Showing posts with label Guide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guide. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 August 2013

It’s not enough to just stock terrific bottles: An outstanding wine shop must also have a strong point of view. These new stores all do, reflecting their owners’ passions. Best New Wine Shop Little Vine in San Francisco, CA San Francisco's Little Vine wine shop Photo © Leslie Santarina, Spotted SF

By opening Little Vine, husband-wife owners Jay Esopenko and Melissa Gugni created a kind of clubhouse for their North Beach neighborhood. The walls of the teeny shop are lined with over 150 wine selections, mostly from very-small-production, family-owned California wineries like Cobb, Matthiasson and Sean Thackrey. Every Thursday evening, Little Vine invites a winemaker to pour samples and hang out with customers. Beyond wine, Little Vine also sells picnic essentials, like local Barinaga Ranch cheese, Fra’ Mani charcuterie and Heslet Honey from hives just up the street. shoplittlevine.com.

“If I didn’t have to consider finances, I’d probably just carry 200 Muscadets and call it a day,” says Noel Sherr, a partner and wine buyer for Cave Taureau. Despite his passion for Muscadet and other wines from France’s Loire Valley, he seeks out excellent choices from around the world, including some small California producers. Still, Muscadet is a specialty of the shop, which is modeled on Sherr’s favorite cavistes (artisanal wine merchants) in Paris. He sells more than a dozen Muscadets and even carries the favorite beer of Loire winemakers, Brasserie de la Pigeonnelle Loirette. cavetaureauwines.com.

John Keife and Jim Yonkus’s handsome shop in New Orleans’s artsy Warehouse District, with its floor-to-ceiling wooden shelves loaded with wine, feels like a library, a speakeasy and a market all at once. The hand-picked wine selection runs the gamut from a truly impressive $15 bottle of Camino de Navaherreros Garnacha from Spain for everyday to expensive bottles of Burgundy. The same care goes into the foods on offer. “We have some of the best Parisian caramels and artisanal olive oils and vinegars, as well as something as simple as the best Dijon mustard—that’s important,” Yonkus says. The Dijon, by the way, is from France’s Eric Bur. keifeandco.com.

Gavin Fine always had a talent for picking good wines for his four Jackson Hole restaurants. So much so, in fact, that “Wine shops in the area used to call me and say, ‘Hey, what are you pouring by the glass at Rendezvous Bistro or Il Villaggio Osteria? We want to carry them, because people keep asking for them.’?” Now at his own new shop, Bin 22, he sells every wine he serves by the glass in all of his restaurants. Three sommeliers help customers with pairings, choosing from the Italian-heavy selection of value-priced ($10–$15) bottles. The attached wine bar serves 25 wines by the glass, small plates and six house-made mozzarellas. bin22jacksonhole.com.

In a sliver of a space between a creamery and a charcuterie counter in DC’s new Union Market, Eric Rohleder has managed to squeeze in a terrific 350-bottle wine and beer shop. “When we opened, we thought we’d need to focus mostly on affordable grab-and-go bottles for people to take home for dinner that night,” says Rohleder. “But then customers came in looking for grand cru Burgundies and Brunellos and culty California wines, so we added those.” Soon, all of the wines will be available online, too. cordialwine.com.

Since it opened five years ago, The Ten Bells wine bar in Manhattan has become a magnet for people looking for natural wines. The selection is particularly strong because owner Fifi Essome travels throughout France to source wines to import exclusively. Now, he’s launched a shop in Brooklyn and packed the 300-square-foot space with more than 200 natural and organic choices, including nine from Burgundy’s incredible Alice et Olivier De Moor, plus hard-to-find magnums. Essome has also taken an interest in hyper-local spirits from producers like Brooklyn Gin. 718-398-1800.

Los Angeles blogger Whitney Adams of brunelloshavemorefun.com worked with artist friends to create items for this new online shop: beautiful grape-leaf coasters, graphic bottle-wrapping papers, tasting journals, even tie-dyed leather cocktail napkins. bottlestockshop.com.

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Friday, 28 June 2013

hammock-allergy-guide Most springtime sneezers—some one in five Americans—are aware they've got allergies. But knowing how best to treat them is another story. Drugstore aisles are stacked high with an array of pills, capsules, sprays, mists, and drops, and that's before you even get to the prescription options. The upside of all those choices, though, is "there is no need to suffer with seasonal allergies—good treatment is available," says Gainesville, Georgia, allergist Andy Nish, MD. The key to finding the products that will do the most for you, he says, is to first determine the severity, frequency, and duration of your symptoms, which may include sneezing, runny nose, nasal congestion, itchy throat, and itchy, watery eyes.

• Your allergies are mild if you get a twitchy, itchy nose and watery eyes while hanging around outside during pollen season (from early spring to early summer, depending on where you live). It's a nuisance, but not really life-altering.

• Your allergies are moderate if you have sneezing fits or need tissues even when you're inside, and if you're congested enough that you have trouble sleeping or wake up with a sore throat, affecting how you feel over the course of your day.

• Your allergies are severe if you're just plain miserable all the time: Your nose is constantly congested or running, you carry tissues 24/7, you go into frequent sneezing fits, and your eyes are incredibly red, puffy, and itchy. Your throat may even get so sore and itchy that you wonder if you're sick. (You're not.) Suffice it to say, your symptoms consume your life.

Now that you know where you fall on the allergy scale, here's how to find the right remedies for your symptoms.

If your allergies are mild
It sounds like a no-brainer, but every allergy doc worth his degree will urge you to avoid exposure to pollen—produced by trees, grass, weeds, and flowers—as much as possible during peak allergy hours (generally noon through late afternoon). Of course, you can't stay inside all the time, so pop an over-the-counter antihistamine such as Zyrtec, Allegra, or Claritin every day before you head into the great outdoors. These drugs work by blocking the effects of histamine, a chemical your body produces to attack invaders like pollen—launching such immune reactions as watery eyes and sneezes. Which antihistamine should you pick? In the end, all antihistamines on the market work the same way, but different people respond differently (both positively and negatively) to each one; trial and error is the only way to find the product that's best for you, says Paul M. Ehrlich, MD, president-elect of the New York Allergy & Asthma Society.

Got a stuffy nose? Consider using an antihistamine with an added decongestant—look for a "D" or the word "sinus" in the name (think Claritin-D or Benadryl Allergy and Sinus). Decongestants relieve clogging by shrinking swollen tissues and blood vessels, which also shuts down the feedback loop that keeps mucus flowing. (Don't take decongestants if you're pregnant or have hypertension.)

Itchy eyes? Use over-the-counter eyedrops such as Zaditor or Alaway.

Still reaching for the tissues? Try using NasalCrom, a mild OTC nasal spray, especially a few hours before you know you're going to be out in nature, says Tim Mainardi, MD, senior fellow in allergy and immunology at Columbia University Medical School. It prevents mast cells—which are like "little land mines full of histamine," says Dr. Mainardi—from blowing up and releasing their symptom-causing goods.

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