mixed in with the others.

Summer vacation... ours was filled with laughter, swimming, princesses, rides, giant smiles, fireworks, sneaky kisses, great food, balloons, and staying up way past bedtime.  Ahhh, vacation.  I love vacation.  I want to take another vacation.  I recently read this quote from an anonymous woman "When I was sixteen, my mother told me that I was expendable and if I didn't work hard, companies would just get rid of me.  I work sixty to seventy hours a week, never take time off, and my husband and I haven't had a vacation in twelve years.  I'm a workaholic, and I love it."  Holy cow, I'm sad reading that.  I read this a few days ago, and went to work the next day and requested a day off.  I was already taking 2 days off because we are taking a day trip (mini vacation is better than no vacation!), but I decided to take a 3rd day, just for the heck of it, just because I can, just because I don't want to become the lady from the quote.  What will I do with that extra day?  Who knows... I'm hoping I'll get a chance to workout, play in the snow with the kids, and drink some wine... I'm flexible as to the order of those events.  All I know is, I'm due to make some carefree memories.  One's like from this summer when we bought this wine.  Taking the day off for no reason was a bit carefree, tonight I'll lift my glass to maintaining that frame of mind.

When was the last time you did something carefree?

Friday, December 13, 2013

Tobias Chardonnay

Description on the bottle:  Please contact us for wine and tasting information.  tobiasvineyards.com

Sarah says:  What?!  No description?!  I'm sad.  The drink itself is fine. It's good but nothing thrilling.  Takes just like any other Chardonnay I've had.  The boring bottle however makes what could be an acceptable party wine, and just turns me off.  The label is often half the reason I purchase a bottle of wine.

Overall rating:  Thumbs down.

Sarah says:  This reminds me, I've made the decision to end my wine club.  As much as I love having a box of wine arrive at my front door, I love shopping for wine more.  I've tasted some good wines, and probably been exposed to higher quality wines than I'm used to, but I still think this is the right decision.  I love walking up and down the wine isle, looking for the right bottle to catch my eye.  Just today I was at Holiday Market, and I knew I didn't need any wine, but I walked the isle anyways.  It was awesome, the different colors, the different shapes, I just wanted to pick some out so badly!  I was sensible and didn't,since I still have 10 bottles left from the club.  But as soon as those are gone (or close to gone - I never want to be totally out of wine, that would be awful), I will be picking out my own wine again!

Similar to this bottle of wine, I fear this blog has gotten boring.  I am hopeful that as I bring back wines that I am actually excited by, exciting thoughts will come with them!

Monday, November 18, 2013

Leelanau Cellars Witches Brew

Description on the bottle:  Leelanau Cellars Witches Brew is a spiced red wine that simmers with the allure of an Autumn's eve.  Our special recipe, when served warm, fills the night air with the spirits of cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg, dispelling the chill of the season.  Fire up your cauldron and heat this brew to the temperature of a witch's tongue, but do not boil, lest the enchantment be undone.  Bewitched!

Sarah says:  Generally, a bottle labeled "Red Wine with Spices Added" would have me running for the hills.  It's usually the spice that turns me away from certain red wines.  I've seen this wine on the shelves the past few Octobers, but haven't felt confident enough to try it.  Until this year, a friend told me I HAD to give it a try.  It doesn't take much to pull me into peer pressure, so I gave it and tried it.

It wasn't bad, I wouldn't go out of my way for it, but it wasn't bad.  The smell was delicious!  Although, I don't recommend breathing it in while trying to drink it, it will sting a little (don't ask how I know that).  The taste was drinkable.  Not nearly as spicy as I had feared, but it still had a pretty strong red wine taste.  I did some google'ing and someone suggested adding a 1/2 gallon of apple cider, that sounds awesome.  I would think that cider would cancel out some of the strongness of this drink, and just make it a delicious sweetness.  Maybe I will have to buy another bottle to give that a go.

The biggest downfall of this drink was the prep time.  I'm a fan of popping the cork, pouring the glass, and getting down to the relaxing as quickly as possible.  This took work!  First there was the heating up, which I debated back and forth between the stove and microwave, but ended up on the stove.  If I tried the apple cider mix mentioned above, I would probably heat it in a crock-pot for a while.  Then there was the dilemma of how to get it from the pot, into the mug, without making a huge mess.  Then there was the fear of taking the first sip because you don't want to burn your mouth.... very stressful.  All that stress is probably worth it though, this drink cold would probably be awful, heating it up is the way to go.

Overall rating:  Thumbs 3/4 way up, despite my complaints, we drank the whole bottle.  Couldn't have been that bad!

Speaking of friends and peer pressure...

A friend of mine, and a mother of a 3 month old baby boy (along with 3 other kiddos!) recently posted on Facebook that little man wasn't sleeping very good at night and she was desperate for a full night of sleep.  She asked if anyone would be interested in watching little man for the night.  My first thought "Me, me, me!!!  Pick me!!!  Please pick me!!"  But, then I saw the line of comments and sadly assumed I was too late.  As I read through the comments, I discovered people giving her all sorts of advice.  Feed him more, give him cereal, etc, etc.  I felt like people were pressuring her to feed him, almost looking down on her for not doing it already.  I scrolled back up to the original post and re-read, I must have misunderstood the question.  Nope, she was clearly asking for someone to watch the little guy for a night, and all she was receiving was a ton load of unsolicited advice.  What the what?  I'm of the opinion that when a mom asks for help, we give her the help that she's requesting!  

For some crazy reason, there seems to be a lot of mom competition.  My baby can almost sit up, well mine already can!  My baby walked at 12 months, well MY baby walked at 11.5 months.  My baby starting saying Dada!  Yeah, mine says MAMA!  It doesn't stop after the baby years, can your kid ride a bike yet without training wheels?  or swim without water wings?  Or count.. by 5's... to 1,000?!  And if you say your kid can't do something yet, man oh man watch out, people will tell you exactly how to fix that.  STOP, people please, stop giving out unsolicited advice.  If someone asks for an opinion on how to get something done, fine, offer up your thoughts.  But otherwise, keep it to yourself!

