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#winespeak
wine-stained-dawn · 1 year
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Have you ever posted a selfie? I a curious about the blogger.
No I’ve never posted a selfie on here. Maybe I will one day? 🤔 I don’t take that many pictures of myself though.
Have a great day/night! ✨
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linguistlist-blog · 7 months
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TOC: Cognitive Linguistic Studies Vol. 10, No. 1 (2023)
ICYMI: 2023. iv, 257 pp. Table of Contents ARTICLES Russian equivalents of the English over : A cognitive linguistic analysis Marika Kalyuga pp. 1–32 Winespeak in wine’s pics: How metaphor and metonymy construct a visual winespeak narrative in the manga Drops of God Iju Hsu pp. 33–56 Metonymy in the nomenclature of Japanese traditional colors Kiyoko Toratani pp. 57–84 Are metaphorical classes essentially abstract? Omid Khatin-Zadeh, Zahra Eskandari, Florencia Reali, Hassan Banaruee & Fernando Mar http://dlvr.it/Sy3VXy
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daraprispumanti · 3 years
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Il simpatico umorismo di #RonaldSearle : #winewriter
#sketches #caricature #winetasters #winespeak #graphis
Ronald William Fordham Searle (1920-2001), fumettista satirico,  scultore, illustratore inglese, creatore della St Trinian's School. 
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jonesylium · 4 years
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Tiny strong hothead+ tall wiry winespeaker = good content
it's a crackship...
It's between ocs (mine and friends. @caemielilium ) but....
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mnwinelover · 5 years
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4 Simple Steps for Tasting Wine
Wine can be intimidating, but it really doesn’t have to be. Here are 4 simple steps to make wine more approachable and enjoyable. (Warning: some “winespeak” ahead.)
Step 1. Sight – Look at the color of the wine as you hold it up to the light. The color offers insight into the intensity, opacity and viscosity of the wine you are tasting. (Viscous wines have higher alcohol and/or residual sugar.)
Step 2. Smell – Swirl the wine in your glass to let it breathe, then hold it up to your nose and sniff.  What do you smell? Citrus?  Strawberry? Blackberry? Lemongrass? Green apple? Is it Earthy? Spicy? Oaky? Smoky? Smelling the wine can also help you detect wine faults (think wet dog) that will help you avoid a bad wine.
Step 3.  Taste – Take a large sip and let it coat your mouth and let the wine sit on your tongue a bit. Then take a few smaller sips. What do you taste? Was it sweet, semi-sweet, dry, bitter? Did you taste any of the flavors you smelled? Try to pick out at least 3 fruit flavors and 3 others, one at a time.
Step 4. Finish - How did the wine “finish” – the sensation it leaves in your mouth once it’s consumed? Was is smooth, tart, acidic, bitter, fruity?  Did you like it? Not your thing? Keep in mind there is no shame in dumping a wine you didn’t like.
Be sure to cleanse your palate in between sips with crackers or a sip of water (or both). Tasting wine before you buy is a great way to find a wine you really enjoy and/or help you avoid one that’s really not your thing. Everyone’s palate is different, which is part of the joy of wine drinking. There truly is something for everyone. Enjoy! 
(Source: Wine Folly)  
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delfinamaggiousa · 4 years
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A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy
Inside a Greenwich Village comedy club on a sweaty Wednesday evening in July 2019, Sam Mushman takes the stage. He starts out his seven-minute set talking about one of his obvious physical features: his height. He’s 6-foot-6 and describes to the audience how women he’s dated believe his stature makes him a good fighter. He disagrees.
“Let’s be honest. I have bad knees and soft hands. I’m no more useful than a giraffe.” The audience laughs. “During the day,” Mushman goes on, “I’m a sommelier. If you don’t know what that word means, its French for self-righteous prick.”
