Pairings Jacqueline Mitchell Pairings Jacqueline Mitchell

Your Go-To Guide For the Best Wine and Cheese Pairings

Now that you have at your fingertips these 5 Tips for Pairing Cheese and Wine let’s put your knowledge to practice with some of the best cheese and wine pairing suggestions. In this guide we break down wine and cheeses by category including favorite wine and cheese pairings by some Vero producers. Pairing cheese and wine allows for a lot of fun experimentation, making get-togethera more engaging and interactive. Use this guide as a “go-to” when seeking out the best cheese and wine pairing to have at your next party.

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Wine Education, Pairings Jacqueline Mitchell Wine Education, Pairings Jacqueline Mitchell

5 Tips for Wine and Cheese Pairings

It may seem like a daunting task: pick out and pair wine and cheeses. But when done right, it is so worth it! It is also not quite as hard as it may seem to pair wine and cheese together. Inside we have 5 tips and tricks to help you learn what wine goes with cheese! So get your local cheese monger on speed dial, open up a new tab with the VeroShop, and get ready to enjoy a delectable article!

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Farming, Wine Industry Sheila Donohue Farming, Wine Industry Sheila Donohue

Wine Growing Pains This Summer

Organic wineries like the ones we select to sell are battling the challenges of nature all the time. After a long drought, this year is bringing lots of rain but the wet weather is an ideal environment for a fungus that attacks both the leaf and the grape, making it much more difficult especially if you make organic wine. How does an organic farmer address this threat? Find out in this video, and learn more in this article.

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Recipes Sheila Donohue Recipes Sheila Donohue

Bruschetta with a Hard Twist

Ready to learn about another traditional food steeped in history in Italy? Discover frisella, a hard bread that has its roots with fishermen who used it as a handy food to have while out at sea. In fact, there is a trick to eating them which the sailors way-back-when figured out: they soaked them in sea water before eating, leaving it kind of crunchy but still soft enough to eat. Italians today eat frisella like their seamen ancestors, although make a spread to put on top which is often bruschetta. Check out this article to learn all about frisella, and get an authentic Italian bruschetta recipe. Can’t get a hold of a frisella? We got a great substitute to suggest, all in this article.

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Travel, Wine Regions and Appellations Sheila Donohue Travel, Wine Regions and Appellations Sheila Donohue

The Rosé Region of Italy

Stop and smell the rosés of Puglia, the heel of the boot of Southern Italy, where rose wine has been a tradition going back to when the Greeks occupied the area 3000 years ago. To this day, Puglia (aka Apulia) is the focal point for rose wine Italy: it makes 40% of Italy’s rose wines, in country which is the biggest producer of rose wines in Europe, after France, in the continent which makes 75% of the world’s rose wines. Find out what rose wine is and how our founder first discovered a dry rose wine, and discover your own rose wine best in this article.

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Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell

Dine Like a Local Romagnolo

In the countryside of Romagna, Italy, capretto al forno, or oven roasted goat, is a popular recipe, especially when drizzled with a really good Italian olive oil. We have an authentic recipe to share straight from the local trattorias of Romagna, thanks to the Braschi Boys sharing their passions of food, not only wine. In fact, Braschi’s recommended pairing wine with food with this goat recipe is a full bodied red wine: their riserva sangiovese wine. Check it out!

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Wine Regions and Appellations Jacqueline Mitchell Wine Regions and Appellations Jacqueline Mitchell

The March of White Wine Grapes from Le Marche Italy

Tucked into the Adriatic coastline, is Le Marche Italy, a region full of delicious wines! They are famous in the world of Italian white wine for their age worthy wines like verdicchio or trebbiano. Discover the white wine grapes of Le Marche, hearing from Lombardy transplant and self-proclaimed Le Marche local Stefano Pintossi with his family farm and winery, Quercia Scarlatta. Find out why he doesn’t cultivate the most famous white wine grape of the region, what drew him to make organic, biodynamic and natural wines, and why he loves Le Marche.

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Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell

A Patchwork Quilt of Pasta

Straight from the land of pasta, comes a journey exploring a traditional filled pasta. While it is not the more well known tortellini, it is just as delicious and versatile. It is tortelli pasta from Romagna, the eastern half of the Emilia Romagna region of Italy. Learn all about tortelli in this article, including pairing wine with food, and find an original homemade pasta recipe from one of the Braschi boys, Romagna natives who run the traditional Romagna winery Braschi.

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Wine Grapes Sheila Donohue Wine Grapes Sheila Donohue

This Trebbiano Ain't Got No Curse

Looking for a new italian white wine to sip this summer? Try Trebbiano Abruzzese, what the New York Times calls one of the “10 Grapes Worth Knowing Better”. Learn about why this trebbiano wine from Abruzzo Italy is unique and special. Get to know the young newcomer to the Abruzzo wine scene, after Emidio Pepe started the trend of making high-quality trebbiano. Explore this up and coming white grape variety in this article.

