Food and Drink

March 24, 2008

Chardonnay Without Oak?

It is true. 

With all the buzz in California about non-oaked Chardonnay, Mountain Spirit Winery has crafted a few cases of this unique wine, which is really quite delicious and reminiscent of a very fruity dry Reisling. 

A very few cases are available, and we will most certainly sell out of this soon.  If you want a bottle of this limited bottling Chardonnay, make sure you contact the winery directly.  We won't even be adding this to our online wine store, so hurry and call the winery at 888-MSWINES.

Speaking of sold out...

Currently Mountain Spirit Winery is sold out of the following Colorado wine offerings:
-Riesling/Chardonnay
-Blackberry/Chardonnay
-We have less than 5 cases of Apple Ice in our inventory. 

Terry and I are working to craft more of these wines as we speak, but, like so much of life, it will take time.  We'll definitely keep you posted when they become available!

Mike B.

UPDATE:  I've just been told that we have sold out of the Apple Ice.  I hope you got your bottles while they lasted!

March 10, 2008

Red Wine, Diabetes, and You

Many of us have heard about the health effects associated with moderate consumption of red wine.  This article looks at a potential link between red wine and insulin dependency.  Interesting news here...

Red Wine Compound May Curb Diabetes

Compound, Called Resveratrol, Counters Insulin Resistance in Lab Tests

By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Medical News

Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

Resveratrol, an antioxidant found in red wine, may counter type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance, a new study shows.

Insulin is a hormone that controls blood sugar. When the body becomes less sensitive to insulin, that's called insulin resistance, a condition that can lead to type 2 diabetes.

Resveratrol curbs insulin resistance in mice, Chinese scientists report.

They included Cheng Sun and Qiwei Zhai of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Shanghai.

If the findings apply to people, it might be possible to create new resveratrol drugs that could be a "valuable new strategy for treating insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes," write the researchers.

But don't count on a glass of wine to do the same thing. It would take quite a bit of wine to reach the same level of resveratrol.

"According to our findings, people might need to drink about three liters of red wine each day to get sufficient resveratrol -- about 15 milligrams -- for its biological effects," Zhai says in a news release.

The researchers aren't recommending that anyone rely on wine to help their insulin sensitivity.

Resveratrol Research

Resveratrol is found in grapes (especially in red wine), raspberries, peanuts, and other plants that use resveratrol to defend against threats such as disease.

Sun's team found that insulin-resistant mice become more sensitive to insulin when given resveratrol.

How does that work? The scientists' experiments with cells in test tubes show that resveratrol spurs a gene called SIRT1 to become more active, boosting insulin sensitivity.

The findings appear in October's edition of the journal Cell Metabolism.

February 12, 2008

Wine, Boron, and a Healthy Prostate

An interesting title, no?  Perhaps I've got your attention.  I just stumbled across this article that details a connection between boron, a naturally occurring element in many substances, including wine, that can lead to a healthier prostrate. 

Sound good?

Here's the article.  I hope you enjoy reading about the health benefits of wine as much as I do!

Wine & Health - The Boron Prescription

http://www.thewinenews.com/images/cleardot.gifBy Dr. Harvey Finkel



Boron? Is it a renegade planet in a sci-fi film? A person of low intelligence who deprives you of solitude without providing company? A command barked out to an oil-drilling team?

Not.

It is element number 5 in the periodic table, mostly mined in California, and of considerable industrial importance. It's a component of the cleaning agent 20 Mule Team Borax (and its stablemate, Boraxo), the sponsor during the radio days of "Death Valley Days," well before Ronald Reagan hosted the television version. My mother treated my childhood eye irritations with a weak solution of boric acid.

In contrast to this demonstration of gentleness, the toxicity of boric acid may be illustrated by the powdered form's storied lethality to cockroaches when sprinkled about - a cucarachacide.

Well, what's wine to boron or boron to wine, or to health?

It is boron's still incompletely defined role in human health that recently drew my attention.

A glass of wine contains about 0.5 mg of boron. A maximum dose of about 2 to 3 mg daily is advised by some to avoid the risk of toxicity. (Charlene Rainey, of Food Research, Inc., of Costa Mesa, California, says that some healthful diets contain 9 to 13 mg of boron per day, and that the safe upper limit is 20 mg daily.) A serving of grapes and other non-citrus fruit and a handful of peanuts each also contain about 0.5 mg.