Mushman is a Level 2 Certified Sommelier with the Court of Master Sommeliers and he’s the beverage director at Arthouse Wine Bar on the Upper West Side. But his 9-to-5 (or 12-to-7, depending on the day) gig is not as glamorous as it may sound. While Mushman’s day job revolves around wine, his duties are more focused on managerial tasks — managing people, inventory, and operations. His day-to-day work largely consists of booking rooftop events, making the staff schedule, and overseeing payroll. And the office where he spends most of his time is in the basement of the Arthouse Hotel, where the approximately seven-foot ceilings are only just tall enough for the ex-college basketball player.
Arthouse Wine Bar’s beverage director, Sam Mushman. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
Earlier, on the day of his comedy show, Mushman’s schedule at the Arthouse Wine Bar was packed. He spent the morning dealing with paperwork and staring at a computer screen, organizing the scheduling for his staff of seven, making sure they all got their requested days off. That part, he said, is like trying to solve a sudoku puzzle. At 2 p.m., he met with a wine sales representative and tasted through a flight of nine wines. Listening to him speak with the rep was like listening to a conversation in a foreign language.
“Oh, it’s got a little funk to it,” said Mushman, describing the first wine. “Can you send me the case drop on that?”
“The structure is so nice,” the sales rep added.
“This is like roasted red pepper all day.”
“Great mineral complexity.”
“[Sommeliers] are dissecting [wine] on such a psychotic level,” Mushman explained. “We can sometimes get caught up in all of the ‘Is this more roasted red pepper or is this more new oak?’ That’s our lingo.”
Later, when deciding which wines to put on Arthouse’s menu, Mushman went ahead and translated his winespeak into layman’s terms for his customers. On the menu, he prefers to use short, simple phrases to describe the wines. One Sauvignon Blanc, for example, is listed as “crisp, citrus, grassy, minerally.” A Zinfandel is identified with notes like “jammy, oaky vanilla, cedar, chocolate.”
Mushman is an easygoing guy in a profession that’s sometimes intimidating to people who don’t know a lot about wine, and part of his job is to help make the confusing world of wine approachable to all of the people visiting the wine bar.
Arthouse Wine Bar and Arthouse Hotel lobby. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
One way he does this is by making the wine list prices as approachable as possible. “I try to pick wines that are off the beaten path that don’t cost as much,” Mushman said. For instance, he had a Sauvignon Blanc from Sancerre in France’s Loire Valley on his by-the-glass menu. But since Sancerre’s prices tend to be on the higher side, Mushman selected one of the sales rep’s other Sauvignon Blancs from a producer farther down the Loire River outside the Sancerre appellation. “It’s [grown] in the same soil,” Mushman pointed out. “Now I can offer what tastes to me like a bad-ass Sancerre for $12 or $13 — and people can experience it.”
After the meeting with the sales rep, Mushman went to work moving bottles around and unpacking boxes filled with booze. Walking between the narrow shelves, he bent down to check the bottles, turning a few to make sure the labels were facing out.
It’s hard to imagine that this is what a man who talks openly about his role-playing sex life on stage does all day. But Mushman says that comedians and sommeliers share a number of similarities. “Sommeliers are almost like comedians in a way,” he said. “You think comedians [and sommeliers] are these egotistical, loud, abrasive, crazy people. When, really, we’re all just emotionally crippled, overly self-deprecating and usually pretty self-aware.”
Mushman fell in love with comedy even before he fell in love with wine. While attending Holy Family University in Philadelphia, he wanted something to take his mind off the pressure of tough basketball games, so he started listening to comedy albums.
“I thought it was such a cool art form,” he said. “I thought some of these guys were rock stars, so I looked up some open mics in Philly.”
After graduating with his degree in communications in 2012, Mushman made the move to New York to pursue comedy, and it was there that he also found wine. Between unpaid comedy gigs and his then-desk job selling TV ads, Mushman started hanging out at Willow Creek Winery in Cape May, N.J.
He became so fascinated with wine that he quit his desk job and took a job at Willow Creek in 2014 managing guest services. From there, he earned his introductory sommelier certification, and he’s since gone on to hold several other positions in the service industry, including wine director at Public, an Ian Schrager hotel in downtown Manhattan.