Do I think my friend should be giving her 3 month baby cereal?  It doesn't frickin matter!  What matters is, she was flat out exhausted and was asking for someone to watch the baby for the night.  So I txt'ed her, and after a series of back and forth, I happily reported to Jon that little man would be spending the night with us!  He was dumbfounded.  First of all, he didn't understand why I'd be willing to give up a night of sleep for a baby, when we are clearly out of that baby stage.  Refer to the paragraph above sweetie, as a mom, when a fellow mom asks for help, I help.  Additionally, since there is all this crazy competition, mom's often feel that we are supposed to handle it all, and asking for help is a sign of weakness.  All the more reason to help!!  Second of all, he said something along the lines of "but, you barely see her anymore".  True, I haven't seen this friend in awhile, maybe a year or so.  Not because we don't want to, we're both just really busy.  But she's "that friend", the one that you can go a year without seeing, but when you do see her, you just pick right up where you left off.  Plus there's the fact that not seeing each other for awhile didn't stop me from offering to let a child that is basically unknown to me spend the night, and it didn't stop her from bringing him over, so I'd say we're still ok.

So, I got to spend the night staring at this little guy, and my friend got the night of sleep she deserved.  She showed up the next day looking a little less cloudy.

I'm proud of her for sticking to her guns.  She feels one way about when and how to feed a baby.  I respect her opinion and am not about to try to change that.  Not only do I respect a mother's intuition, of all the people on Facebook, the mom herself really knows her baby best and will make the right decision for her little guy when it's time.  But also, she's a mom of 4.... pretty sure she knows what's she's doing!  She doesn't get caught up in that competition crap.  She recognized she needed help, she asked for it, and she took it when it was offered.  Good for you.  Little man is a lucky guy.

Next time you're about to offer up some advice, ask yourself if that advice is really being requested.  Or if something else is needed all together.  Then go drink some wine and reflect on your good deeds!

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

DeLoach Part III

Sarah says:  I slept good last night.  That is a rare statement coming from me.  Sleep and I aren't exactly the best of friends.  I generally want it, but it won't come to me.  I often lay awake a night, unable to turn off the brain, thinking about nothing specific.  So, when the occasional good night sleep occurs, I generally try to re-do everything I did the night before in an attempt to duplicate the night.  It never works, but I try anyways.

So... last night I drank a glass of DeLoach and blogged, tonight I'm drinking a glass of DeLoach and am blogging.  Last night I washed the dishes before bed, tonight I have every intention of washing dishes once I'm done here.  Last night I wore my pink PJ's, tonight I'm wearing my pink PJ's.  Last night I read a chapter of a book, tonight I will read a chapter of a book - maybe the same chapter just to be safe.  

I will likely not sleep great tonight.  Two nights in a row is really pushing my luck.  On average, I'd say about 2 nights of sleep a week are ok, meaning I get about 7 hours.  I get around 4-5 hours the other 5 nights a week.  I have a sleeping pill, but I'm always so groggy the next day from it, that I don't really love taking it.  If I ever had the opportunity to sleep in, to let it wear off, then maybe I'd give it a go, but even on the weekends my kiddos are up so early, it's just not worth it.  If I'm going to be sleepy either way, I'd rather be natural sleepy vs drug sleepy.  I consider it a good night sleep if I only needed one cup of coffee to get me going.  I generally drink 3, 4 on really bad days.

So, even with my lack of success trying to recreate my good luck, I keep going for it.  Why?  Is it a natural instinct?  Or am I just crazy?  I know lots of people who believe in good luck charms.  Wearing a favorite article of clothing, or sitting in the proper chair seems to bring people good luck (especially during sports games!).  Some people believe holding a particular item, hearing a certain song, or even a kiss from a loved one can bring certain types of good luck.  I'm curious, does it ever work?  It must, or else people wouldn't keep doing it, right?  Then what am I doing wrong in my trying to bring myself the good fortune of sleep?  Maybe it's not the entire night-time routine, but just one particular item.  And if that was the case, how would one go about determining what that one particular item was?  It couldn't have been the wine, I do that all the time.  It couldn't have been the dishes, or the reading, or the pink PJ's... all of those are constants in my life.  It seems to me that finding that one tiny good luck charm is nearly impossible.  Is that why it's a charm, because it's tiny?  I just don't understand the concept of good luck.

Maybe it has nothing to do with luck at all.  Maybe it's all about the effort put into something and the conditions being right to accept that effort.  What would people think if there was no such thing as luck.  Output always depended on input.  Would people try harder, or just get discouraged?

Tonight, I'm believing in luck.  I'm going to drink my wine, wash the dishes, put on my pink PJ's, read a book.  Then I'm going to climb into bed a test my luck.  Or maybe I'm actually putting in all that effort, and will get rewarded with good results in the end!

Do you believe in luck? 

Monday, November 4, 2013

DeLoach Part II

Sarah says:  There are pros and cons of a wine club.  Pro - wine delivered to my door!  Con - duplicates.  You can read my first thoughts of this wine here, my second thoughts are pretty similar.  I like it, don't love it.

Speaking of things that I like, but don't love, Halloween.  Halloween has it's own set of pros and cons.  Pros: CANDY!  One day to be someone/something totally our of character.  Crazy costumes.  CONS:  Weight gain.  Greedy people.  Sticky kids.  Expensive outfits.

Halloween seems to bring out the worst in people.  The greed that some people show is unbelievable.  I've seen people steal bags of candy from kids.  I've seen people with bags busting at the seams, keep going back for more.  I've seen people laughing at scared little kids.  I've seen people pushing and shoving to be the first in line for the mini snickers bar.  Halloween isn't very fun.  But this year, Halloween opened my eyes to a new appreciation for my own kiddos.

First, they did the typical thing.  They begged for the fancy expensive costumes.  So, we took them to Salvation Army and let them find a close second (I won't spend a lot of money on something they wear for a few hours!).  Then they begged for new bags.  Nope, do last year's have holes?  Then they still work fine.  But then they did something that amazed me.  After trick or treating, I watched my kids share with each other, give candy away to their friends when they didn't get what they wanted, and tell others their costumes were great.  Then, there was this awesome conversation:

Liam:  Here Mom, this one is for you.
Me:  No thanks, sweetie, I don't need any.
Liam:  But Mom, it's your favorite.
Me:  It is, but it's yours, you earned it.
Liam:  But Mom, I picked it out for you.
Me:  :-)

I couldn't say no.  In the middle of the sugar high and ninja turtle action, he stopped to pick out a piece of my favorite candy.  How awesome is that.  Leave it to Halloween to bring out the best in my kids!  Sometimes I think I'm failing as a parents, but nights like that make me see I'm actually doing alright.

I'll drink to that!  (After I finish this awesome candy bar!)






Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Le Prince Part II

Sarah says:  Check out what Liam got!  No, not the wine, a desk!  Now that we are two months into 1st grade, I discovered that Liam needed a place to do homework.  We were using the kitchen table for awhile, but we didn't have a good place for "stuff".  We had a pile of important information stacked on a chair, and we had pencils, markers, glue, and paper in miscellaneous spots all over the apartment.  It made homework time an impossible time.  We spent 10 minutes just looking for the last place we left the markers.  So, when we saw this desk on clearance at IKEA, we couldn't resist. 

I know what you are thinking, it's so plain and boring... that's the point.  It's perfect.  Plain and boring = no distractions.  I'm even still a little unsure about the paper holders on top.  That gives him something else to focus on other than the assignment in front of him, but I like that it allows him to have certain tools readily available (numbers chart, current weeks spelling list, blank paper).  I got a drawer organizer, so now pencils have a spot, markers have a spot, crayons have a spot, glue has a spot, tape has a spot, erasers have a spot, rulers have a spot, index cards have a spot, staples have a spot, scissors have a spot... you get the point.  Liam now has a place, that is all his, that allows him to get focused on his work without the "excuses" of being unable to find something, and the distractions of the kitchen table (ie, Mary).  I made sure the lighting was right, and the chair was adjustable to just the right height.

$70 or so later, we have a homework spot.  It was worth every single penny.  At this point, I'm not handing out advice to ADHD parents yet, I'm mostly just soaking in anything that I can.  But, if I was forced to say something, I would say this: get a desk.  It's made a world of difference for us.  Not only does it allow us to avoid the obstacles mentioned above, but it gives Liam some independence.  He can get his own supplies, without getting frustrated when things aren't where he expects them to be, which caused us to be annoyed, which caused him to get upset.  Now, he finds things without needing help, and he knows where to put them back.  It  also gives him a space to try his homework without Jon and I starring down his back, but we are still close enough that he can call for help when he needs it.  Get a desk. 

Then, go open a bottle of wine, and sit back and watch your child grow.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Le Prince De Courthezon

Description on the bottle:  Our cellar was founded in 1924 in Courthezon, a historic town rich in medieval history that was once governed by the Princes of Orange.  Our Cotes-du-Rhone blanc is comprised of the three main white grape varieties of the region:  Grenach Blanc (65%), Clairette (25%), and Bourboulenc (10%), harvested from prime vineyards on the clay and sand soils that bring the local wines such complexity.  2012 was an excellent vintage for white Rhone and Prince de Courthezon is a wine with considerable freshness and depth of flavor.  The wine displays gentle floral notes with hints of peach and apricot on the nose and palate, underpinned by the attractive minerality, which leads to a well-rounded, complex finish.  This is the perfect wine to enjoy on its own or as a partner for fish, seafood and out local goats' cheese.

Sarah says:  There is something about wine with white grapes, I never enjoy them as much.  They have such a strong flavor that it is overwhelming.  It's almost painful to swallow.  Not because it's bad, but because you it feels like it's burning as it goes down.  It's hard to explain, but I don't love it.  I won't dread finishing the bottle, but I wouldn't seek out another bottle of this either.

Overall rating:  Thumbs down.

Sarah says:  It's three days before Halloween, and I'm dumbfounded.  What's wrong with women?  We judge other women based on their size so quickly.  I almost wish I was from the medieval times in France, being larger wasn't such a horrible thing.  Here's my observations:  a larger woman says she wants to loose weight, we encourage her.  A thinner woman says she wants to loose weight, we laugh at her.  A larger woman successfully looses weight, we encourage her to eat fattening foods again, thus gaining the weight back.  A thinner woman puts on 5 lbs, we talk about her behind her back.  We encourage others to be thin, as long as we are the thinnest.  We want to remain thin, but give off the impression that we can maintain it with little to no effort. 

It makes no sense.  Personally, I'm semi-in-shape.  Nearly 4 years, I worked really freaking hard to loose weight, and it worked.  I am by no means skinny, but I'm a lot healthier than I used to be.  I'm anticipating eating a larger than normal amount of candy this weekend (thanks to my kids hard Trick or Treating work!), so I'm trying to eat a little better than normal this week to prepare.  People look at me like I'm crazy.  Why crazy?  I don't want to gain back the 20 lbs I lost.  Eating bad this week, eating bad this weekend, I would just be setting myself up to fail, and I get the impression that is what the ladies want me to do.

I think we need to find the right balance between encouraging each other and just staying out of each others business.  Weight is personal.  You don't need to know what I'm eating or how I'm working out.  You don't need to know my size or that my pants are feeling tighter this week.  It's my body, stop staring at it.  Feel free to tell me I look good, but only if it's sincere.  I'm pretty sure a day doesn't go by where the word calories or fat doesn't pop into my mind.  We women should be trying to keep those words out of our vocabulary, but the pressure to be thin makes that impossible.

In the midst of candy bowls, caramel apples, pies, & lattes, I don't know what your staying healthy strategy is, but mine is to block out the rest of the world and just focus on me.  Salad & wine today, kit kat & wine tomorrow!

Monday, October 21, 2013

Ascencion Part II

Sarah says:  This wine is way better the second time around. Maybe it's because as a part of the wine club, I've been exposing myself to more reds, and they are growing on me.  Is it my favorite wine, no,  But is it totally drinkable, yup!  Speaking of the wine club, I have 5 bottles left, and my next shipment comes in two weeks.  Eeekkk!  I'm not ready.  My original plan was one bottle a week.  A couple weeks out of town, and 3 bonus bottles on my first shipment, means I'm totally behind.  I have some catching up to do.  Halloween is good for wine drinking, right?

The flowers in the background are from Jon for Sweetest Day, which was sweet, but unexpected.  As a general rule, Jon and I don't celebrate Sweetest Day.  During the first several years of our relationship, we got in pretty big fights on every "romantic" holiday, and it ruined our plans every time.  There was the time that Jon got me a stuffed animal pig because I thought it was cute, seriously Jon... a pig?  (Word of advice to guys, don't every buy a girl a pig, never never never)  Then there was the time that Jon took me on a special date.... to the freaking movie theater that we went to every single week.  Eventually, we stopped recognizing them as special days, and the fights stopped too!

