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REVEALING THE CHARM OF PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

shan_picIf you are making a list of busy women in the County, Shannon Bisnaire should be in your top ten. As Publisher and Creative Director of The County Grapevine Magazine, she is responsible for using photos and the written word to “reveal the charm of Prince Edward County.” The Niagara Grapevine, is also a “unique regional lifestyle magazine” and Bisnaire is director of both.

Each year, The County Grapevine Magazine is a proud media sponsor for TASTE! a celebration of regional cuisine. Bisnaire summarizes the support by saying “our magazine features art, culture, food and wine for the region from the unique perspective of Prince Edward County being the newest wine region in Ontario, so the TASTE! event is a perfect fit.”

The new issue of The County Grapevine Magazine has been distributed throughout the County at a variety of locations. The cover is the first indication of the quality Bisnaire puts into her work to represent this area. Inside the covers are features by award-winning wine writers such as: David Lawrason, Tony Aspler, Natalie MacLean, and Michael Pinkus. Topics of interest include regional tasting notes, profiles, and many other interesting stories.

You’ll be able to catch Bisnaire at her TASTE! a celebration of regional cuisine booth and sample the dream-worthy Chocolate Merlot Crème Brûlée. The County Grapevine Magazine will also be hosting two wine seminars with the Grape Guy, wine writer Michael Pinkus from “OntarioWineReview.com” leading a tasting of some value-priced wines.

~Ineke HS Guadagnin

JB’S IMPRINT ON THE COUNTY

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

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Connection and community: those are not just words for Teresa and Mike Bell of JB Printing. To these County natives, they are sentiments that go deeper than the County soil.

Both Bells grew up in the County. They built their home here and raised their children here. Her family’s work at a feed mill in Consecon instilled the strong ties of Teresa’s love of farming and the connection to agriculture. Today’s produce is “not oats and barley anymore but grapes” she notes, but she feels we need to “continue to honour” the local agricultural based community. “It’s important to me and it always should be in the County.”

As owners of JB Printing in Trenton, the Bells provide companies with commercial printing and lithography. During off-hours, the Bell’s hearts, hands and feet are in giving to the community. This past July, JB Printing sponsored the “Sarcoma Step and Fetch,” a fun walk, bake sale and BBQ to raise awareness for Sarcoma. Teresa is personally too familiar with this soft-tissue and bone cancer.

When the Bells were approached to sponsor TASTE! a celebration of regional cuisine, they became enthusiastic endorsers of the event. Teresa shares that she “likes the gathering of community, the mingling, the cooking, the preparing, the interactions and connections.” She wants to encourage how TASTE! brings together “everyone from grower, supplier, preparer and purchaser” under one roof.

Connection and community mean something else to Teresa. In her words, they’re about “recognizing our need for each other. There are no drop outs.”

~Ineke HS Guadagnin

OUR FAVOURITE THINGS … AT CLOSSON CHASE

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

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Okay, I admit I love showing off my County to my friends. I took guests from the city to visit Closson Chase Winery because we’d enjoyed a bottle of winemaker Deborah Paskus’ 2007 Chardonnay the night before and I wanted them to see where it came from. Mum, Dad and daughter all came away with different pictures and different things they liked most. 11-yr-old Isabella loved that the barn is purple, that purple flowers grow around the doors (Russian Sage) and that she found other purple flowers in the garden (plus one teeny tiny toad). Mum adored the art glass that frames the doors (and features on the CC logo and labels) and the vineyard at the end of the garden. Dad admired the elegant barn renovation, then did some tasting. His pick? The new release 2008 South Clos VQA released just the day before. Nik, our tasting room host, had sold 100 bottles the first day and with only about 3,500 bottles made, looks like this vintage will sell out. Very different from the 2007, this Chardonnay tastes fresh, fresh, fresh … and lovely. It’s made from the grapes of a single vineyard and it’s 100% County! (big round of applause). My old friends were impressed and I was proud. The usual story. If they make it back for the TASTE! weekend, Isabella can go off frog and toad hunting (the event is for 19 years and older) while Mum and Dad hunt down the Closson Chase booth at the Crystal Palace – sampling glasses at the ready.

Janet Davies

FIRST ENCOUNTER OF THE TASTE! KIND

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

donna-kearnsDonna Kearns, County and Quinte Living’s publisher, has been attending events in Prince Edward County even before she moved here.

Swinging through the County one day, on the way to other destinations, Kearns and a friend thought they’d stop and attend TASTE! a celebration of regional cuisine. They were delighted. Kearns felt she already had a “feel for the place” by the time she made Prince Edward County her home in 2007.

Kearns’ story of her first encounter with TASTE! parallels her vision in creating a lifestyle magazine to celebrate Prince Edward County and the Quinte region. She has published County and Quinte Living for the past three years, a magazine that features an everyday look at the community and people she loves. Kearns feels connected to the area and that through her publication she is giving a glimpse into the life in the area. “The County has a kinder and gentler feel as opposed to a bustle and yet, the people are proactive and energetic,” Kearns affirms.

Kearns became a TASTE! event supporter as she viewed the opportunity as a natural “partnership.” Both the event and her print and online magazine offer ways to experience the variety of delectable culinary treats and vineyard offerings. She is inviting people to share in the abundance of a Prince Edward County lifestyle.

We’re glad Donna Kearns drove through and returned to stay!

Ineke Guadagnin

COUNTY WINERY JOINS THE ARMY

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

caroline-granger1Caroline Granger is a Get Involved type of woman. She’s the hands-on boss at the Grange of Prince Edward, the County’s largest grape grower and winery but she lends her energies and enthusiasm to causes far beyond her own family, property and business. She’s already a director and chairman of the Governance Committee of of Farm Credit Canada, chair of Taste the County and chair of Alternatives for Women in the County. Now she’s gone and joined the Army.

Okay, not really. But Caroline Granger has created her own mission to raise $50,000 to support Ontario’s military family resource centres; not for profit organizations located on every base across Canada that support local military families.

Why this? Why now? Not long ago she and her 14-year old son Quinton were on the 401 just ahead of a procession carrying a Canadian soldier killed in Afghanistan. People stood on bridges along the route from CFB Trenton to Toronto holding Canadian flags to honour the soldier making the final journey down the “Highway of Heroes,” and she and Quinton got talking about what it would be like to be a military family.

“I got a whole different viewpoint that day,” she says, perhaps more sensitive suddenly to what military families must be experiencing.’ Rather than just feeling sad, Caroline decided to do something positive. “There is always something you can do to help,” she says. Her one-year battle plan is to donate 50 cents from every bottle of Trumpour’s Mill wine sold in LCBOs and $1 from each bottle sold in restaurants to local Military Family Resource Centres.

If you were to praise her for this admirable sacrifice, she’s likely to respond “Sacrifice? What sacrifice.” She and we know that most of us will never make the kind of sacrifices our military families make.

The $50,000 she hopes to raise will flow like good wine into special programs for children, spouses and social support systems. To paraphrase the Blood Donor motto ‘it’s in her to give.’ To Caroline, who spends as much time in the vineyard as she does in board rooms at this time of year, it’s a natural thing to do.
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“The least we can do is help make sure their families are okay,” she says. “I think soldiers appreciate that.”

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