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Events & Happenings Wine - Island Style. The 12th Annual Nantucket Wine Festival
Wine - Island Style. The 12th Annual Nantucket Wine Festival Print E-mail
Written by Christine St. Pierre   Monday, 05 May 2008 14:59   

If you’re headed to Nantucket next week for the annual wine festival, look forward to intimate tastings, fabulous food and beautiful views.


The 12th annual Nantucket Wine Festival promises to be filled with so many events, you’ll need to come up with a strategy to get into all of the seminars, receptions and auctions you want to attend. Held May 14 to 18, there will be more winemakers on Nantucket during this week than in Stag’s Leap, noted Denis Toner, president and founder of the Nantucket Wine Festival. More than 150 of the world’s great Denis.jpgwineries will be sharing their wines with guests at the Grand Tasting--the focal point of the festival--on Saturday, May 17th, and Sunday, May 18th at the Nantucket Yacht Club, in four two-hour sessions. “I love restaurateurs and helping out those in this industry, so I’d like to extend an offer to executive level staff for a discount on the Sunday sessions of the Grand Tasting,” added Toner. Tickets for the event are $85, but Toner will offer tickets to chefs, owners and general managers for $60 if you call or e-mail in advance.


The festival also boasts Great Wines in Grand Houses, and Toner described these tastings as intimate and educational. “These small tastings at held in beautiful private homes that feature historic architecture and dramatic panoramic views,” he added. With no more than 20 guests at each tasting, they meet with those that create the wine, and some tastings are incorporated into a brunch or dinner. “People adore this opportunity, and many friendships have been made over these tastings.”


The Opening Reception on May 14 will feature Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label Champagne and appetizers by the Executive Chef of the Brant Point Grill, along with music by Nantucket guitar virtuoso Jim Sulzer. Immediately following this reception, Kevin Williamson, chef/proprietor of Ranch 616 in Austin, Texas, hosts Texas Throwdown, where he’ll show off his unique new-wave, old-boy style to Nantucket. He will present three different interpretations of Texas game and beef, that will be paired with the award-winning wines of Cliff Lede Vineyards in Stag’s Leap, presented by vice president and general manager Jack Bittner.


A cooking demonstration with Jody Adams of Rialto in Cambridge promises that she’ll share her kitchen secrets as she prepares spot prawns plucked from the icy waters of Alaska. And master butcher Ron Savenor, of Savenor’s Market in Boston and Cambridge, will host The Lost Art of Butchery with a lesson in all things meat. He will discuss who’s really serving USDA prime, why oleaginous is actually a good thing and how different cuts of meat taste. To showcase this, he will prepare four different cuts of lamb (leg, loin, rack, and shoulder) prepared only with oil, salt and pepper. Newton Vineyards will provide wines for this demonstration.


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Also at the Nantucket Wine Festival, Plum TV will premiere Coming of Age, a movie about the dramatic changes in the Spanish food and wine trade. In the fall of 2007, Plum TV’s intrepid camera crew of David Kuhn, Dan Honan, Mark Donato and Denis Toner traveled to Spain to undertake a survey of great wineries and restaurants. “We made it a point to go into restaurants in Spain, not just into the dining room, but the kitchen as well. For people that love restaurants, they can see how the food is made, the ambiance in dining rooms and the pleasure on people’s faces as they dine,” Toner explained. The movie will premiere on Friday, May 16 at the Starlight Theatre.


With 4,300 tickets to various events and a total of 1,500 visitors, this really is a busy festival. Take Toner’s advice and chart your plan of action. “Once you’re on the island, you’re away. The people that take the time and money to attend the festival feel it’s worth it,” he said. Too numerous to list here, the festival also features countless receptions, brunches, dinners, three wine symposium luncheons, a celebrity chef and winemaker dinner, and a grand gala, just to name a few events. “The scale of the festival is small, but the quality of the bar is high,” Toner added. “You can look at this like a graduate seminar. You have an amazing opportunity to learn about food and wine in a short amount of time.”


For more information about the Nantucket Wine Festival or to order discounted tickets for the Sunday sessions of the Grand Tasting, please go to www.nantucketwinefestival.com or call them at 508-228-1128.

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