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Travel Sheila Donohue Travel Sheila Donohue

Love Letter to Emilia Romagna

After you check the boxes off of Rome, Florence and Venice while visiting Italy, what else should you explore while visiting this beautiful country? Emilia Romagna.

Learn about this off-the-beaten path region for tourism and find out from an insider what there is to see and taste in the heartland of Italy. It has many tucked away corners which, sadly, have been damaged by the apocalyptic flooding that recently took place. Hurry and find out more, and help this region so it rebuilds in time for your next visit to Italy.

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Wine Grapes Jacqueline Mitchell Wine Grapes Jacqueline Mitchell

Broaden Your White Wine Horizons with Albana

Discover a new, yet old, Italian white wine grape, Albana. It was the first white wine to get the highest quality designation in Italy, DOCG, yet many people have yet to hear of this Italian white wine. We’ve uncovered the history, tradition, taste, and versatility of the Albana grape from Romagna, including perspectives from a local winery owner, in this article.

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Pairings, Wine Education Jacqueline Mitchell Pairings, Wine Education Jacqueline Mitchell

All About Umami

What is umami flavor? Do you know that it is considered a fifth taste, after sweet, sour, bitter, and salty? In what foods can you find this fifth taste? Can you find umami in wine as well as food? … You may not know that some wines have umami flavors, or that certain wines pair better with umami dishes than others. Discover the flavor of umami and how it interacts with wines in this article.

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Producers Sheila Donohue Producers Sheila Donohue

A Rock Star Natural Winemaker

Michi Lorenz is a young wild winemaker in Austria. While crafting natural, organic, and biodynamic wines, from his family’s land where they’ve been winemaking since 1524, he is a breath of fresh air to the more typical traditionalists in Austria.

His motto in winemaking is “attention but not interference” to create expressive terroir driven natural wines. Despite his seriousness and talents when it comes to vineyard cultivation and winemaking, his playful side comes out easily, you’ll find out in this article, after we sat down to get to know him at our last VeroTalk where he marries his passions of wine and rock music with his natural wine creations. Discover also why he loves his Sauvignon Blanc white wine that comes from the schist rock of Austria.

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Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell

Put Some Primavera in Your Pasta

We’ve heard the dish Pasta Primavera before, right? Do you know why it’s called primavera?… Spoiler alert, it means spring in Italian, but what does the word primavera come from? Find out in the article and get yourself an authentic trattoria recipe from Italy to make your own sugo for vegetables with pasta, great for pairing with Sauvignon Blanc.

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Producers, Farming Sheila Donohue Producers, Farming Sheila Donohue

A Forager's Show & Tell

Here is a forager guide to what you can find when going to seek out and explore wild plants around your home, nearby fields and forests, and even in cracks in sidewalks. Use it to identify useful wild plants as you forage for things like spring greens, wildflowers, fennel frond and all sorts of edible wild plants.

Get on your way to start a your own forager kitchen!

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Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell Recipes Jacqueline Mitchell

Making Fresh Pasta with Wild Plants

We might think of nettles as a nasty weed, but it actually has loads of benefits, from to curing ailments, to being a tasty and nutritional food. Find the inner forager in you as we continue to explore backyard-to-table cuisine in this article with a fresh homemade pasta recipe that uses this wild food plant, making it flavorful and healthy. Check out this article to discover nettles tea benefits, get the nettles pasta recipe, find out what sugo to serve it with, as well as natural wine to pair along.

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Farming, Producers, Interviews Jacqueline Mitchell Farming, Producers, Interviews Jacqueline Mitchell

Backyard to Table: Foraging and Cooking Straight from the Wild

While farm-to-table is the rage, have you thought about upping it to backyard-to-table?

What wild foods are growing in your backyard, or neighboring fields and woods, that you can add taste and originality to your dishes? And not only - backyard-to-table takes sustainability to the max!

We talked with master forager and vegan chef Beatrice Calia to learn how she cooks with wild foods in her kitchen. Get her tips and tricks in this article.

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Producers, Farming Sheila Donohue Producers, Farming Sheila Donohue

Foraging for Nature's Wild Treasures

Our food foraging skills out in the wild may be part of our DNA as hunter-gatherers but the skill is lost. Beatrice Calia, a chef turned author, educator and consultant on wild plants took it upon herself to learn one new plant every day so to be able to live her life and livelihood centered on plants around her home in the hills of Bologna. What inspired Beatrice to become a wild food expert? What is there to know? Find out in this article.

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Interviews, Producers Jacqueline Mitchell Interviews, Producers Jacqueline Mitchell

A Southern Italian Woman’s Journey into Wine

Meet Rosanna Melchionda, a native from Apulia (aka Puglia), in Southern Italy, whose passion for history led to passion for wine. What drives her is her love and commitment to her family and her region. Read this exclusive interview as she takes us through the history, culture and beauty of Puglia, and what is unique about her family estate’s terroir for wine making.

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