Author name: Linda Whipple, CSW

Certified Specialist of Wine (CSW). WSET 3 Advanced with merit. Grateful for the grape and all things growing.

What it’s like to attend a wine conference for the first time

When I told friends and family about my summer “vacation” plans to attend a wine conference, reactions were mixed. Some chuckled and expressed mock sympathy, and perhaps a hint of envy, as in, “too bad you have to taste wine for three days.” Others registered skepticism and concern. Actually, I signed up for the 13th […]

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Road trip to the Yakima Valley, Part I

If you’re a fan of Washington state wine, chances are you’ve heard of the Yakima Valley. No one knows for certain how the Native American word “Yakima” originated. According to one legend, “Yakima” misappropriates the Native American word for “big belly” or “pregnant one” and was named for a tribal chief’s errant daughter. If that’s

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Shining a light on white grapes of Walla Walla Valley

Walla Walla Valley is predominately a red region. Only about 5% of grapes in this corner of southeastern Washington are white. So it felt kind of special to open a bottle of L’Ecole No. 41 Luminesce and shine a light on their two estate-grown whites, Semillon and Sauvignon Blanc. Family-owned L’Ecole No. 41 was the

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Five winemaking women of Alsace (#winophiles)

When Sylvie Spielman started her winemaking career in the late 1980s, she was one of only a few women in the Alsatian wine industry. Things were tough for these early pioneers. Now, some three and a half decades later, the ratio of men to women is about 50/50, according to winemaker Mélanie Pfister. While more

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Tasty Txakolina from Basque Country calls for fish (#worldwinetravel)

“Fascinating” is an overused word, but it seems appropriate to describe the culture, language, wine and food of Basque Country (País Vasco in Spanish). Fiercely independent and proud, the Basque people inhabit both sides of the Spanish-French border in the western foothills of the Pyrenees Mountains. Many more live in Spain than in France. Traditionally,

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