The rest of Mushman’s afternoon at Arthouse was taken up by meetings. He met with an Italian winemaker, a potential DJ for the weekly Rosé on the Roof program, and then did a walkthrough of the Art Hotel’s rooftop space with a potential client interested in renting it for a party.
Mushman’s latest venture is an hour-long comedy special called “Vino-Comic” that he’s performing in the tri-state area. It showcases both of his loves — wine and humor — in one hour-long segment. In it, he talks about wine culture and somms, and he concludes the show with an interactive wine tasting, in which he assesses wines from the wineries that host him. He says his show is meant for wine lovers who don’t take themselves too seriously. That is certainly sommelier and comedian Sam Mushman.
The article A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/beverage-director-day-in-life-nyc-wine-bar/
source https://vinology1.wordpress.com/2020/01/15/a-day-in-the-life-of-a-nyc-wine-bar-director-includes-stand-up-comedy/
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wine-porn · 4 years
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WINESPEAK PASO ROBLES is THIS WEEK. Last call, and this is a sold-out industry-only week-long event, BUT! there are a few tickets left to the 2 PUBLIC EVENTS: the Wines Of The World Grand Tasting at the Lake Pavilion in Atascadero on TUESDAY and the BYOB Dinner on Wednesday at The Carlton Hotel. At the tasting you will be poured wines you have only HEARD about and at the dinner, you will see people you have only READ about (and these people dig DEEP into their cellars for the BYOB part). Not much notice, I know, but this event is only in its 3rd year and it just gets bigger and better, on-track to become Paso's signature wine-event of the year. So even if you can't call in sick on Tue or Wed, follow them, get @winespeakpaso ON YOUR RADAR for next year. TICKETS▶️ https://www.winespeakpaso.com/ or link in their bio. DO IT NOW! oh and hi @oenophile.babe I SEE YOU (at Ancient Peaks Winery) https://www.instagram.com/p/B7OqG6unTP9/?igshid=149qi32uxjp2h
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lazilywingedcowboyx · 5 years
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aircraft appointment defeat sight trail deep expansion winespeaker boss captain obvious vary assault analyze comfortable
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wine-stained-dawn · 3 years
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do you ever just submit something thinking "fuck it, I don't care anymore" but then 5-seconds later you realize you actually care very very much and are seized by a gripping anxiety.
Yeah.
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linguistlist-blog · 7 months
Text
TOC: Cognitive Linguistic Studies Vol. 10, No. 1 (2023)
2023. iv, 257 pp. Table of Contents ARTICLES Russian equivalents of the English over : A cognitive linguistic analysis Marika Kalyuga pp. 1–32 Winespeak in wine’s pics: How metaphor and metonymy construct a visual winespeak narrative in the manga Drops of God Iju Hsu pp. 33–56 Metonymy in the nomenclature of Japanese traditional colors Kiyoko Toratani pp. 57–84 Are metaphorical classes essentially abstract? Omid Khatin-Zadeh, Zahra Eskandari, Florencia Reali, Hassan Banaruee & Fernando Mar http://dlvr.it/Sy127r
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foreverisnowforever · 5 years
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The Uselessness Of Winespeak
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chelceeamberr · 6 years
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You know, I wrote you letters you will never receive. I made playlists in your honor... in our honor. I spent hours trying to figure out what happened to us. I never got my playlist, I never got my letters.