Although, not a sweetest day plan, we attempted an impromptu date night on Friday.  We even got a last minute babysitter, who offered a sleepover with no strings attached (THANKS ANNE!!!).  I've said it before, and I'll say it again, I love my kids, but I love my time without them too.  I wasn't about to turn this down, so we packed the kids up and sent them off.  This all started because Jon really wanted to go to the movies.  I know what you all think - Jon works at the theater, don't we see movies all the time?  The answer is no.  We see every cartoon movie that comes out, but adult movies...  not so much.  7 years ago, sure, we saw a movie every weekend.  That's one of those things that goes out the window once you have kids.  Not that we are complaining one bit, normally we're fine with it, we rent movies in the evenings instead of going out.  But this particular night, we had the urge to see a movie, in a theater, without kids reaching for our popcorn or back washing in our pop, without some blue drawing as the main character.

So, there we are, kid free, full from hummus and chicken shawarma (something the kids would balk at), and we're scanning the movie listings.  Jon wanted to see Carrie or Escape Plan.  I wanted to see Gravity or Captain Phillips.  There is no compromise (for the record, I was way more willing to see Jon's movies than he was mine), but it just wasn't happening.  So instead, we went home and went to bed.  Which was equally as awesome.  Sleep is also something that has declined since having kids.

But that got me wondering, would it have been so awful if we each went and saw our own movie?  

I'm very torn about this.  Even though we see considerably more of each other than we did a year ago, Jon and I still don't get a lot of together time.  Between work, kids, church & school, there is always something going on.  So, since we had this evening, it would have felt "wrong" to split up.  But, seeing a movie isn't exactly quality time.  Sitting quietly together, or sitting quietly apart, same result, right?  But then we'd be missing out on the opportunity to have quality conversation afterwards about what we both just saw.  But, we could argue that we could still chat, each about our respective movies, but would it not be as meaningful?

Several years ago the decision would have been easy, Jon picks this week, I pick next week.  But, since this was a now or never type of situation, there is no next week to even it up.  Apparently we choose never.  We had the attitude that if I can't see the movie I want, no one is seeing a movie.  Kind of like my kids would.  And it's not like we went and did something else fun together, we literately ceased conversation, and slept.  See, going out on sweetest day never works for us!

What would you have done?

Sunday, October 13, 2013

DeLoach Chardonnay

Description on the bottle:  We take great pride in producing distinctive wines that highlight the unique nuances of each appellation, while at the same time nourishing the land with eco-friendly viticulture and minimally intrusive Burgundian wine-making.  Floral and citrus aromas fill the glass, with flavors of grapefruit, whit peach, melon and spice.  This Chardonnay has good structure and balance, with wonderful length and complexity.

Sarah says:  I have no idea what the first sentence on the bottle means, but I think I like it.  I also think I like this wine, but I'm leery.  Generally, once the word spice is introduced, I run away screaming.  I'm ok with it for the moment, but I haven't had much to eat, and I fear that if I tried to pair it with food, I'd have a different opinion.  For those curious, the wine notes indicates it best with a poultry based meal.  This chardonnay is quite flavorful, and I would think any food would mute that flavor.  I say keep it simple and drink it alone after your kids go to bed.  Keep food away from it.

Overall rating:  Thumbs mid-way up.

Sarah says:  As I pondered a topic tonight, I found myself says to myself "well, I used to use the wine name as a topic starter, but now that I'm in the wine club, the names aren't very interesting.  How can I incorporate the name DeLoach in my thoughts?"  Throughout this thought, I realized that I do a lot of looking back on my life.  Maybe it's the auditor in me where we'd spend weeks, months if you include the planning time (yup, we'd plan our look backwards), looking at what happened over the past year at a client, then we'd spend just a couple of hours asking about what's coming up for the next year.  Now that I'm at the Township, the mentality is the opposite, instead of looking at what happened, we are looking at what is going to happen (or that is what we are supposed to be looking at, I'm obviously still struggling to get on board with that).  We're working on the 2015 budget.  What?!  I'm still in 2013 mode, and what about 2014?  We've got time, why do we need to look so far forward?  (says the stubborn, doesn't want to change her ways, me).  As I sit in my office and pout, I realized that I'm constantly looking backwards. I'm re-evaluating how things have turned out, re-asking what would have happened if only if..., did it go the way I expected, why or why not.  It's time to start looking forward.  It's like Rafiki from "The Lion King" says "It doesn't matter, it's in the past".  No more dwelling over Liam's kindergarten experience - we're on to 1st grade now, it's bigger and better.  No more pondering about the Southfield house and what we could of, should of done different... it's in the past.  No more being mad about the ice cream that I ate that didn't need, time to focus on the healthy eating that will take place going forward. 
That's not to say you can't remember previous experience and learn from them, I'm just saying I won't be stewing over them anymore.  I read an inspirational saying once, and I can't find the exact words (google let me down!), but the idea had something to do with our life's being like a book.  We have to constantly move forward, closing one chapter and starting a new one.  You can remember the previous chapters, but the focus is on the current one, not the past.
How will this better me?  Well, it will free up a lot of time in my mind.  Instead of pondering what could be different in my life if previous things had gone differently, I'll be thinking about my future and how exciting that it can be!  And when things don't go as planned, I'll just think forward and come up with a new future.  The possibilities are endless with forward thinking.  Backwards thinking just gets you stuck in a rut and you feel out of options.  Forward thinking allows for mistakes, but ends positively anyways.  I'm totally looking forward to it.
Tonight I drink to moving forward!

What have you been looking backwards at?  Is it time to head in a different direction?

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Tenuta Di Somaro

Description on the bottle:  Despite Italy's long and illustrious wine history, there are still small vineyard plots that have been lost or forgotten that the more intrepid of wine enthusiasts (such as myself) can only wish to discover.  So, when I stumbled upon a small parcel of gnarled old bush vines deep in the Puglian countryside, in an area better known for olives than vines, I was eager to track down the owner and persuade him to allow me to coax the vines back into production.  I did and we christened the vineyard "Somaro" after the local breed of donkey which originally worked the land.  This is a sumptuous blend of two of Southern Italy's best loved grapes: Aglianico, which provides depth and a mineral quality to the wine, and Primitivo, which gives ripe blackberry notes of vanilla and leather from six months ageing in small oak barrels.  This complex wine is the perfect accompaniment to roast beef, spicy pasta dishes and full-flavored cheeses.  Mario Ercolino, Winemaker
 
Sarah says:  All this time I've been drinking American wine, Italy is where the good things are.  This red wine is delicious.  I did enjoy it with spicy pasta (Hamburger with red pepper counts, right?) and then I enjoyed some more after dinner, while relaxing with my hubby.  I am thankful to my wine club for this bottle, I never would have tried it if it wasn't for them!  This is absolutely something that I would drink again, and it's perfect for sharing at a party.  As a side note, I also love the story on the bottle, who doesn't love someone who saves a dying vine and turns it into something great?!
 
