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Sipping Pretty

Monday Monday Monday - we meet again.  Mondays never seem to get any easier, even when I know it's a short work week.  I am heading out of town with my family on Wednesday morning, so only about a day and a half of work stand between me and five days of relaxation and family time :)

This weekend was spent catching up with old friends, treating myself to a manicure and some new clothes, visiting with family, and trying something new: a wine seminar.  I was a little skeptical about how this wine event was going to be, but I learned so much and had a total blast and can't wait to share it with you!

A dear friend invited me and seven other fantastic ladies over for a wine tasting/seminar hosted by Sipping Pretty Consultants, LLC, a Baltimore-based company.  After downing a few bottles of wine before the event "officially" started, our wonderful sommelier, Jeanette, arrived with three bottles of wine, cheese and crackers, and a great sense of humor.


Meet Jeanette
Jeanette was excellent and fit right in with eight slightly-intoxicated ladies.  She was entertaining, informative and all-around a great time!  

Our tasting followed a curriculum centered on four S's: see, sniff, sip, and summarize.  Jeanette showcased three wines and offered alternative ways to explore each of them, including how to master the art of tasting.  

Our first wine was a Cardinal Moscato.  Now, first things first -- I do not do sweet wines.  I steer clear of moscatos and rieslings to spare myself a headache from hell the morning after drinking those.  Most of our wine party agreed and turned their noses at the thought of drinking a glass of this sugar, but Jeanette had other plans for us.

The first S: see.  The "see" category focused on clarity, color and legs of the wine.  Clarity is measured as either brilliant, clear or hazy.  I learned that wines that appear clear or hazy are best used for sangria or cooking.  It was no surprise, then, that Jeanette brought us a moscato that was brilliantly clear!  The color choices included green tinged, straw, gold, or amber.  Jeanette explained that the color of the wine is instructive of how the wine is fermented.  Lighter colored wines often are steel barrel fermented, which means they are tart and tangy.  Our party decided that "straw" was the best color description for the moscato.  Finally, I learned what the "legs" category was about.  The legs are the markings that the wine makes on the inside of the glass when it is swirled around, and you can tell a lot about the sugar content and alcohol by volume based on these drippings.  If the legs are slow and wide ("pronounced"), the wine likely is sweet, and if they are skinny and long ("faint"), the wine likely has a higher alcohol content.  Our moscato was pronounced, which made perfect sense because the wine was so sweet!

We then moved to the second S: sniff.  Although this category was broken down in to about ten different types of scents, the overall gist was whether the wine smelled fruity, earthy or mineraly.  Fruity scents are what you smell when you put your nose to the very top of the glass; earthy scents are what you smell when you lean your nose toward the side of the glass; and mineral scents are smelled at the bottom of the bowl of the glass.  One girl in our group guessed right away that this wine smelled like an apricot, and Jeanette applauded her sharp sense of smell.  There was no mistaking that we were drinking a fruity wine. 

Next, Jeanette FINALLY let us sip the wine.  All this time we were holding this wine and learning about it but we were not allowed to try any of it, so this was a much-anticipated moment for everyone.  I commented immediately about how I could not imagine having more than one or two sips of this ultra sweet wine, and this is when Jeanette blew my mind.  She figured most of us would say something similar, so she invited us to try a grape before taking our next sip.  I can't even tell you the difference this made!  I grabbed a red grape, chewed on it for a seconds (Jeanette said we should make sure we chew on the skin), and then had a sip of the wine and it tasted like a completely different drink!  So now I know: if a wine is too sweet, have some grapes while drinking it and they will balance out the sweetness.  Conversely, if a wine is too dry, oily and fatty foods will grease our palates and provide a different flavor.  Or, if a wine tastes too flat, we should pair it with something spicy.

The final S, summarize, was personal to each of us.  Some ultimately enjoyed the moscato, and others vowed that we never would reach for another glass of it again.  I think I leaned more toward the latter, but I still am impressed with the grapes trick.

The second bottle of wine we sampled was San Michele Pinot Grigio.  Pinot grigios are my "go to" wines -- hands down.  I find them to be light and fluffy and perfect for any occasion (and time of day for that matter, because we all know I can get into some day drinking ...).  This wine was brilliant, straw-colored and had faint legs.  We smelled earthy tones and tasted a dry flavor with this wine -- quite the opposite from our previous glass of moscato.  Some ladies who felt the wine was too dry tried the tasting trick and sampled a piece of cheese or a pepperoni before giving the wine another try.  I thought the flavor of the pinot grigio was great, but I tried some cheese just for the heck of it and definitely tasted a difference!

We then moved on to our third bottle of wine, which was a Mendoza Station Malbec.  Like moscatos and rieslings, I typically do not do red wines either.  Occasionally I will have a glass of red around the holidays, but for the most part I stay true to my whites.  This malbec was a deep cherry plum color, which means that the grapes came from a younger vine.  Jeanette explained that younger vines produce a mass quantity, but usually a lower quality wine.  Most of us noted the wine smelled fruity and tasted fairly dry (cue cheese & pepperoni trick again).  Jeanette taught us that the best foods to pair with this type of red wine are proteins, like chicken and fish.  