& that made all the difference
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existentialwineguy · 5 years
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More things I love... . . . #love #sexy #sayyes #wine #wines #wineconnection#wineenthusiast #craftwine #redwine #whitewine #vino #wineporn #drinkwine #winelife #winery#drinks #cocktails #winegeek#existentialwineguy #foodie #foodporn#winepoet #winepoetry #winespeak#winestagram #visitsacramento#visitcalifornia #916 #existentialmemes #winewednesday #winethoughts (at Sacramento, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bqu8uXkH-js/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1lmya0jspj27e
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daylesfordlonghouse · 3 years
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A morning making this delicious Medlar and Apple Chutney. Just about to get some Blue Cheese from @winespeake to go with it, and put it to the test. #daylesfordlonghouse #dlonghouse #medlarchutney #medlars #countrycuisine #farmhousecooking #preserves https://www.instagram.com/p/CQDCZxkDtdr/?utm_medium=tumblr
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wineanddinosaur · 4 years
Text
A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy
Inside a Greenwich Village comedy club on a sweaty Wednesday evening in July 2019, Sam Mushman takes the stage. He starts out his seven-minute set talking about one of his obvious physical features: his height. He’s 6-foot-6 and describes to the audience how women he’s dated believe his stature makes him a good fighter. He disagrees.
“Let’s be honest. I have bad knees and soft hands. I’m no more useful than a giraffe.” The audience laughs. “During the day,” Mushman goes on, “I’m a sommelier. If you don’t know what that word means, its French for self-righteous prick.”
Mushman is a Level 2 Certified Sommelier with the Court of Master Sommeliers and he’s the beverage director at Arthouse Wine Bar on the Upper West Side. But his 9-to-5 (or 12-to-7, depending on the day) gig is not as glamorous as it may sound. While Mushman’s day job revolves around wine, his duties are more focused on managerial tasks — managing people, inventory, and operations. His day-to-day work largely consists of booking rooftop events, making the staff schedule, and overseeing payroll. And the office where he spends most of his time is in the basement of the Arthouse Hotel, where the approximately seven-foot ceilings are only just tall enough for the ex-college basketball player.
Arthouse Wine Bar’s beverage director, Sam Mushman. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
Earlier, on the day of his comedy show, Mushman’s schedule at the Arthouse Wine Bar was packed. He spent the morning dealing with paperwork and staring at a computer screen, organizing the scheduling for his staff of seven, making sure they all got their requested days off. That part, he said, is like trying to solve a sudoku puzzle. At 2 p.m., he met with a wine sales representative and tasted through a flight of nine wines. Listening to him speak with the rep was like listening to a conversation in a foreign language.
“Oh, it’s got a little funk to it,” said Mushman, describing the first wine. “Can you send me the case drop on that?”
“The structure is so nice,” the sales rep added.
“This is like roasted red pepper all day.”
“Great mineral complexity.”
“[Sommeliers] are dissecting [wine] on such a psychotic level,” Mushman explained. “We can sometimes get caught up in all of the ‘Is this more roasted red pepper or is this more new oak?’ That’s our lingo.”
Later, when deciding which wines to put on Arthouse’s menu, Mushman went ahead and translated his winespeak into layman’s terms for his customers. On the menu, he prefers to use short, simple phrases to describe the wines. One Sauvignon Blanc, for example, is listed as “crisp, citrus, grassy, minerally.” A Zinfandel is identified with notes like “jammy, oaky vanilla, cedar, chocolate.”
Mushman is an easygoing guy in a profession that’s sometimes intimidating to people who don’t know a lot about wine, and part of his job is to help make the confusing world of wine approachable to all of the people visiting the wine bar.
Arthouse Wine Bar and Arthouse Hotel lobby. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
One way he does this is by making the wine list prices as approachable as possible. “I try to pick wines that are off the beaten path that don’t cost as much,” Mushman said. For instance, he had a Sauvignon Blanc from Sancerre in France’s Loire Valley on his by-the-glass menu. But since Sancerre’s prices tend to be on the higher side, Mushman selected one of the sales rep’s other Sauvignon Blancs from a producer farther down the Loire River outside the Sancerre appellation. “It’s [grown] in the same soil,” Mushman pointed out. “Now I can offer what tastes to me like a bad-ass Sancerre for $12 or $13 — and people can experience it.”