Overall rating:  Thumbs up
 
Sarah says:  Where have I been?!  It's been over a month since my last post.  I wish I had some great stories about what I've been up to over the past month, but I do not.  I've simply been living. 
 
We're 6 weeks into 1st grade, and it's pretty demanding.  I'm suddenly terrified for middle and high school.  Everyday we have math and reading homework, and we have a spelling test every Friday to study for.  While this homework is fairly small, it takes us hours.  Our teacher has said she can adjust the work for Liam if we need to, but I'm not ready for that.  For now, I want her and Liam to know that I expect him to do the same work as everyone else.  We're not going to be the people that use ADHD to get out of certain things.  When Liam doesn't finish is work in class because he's distracted, she sends it home and we finish it here.  Liam's teacher is so freaking wonderful though, she is the best thing to happen to Liam in awhile. She's so encouraging and uplifting, she finds his strengths and praises them (unlike some other teachers I know that only point out the things that he did wrong).  I couldn't ask for a better teacher.
 
We're also 5 weeks into preschool.  Mary is the complete opposite of Liam (not that either way is good or bad, they are just different!).  Where Liam needs and wants a lot of help, Mary wants none of it.  She wants nothing more than to be 100% independent.  She has the attitude that she can and will do anything that she wants.  While I totally admire this spirit, and I don't want to "burn out her light", it can be incredibly frustrating when I actually need her to do something specific... like get dressed.  I've spent a lot of time over the past month trying to convince Mary to wear reasonable clothes.
 
I've also spent a lot of time not at home this past month.  I went to California with my sister and Dad to watch my beautiful cousin, Tish, get married (congrats lady!  It was awesome!). 
 
toes in the sand
Tish is married!
Speaking of cousins, I also got together with all of my cousins on my Mom's side of the family, and all of our significant others.  This is quite the accomplishment!  We talk about getting together, but this is the first time it has happened, and we all actually made it!  And to top it off, our grandparents (Garby and Pa!) made a surprise visit!  I got to spent an evening talking, laughing, drinking, and catching up with my family.  Loved it.
cousins!
 
I also spent a weekend in Holland celebrating my 8 year wedding anniversary with the hubs.  Side note:  We also ran a 5K at a winery while on this trip - which was awesome and hard!  The run was uphill, through wet grass, through skinny vines, through the woods, not an easy run.  The only thing that kept me going was the wine at the end (and the carefully placed signs that said "Don't whine now, wine later!" 
 
Winery 5k with Jon and Aunt Terry!
Here's something I learned over the course of these trips, since none of them included kids, closing your eyes is a luxury that I never appreciated in my life pre-kid.  Side note:  I don't get people who never leave their kids!  I love mine!  Watching them learn and grow through school this past month is awesome.  Talking with them is hilarious.  Playing games with them is totally freeing.  But, holy cow, I love getting away.  Both the CA and Holland trips included pool/hot tub time, both trips I found myself marveling in the fact that I could close my eyes and not worry about someone drowning.  Closing your eyes around water is totally relaxing, and I soaked up every minute of it! 
 
So, while I haven't been doing anything crazy and awesome this month, I've still been a mom, a wife, a sister, a daughter, a cousin, and that's crazy awesome enough for me.
 
What have you been up to?

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Sonoma Vineyards Merlot

Description on the bottle:  Style: Silky texture, fruit forward, full bodied, lightly oaked, long finish.  Primary growing region: Sonoma County.   This coastal region benefits from warm sunny days that contribute to body and texture, and cool nighttime fog which maintains the crisp nature of the fruit character.

Sarah says:  Now THIS is a red wine that I can enjoy!  I love it!  It's so smooth and lasting.  I find that many red wines have a spicy, peppery element that makes me gag.  This has none of that.   No hints of other fruits and flavors either.  And it's not watery or too juicy.  It's just smooth, thick, grape wine.  It leaves a wonderful flavor in my mouth, and my tummy is warm and full.  I want more.

Overall rating:  Two high thumbs up!

Sarah says:  Last month I wrote a couple of serious posts, read them here and here.  So, today I decided I need to lighten the mood, and write about something that I've been thinking about all weekend.  Brain freeze. What the heck causes it?  It was Friday night, we were out at Michigan Adventure (which was awesome by the way, I will totally be going back there!), enjoying an ice cream treat.  I looked up and saw Jon looking like this:

How is it that we can grow up, get college degrees, raise kids, but we can't figure out how to eat our ice cream slowly?  I did some googling, and according to Wikipedia, a brain freeze, or ice-cream headache as the professionals call it, is the result of eating or drinking a very cold substance.  I feel smarter already!

Apparently, it has to do with the ice cream touching the roof of your mouth when you swallow.  An ice cream headache is the direct result of the rapid cooling and rewarming of the capillaries in the sinuses. The cold temperature causes the capillaries in the sinuses to constrict and then experience extreme rebound dilation as they warm up again.  I find this fairly fascinating, our bodies are amazing.  

Another theory into the cause of ice-cream headaches is explained by increased blood flow to the brain through the anterior cerebral artery, which supplies oxygenated blood to most medial portions of the frontal lobes and superior medial parietal lobes. This increase in blood volume and resulting increase in size in this artery is thought to bring on the pain associated with an ice-cream headache.  Seriously, who is smart enough to figure this out.

The part that I find the funniest, is that most people moan and hold their heads until the pain goes away.  The reality is that holding onto the brain won't help one bit.  The better approach is to drink a liquid that is warmer than the ice cream, or hold your mouth open to allow the warmer air in.  Nonetheless, watching someone wriggle in pain while banging on their head will always remain hilarious and fascinating.  

Remember next time you are enjoying a cold glass of wine, take it slow!

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Ascencion Malbec

Description on the bottle:  Our vineyards are located in the Alto Valle Calchaqui, Province of Salta, between 1700 and 2500 meters above sea level.  Some of the highest vineyards in the world and some of Argentina's oldest.  They include several hectares of Malbec imported from France and planted on their own root stocks in the late 1850s, with excellent exposure to sunlight yet a relatively cool micro-climate.  We nurture the vines, working with the natural advantages of our environment and harvest the Malbec grapes entirely by hand.  Their juice is fermented at low temperatures to retain maximum aroma and fruit flavor.  25% is aged in french oak barrels for 9 months and the final blend clarified in the traditional manner.  By combining traditional wine-making with local techniques developed over more than 2,000 years, we have crafted a richly flavored yet elegant Malbec, with a brilliant ruby color and a rounded palate of spicy red cherries, raspberry and subtle vanilla.  Through ready to drink it will cellar very well for another two or three years.