Curious about whether the alcohol by volume on the label tells you anything about the taste of the wine?  I was too.  As a general rule, wines with 10% or less ABV typically are sweeter; 10-12% ABV are the off-dry wines; and 12.5-15% ABV are considered dry wines.  If a wine has a high alcohol content but also tastes pretty sweet, it probably is fortified, which means sugar has been added.  Fortified wines can run you over 500 calories per bottle (generally, a bottle of wine has between 325-375 calories), so these are the ones to watch out for!  And of course, this comes before you factor in any of the foods you're eating with the wine ;)

Overall, I learned a ton about various wines and can't wait to impress my family members at the Thanksgiving dinner table this week!  I highly recommend checking out Sipping Pretty and all they have to offer -- trust me, there is a lot more to learn than what I have posted.  Below are a couple more pictures from this very fun night with great friends.


Me and my lovely mother
The best picture we could get as a group

Thanks to all the wonderful ladies who filled Saturday night with fun, laughter and lots of entertainment!  This night deserves a serious Cheers!

Five Favorites on Friday

Happy Friday!!  I don't know if anyone else has felt like this has been a long week, but it sure has felt that way to me!  Maybe it's the abnormally cold weather and the fact that it gets dark so early now that makes the days feel so much longer.  I am looking forward to a relaxing weekend with some friends and family and hopefully lots of snuggle time on my couch :)

To make Fridays a little more fun, I have decided to share my five favorite things from the week!  


ONE


"Thinking Out Loud" by Ed Sheeran.  I have been pretty obsessed with this song for a while now, but I finally heard it on the radio this week so I am hoping it becomes his next hit.  Some days I can't listen to it because the floodgates will open, but other days I can blast it on repeat.  Enjoy :)



TWO


A happy hour date with this guy (obviously I pulled an old picture for this one).  Life was a little stressful for me this week, so I knew I could count on my dad to cheer me up and talk things through with me.  Sure enough, he lived up to my expectations and offered valuable advice as always.



THREE



Hersh's Pizza in Baltimore.  I ate there for the first time on Monday for my roommate's birthday and totally indulged.  I had heard of the restaurant before, but it's a little bit out of the way from my "usual" spots, so I had never ventured down to south Federal Hill to give it a try -- boy am I glad I did!  My personal favorites on their menu: wood-fired shrimp & calamari, fries alla carbonara (to die for) and dry-aged steak dal forno.  Unfortunately, I couldn't have any of the pizza, but our table finished off two guanciale pies with ease.  Definitely going back to Hersh's!



FOUR


Marion Cunningham's Raw Apple Muffins are heavenly.  I baked these with my dad on Sunday night and they were all gone by Tuesday!  Very simple to make but a huge hit.  Make sure you check out the recipe -- you will be glad you did!



FIVE



Camille Beckman Hand Therapy has been essential for me this week.  As I mentioned, it has been unusually cold here all week, so I have been loading up on chapstick and hand cream to fight off the oh so dreaded winter dry skin.  I wash my hands about one hundred times a day, so I always keep some lotion handy.  I received a sample of this lotion in my November Birchbox, and I am totally in love with it.  The lotion is thick enough that I know it's working, but not too thick to where it feels sticky.  Plus, the scent - lemongrass vert & sparkling grapefruit, amazing!  The only thing I'm disappointed about is that I received only a sample size of this stuff!  Definitely purchasing more for the cold winter months.


So, those are my five favorites from the week.  Have a kick ass weekend, everyone!  Cheers!

Giving Thanks :)




Welcome to my inaugural blog!  

I thought it was appropriate to get this started as we approach Thanksgiving week.  If you have seen any of my last twenty or so Instagram posts, you know that I have a lot to be thankful for: my supportive family, friends who keep me grounded, a job that I enjoy and look forward to each day, a home that I have made my own, and opportunities which I have worked very hard for.  Here is just a glimpse of some of what I am thankful for:

My incredible parents
The courthouse I am lucky enough to work in every day
   
My friend Lauren -- friends since age 10!
   
A great group of high school friends         

And college friends


My freshman year buddy Kristen
                                                
My wonderful friend Elene          
                                
And of course my best friend Emily


I also am thankful and excited for the opportunity to share my ideas, experiences and daily ramblings on here with you!  Now that I have semi-settled in at my "new" job, I have decided to share my journeys with total -- ok, maybe not total -- strangers.  Who knows if anyone actually will read this blog, but it is a way for me to share my thoughts and document interesting (and not so interesting) events. 

Before the drum roll, I need to pause for a moment and acknowledge and give special thanks to the amazing ladies in my life who I am blessed to call my best friends.  You all listen to me vent when I am sad or overwhelmed; hold my hand through breakups (more so lately than ever) and my hair during those weekends that I am not so proud of; laugh with me; cry with me; slap some sense into me when I need it; support me through all of my studies and endeavors; love me at my darkest moments; and congratulate me on my achievements.  

I have learned that as we grow older and life gets in the way it is more and more difficult to keep in touch with friends regularly.  Fortunately (well, sometimes), I have about a 45-minute commute each way to and from work every day, so that is time I use to catch up with my friends.  But even when I go a few days, a week, two weeks, or even sometimes a month without chatting with one of my friends, I know we can pick up right where we left off.  I am eternally grateful for these friendships.

So, this is to you: my roommates (old and new), confidants, companions, partners in crime, drinking buddies, mentors, and truly my best friends.  I love you all!

Let the blogging begin ... Cheers!