Ingredients (Serves 4):
"Everything at Lingua Franca is a group effort, we look to all members of the winemaking team for input on our wines."
Kim also tends to our four new beehives. We have partnered with Jacobsen Salt's beekeeper, Emily Schmiedel, through their Bee Local program to learn sustainable beekeeping and begin harvesting our own estate honey next year.
"The bounty of the Pacific Northwest is all-giving when you find the right spot. That feeling of finding a patch of chanterelles — pure excitement, where nothing else matters in that moment. I like to call mushroom hunting adult treasure hunting, though it always makes me feel like a kid again. The meals to follow are always mind blowing and a reminder that nature provides for us when you allow it to.This week we’re taking a trip to Italy to explore some of the most prestigious wines in the world, wines I like to call Italy's "Killer B's" -- Brunello, Barolo, and Barbaresco.
In this webinar we'll explore the rich and complex history of these wines, the strict Italian production laws that govern them, the production methods that make these wines so special.
This webinar is now available to Lingua Franca Club Members only.
Please click here to access the Club Member Webinar Archive Page.
Sparkling wine is synonomous with celebrations and good times… but that wasn’t always the case. Originally called “Le Vin du Diable” (“The Devils Wine”), medieval monks gave it this name due to its explosive nature - literally! In fact, Champagne as we know it today was not really invented in Champagne — it was a actualy more of a “consolation prize” after losing the Paris market to its rivals in Burgundy. What a difference a few hundred years makes as today we use sparkling wine to toast to our health, prosperity and good times!
In this webinar we will explore the origins and history of sparkling wine, dispel some long standing myths about Champagne’s origins, and explain the differences between Champagne, Prosecco, Cava, and a few other sparkling wines from around the world and why we can’t universally call sparkling wine Champagne.
This webinar is now available to Lingua Franca Club Members only.
Please click here to access the Club Member Webinar Archive Page.

"I love to cook, and I love to make pizza. A great friend of the winery, Junichi Fujita, gave me a piece of his sourdough starter which he brought from the great Jura winemaker, Pierre Overnoy. I've been making all types of breads and pizza doughs lately.”
Pinot noir is one of the oldest known wine grape varieties and has a vast family tree. In this webinar we will explore the history of Pinot Noir, its "love affair" with an obscure grape known as Gouais Blanc, and the many grapes that now trace their lineage to this noble grape of Burgundy.
This webinar is now available to Lingua Franca Club Members only.
Please click here to access the Club Member Webinar Archive Page.
In the 1960's, the founders of the Willamette Valley imagined a new frontier for cool climate grape varieties -- in particular Pinot Noir, Riesling and Chardonnay. While Pinot Noir became a virtual overnight sensation and Riesling a wine-culture darling, Chardonnay languished and almost became a footnote in the Willamette Valley wine story, over taken by the easy going Pinot Gris. Why did Chardonnay struggle while Pinot Noir soared and what was behind its astounding revival?
This webinar explores the early history of the Willamette Valley while we uncover Chardonnay's sordid past and its triumphant comeback. Whether you are a Chardonnay fan or a practicing ABC wine enthusiast (anything but Chardonnay), this webinar will help you understand the role of terroir & clones, and how they contribute something truly unique and special to Chardonnay in the Willamette Valley.
This webinar is now available to Lingua Franca Club Members only.
Please click here to access the Club Member Webinar Archive Page.