Sunday, August 29, 2010

Looking Back on August 2010

















The winery and all its equipment is sparkly clean again. As you can see, Stanley really got into the spirit of cleaning today.

The vineyard is grape-free. Every one of those little berries has been harvested, crushed, fermented, pressed, and the juice is presently stored in sealed containers under the protection of air locks.

When all was said and done, we had a little more than 20 gallons of Sauvignon Blanc and about 75 gallons of our Hecho a Mano red blend. We didn't get quite as much red wine as we had thought we would - mainly because of an error in the marketing of our fermenters and storage tanks. The tanks we thought were 50 gallon tanks actually hold 55 gallons and the 80 gallon tanks actually hold less than 75. It's hard to do accurate estimating when you start off with nu
mbers that are wrong. At any rate, we are very pleased with the quality of the wine. Right out of the press, it has a great taste that will only get better with a little time.

What a treat to have Jim here. He made the whole experience even more fun than usual. We used Tom Sawyer's technique and thereby got the absolute greatest productivity from our helper while maintaining an excellent attitude. That same technique worked with Antonio, also. He spent one whole morning picking grapes.

We took our press to Estela's house yesterday and left it with her so that she could process her Lenore grapes. It's the darndest way of making wine you ever saw, but the end prod
uct is a potion that she and her friends can drink by the gallon.
























Our annual Wine and Grape Festival was held as always during the first two weeks of August. On Sunday the 8th, Stanley and I were invited to a feast hosted by Ferdi and Lucy Madero. What fabulous people! We met them through our often-absent neighbor, Eduardo, and we like all of them more every time we are around them. There were lots of people there: young, old, Gringo, Mexican, English speaking, non-English speaking. They all loved the wine and tomato salad we brought and the lamb was delicious! In the pictures above: Eduardo, Lucy Second Picture Lucy, Ferdi, Dona, Stanley, Liz (city planner from San Angelo, TX)

The grand day of the festival is October 10, Feast Day of San Lorenzo. That morning, Stanley and I packed a picnic to take with us and went early to enjoy a walk around the Casa Madero vineyards. That was absolutely the best part of the day for us. The crowds poured through the gates until there was no longer any place to stand, sit, kneel, or lean. By the time, the Blessing of the Grapes Holy Mass actually started, I could just barely see the top of the priest's head and maintaining my balance was a bit difficult. I was standing on a curb about three inches wide. Stanley had given up much earlier. We decided to call it a day, walked back through the vineyard, and came home. We did not walk through the fair grounds again this year. There just wasn't time with all the grape/wine making activities at our house. Maybe next year . . .

As luck would have it,
the next week-end we scored another invitation to have dinner with Ferdi, Lucy, and Eduardo and we took Jim with us. This time it was just us and we enjoyed having them all to ourselves. Jim really enjoyed practicing his Spanish with Ferdi- which is always more fun when you are talking with someone who speaks excellent English.

Summer is always a time for introductions to new folks here at the hacienda, and this summer was no exception. There was the group from the Peace Corp and Saltillo University, the mother with her five daughters and their husbands (the mom regaled me for almost an hour with her tales of how much she hated Mexico), and the two gentlemen from Hungary who showed up just a few days after we had made our plane reservations to Budapest for the fall trip.

Topping off the month with Stanley's 70th birthday was like icing on the cake. We are so blessed.