Sarah says:  Oh red wine, it's been awhile since I ventured into red wine territory, and I forgot how hit and miss it can be for me.  I'm trying to decide if I like it or not.  My initial reaction was "whoa, bad", but as I sip on it, it's growing on me. It's not that it's bad, it's just the unfamiliarity of the red that initially hit me.  It definitely has a raspberry taste, and to me, that makes it a bit too sweet and bitter.  It's not a bad choice for a red wine, but it's not the wine for me.

Overall rating:  Thumbs 1/3 way up.

Sarah says:  I've joined the WSJ Wine Club.  This is my first bottle from the club, and sadly, it's a tad disappointing.  I've been pondering joining a club for a few months, and just happened to pick this one, simply because they were having a sale.  I got 15 bottles of wine for $90 ($70 + $20 shipping), not a bad deal!  From this point forward, they will send me 12 bottles every 3 months.  As it is with any club you join, there are pros and cons.

Pros:  
  • They'll send me bottles I wouldn't normally have picked out myself, allowing me to expand my tastings.  (because, I'm such a professional, it's time to start expanding)
  • Wine appears at my doorstep without me having to go to the store. (in short, I'm lazy)
  • Buying in bulk from a club allows me to get better wine at a lower cost than purchasing it in the store. (and I'm cheap)
  • I get to taste wines before they've even hit the stores, allowing me to be a first taster. (but no one will know that except for me, so I'm not sure why it's important)
  • I get wines that are a higher quality than the typical bottle I'd buy at the store. (I'm such a high quality person, I purchase zero brand name foods, and shop for clothes at garage sales, but only the best wines for me!)
  • They send me a whole book with information on each bottle in the case.  An informed taster is a better taster.  (actually, this is quite awesome)
Cons:
  • They send me a mix of red and white, I have no say what I get. (why did I get way more red than white?  Hello... I demand to be catered to!)
  • I like to seek out wine with fun names, wine club wines are mostly serious. (Remember the bottle of wine I purchased just because it was called Sex?  Yup, fun named wines are just funner to drink)
  • They send me 12 bottles, every 3 months, I don't drink that fast, and I fear I will start drinking them just to drink them. (I hear AA calling)
  • Although it is a deal, it can still be pricey, since they are sending better quality wines.  I won't keep getting the same price that I got on my first shipment. (yup, I'm cheap, not sure how long this club will last)
Sarah says:  I guess the pro's outweighed the con's, obviously I went for it.  I am enjoying the booklet with the wines, telling me specifically what temp to serve these at, and what foods to go with.  This Malbec is 64 degrees and goes well with a hearty vegetarian dish like a spicy 12-bean chili or eggplant casserole.  (I failed, and had pork chops for dinner.  But Jon cooked, so I'm not complaining!!)  There is also additional information about the Wine, the Grape, and the Estate.  I especially enjoy the ones that include a picture of the winemaker.  I'm not sure why, but for some reason, putting a face to the bottle allows me to enjoy it more.  I think I will continue to purchase wines from the store and rotate them into my tasting, those that intrigue me with fun names make the best blog topics.

What clubs have you joined lately?


Sunday, August 18, 2013

Asparagus wine Part II


Sarah says:  I'm still unsure about this wine.  It's just so different.

Speaking of things that are different, Liam... let me back up a minute and say that I have debated back and forth a lot, trying to decide if I want to blog about this or not.  It's one thing to put my own thoughts and struggles on the Internet.  It's one thing to put silly stories of my kids on the Internet.  But, putting my kids struggles out there, that's questionable.  My goal here is to put the facts, but hopefully nothing that will one day upset my kids.  

So here goes, as I mentioned in my previous post, Liam had some struggles over the past year in school.  Those struggles led to some uncomfortable conversations, which led to several doctor visits, which led to loads of testing, which led to a conclusion. 

Wednesday, July 3, 2013 - diagnosis day.  Liam has been diagnosed with ADHD.  Oddly, it doesn't feel like a diagnosis, it feels like a label.  Why are people so judge-y?!  It seems to me that people have a misunderstanding of ADHD, and to be honest, I did to.  Over the past month, I've done a lot of reading and learning, and I'm here to clear the air a little.  I am by no means trying to be an expert.  I'm just beginning to graze the surface of the issues that are involved here, and although I have a treatment plan ready to go, I haven't started it at all (waiting for the school year to start!), so who knows how it all will end up playing out.  Here's what I know:


Myth:  All little boys have a little bit of ADHD.  Wrong.  I admit that that was one of my first reactions too.  True, lots of little boys like being active, and don't like to sit still, that doesn't mean they have ADHD.  Less than 10% of kids actually have ADHD.  And while I believe that number should probably be a tad higher because I'm guessing that several kids go un-diagnosed, it's not something every little boy has.    

Myth:  ADHD is just a behavioral problem.  Wrong.  ADHD stands for Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and it's a brain-based disorder that usually affects children (although it can impact adults too!)  It has the word disorder right in the name, it's a legitimate medical issue that is recognized by medical professionals.  It's also a lot more than just the inability to sit still.  It includes difficulty paying attention to detail, difficulty staying focused during a particular task, inability to listen when spoken to, inability to follow through with instructions, difficulty organizing activities, a dislike of things that require continuous mental effort (ie, school), easily loses items, easily distracted by noises or objects, forgetfulness... and the list goes on and on.

Myth:  Poor parenting causes ADHD.  Wrong.  I can't even... the words won't come out right... this just makes me so freaking angry!  I'm not really one to toot my own horn, but I'm a good mom.  There isn't a single part of me that thinks my parenting style has anything to do with this.  However, I do realize that my parenting style needs to be adjusted to his particular needs.  I'm still in the process of learning how his brain is wired to work, and how it's different than mine.  Understanding that will allow me to encourage him to be the best that he can be.  For now, it's all about patience.  For starters, I realize that he cannot remember a series of instructions, ie. Put on pjs, brush your teeth, pick out a book.  This has been a struggle for me, I would constantly give him things to do, and be so angry 5 min later when he'd be playing in his room... still naked.  So, I've adjusted, first, we repeat it over and over (I feel like a Dora episode all the time!).  Then I draw it out on a dry erase board so he can refer back to it.  Then, I check in with him every few minutes to make sure he's still on task... leaving him on his own is necessary to develop independence, but leaving him for too long is just setting him up to fail.  Poor parenting does not cause ADHD.  But, a parents willingness to accept, learn, and adjust can make the world of difference.

