Home

Home Grown Tomatoes

Organolepticians Number 74 ()

 

August 30, 2007 It must be ninety in the shade in Berkeley. The skin on my right hand has turned a little blue from grape pigment, from punching down bins of Gamay and Syrah. The Syrah from Wylie looks like black bean soup, except the liquid is a purple that seems almost electric. I'm well into Harvest 2007, and it's not even September. This is harvest #23 for Edmunds St. John. I have to admit, it sneaked up on me. I used to have dreams, when I finally graduated from high school, of finding myself in a Final Exam for some class I hated, and not having studied at all. Then, after I’d been a mailman for a little more than three years, I’d dream about showing up at the Post Office around noon on a winter day, hours after all the other mailmen had gone out to deliver their mail, and mine was still sitting in my case, unsorted, The dream changed, after running a winery for awhile, to having grapes coming before I’d had a chance to even think about getting ready for harvest. I knew this season would be a little earlier than last, but I didn’t know by how much. I had an inkling around the end of July, when I visited a couple of vineyards in El Dorado County in which veraison was already well underway. Still, I thought I’d have until the very last week of August. On the 30th of July I headed East to the Berkshires with our two oldest grandchildren, Noah and Olivia, for a family vacation. Already there when we arrived were two other grandchildren, Megan and Emily, and their parents, and Cornelia. Cornelia’s sister was there as well, and there were various other siblings, cousins, in-laws and outlaws making appearances each day. The average crowd at dinner was 12 or 13. We spent a week in the Berkshires eating corn on the cob fresh every night, with hamburgers or hot dogs, or chicken, all cooked over an open fire, and followed by copious amounts of ice cream The kids went swimming in the pond or the falls every day. They made up and performed a play about Death and what follows, about which the audience, made up of geezers like me, was already fairly curious. After returning the grandchildren back to their parents, Cornelia and I spent the following week along California’s North Coast, mostly in Mendocino County. We got home on the 14th, giving us just enough time to pull things together for the celebration, August 18th, of my 60th birthday.(We’d returned home to discover that the four tomato plants I’d put into the ground in June, had nearly swallowed up the rest of the vegetable garden I’d planted at that same time. None of them ripe yet, but not too far off. I love tomatoes in late summer, especially when I can pick them ripe just a few steps from the back door. I don’t think I’ve ever seen such energetic tomato plants, though; it’s awe-inspiring!) We invited a few hundred kindred souls, friends, family members, wine geeks and gadabouts to attend, in a park in the East Bay hills, a pig roast for the occasion. 2007 is, of course, the year of the pig, in the Chinese zodiac, and the year of my birth was also of the porcine persuasion, so the pig roast seemed appropriate. And since, in the insouciance of youth I’d never imagined I’d ever be as old as this, that I would turn 60 “when pigs fly,” by God, thence came the title of this celebration. About 130 or 140 people showed up for the party, I think. I had a wonderful time. It was a breathtakingly pretty day, in a grove of really splendid, elegant Eucalyptus trees, sunny, plenty of cooling breeze from the Bay. Everyone was in a festive mood, the kids were all running around having a blast. We ate, we drank, we sang. Cornelia spearheaded the composition and performance of a song in my honor that brought the house down, and left me speechless with love. Some very dear friends from out of town came for the party; perhaps you’ve heard of them? The Great Leftfielders? (see: Organolepticians #31)On Sunday afternoon, the 19th, my real birthday, we spent a portion of the afternoon in the shade of the big Live Oak in our backyard, with guitars, trading songs, and just hanging out. I had to go into the house for something, and heard the phone ring in my office. I imagined it might be someone calling to find out if it was too late to RSVP for the pig roast. (It’s happened!) It was Ron Mansfield, my main man from the Foothills, who’d been unable to get to the party because he’d been up to his neck in peaches. Everything was getting ripe, and quickly. Now it was the grapes’ turn; the new field of Gamay, at Barsotti Ranch was sugaring up fast, did I want to come look at it? I had a bunch of folks tell me that I should spend at least 10 days celebrating my 60th birthday, but I think I’m going to have to save the last four or five of those until after the grapes are all in, fermented, pressed out and tucked away for a long winter’s nap. Now, where’d I put that danged hydrometer? Steve Edmunds

Join the organolepticians!

organoleptic
(ôr'ge nl ep'tik, ôr gan'l ep'-), adj. 1. perceived by a sense organ. 2. capable of detecting a sensory stimulus. [1850-55; < F organoleptique = organo- ORGANO + -leptique < Gk leptikós disposed to accept (lept(ós), v. adj. of lambánein to take + -ikos -IC)]

--Random House Webster's
College Dictionary

The Edmunds St. John Dictionary of Etymological Arcana defines organoleptics broadly and simply as tasting events. To stay in the know, you should subscribe to the organolepticians, our online newsletter of announcements, thoughts, vintage tasting notes, whatever strikes us. To join, just send an email to organolepticians-request@EdmundsStJohn.com with only the word subscribe in the body of the message.

