Sheldrake Point

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December 26, 2007

Frommer's New York State, 3rd Edition
Gives High Recommendations to Sheldrake Point Vineyard and Simply Red Bistro

Sheldrake Point & Simply Red Bistro...has one of the more appealing compounds on a mid-19th century farmstead, with a nice lakeside restaurant serving lunch and dinner and outdoor seating, a professionally run tasting shop, and handsomely designed labels. I quite like their dry Riesling and cabernet franc.

Simply Red Lakeside bistro (** Value Creative American Bistro) Relocated in 2007, after 4 years in the little village of Trumansburg, to the welcoming arms of Sheldrake Point Winery on the west bank of Cayuga Lake, Simply Red still has the South Africa-born chef Samantha Izzo at the helm, and it's named for her flaming locks. Although this terrific bistro now presents a tidy, uptown look--the original tilted more toward intimate bohemian chic--it's still one of the best restaurants in the Finger Lakes. Its fresh menu, best sampled in the "chef;s table" prix-fixe menu that changes every week, is all about fresh, made-from-scratch items based on locally grown produce and regionally raised, free-range, grain-fed meats. Izzo makes a real effort to show of the bounty of the Finger lakes.

Monday nights feature "Mama Red's Comfort Kitchen," featuring Southern standards such as fried green tomatoes, shrimp and grits, and cornmeal-crusted, Cajun-spiced catfish. The three-course prix-fixe dinner on other nights, just $35, is an outstanding deal (and you can pair it with wines for just an extra $10).

Lunch is mostly tasty salads, sandwiches, and tartlets, while Sunday brunch features live jazz musicians. The small but select wine list has some of the best vintages from the finger lakes and some interesting international selections.


October 8, 2007

2006 Dry Riesling Wins Silver at the
Canberra International Riesling Challenge

Sheldrake Point Vineyard’s 2006 Dry Riesling has been awarded a Silver Medal at the 8th Canberra International Riesling Challenge. In addition, the 2006 Dry Riesling was tied for third place in the “top ten” list among all of the US wines submitted to the competition.

for complete results: www.rieslingchallenge.com


September 8, 2007

Sheldrake Point Vineyard and Simply Red Bistro at Farm Days in Washington DC.

Chef Sam Izzo and Winegrower Bob Madill were invited to DC to participate in Farm Days.

On September 18, 2007 Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton hosted "New York Farm Day" in the elegant Senate Russell Caucus Room at the crest of Capitol Hill. Attendees included other United States Senators, members of the New York Congressional delegation from the House of Representatives, members of the Committees on Agriculture, legislative chiefs of staff, agricultural specialists in Congress and the Administration, members of the New York and Washington media, top area restaurants and fine wine shops.

New York's award-winning wines, farm-fresh products, and fine restaurants traveled to the nation's Capitol yesterday to tastefully show Congress, the Administration, and others that New York is a major agricultural state, and agriculture is a major part of the state's economy.

Sam featured Grilled Polenta Napoleon with King Bird Farm Chorizo, Stick & Stone Farm Zucchini and Lively Run Goat Cheese. Bob poured 2006 Dry Riesling and 2005 Barrel Reserve Cabernet Franc to accompany the Napoleon to an appreciative audience.

To view the video, click here.


September 15, 2006

Sheldrake Point Wine & Food
at the U.S. Senate

Sheldrake Point Vineyard & Café in Ovid, New York, presents its wines and culinary delicacies at the 2006 New York Farm Day, hosted By Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton on September 19th. This very popular annual reception is held in the elegant Russell Caucus Room at the United States Senate. Sheldrake Point will be showcasing regional Finger Lakes produce and wine to an audience of Senators, House Members, Congressional staffers, agricultural specialists from the Administration, members of the media, top area restaurants and fine wine shops.

The Farm Day event has become very popular in Washington, and this year special invitations are going out. Each U.S. Senator and New York Representative will receive a basket of New York wine, cheese and fruit together with an invitation to the New York Farm Day. Senator Clinton has been a champion of New York wine and foods, and this event will showcase food products, wineries and restaurants from across the State.