It seems to me that wine offers the most attractive form. Common sense rules.

Boron is one of those trace minerals that gets little of the respect and attention paid to the better-known major nutrients. (We should wonder what other trace elements or compounds may turn out to be major health factors.) I'd wager that few people, physicians included, even consider boron a factor in health, nor deficiency a concern, but a nutritional study of six nations conducted by Rainey revealed that American adults, consuming on average just over one milligram daily, stood last on the list: 7 to 10 percent less than the British and Egyptians; 32 to 41 percent less than Germans, Kenyans and Mexicans.

It is likely that Americans' boron intake is so low because we eat so few fruits and nuts and drink so little wine. Even so, what harm might be done?

Zuo-Fen Zhang and associates at the UCLA School of Public Health may have found out. Using the huge data bank of National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), which tracks thousands of men and women, Zhang's group sought correlations between the amount of dietary boron and its beneficial or adverse health effects. They uncovered only one, but it appears dramatic. Boron protected against prostate cancer, a cancer that lies near the top of the list of deadly afflictions of older men.

According to the American Cancer Society, at 198,100 cases per year, prostate cancer is the most common of newly diagnosed cancers in the U.S. In causing 31,500 deaths annually, prostate cancer is exceeded in this country only by lung, colorectal, and breast cancers.

Among the 7,727 older men in the survey, the risk of prostate cancer fell as boron intake climbed. As reported at the Experimental Biology 2001 conference held in Orlando, Florida, in early April, the trend was strong: "Prostate cancer risk for men eating the most boron, at least 1.8 mg/day was less than a third that of men eating under 0.9 mg/day" (emphasis mine). Ample boron consumption does not protect against other cancers, nor other chronic diseases, in this study.

Zhang called the association "very specific to prostate cancer." This is the kind of exciting discovery that will stimulate plenty of further research.

It's odd how often something rare or obscure pops up in multiples. At the same conference, Curtis Hunt and Joseph Idso of Grand Forks, North Dakota, working at the Human Nutrition Research Center of the Agriculture Department, reported immune benefits in rats fed boron, estimated to be about equivalent to 2 mg daily in a human diet.

We all know that immune inflammatory reactions are essential to controlling infection. Sometimes, and mysteriously, these reactions become perverted and uncontrolled, attacking one's own tissues, a mortal sin. Such autoimmunity is operative in a number of nasty diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. The North Dakota aggies' research showed boron-deficient rats to be more susceptible to autoimmune disorders. Boron is protective, apparently by preventing inappropriate activation of cells (T-suppressor and T-helper) important in autoimmune chain reactions.

The group is studying the effect of supplemental boron on the pain of rheumatoid arthritis in humans.

I must warn against taking pure boron supplements. They may lead to toxicity, which is much less likely from natural sources. But boron poisoning is rare - its compounds are found in soaps, detergents, fertilizers, wood preservatives, fungicides, high-energy fuels and in the form of boric acid. Ingestions, absorption from local skin application and inhalation must provide intense exposure to cause dangerous toxicity in most circumstances. Accidental or suicidal ingestion may be difficult to prevent. Among the effects of excessive boron are gastrointestinal disturbances, anemia, convulsions and other brain dysfunction, skin and hair loss, blindness, metabolic imbalance (acidosis), lung impairment and cardiac arrest.

Both the deficiency and excess of boron are injurious to the health and productivity of vines. Either may be caused by injudicious viticultural practices. Deficiency may occur in sandy or highly acidic soils, especially when irrigated freely with water deficient in boron. Water varies in boron content, some places high, some low, some just right.

As the problem progresses, vine leaves are blotched with yellow, shoots swell and fruit set is impaired, leading to berry shatter and fruit drop.

Because the range between deficiency and excess is narrow, as appears to be the case in humans, boron toxicity may be brought about by uneven application of borax to prevent or counteract boron deficiency. Toxicity is first manifested by dark speckling of vine leaves. As severity increases, these become confluent, and leaves wrinkle, pucker and wither.

