How to find a chianti classico you’ll fall in love with
Forget the big brands and seek out these smaller producers for a wine you’ll want to nuzzle up close to
11 February 2021 • 12:00pm
It can play hard to get, but in the hands of the right grower this Tuscan red is a keeper
Credit: Getty
Falling in love with chianti classico is rarely straightforward. When it’s right, the smell is as comforting and desirable as sun-warmed skin; you want to nuzzle up close and stay there. But while individual wines can and do have that effect, the region as a whole has an image problem.
Is it goegraphy or architecture that draws younger oenophiles to bordeoux?
Credit: Getty Creative
It’s said that people tend to drift further to the right as they age. In reading, the trend is away from fiction towards history, biography and so on. In wine the axiom is that we begin by loving bordeaux, then graduate to an appreciation of burgundy. It’s a shift that can make a right old mess of someone’s careful cellar plan. Many who find themselves in a position to start collecting when still relatively young reach middle age with a splendid portfolio of bordeaux and almost no burgundy – just as they have decided that the latter is, after all, quite worth drinking.
Petersburg Indian Association looks forward to new projects and programs in 2021
Posted by Angela Denning | Jan 8, 2021
PIA builds and maintains trails in Petersburg as one of the tribe’s many community programs. This raised boardwalk was constructed at Hungry Point Trail. (Photo by Angela Denning/KFSK)
Petersburg Indian Association has confirmed the results of its election for tribal council. As KFSK’s Angela Denning reports, the tribe has a lot planned for 2021, which includes COVID-assistance programs and other projects for the whole community.
Every year new seats come up for Petersburg Indian Association’s council, which is comprised of six members and a president.