Sheldrake Point Vineyard & Café are proud to be included in the event for the third time. Bob Madill, Winegrower will be presenting tastings of our estate wines - the 2004 Barrel Reserve Chardonnay and our 2001 Barrel Reserve Meritage. Our Executive Chef, Jack Carrington will be serving one of his specialties, Wood- Fired, Herbed Lamb Chops from the local McDonald Farm, accompanied by Cranberry Peach Chutney. Click here to see the recipe: www.sheldrakepoint.com/recipes.

“This delegation of farmers, chefs and winemakers is very effective at raising the awareness of the quality of Brand New York agriculture. Sheldrake Point Vineyard now distributes its wines in New York, Florida, California, Massachusetts and Virginia. This coupled with the gradual lifting of interstate shipping restrictions means that as New York’s wine reputation goes national, we will be better placed to serve customers well beyond our local region,” said Winegrower, Bob Madill.

Sheldrake Point Vineyard & Café is a proud member of the Finger Lakes Culinary Bounty and the New York Farm Bureau as well as several regional and national wine trade associations.


August 30, 2006

Sheldrake Point Serves up
Something Special at
the Mini Farm Day
Hosted by Senator Clinton

It was a Mini Farm Day, hosted by Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, a long-time supporter of New York agriculture, today at the New York Wine & Culinary Center in Canandaigua. The event is modeled on the annual New York Farm Day hosted by Senator Clinton each fall in the Senate Russell Caucus Room in Washington. The Mini Farm Day event is an opportunity to show of the best of the State’s agriculture, including fresh produce, wines, and other food products. Sheldrake Point Vineyard was one of fourteen companies from around the State selected to show their food and beverage products at today’s event. Today’s event included over one hundred business leaders, with a strong showing from the restaurant, hotel and catering sector as well as State and local officials, and the media.

“We wanted to prepare something special, which would highlight the diversity of the local area produce, but still be easy to eat in a reception setting,” said Jack Carrington, Chef at Sheldrake Point Vineyard Café in Ovid, New York. The Winery selected mini sandwiches of chicken salad with blue cheese and peaches on fresh baked croissants. The fresh peaches are from the Wyckoff farm in Ovid; the Cayuga blue cheese from Lively Run Dairy in Interlaken and the Croissants from Blanche’s Scratch Bakery also in Interlaken. For the complete recipe, visit recipes.

“Sheldrake Point Vineyard and Café is proud to have been included in this event, as we are a long-time supporter of local agriculture,” said General Manager, Bob Madill. “We are members of the Finger Lakes Culinary Bounty, whose members supply produce and prepared food products to our restaurant as well as our winery gift shop. Our winery gift shop sells a wide range of locally-produced gourmet food products as well as wines from our own lakeside vineyard.” Madill went on to say, “Today’s event is even more special since the venue is the New York Wine and Culinary Center. Although only a few months old, the Center has already helped to put New York wines on the radar screen of visitors from around the country. We have also felt a need for some time for more professional culinary training facilities, as it is always difficult to find enough local trained kitchen staff. Thanks to the efforts of the Center, we now have a place where top chefs and aspiring cooks can share their skills and enthusiasm.”

Sheldrake Point Vineyard & Café will participate again this fall in the New York Farm Day in Washington D.C. in September.



November 30, 2005

"Wine Spectator" gives
Riesling Ice Wine 91 point score

"Elegant, with lovely purity to the green almond, peach, dried pineapple and orange blossom notes. Long, lacy finish ripples with fruit and fine acidity. Drink now through 2007."

Sheldrake Point Vineyard’s 2004 Riesling Ice Wine (December lot) was awarded double Gold and the Crystal Grape Trophy at the sixth annual 2006 Finger Lakes International Wine Competition for best Ice Wine. Selected from Canadian and American ice wines by a panel of international judges, this award continues the recognition of the superb quality of our Ice Wines and further promotes the reputation of Finger Lakes Riesling. This Ice Wine has also been awarded Gold at the Florida State Fair.