Bear in mind, then, the payoff in antioxidants and boron of consuming ample fruits, nuts and a moderate quantity of wine. ¶

Contributing Editor Dr. Harvey E. Finkel is a clinical professor of medicine at Boston University Medical Center and chairman of the Committee on Health of the Society of Wine Educators.

February 08, 2008

Is it Spring yet?

With much of the country still buried under snow, I thought I'd turn my thoughts towards Spring!

This time of year is pretty slow at the winery.  The wines are nestled snug in their tanks, casks, and bottles, and we're getting a slow stream of traffic from the skiers in the area.  But there just isn't the excitement of Spring.

Spring time brings everyone back out of their homes, looking for fun and entertainment.  We get lots of friends and visitors up from Salida, CO, the closest town, just wanting to experience something new.  And I'm always happy to offer up one of our unique Colorado winery tours.

Our winery tours have a very personalized touch.  Everyone who gives one of our winery tours has played an important role in the making of our wines.  So it's not simply an employee showing customers around.  Our tours are given by the very people who make our award winning Colorado wine. 

We love our wine and we love our unique Colorado winery.  We hope you'll come around soon to experience a bit of the joy we feel as we work here at Mountain Spirit Winery.

Mike B.

November 01, 2007

Cold Weather Wine Choices?

Now that the weather is taking a bit of a turn for the cool (downright cold around here!), I was wondering if your wine preference had changed, too?

I know that when the weather gets a bit chilly, I'm much less likely to sip a glass of a chilled wine, prefering the warmer tones and flavors of a dark red.  Do I have company with this sort of temperature based wine-sensibilities? 

Leave me a comment and let me know how your wine tastes change with the seasons.  I'd be curious to know what you thought.

Mike

April 22, 2007

Something Special This Way Comes!

Hello everyone!

Last post I mentioned something big and juicy and special coming your way.  And is it ever!  Before Terry and I release a special of this magnitude, we want to make sure that our ordering apparatus is ready to handle everything we're getting ready to promise.  Rest assured, this special will be a one of a kind event which the online wine world has seldom seen. 

Check back with us within the next couple of days for your best opportunity yet to get your hands on some serious amounts of Mountain Spirit Wine!

Mike

March 06, 2007

2004 Blackberry Chardonnay Winemaker Notes

The fourth edition of Mountain Spirit Winery's 2004 Blackberry Chardonnay was a co-operative effort between Terry and Karl Hinther, our cellar manager.  Six years ago Karl mixed some Raspberry and Chardonnay for fun and had us taste it.  Terry did the same with Blackberry and Chardonnay, and we had some of our customers and volunteers try it.  Everyone liked the Blackberry/Chard mixture extremely well and generally preferred it to the Raspberry blend.  From there, we started with blending trials, ending up with about a 30/70 blend of Blackberry and Chardonnay. 

This year’s blend was more like 25/75 due to the intensity of the Blackberry.  It was important to us to have the Chardonnay flavor still come through, and this is seen very nicely in the finish.  You can taste Chardonnay in your mouth for several minutes, even more pronounced if you swish some wine around in your mouth before swallowing.  Yum! 

Because of its acid and sugar balance, it goes well with a great many foods---pastas, salads, white meats, Asian----and as an aperitif to sip before dinner.  And our all-time favorite food with this wine is a Greek salad.  Let us know what foods you like best with this fun wine.  And, as always, you can order this and other wines directly from the website at http://www.mountainspiritwinery.com. 

Enjoy.

Mike and Terry

Winery Photos

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    Most of these photos were shot on a beautiful Colorado evening with the sun setting behind us. If you've never been to the winery, these shots really give you a good idea of what it looks like on the grounds and behind the scenes of Mountain Spirit Winery.

Photos from the Gallery and Tasting Room!

  • Img_1739
    If you've never been to our gallery and tasting room off Highway 50 in Salida, Colorado, here's your chance! Browse through our photo album to see a selection of art, jewelry, wine accessories and wine gift baskets that is constantly being displayed and updated in our gallery. While you might not be able to find the exact items in our store any more since our inventory changes daily, you will certainly be able to find beautiful items that suit your fancy.

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