The organolepticians at work


Number 82 (May 27, 2010)
A Few Thoughts Regarding Syrah, 25 Years Into The Parade...
Number 81 (February 8, 2010)
Time Out of Mind
Number 80 (November 6, 2009)
Whoppin' Good Time!
Number 79 (September 26, 2009)
What’s In a Name?
Number 78 (July 27, 2009)
Beauty In The Beast (The Baby and the Bathwater)
Number 77 (24 March, 2009)
April Starlight
Number 76 ()
First The Tide Rushes In
Number 75 (November 25, 2007)
When The Hours Turn to Smoke
Number 74 ()
Home Grown Tomatoes
Number 73 (February 28, 2007)
Late Winter Offering
Number 72 (September 4, 2006)
Me and My Shadow
Number 71 (August 13th, 2006)
Ridin' Six White Horses (Welcome to Peoria!)
Number 70 (June 20th, 2006)
Hobo's Lullaby
Number 69 (May 27th, 2006)
Might be Nothing but Words
Number 68 (January 13th, 2006)
Seeing Things
Number 67 (December 9th, 2005)
Across the Great Divide
Number 66 (November 28th, 2005)
Wild Card (When Worlds Collide)
Number 65 (November 1st, 2005)
Just Another Whistlestop
Number 64 (October 24th, 2005)
Dead To The World
Number 63 (October 12th, 2005)
Not a County Maintained Road
Number 62 (September 25th, 2005)
Knock, Knock, Knockin'
Number 61 (August 1st, 2005)
The Heart Laid Bare
Number 60 (July 17th, 2005)
Ship Of Fools
Number 59 (June 14th, 2005)
Good Things From The Garden (The Terroir Blues)
Number 58 (May 22nd, 2005)
Jack O'Diamonds (I Know You Of Old)
Number 57 (April 10th, 2005)
Whiskey Before Breakfast (And other songs of the itinerant...)
Number 56 (February 6th, 2005)
Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Number 55 (December 20th, 2004)
Original Sin
Number 54 (October 29th, 2004)
Harmonicas and Virgins
Number 53 (October 2nd, 2004)
I Can't Help It If I'm Lucky
Number 52 (August 5th, 2004)
Way Up North
Number 51 (June 28th, 2004)
Can't Forget the Motor City
Number 50 (June 2nd, 2004)
Diamonds In The Rough
Number 49 (May 17th, 2004)
The Miles Could Tell a Million Tales
Number 48 (April 12th, 2004)
Lo, How a Rose
Number 47 (March 5th, 2004)
First Bird
Number 46 (January 31st, 2004)
I Wanna Be Like Mike
Number 45 (November 2, 2003)
Ghost Stories
Number 44 (October 14, 2003)
Extra Innings
Number 43 (September 26, 2003)
Sowing On The Mountain
Number 42 (August 29, 2003)
The Fugitive/The One-Armed Man
Number 41 (July 20, 2003)
Tales of Wining and Dining
Number 40 (June 13, 2003)
Wonder If We Know Just Who We Are
Number 39 (May 13, 2003)
Blast from the Past
Number 38 (March 2, 2003)
Breakfast of Champions
Number 37 (December 14, 2002)
Talkin Bout Good News!
Number 36 (November 27, 2002)
Merging with the Energy
Number 35 (October 27, 2002)
After the Summer
Number 34 (Labor Day, September 2, 2002)
Ban des Vendanges 2002: Gamay Shelter!
Number 33 (August 25, 2002)
Waitin' for You
Number 32 (August 14, 2002)
Got the Butterflies
Number 31 (August 11, 2002)
The Great Leftfielders
Number 30 (July 2, 2002)
The King of Luckytown
Number 29 (June 24, 2002)
Rhônesome and Ramblin': In Search Of A Linear Narrative
Number 28 (May 21, 2002)
Ramblin' Blues: In search of the World's Greatest Pizza
Number 27 (April 25, 2002)
Ramblin' Fever (On the trail of the Sacred Energy)
Number 26 (April 18, 2002)
The View from Here
Number 25 (March 12, 2002)
I Started Out on Burgundy
Number 24 (January 21, 2002)
The Devil Made Me Do It
Number 23 (December 26, 2001)
All is Calm, All is Bright
Number 22 (November 8, 2001)
I Don't Think We're In Kansas Anymore, Toto
Number 21 (September 17, 2001)
911 COMES CALLING (I'll Take Any Good News I Can Find)
Number 20 (September 3, 2001)
A CASE OF THE VAPORS: Labor Day, 2001
Number 19 (September 2, 2001)
2001: THE ODDYSSEY THAT WOULD NOT DIE: Stop Me If You've Heard this Before
Number 18 (June 26, 2001)
The Myth of Sisyphus
Number 17 (May 29, 2001)
ANOTHER ROADSIDE ATTRACTION
Number 16 (February 19, 2001)
IN THE BLEAK MIDWINTER:
Number 15 (January 9, 2001)
FIRST MUSTER, DOUBLENAUGHT ONE: Sound the Trumpets!
Number 14 (November 27, 2000)
WHOLE LOTTA SHAKIN' GOIN' ON
Number 13 (November 6, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Good to the Last Drop
Number 12 (October 27, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: The Wheels Come Off
Number 11 (October 17, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Rainy Day, Man
Number 10 (October 4, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Lord Willin' and the Crick Don't Rise
Number 9 (September 25, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Dancing with Lunacy
Number 8 (September 14, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Read 'Em and Weep!
Number 7 (September 2, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Is it September Yet?
Number 6 (August 24, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Back to the Future
Number 5 (August 20, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: We Can't Go On Meeting this Way
Number 4 (August 16, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: Maybe it was the Full Moon
Number 3 (August 14, 2000)
UPDATE: VINTAGE TWO-TRIPLENAUGHT: First Stirrings of Harvest
Number 2 (August 4, 2000)
Hospice du Rhône 2000, Revisited
Number 1 (June 2000)
What's New?
Number 0 (October 6, 1999)
Out Standing in His Field


© 2006 Edmunds St. John
1331 Walnut Street
Berkeley, CA 94709
t: (510) 981.1510
f: (510) 981.1610
e: info@EdmundsStJohn.com