Myth:  Kids with ADHD will become one of those "Ritalin Kids".  Wrong.  First of all, for anyone out there talking negatively about a kid that's taking Ritalin, please stop.  We hear you, it's unbelievably rude and unnecessary.  Taking Ritalin for ADHD is like taking Tylenol for a headache.  For the right person, it's absolutely necessary.  Others however, would prefer Advil, or Excedrin, or taking a long shower and taking a nap.  There are several treatment options for ADHD.  There are several types of medicines that may work, but a series of behavior therapies may work too.  There is a lot of trial and error, and communication between all parties involved.  But Ritalin isn't as bad as some people make it out to be, so parents, stop acting like your kid is better than another just because some are taking some meds and some aren't. 

Myth:  Having ADHD means your child isn't smart.  Wrong.  ADHD has nothing to do with intelligence.  Actually, kids with ADHD are often extremely smart, but they struggle in school because the structure of the day doesn't work for them very well.  Figuring out how Liam best learns will be critical to his success throughout school.  I'd like to point out that Thomas Edison had ADHD and flunked out of school.  Don't be surprised if Liam turns out to be a genius inventor!

So that's where I'm at.  We're learning about our options, we're getting Liam all the extra help we can, we're distancing ourselves from those that think having ADHD makes him weird, we're debunking myths, and we're being the best parents we can be.  I'm not an expert on this disease, but I am an expert on Liam.  I know that he is freaking awesome, hilarious, sweet, smart, caring, loves animals, cares for the environment, idolizes spider-man, handsome, loves to draw, ride a bike, and play hide-and-seek.  All that knowledge, combined with everything I'm now learning, gives me the ability to make the best decisions for him and us as a family.  And that's all I can do.  That and continue to love him like crazy!


Asparagus wine update:  Yes, it does seem to give you that famous asparagus pee smell.

Monday, August 12, 2013

St. Julians Riesling... again

Sarah says:  Remember this post where I declared St. Julian Riesling as my favorite wine?  Yup, it hasn't changed.  This wine and I, we just click.  It's perfectly delicious.  It doesn't matter how many other wines I try, this one stays constant.  It's like that old friend, that you have sort of lost touch with, but whenever you get together, it's like you just pick up where you left off.  It's the friend that when they ask how are you, and you smile and say fine, they just look at you like you are crazy because they can tell you actually aren't.  That's me and this wine, it just gets me.
 
How are you?  It's such a simple question, and such a complicated one.  There's different versions of how this question can play out.  The polite version - the I'm only asking to be nice, so I only expect a nice response; goes like this "How are you?  I'm good, how are you?  Good, thanks."  Quick, simple, expresses a friendly front, but doesn't really answer the question.  The unexpected response version - when you ask to be polite, but get an earful in return, goes like this "How are you?  Oh, not good, see my cousins, boyfriends, kid is sick with the flu and.........."  this goes on for awhile, but you don't really listen, because you weren't really interested, you were only asking to be nice.  The how did I get into this version - you didn't even start the conversation, you only responded to be nice, which is what you thought the other person was being, but now you are stuck, goes like this "How are you?  I'm good, how are you?  Well, my cousins, boyfriends, kid is sick with the flu and...... "  Then there's the best friend version, the person that really cares and gets you, goes like this "How are you?  I'm good, how are you?  That's crap, I don't know who you think you are talking to, but it's me, and I can tell you aren't good, so start spilling."  And you do, because it's time to be honest.
 
I'm infamous for the quick, short, not really telling response.  I'm an accountant, words aren't my strong suit, which seems odd since I write a blog.  If it was socially acceptable to answer that question by giving 1 - 10 rating, I would, but I fear people wouldn't adapt to that.  Can you imagine it, "How are you?  4"  Love it.  Seems odd, but it's pretty clear how I'm feeling.
 
So, today, I'm going to attempt to explain how I am in words.  First, let me take you back, and explain how I assess how I am.  A long, long, time ago, I was told about the wonderful Frank Moran (yes, of Plante Moran).  Frank had a theory that life was like a tightrope, and required a delicate balance between work, family, hobbies, church, and everything else that fought for your time and attention.  To this day, P&M promotes finding your balance, and not allowing work to become your everything.  I probably took this more literally than most, and I actually picture myself walking up on a tightrope, carrying all my stuff, trying to find the balance.  Before I take on any new project, I generally picture myself on my tightrope and try to figure out what I'll have to shift around to maintain the balance.  Sometimes, it's just a matter of tossing something from one arm to the next, sometimes I can put something in a pocket or backpack, or sometimes I realize I just can't make it work.  A similar picture crosses my mind when something ends, now there is a void that can cause my balance to shift.  Sometimes when balancing becomes too hard, it's easy to think that it might be easier to just fall.  It's not the end of the world to fall off the tightrope, there's a net to catch you, and you get to take a little rest and lay there awhile.  But the reality is, things can get broken during the fall, your items will get scattered all over the place, you'll have to gather them up again, climb back to the top, and ultimately take that first terrifying step back onto the tightrope.  It's much easier to just stay up there.
 
