Matteo_Lahm
Senior Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2021
- Messages
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- 835
you are spot on. The blend is 60% Zin 20% Petite Sirah and 20% Syrah. The zin is the base of the flavor profile.
It sounds good to me. While not quite in the same arena, I made a blend of 40% Zin, 40% Merlot, 20% Bordeaux grapes, which I really like. Depending on the ratio of Zin in this kit, I expect it will have characteristic Zin fruitiness with extra backbone from the other grapes.
@Matteo_Lahm, can you post the varietal ratios of the blend kits? I expect that will be helpful to folks in deciding what to buy.
The name is referential to the blend because that is where it originated but not the juice itself. In the future I expect we will be able to expand enough to start offering regional specific varietals but that will take time. For now we are coming up with our own versions of regional blends. A few of the new ones are really good and original. We will announce more in the coming weeks. Anyway, for now I am trying to source Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy. Italian concentrates will likely be our first International juices.@Matteo_Lahm Does the Sonoma blend use Sonoma juice? Implicitly it should, but the description only says that this blend was popularized in Sonoma.
May not apply as FWK is selling juice that qualifies as a 'Meritage Blend' and 'Meritage' is licensed by the case of wine produced. I'd say that if you used FWK kits to make retail wine then you are responsible for joining and paying the license fee.Just curious: Are you paying the licensing fee to the Meritage Alliance for using that term, or are you winging it?
May not apply as FWK is selling juice that qualifies as a 'Meritage Blend' and 'Meritage' is licensed by the case of wine produced. I'd say that if you used FWK kits to make retail wine then you are responsible for joining and paying the license fee.
Depends upon the lawyers probably. If you look at the Meritage licensing agreement it only talks about wine produced, nothing about juice, other than the allowable varietals for the blending. And seeing the number of varietals allowed I don't see how they can spec any of it as a brand. Worse comes to worse then FWK could just call it a Cab/Merlot blend, at 60/40 and give the Meritage Alliance the finger.I agree with "may not apply." But, of course, it also "may apply."
Emphasis mine. THAT is an interesting distinction. If a US winery is selling solely in state, they are exempt. While that seems like an error in the licensing agreement, it's likely there to address a more significant problem (whatever that may be). IIRC, the MA is based in CA, so the idea of selling only in state is a much lesser concern.The trademark, and the Meritage Assoc. licensing agreement, are both limited to the sale of wine in interstate commerce.
I'm in conflict. In 2020 I made a Meritage that is 67% Merlot and 33% CS, CF, Malbec, and Petit Verdot. That one is in compliance.To be good neighbors to our winery brothers, we probably should (but are not required to) limit any use of the term to the type of wine they define it be:
Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy, huh? Sign me up, 1 of each please-but don't tell my CFO.The name is referential to the blend because that is where it originated but not the juice itself. In the future I expect we will be able to expand enough to start offering regional specific varietals but that will take time. For now we are coming up with our own versions of regional blends. A few of the new ones are really good and original. We will announce more in the coming weeks. Anyway, for now I am trying to source Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy. Italian concentrates will likely be our first International juices.
Blend percentages:
Sonoma is 60/20/20 zin, petite. syrah
Meritage is 60/40 cab, merlot
Baby Super Tuscan is 60/40 Syrah, Merlot
Montepulciano….. of course I’m interested.Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy, huh? Sign me up, 1 of each please-but don't tell my CFO.
The name is referential to the blend because that is where it originated but not the juice itself. In the future I expect we will be able to expand enough to start offering regional specific varietals but that will take time. For now we are coming up with our own versions of regional blends. A few of the new ones are really good and original. We will announce more in the coming weeks. Anyway, for now I am trying to source Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy. Italian concentrates will likely be our first International juices.
Blend percentages:
Sonoma is 60/20/20 zin, petite. syrah
Meritage is 60/40 cab, merlot
Baby Super Tuscan is 60/40 Syrah, Merlot
Great. Thanks for the update. Any plans for a Dolcetto ? I would love a Dolcetto.The name is referential to the blend because that is where it originated but not the juice itself. In the future I expect we will be able to expand enough to start offering regional specific varietals but that will take time. For now we are coming up with our own versions of regional blends. A few of the new ones are really good and original. We will announce more in the coming weeks. Anyway, for now I am trying to source Sangiovese and Montepulciano from Italy. Italian concentrates will likely be our first International juices.
Blend percentages:
Sonoma is 60/20/20 zin, petite. syrah
Meritage is 60/40 cab, merlot
Baby Super Tuscan is 60/40 Syrah, Merlot
In practice, it's not. When used in the sense of establishing federal jurisdiction, "interstate commerce" means "all commerce Congress has the power to regulate," which is virtually synonymous with "all commerce in the USA." Like most areas of federal law (tax, wage & health, drugs, guns, etc.) trademark law fully applies to purely intra-state sales. Technically, there should be some interstate element lurking somewhere (e.g., some piece of equipment, office supplies, fertilizer, etc. crossed a state line at some point), but even if not, an intra-state sale "affects" interstate commerce, which the Supreme Court has found sufficient for federal law to apply.THAT [interstate commerce] is an interesting distinction.
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