Monday, March 29, 2010

Finger Lakes International Wine Competition Chpt. 3

The FLIWC finished up yesterday. Jim and I had a great time pouring and serving our table of judges. We came home with some great wines and VERY sore legs. This was the tenth year of the competition, so things were extremely well organized and orchestrated. Here is a sampling of what we had to do at our pouring station... First the "corkers" uncorked and brought us the wines in our flight. We had usually 5 judges (the 5th being a "visiting" judge) with flights of 7-8 wines per flight. Therefore we had 40 Riedel wine glasses to stage. First we had to dry and inspect them for water spots or chips. Next, because this is a blind tasting and the judges only know the type of wine not the winery, we had to place a sticker on each wine glass denoting the number of the wine. We then poured the wines into their designated glasses, checked and double checked our accuracy and waited to be called. When the boss man (Tom King) said "lets roll", all the wine stations (there were 15 of us) VERY CAREFULLY rolled our wine carts with our 40 filled glasses out of our room, down a hallway to the judging room. In the judge's room we collected the old scoring sheets and cleaned the previous flight's glasses from the tables, then arranged the next flight before each judge in left to right sequence matching their scoring sheets. But our work was not done. Now we had to take the used glasses to the glass washers, a wonderful group of very dedicated volunteers who washed thousands of very expensive Riedel glasses all day long. We took our cart back to our station and started over again. There was a total of 27 flights of wine over the 2 days!
We were just a tiny part of this wonderful day. The judges volunteer their time and come from Canada, Europe and across the United States because they believe in Camp Good Days and Special Times. We spoke with several who judge year after year and consider it the highlight of their year. Then there are the hours and hours that go into gathering the 3010 wines, numbering them, separating them for the competition and the dinner (May 1st), hauling them into the Rochester Plaza, coordinating the volunteers, the food, the judge's dinner, the rooms for staging, judging and processing the scores, the set-up and dismantling...the list goes on and on and is mind boggling. This is truly a labor of love for the coordinators and planners: Peter Parts, Scott Osborne, Ed Schramm, Tom King and others such as Joelle Cain. I know I have left out tons of important people involved and I apologize for not knowing who you all are. Suffice it to say, I felt a part of something so inspirational that I know I want to return and keep paying forward all the good that this competition and dinner represent for the children who attend Camp Good Days and Special Times.
The afternoon highlight was when Gary Mervis, the camp's founder spoke softly and eloquently to the judges and volunteers about his daughter, Teddi. Teddi was his reason for founding the camp as a place where children dealing with cancer can go - free of charge- and have fun. Having those "good days" at camp and keeping the memories of those "special times" at camp to help them through other, not so pleasant days, is what the camp is all about. Gary went on to explain his vision of cancer research and hopes for the future. I was humbled to be a part of something so important.


So here is a photo of our awesome "K" team - Tony, Denise, Jim and I, as well as some of the staging and work areas at the competition.

Thank-you Peter Bell for your recommendation and Peter Parts for allowing us to be a part of this important occasion.






Saturday, March 27, 2010

Finger Lakes International Wine Competition Chpt 2.

The FLIWC is half way over. 3,010 wines were entered from ALL 50 States in the US and countries around the world. 666 wineries in total! Wow. We attended the judge's dinner tonight at the German House, sat with several judges and spoke with one from California and one from Prince Edward Island, Canada. The food was marvelous and the wine plentiful (all bottles from today's competition). We had a chance to sample some we had heard about but never tried. We are a little nervous about tomorrow. What will our job entail? What do we wear on are feet? (Joelle tonight told us sneakers were OK but no jeans!) Who will be the judges in our group?
Stay tuned...

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Finger Lakes International Wine Competition

Next weekend the Finger Lakes International Wine Competition comes to Rochester. This year there are somewhere around 2800 wine entries from around the world as well as our own back yard. Jim and I are really excited about working at it this year and at the dinner and silent auction on May 1st. ALL proceeds for both events go to benefit Camp Good Days and Special Times. I will keep you posted about these events through the blog, but if you want more information go to these websites:

Finger Lakes International Wine Competition: http://www.fliwc.com/

Camp Good Days and Special Times: http://www.campgooddays.org/

Monday, March 15, 2010

Wine Clubs Are the Way to GO!


Many of the Finger Lakes wineries offer wine clubs. Wine clubs offer several benefits:


  • They are a great way to get special bottles of wine from your favorite winery throughout the year.

  • Frequently Reserve wines and specialty wines are offered. (Sometimes they are only offered to Club members)

  • Discounts are given to Club members for tastings, dinners, other special events.

  • You may get a newsletter with information non happenings at the winery.

  • If you attend the special events you get a discount to, you will meet fantastic people who share your love of a winery.

Wine Clubs usually involve wine shipments 3-4 times a year. The only catch is that someone over age 21 has to be home to sign for the shipments. This hasn't been too big a deal for us as UPS or Fed Ex will try delivering at another time. We haven't missed one yet! We have been members of several different wine Clubs over the years and have enjoyed the benefits of each. I would highly recommend trying one out.