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A Wine Lover’s Diary, Part 451: Stowaway 1812

Sunday, June 30: Decided to do some tasting to reduce the number of bottles waiting for reviews.

Finished off this last wine with dinner (trout on the BBQ).

Monday, July 1: Canada Day. Wrote my 680News wine reviews. Had a call from Sophie Jump, the CEO of the International Wine Club Association in London. Representatives from this association who sell over 10 million cases of wine annually will be meeting in Montreal in November. She asked me if I would select and present Canadian wines at a dinner at Graziella Restaurant. Sounds like a lot of fun. In the evening Deborah and I were invited to a Canada Day party at our neighbours’, Alec and Bonnie, who have a large terrace from which we could watch the fireworks.

Tuesday, July 2: Wrote my Lexpert column on the history of wine cellars. Spoke to Sean Rowlands, whose company, Gradwell Wine Agency, imports South African wines, about products for Grapes for Humanity’s fund-raiser event in October. Dinner at our neighbour Sally’s, who prepared a delicious bowl of mussels in a tomato sauce, with Villa Maria Sauvignon Blanc 2012.

Wednesday, July 3: Recorded my 680News wine reviews and then packed for an overnight trip to Windsor and Amherstburg. On VIA Rail I wrote a piece for Decanter magazine about Pinot Noir in Canada to go into their October issue that publishes the results of the Decanter World Wine Awards. Spent the night at the Windsor Hilton.

Thursday, July 4: Breakfast in the hotel with Kyra Knapp, War of 1812 Regional Project Facilitator. Kyra had asked me to write a piece for the press release on the project called Stowaway 1812.

Stowaway 1812

Six Lake Erie North Shore wineries have produced unique wines to commemorate the War of 1812 Bicentennial and the Coastal Trails: Sail to See Tall Ships Festival. These six VQA wines are bottled as the “Stowaway 1812” series and each features on its label the image of a different tall ship that plied the Great Lakes in the 1812 era. The Tall Ships from around the world will sail to 15 Ontario ports over the summer from June 14 to September 2nd, 2013.

Their majestic presence in our waters speak to an ancient tradition of ageing wines at sea. As early as the 16th century in Europe sailing ships transported wine from Madeira to India and China by way of the Cape of Good Hope. The hot temperatures as the ships crossed the equator and the incessant rolling action had a beneficial ageing effect on the wine. Like most advances in beverage alcohol technology the discovery of sea travel to improve the flavour of Madeira was accidental. But once discovered this technique of long sea voyages was used to speed up the maturing process of Madeira and port.

As a nod to this naval tradition and a salute to the War of 1812, the six participating wineries will contribute their Cabernet Franc/Cabernet Sauvignon blend to a 100-litre barrel that will be subjected to a 13-day voyage on the Great Lakes in the hold of Liana’s Ransom. Flying the flag of the British Virgin Islands, Liana’s Ransom is a replica pirate ship – a gaff rigged, square top sail schooner. At the end of the voyage the wines will be bottled and auctioned off as collectors’ artifacts.

I had the opportunity to taste the Stowaway 1812 wines before they were released for sale at participating wineries.


Labels from the Stowaway 1812 series

(All wines except the Cooper’s Hawk are under screwcap.)


Sculpture commemorating the Battle of Lake Erie in Amherstburg

The press launch for the Stowaway 1812 tall ships event was held at the Provincial Marine Commissariat in King’s Navy Yard Park, Amherstburg. A commemorative sculpture of the Battle of Lake Erie during the War of 1812 stands in a the grounds and history buffs dressed in authentic costumes of the time discharged a 3 lb muzzle-loading brass cannon (my ears are still ringing from the noise). After the speeches we sampled the six wines involved in the project.


Preparing to fire the ceremonial cannon


The firing

After the press conference Kyra drove me to Oxley Estate in East Harrow for a tasting and lunch. The winery, in very welcoming contemporary style, is a refurbished 1920 tobacco barn. The proprietor, Ann Nedon Wilson, told me they had grapes and made wine from their two-year-old vines in 2011! Their website has profiles of not only the key people in the winery but the farm workers as well.

After lunch (breaded perch), Kyra dropped me at Windsor Station for the train-ride back to Toronto.

Friday, July 5: A Vintages release tasting. Had to have my photo taken for a pass into the LCBO building – new security system.

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