So, how am I?  Well, 9 months ago, I was up on the tightrope, in my running shoes, work in my right arm (because it's my strongest), kids in my left, church was in a fanny pack (front and center), Jon sits on my shoulders (kind of watching over us all), my family was in a backpack (not at the front of my life, but close enough where I feel their weight and can't forget about them), I have a few books stuffed in my pockets on one side, my laptop in the other, and I'm kicking around a hacky-sack that represents my house (I could drop that at any minute).  And I was slowing making progress forward on my tightrope.  And then... the words that every parent fears came out of Liam's kindergarten teacher's mouth.  "Liam's not doing very well in school, he needs some more in-depth developmental testing."  At that moment, all forward movement stopped.  I was ok with that stop in movement at that time, I was letting it sink it, a normal reaction.  But then... I started loosing the balance.  Suddenly, information was being thrown at me at such a rapid speed that I could barely figure out if it was good information or junk before it flew by.  All well intended, but between the teachers, the doctors, the internet, my family members, and every other good hearted person that had opinion, I couldn't balance it.  I try to maintain a picture of gracefulness up there on my tightrope, that has completely vanished.  I no longer cared how I looked, I just didn't want to experience the pain of the fall.  I was wobbling all over the place, throwing items from one arm to the next just for a moment to free up that hand to grab onto something, only to realize it wasn't what I thought it was, and dropping it.  Or thinking I didn't need it and watching it go by, only to catch a glimpse of it at the last second, and deciding it was worth a shot, but it was too late at that point.  I wasn't just stopped and wobbling on my tightrope, my tightrope got caught on a nail and was beginning to fray.  It was only a matter of time before the whole thing went down.  And then, Daddy grabbed the duct tape, and patched us up.  There was that moment of shock, where did that magical duct tape come from?  And when I looked up, my shoulders didn't ache anymore, because I wasn't carrying a person on them, instead he was shuffling his away along that tightrope next to me.  At times I find it annoying, having a second person making my tightrope bounce around, but overall it helps balance it out.  I especially enjoy that when I drop something, there's still time for someone else to catch it.  Very recently, I was able to stop wobbling over the place and stand still again.  I'm hoping to start making forward movements again in the near future.  I guess you could say I'm not currently moving on the tightrope, I'm standing still, but at least I'm standing tall. 
 
I know that was a long, crazy way of saying how I am.  And maybe that's why I don't generally answer it when people ask.  For now, I'll continue to say "I'm good", but now at least you know there's a little more to it.
 
How are you?

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Odd Fox Wine - Asparagus Table Wine

Description on the bottle:  There isn't one!

Sarah says:  Ok, there is the same info about the Fox family and the label as on my previous Fox Barn Winery post, but there is nothing specific about this wine.  I find that shocking.  The wine is called Asparagus table wine, it's green, it needs a description! Anything at all would be helpful... serve chilled or room temperature?  Serve with food or on it's own?  I had no idea what to do here, so I choose to refrigerate and drink after dinner (which was pizza).  And the results were... um, interesting.  

I'm not really sure how to describe it.  First of all, drinking a light green substance of any kind is a little scary.  This was sweet, and a tad bitter.  It's.... like nothing I've ever had before.  I'm having a hard time putting it into words.  It is kind of like drinking liquid vegetables, with a wine aftertaste.  I don't hate it, but I probably will recruit Jon to help drink the rest of the bottle, because I'm not sure I could do it on my own.  I recommend drinking it cold, and alone, maybe with something starchy.  Pizza was probably not the greatest choice, because of all the flavor that is already in my mouth.  I also wouldn't recommend trying to drink more than one small glass at a time, it's not that easy to drink.

Overall rating:  Thumbs up for being creative and different, but unfortunately, down for flavor.  There is a reason wine is made from fruit, it just tastes better.

Sarah says:  I've had this wine for a few months, it was a birthday gift, but I'm just now trying it because Jon was too scared.  So, I've had to wait for a night that I knew he'd be working. He isn't a fan of trying new things (although, since he's not here to defend himself, I'll give him some credit, he has taken great steps forward in "trying new things" area compared to when we first met).  I get that sometimes new things can make you uneasy, but sometimes you just gotta step up and do it.

Speaking of trying new things... I think it's time to try a new eye doctor.  I'm ready for a second opinion for Mary.  As many of you know by now, we've been patching Mary's left eye for 4+ years.  The length of time varied from 30 min a day, up to 4 hours a day.  Every time we went to the doc, he has had some reason for increasing or decreasing, reasons that sometimes did, sometimes didn't make the most sense, but we'd go along with it because we trusted his opinion.  Twice he has had us stop patching to see what would happen.  It was very easy to see that whatever progress Mary made while on the patch, she quickly lost while off the patch.  Within 8 weeks we were back to patching both times.  Looking back, I don't think he had any basis for the changes, other than trial and error.  So here it is, 4 years later and we are still trying the same treatment plan we started with when she was 6 months old.  Why exactly are we still trying this?  

I like this quote from Albert Einstein:

That's pretty much what we are doing right now.  I no longer expect patching to do anything for us.  If I were sick for 4 years, there is no way I would continue to try the same medicine, in different dose amounts, for 4 years. It's insane.  I'm ready to try something, someone new.  Please message me if you know of any good children's eye doctors!

What have you done that's insane?  Try asparagus wine, then you can say you've done that!

Friday, August 9, 2013

Fox Barn Harvest Rose

Description on the bottle:  The Fox family has been farming in Oceana County for five generations.  We are "Where the north begins and fire fruit grows."  Our wine label is an adaptation of the 1950's label that was used on fruit crates.

Sarah says:  YUM!  I am really loving this wine, and for some reason that surprises me.  I'm not sure why I'm so surprised, maybe it's because I haven't really been LOVING much of the wine I've been drinking lately, so I was loosing hope.  Maybe it's because the color of this wine has a very slightly orange tint to it, making me think bad thoughts about it.  Maybe it's because the label on this wine looked a little old fashioned.  Whatever it was, I didn't have high hopes for this.  I'm pleasantly surprised, it's awesome!! 

Overall rating:  Thumbs extra high, because it's also a Michigan wine!

Speaking of surprises.  To celebrate the recent return of Hostess and Twinkies, I'd like to introduce to you "The Twinkie Surprise".  The easiest, poorest, yummiest, strawberry shortcake you'll every try.

Step 1:  Cut 10 Twinkies in half length wise and place in a large dish.

 

Step 2:  Place strawberries over Twinkies

Step 3:  Mix one package instant vanilla pudding mix, 1 1/2 cups milk, and one 8 oz. container cool whip in a bowl.  Beat until lumps are gone.  Pour over Twinkie/Strawberry dish.


Step 4:  Some would say to cover and refrigerate overnight.  I don't have patience for that.  I say let sit 10 min to let pudding set.  Cut, eat, enjoy!





 
Surprisingly delicious... and I recommend you drink it with this yummy wine!

On a totally unrelated note:  somehow I ended up in a recent conversation about if it's appropriate to re-gift wine or other beverages.  I'd like to put it on the record that I think it's totally acceptable to re-gift bottles of wine.  I an comfortable with both giving and receiving these types of bottles.  If you know you won't enjoy a bottle of wine, there is no need to suffer through it, or worse, let it just go waste.  I will take your re-gifted bottles of wine.  How do feel about re-gifting?  Try pondering it over a glass of wine and plate of Twinkie surprise.