Showing posts with label wineries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wineries. Show all posts

Monday, November 15, 2010

Ready To Share Some Holiday Cheer


Did you see the little white flakes drifting through the air on Monday, November 8th? We here at the winery witnessed SNOW falling, winds howling out of the north, and a definite chill in the air!. It is hard to believe the harvest is behind us, but with the change in seasons the attention shiftes from the vineyard to the cellars, the tasting room, and our upcoming holiday events.
Getting ready for the holiday season is always a fun affair. We enjoy decorating, baking and all the other events that signify the beginning of the “season”.


What a November we have planned for our visitors. This month brings a unique and first ever opportunity to sample wines that have never been on our tasting before. Our first annual, Grand Portfolio Tasting will take place two days, Saturday, November 20th and Sunday, November 21st You are invited to visit our charming cellars where several stations will be set up with wines from our entire portfolio. Our knowledgeable staff will taste your through dozens of never before tasted wines. Meet our winemaker and his staff as you sample cheeses, olive oil and artisanal breads. Perhaps a barrel of wine will end up being sampled, you just never know! Complete your experience by visiting our holiday decorated, inviting gift shop where you will be able to select wines for custom labeling while you wait.. With Thanksgiving right around the corner, our CIA trained staff are ready and waiting to help you select just the right wine to compliment your meal.


If you are looking for something to do with your out of town guests on Thanksgiving weekend, why not bring them to our Holiday Open House!. Friday through Sunday, November 26th-November 28th, from 12-5 p.m., join us for a festive wine tasting and the opportunity to select just the right gift in a stress free, warm atmosphere. Our tasting room is aglow with holiday spirit, our gifts are unique and we promise no Mall pumped in music. Listen to the strings of a LIVE guitar, sample some great Stonewall products, and kick back. The crowds will be at the Mall but you will be here enjoying Pinot Noir!
I look forward to seeing you all soon , I would like to personally wish you all a wonderful, joyous, holiday season.. .

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Tales From A Tour Guide, By Tom Mandato


My name is Tom Mandato. I am a part time employee and have been conducting tours and wine tasting sessions for almost eight years. I retired from my former profession over ten years ago and took this job as a way of getting out of the house a couple of days a week. It was supposed to only last about three years until such time as my wife retired. But, I’ve been having so much fun, I’m still at it. Over the years I have become so familiar with many of the Millbrook family of customers that we recognize each other when we meet locally.

My wife Sally and I, along with friends, had been visiting Millbrook Winery for years. We would often attend new release tasting sessions and those highly enjoyable summer concert series that were held on Saturdays. So, when I applied for the part time position, I was not a neophyte to the Millbrook world of wine. Also, being of Italian heritage, I had some limited experience in wine consumption.

Over the years it has been my pleasure to meet people from all walks of life and probably as many countries as belong to the United Nations. I’ve had occasion to pause while interpreters interact between me and those taking the tour. I even had one interpreter ask me if I could conduct the tour in Hebrew. Being from Brooklyn I am familiar with some Hebrew terms but not enough to hold a full conversation. I mention these encounters as a way of highlighting how popular and highly recommended Millbrook has become as the place to visit when considering a wine tour and tasting experience.

One of Sally’s and my favorite pastimes is to visit wineries during our vacations. We have been up and down the west coast from northern Washington to San Diego, California. We’ve visited wineries in New York, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and other U.S. wine producing areas as we’ve driven around these wonderful United States of ours. We have also been fortunate to have had the opportunity to visit many wineries in Spain, Portugal, France, Germany and of course Italy. Needless to say, we have tagged along on more tours than we can recall. When I first started conducting tours I felt that Millbrook’s was far superior to anything I had previously attended. However, while it has always been greatly informative, it was limited to a verbal description of a specific process and the pointing to such things as the vines, presses, vats, barrels and the bottling station. Last year we began to expand and improve the tour to include photos and displays (i.e. equipment, wine fermenting, aging, the inside of toasted barrels and cork harvesting) of the various stages of the grape growing and actual wine making processes. I recommend that no matter how many tours you may have taken in the past to please avail yourself of our new and interactive tour on your next visit.

I’m looking forwarded to meeting each and every one of you. Just remember that I only work two or three days a week. Also, we do change the variety of wines available for tasting several times during the year throughout the season. So, you’ll have to make plans for several visits, if not just to meet me, but to also enjoy the various wines available for tasting. Until then, have a happy and healthy year.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

The Inaugural Post, by Tim Krause


As the writer of this inaugural Millbrook blog I thought I might begin by introducing myself. My name is Tim Krause and I have been working at the winery for 3 harvests. During that time I have participated in just about every operation at the winery including, the tasting room reserve bar, bottling, deliveries, and now Ct. wholesale sales. But I am most proud of my picking for the 2009 harvest even though I wasn’t very good. As I have observed the winery in action from all its different angles I have been most impressed by the dedication and loyalty the entire staff has toward producing award - winning wines.
So with the Olympic music playing in the background, I set out to find how Millbrook Winery actually goes about producing award-winning wines. My first stop was to visit with the winemaker of every Millbrook vintage and the most decorated of all-time, John Graziano. (Not be confused with the legendary Dick Button although both skate well.) I asked John how we determine what events to enter and what wines do we pick. I was trying to ascertain whether this was a random selection or whether these were the hand-picked individual selections by John himself. He was quick to inform me that the selection process is handled by the marketing department.
This led me to my next stop to see the second longest serving employee at Millbrook winery, Stacy Hudson. She said every year we only send our estate grown wines to the Hudson Valley Wine Competition that is put on by the Hudson Valley Wine & Grape Association. Some years we will send our wines to other competitions if we are asked to compete, but for the most part we basically allow for the wines to speak for themselves. We enter the Hudson Valley competitions so we can be good neighbors and support the efforts of our wine making region. And our participation has been rewarded year after year with our most recent victory awarding our 2007 Pinot Noir Block Five East as the Cornell Cup winner (Best Wine of the Hudson Valley).
Although we have just sold out of this wonderful wine, the 2008 vintage was just recently bottled. This wine will probably be bottle aged for 4-6 months before it is released in our Tasting Room. Until then…cheers!