After the meeting with the sales rep, Mushman went to work moving bottles around and unpacking boxes filled with booze. Walking between the narrow shelves, he bent down to check the bottles, turning a few to make sure the labels were facing out.
It’s hard to imagine that this is what a man who talks openly about his role-playing sex life on stage does all day. But Mushman says that comedians and sommeliers share a number of similarities. “Sommeliers are almost like comedians in a way,” he said. “You think comedians [and sommeliers] are these egotistical, loud, abrasive, crazy people. When, really, we’re all just emotionally crippled, overly self-deprecating and usually pretty self-aware.”
Mushman fell in love with comedy even before he fell in love with wine. While attending Holy Family University in Philadelphia, he wanted something to take his mind off the pressure of tough basketball games, so he started listening to comedy albums.
“I thought it was such a cool art form,” he said. “I thought some of these guys were rock stars, so I looked up some open mics in Philly.”
After graduating with his degree in communications in 2012, Mushman made the move to New York to pursue comedy, and it was there that he also found wine. Between unpaid comedy gigs and his then-desk job selling TV ads, Mushman started hanging out at Willow Creek Winery in Cape May, N.J.
He became so fascinated with wine that he quit his desk job and took a job at Willow Creek in 2014 managing guest services. From there, he earned his introductory sommelier certification, and he’s since gone on to hold several other positions in the service industry, including wine director at Public, an Ian Schrager hotel in downtown Manhattan.
The rest of Mushman’s afternoon at Arthouse was taken up by meetings. He met with an Italian winemaker, a potential DJ for the weekly Rosé on the Roof program, and then did a walkthrough of the Art Hotel’s rooftop space with a potential client interested in renting it for a party.
Mushman’s latest venture is an hour-long comedy special called “Vino-Comic” that he’s performing in the tri-state area. It showcases both of his loves — wine and humor — in one hour-long segment. In it, he talks about wine culture and somms, and he concludes the show with an interactive wine tasting, in which he assesses wines from the wineries that host him. He says his show is meant for wine lovers who don’t take themselves too seriously. That is certainly sommelier and comedian Sam Mushman.
The article A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/beverage-director-day-in-life-nyc-wine-bar/
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isaiahrippinus · 4 years
Text
A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy
Inside a Greenwich Village comedy club on a sweaty Wednesday evening in July 2019, Sam Mushman takes the stage. He starts out his seven-minute set talking about one of his obvious physical features: his height. He’s 6-foot-6 and describes to the audience how women he’s dated believe his stature makes him a good fighter. He disagrees.
“Let’s be honest. I have bad knees and soft hands. I’m no more useful than a giraffe.” The audience laughs. “During the day,” Mushman goes on, “I’m a sommelier. If you don’t know what that word means, its French for self-righteous prick.”
Mushman is a Level 2 Certified Sommelier with the Court of Master Sommeliers and he’s the beverage director at Arthouse Wine Bar on the Upper West Side. But his 9-to-5 (or 12-to-7, depending on the day) gig is not as glamorous as it may sound. While Mushman’s day job revolves around wine, his duties are more focused on managerial tasks — managing people, inventory, and operations. His day-to-day work largely consists of booking rooftop events, making the staff schedule, and overseeing payroll. And the office where he spends most of his time is in the basement of the Arthouse Hotel, where the approximately seven-foot ceilings are only just tall enough for the ex-college basketball player.
Arthouse Wine Bar’s beverage director, Sam Mushman. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
Earlier, on the day of his comedy show, Mushman’s schedule at the Arthouse Wine Bar was packed. He spent the morning dealing with paperwork and staring at a computer screen, organizing the scheduling for his staff of seven, making sure they all got their requested days off. That part, he said, is like trying to solve a sudoku puzzle. At 2 p.m., he met with a wine sales representative and tasted through a flight of nine wines. Listening to him speak with the rep was like listening to a conversation in a foreign language.
“Oh, it’s got a little funk to it,” said Mushman, describing the first wine. “Can you send me the case drop on that?”
“The structure is so nice,” the sales rep added.