Our 2004 Riesling Ice Wine (January lot) has been served at the White House, received a score of 91 by the Wine Spectator, and has been awarded multiple Gold medals as well as the Hyatt Trophy in Australia for best North American Riesling.

The Riesling grapes for the 2004 December lot were harvested frozen on the vine on December 21 & 27, 2004 and pressed immediately. The rich must (39 Brix) was fermented cool for 25 days at 65 degrees F. The wine has 12.8% alcohol, 10.7 grams per liter acid, and 15.4% residual sugar.

The 2004 Riesling Ice Wine December lot is a classic Ice Wine from our Estate Vineyards with wonderful, sumptuous and rich complexity that is stunningly balanced by natural fruit acidity as only Riesling can be. An exciting taste treat not to be missed.


October 28, 2005

Sheldrake Point Vineyard's
2004 Riesling Ice Wine Named
Best North American Riesling

FINGER LAKES, N.Y. – Sheldrake Point Vineyard’s 2004 Riesling Ice Wine recently won the “Hyatt National Riesling Challenge Trophy for Best North American Riesling.”

The 6th Hyatt National Riesling Challenge held in the Australian Capital, Canberra, in October 2005 attracted record entries of 328 wines from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, USA and Germany with judges from the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia.

“This event is unique because it promotes, recognizes, educates and rewards excellence in Riesling wines and its makers,” said Ken Helm, chairman of the event. “And it comes at an appropriate time with Riesling rapidly becoming a preferred drink of wine consumers around the world.”

Produced in the traditional manner, Sheldrake Point’s Riesling was hand harvested from vine frozen grapes at 14F (-10 C) during the first week of January 2004. After being pressed immediately and fermented for 28 days, 112 cases (375 ml) were produced.

According to winegrower Bob Madill, “The Hyatt Trophy for Best North American Riesling is an exciting win for Sheldrake and another international milestone for showcasing the exceptional quality of Finger Lakes Terroir and our wines.”
The Hyatt National Riesling Challenge is becoming one of the most important wine competitions in Australia, with the objective to promote Riesling nationally and internationally and to improve its quality through innovation and research.

About the Finger Lakes Wine Alliance
The Finger Lakes Wine Alliance (FLWA) is an association of wineries and growers dedicated to the production and promotion of quality wines from the Finger Lakes Region of New York state. The wine region’s unique soil and climate conditions enable winemakers to produce some of the world’s greatest Rieslings, as well as the widest range of wines from a single viticulture area anywhere on the globe.


DAY TRIPS                                    
In the Finger Lakes, the Sweet Taste of Winter

By TATIANA BONCOMPAGNI

It's 12 degrees outside, there's at least a foot of snow on the ground, and Bob Madill, a winegrower in the Finger Lakes region of New York, is picking grapes. For makers of ice wine, a dessert-style wine that gets its nuanced sweet flavor from grapes that have been allowed to freeze on the vine, the recent spate of Arctic weather has been ideal for harvesting. ''Fun and crazy is sort of what this is,'' said Mr. Madill, one of the owners of Sheldrake Point Vineyard on Cayuga Lake in Ovid, N.Y.


FROZEN ON THE VINE    Bob Madill of Sheldrake Point Vineyard in Ovid, N.Y., harvested grapes this monch for ice wine. Many Finger Lakes wineries stay open in the winter.

For those crazy enough to make the trek to the Finger Lakes in winter, the ice wine season can mean an intimate look inside the operations of one of New York's prime wine regions. During the winter months almost a dozen wineries, many of them family owned and operated, are in the process of picking, pressing and fermenting this year's yield of ice wine. There are often only a handful of people in the tasting rooms, allowing the sales staff -- frequently including the winemakers and vineyard owners -- to guide visitors through their various vintages. Some even offer an impromptu tour or a taste of wines straight from the cask.

That's what Kate Coster, a computer trainer at a talent agency in Manhattan, and her partner found on the wine trail in mid-January. Mainly in the area to visit the Harriet Tubman Home, the couple ended up spending 45 minutes tasting five wines each at Sheldrake Point. ''The lack of other people allowed us to belly up to the bar and stay for a while,'' said Ms. Coster, who also tried the linguine, part of a continuing cooking demonstration at the vineyard.

At other vineyards, the mood was a bit livelier. ''I love the party atmosphere,'' said Cynthia Simon, who had made the 150-mile drive from her home in Bloomsburg, Pa., for a day and went home with more than $200 worth of wine. ''People were kibitzing more,'' said Mrs. Simon, who has visited the Finger Lakes' wineries in the summer.

People like Mrs. Simon are part of the reason winter visitors tend to get a warm reception at the Finger Lakes' 80-odd vineyards. During summer months, tasting rooms are crowded with people taking a break from swimming or tennis. But in the winter, vineyard operators say, only true wine lovers brave the snowdrifts and freezing temperatures of upstate New York. ''In the summer we get as many as 2,000 visitors a day, but a lot of them walk out without buying anything,'' said Leanne Powers, retail director at Heron Hill Winery on Keuka Lake. ''In the winter, people buy.''

On her recent three-day trip to the vineyards, Lia Seltzer, 31, planned to do just that. Undeterred by the cold, Ms. Seltzer rented a small cabin and persuaded her husband, Tim, to drive their minivan instead of their smaller S.U.V. so there would be room to cart all the cases home to Long Island. ''The vidal blanc is outrageous,'' Ms. Seltzer said of her favorite wine from the region.

\But it's ice wine that is increasingly putting the Finger Lakes region on the wine map. In the last three years, sales of ice wine made in the area, as well as on Long Island, which more recently jumped into the ice-wine-making fray, have more than doubled, said Susan Wine of Vintage New York, a shop with two locations in Manhattan and one at Rivendell Winery in New Paltz that sell only New York wines. ''The Japanese who come in to shop know to buy ice wine,'' Ms. Wine said. ''It's something that everyone knows New York does really well.''

New York vineyards first started making the sweet dessert wine about 15 years ago, but its roots stretch back hundreds of years to the vineyards of Germany and Austria, where it is known as eiswein. Winemakers there discovered that when they left grapes on the vines to freeze and thaw during winter's first months, the temperature cycles had the effect of concentrating both the sugars and flavors of the grapes. Then, when picked during a certain temperature range -- from about 12 degrees to 18 degrees, a kind of magic window when the juice inside the grapes has thawed but the water has not -- they yield a concentrated, amber-colored liquid.

In New York, many of the wineries, like Standing Stone Vineyards on Seneca Lake, have been making ice wine by picking grapes earlier in the season and freezing them artificially, a process called cryoextraction. But in 2002, the federal agency overseeing the wine industry, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, reiterated rules dating to 1978 that prohibit vineyards from labeling their so-called partial-freeze wines as ice wine. Because the vineyards that make true ice wine end up losing many more of their grapes between the first frost and harvest time, their bottles can cost as much as $40, almost twice as much as some of the partial-freeze options.

And truth be told, while one superb real ice wine had cherry and berry flavors and a caramel taste close to oloroso dulce, the well-known Spanish dessert wine, and other good real ice wines had more apple, pear and honey aromas, some of the partial-freeze wines had a taste closer to grape jelly. But Robert Ransom, a partner in Vintage New York and Rivendell Winery, said that excellent ice wine could be made both ways. What's more important, he said, is that the wine is made with a grape varietal, like riesling or vidal, that has enough natural acidity to balance the sweetness of ice wine. When it is made right, ''ice wine is the purest expression of that particular varietal you can get,'' Mr. Ransom said.

But not even the sophisticated taste of a cabernet franc ice wine from Sheldrake Point Vineyards is enough to convince Ellen Bradshaw to pick up a bottle, though she and her husband have been braving the cold and snow of the Finger Lakes region in winter since 1988. ''I just don't like dessert wine,'' said Mrs. Bradshaw, 42, an artist in Manhattan, who regularly takes home cases of chardonnay and riesling instead. ''It's just not my thing.''

 
 

 

7448 County Road #153, Ovid, NY 14521 (607) 532-9401 toll-free: (866) 743-5372