“This is like roasted red pepper all day.”
“Great mineral complexity.”
“[Sommeliers] are dissecting [wine] on such a psychotic level,” Mushman explained. “We can sometimes get caught up in all of the ‘Is this more roasted red pepper or is this more new oak?’ That’s our lingo.”
Later, when deciding which wines to put on Arthouse’s menu, Mushman went ahead and translated his winespeak into layman’s terms for his customers. On the menu, he prefers to use short, simple phrases to describe the wines. One Sauvignon Blanc, for example, is listed as “crisp, citrus, grassy, minerally.” A Zinfandel is identified with notes like “jammy, oaky vanilla, cedar, chocolate.”
Mushman is an easygoing guy in a profession that’s sometimes intimidating to people who don’t know a lot about wine, and part of his job is to help make the confusing world of wine approachable to all of the people visiting the wine bar.
Arthouse Wine Bar and Arthouse Hotel lobby. Photos courtesy of Arthouse Hotel New York City.
One way he does this is by making the wine list prices as approachable as possible. “I try to pick wines that are off the beaten path that don’t cost as much,” Mushman said. For instance, he had a Sauvignon Blanc from Sancerre in France’s Loire Valley on his by-the-glass menu. But since Sancerre’s prices tend to be on the higher side, Mushman selected one of the sales rep’s other Sauvignon Blancs from a producer farther down the Loire River outside the Sancerre appellation. “It’s [grown] in the same soil,” Mushman pointed out. “Now I can offer what tastes to me like a bad-ass Sancerre for $12 or $13 — and people can experience it.”
After the meeting with the sales rep, Mushman went to work moving bottles around and unpacking boxes filled with booze. Walking between the narrow shelves, he bent down to check the bottles, turning a few to make sure the labels were facing out.
It’s hard to imagine that this is what a man who talks openly about his role-playing sex life on stage does all day. But Mushman says that comedians and sommeliers share a number of similarities. “Sommeliers are almost like comedians in a way,” he said. “You think comedians [and sommeliers] are these egotistical, loud, abrasive, crazy people. When, really, we’re all just emotionally crippled, overly self-deprecating and usually pretty self-aware.”
Mushman fell in love with comedy even before he fell in love with wine. While attending Holy Family University in Philadelphia, he wanted something to take his mind off the pressure of tough basketball games, so he started listening to comedy albums.
“I thought it was such a cool art form,” he said. “I thought some of these guys were rock stars, so I looked up some open mics in Philly.”
After graduating with his degree in communications in 2012, Mushman made the move to New York to pursue comedy, and it was there that he also found wine. Between unpaid comedy gigs and his then-desk job selling TV ads, Mushman started hanging out at Willow Creek Winery in Cape May, N.J.
He became so fascinated with wine that he quit his desk job and took a job at Willow Creek in 2014 managing guest services. From there, he earned his introductory sommelier certification, and he’s since gone on to hold several other positions in the service industry, including wine director at Public, an Ian Schrager hotel in downtown Manhattan.
The rest of Mushman’s afternoon at Arthouse was taken up by meetings. He met with an Italian winemaker, a potential DJ for the weekly Rosé on the Roof program, and then did a walkthrough of the Art Hotel’s rooftop space with a potential client interested in renting it for a party.
Mushman’s latest venture is an hour-long comedy special called “Vino-Comic” that he’s performing in the tri-state area. It showcases both of his loves — wine and humor — in one hour-long segment. In it, he talks about wine culture and somms, and he concludes the show with an interactive wine tasting, in which he assesses wines from the wineries that host him. He says his show is meant for wine lovers who don’t take themselves too seriously. That is certainly sommelier and comedian Sam Mushman.
The article A Day in the Life of a NYC Wine Bar Director Includes Stand-up Comedy appeared first on VinePair.
source https://vinepair.com/articles/beverage-director-day-in-life-nyc-wine-bar/ source https://vinology1.tumblr.com/post/190273143104
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