Champagne is often a highlight at tastings, such as those featured during the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience, also known as NOWFE.
Wine is not only served alongside food to enhance its flavour, but it can also reflect an individual’s mood or the setting of an event. For example, Champagne is often associated with joyous celebrations. As my wine knowledge has developed through a mix of both formal and informal tastings, I found that different types of wine can be paired accordingly with each season.
As we navigate the sultry summer season, the timing of the New Orleans Wine and Food Experience couldn’t be more suitable.
The Grand Tasting is the most significant event during the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience, which offers a variety of self-guided wine tastings as part of the festival’s programme.
The annual wine festival is now scheduled for early June, taking place from June 4-9 this year. The timing is designed to help local restaurant and hospitality businesses during the typically slower season.
Personally, it’s also an opportunity for me to discover the wines that will accompany me throughout the summer.
Vinola is an upscale wine tasting event, which is part of the Orleans Food & Wine Experience (NOWFE) festival program.
NOWFE offers a variety of experiences, and there are numerous ways to engage in it, including wine dinners and wine-focused workshops and activities. Also, new events have been added this year such as a Champagne launch party and an Italian dinner on Sunday to conclude the festival week.
Noteworthy facets of this experience include large, independent wine tastings in three unique formats – the Grand Tasting, the grandest one; Vinola, a sampling of premium wines; and the Tournament of Rosés, an entire evening dedicated to rosé wine only.
The Tournament of Rosés is now an event held on the central stage on Fridays at the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience.
No matter which format you choose, a vast selection of wines, way more than anyone could possibly taste, awaits you. Thus, it’s crucial to devise a strategy. Mine has always been to focus on a specific genre or style of wine best suited for the time of year. Sometimes, it could be Italian white wines exploring the infinite varieties from that country, or perhaps French reds, which are perfect when slightly cool.
Winemakers and distributors serve from hundreds of bottles of wine at the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
Credit: NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
But there’s more than just wine tastings to experience. Below, I’ve highlighted several other ways to engage with NOWFE. Keep in mind that the event offers both individual tickets and various tiered packages. Take a look at the NOWFE website for further details on ticketing information.
One such location of interest is the courtyard at Brennan’s Restaurant located at 417 Royal St.
The NOWFE Kick-Off Celebration starts on Tuesday, June 4, from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at Brennan’s Restaurant.
Expect Brennan’s courtyard and Rooster Bar to be a hub of sparkling wine activity as the event kicks off. The party features a Champagne tasting and a ‘saberage’—a fancy term for opening Champagne bottles with a saber blade. Also, enjoy an oyster bar and appetizers, with the option to learn saberage. Tickets cost $119, with additional saberage lessons for $150.
Vinola, Thursday, June 6, 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Orpheum Theater
The Orpheum Theater in all its Beaux Arts beauty is again the venue for Vinola, and this year, its stunning Double Dealer speakeasy-style subterranean bar is the VIP lounge.
Vinola is a higher-end wine tasting that’s part of the Orleans Food & Wine Experience (NOWFE) schedule of festival events.
If you want to taste wine like a pro, Vinola is for you. This higher-end tasting has wines carrying heftier retail prices, the type you’re far less likely to encounter at consumer-oriented tastings. Local restaurants offer dishes between the wine tables.
Tickets are $215 for general admission; $280 VIP (early admission and special lounge access).
Tournament of Rosés, June 7, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Generations Hall
The Tournament of Rosés is a evening devoted to the delightful pink wine as part of the Orleans Food & Wine Experience (NOWFE) schedule of festival events.
Rosé can come in countless styles from different grapes and regions. At NOWFE, you can taste through its varieties and versatility at this night dedicated to the pink wine.
The Tournament of Rosés is an evening event that features the lovely pink wine as a central part of the Orleans Food & Wine Experience (NOWFE) program of festival functions.
Expect a bar dedicated to sparkling wines (rosé included), a cocktail bar, food offered by local eateries, a VIP lounge, DJs and the usual abundance of pink attires reflecting the festive mood of New Orleans people. The entry tickets are priced at $129, whereas VIP access is for $195 (with the entry time for VIP being 6:30 p.m.).
Customers revel in the night at the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience, which returns its Grand Tasting to the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center this year. Picture by Michael DeMocker, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune.
Grand Tasting, scheduled for Saturday, June 8, from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.
The largest event at NOWFE has been condensed into a single day, but it’s returning to the Great Hall of the convention center. This signifies that all the participating eateries will be in one place for food tasting and matching.
The Tournament of Rosés will feature a variety of wines from across the globe, and it has now been scheduled as a main Friday event at the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience.
One all-access ticket grants the holder the opportunity to sample hundreds of unique wines, accompanied by a wide range of small plate dishes from local restaurants. Regular tickets are available for $149, while VIP tickets (which include early entry at 2:30 p.m.) cost $215.
The Labs and Experiences event will be held at various locations on June 7-8.
Wine enthusiasts have the opportunity to engage with winemakers and representatives directly at the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience (NOWFE) events, sampling numerous wines in the process.
NOWFE’s labs are wine-based educational seminars, generally characterized by an enjoyable nature (most likely due to the wine involved). Simultaneously, its “experiences” are devised with the intention of providing amusement primarily, with a sprinkle of enlightenment along with added servings of wine.
A selection of dessert wines paired with sweets is a part of the instructional event at NOWFE.
These seminars take place at the Marriott Warehouse Arts District Hotel, with a variety of subjects such as wine blending, the impact of selection of glassware on the taste of the wine, and the intricacies of pétillant naturel wines – the “pét-nats” often spotted at speciality wine stores.
Various restaurants and venues host exciting experiences. This year, an outdoor wine party will be on offer at Bacchanal, featuring South American food from chefs Joaquin Rodas, Alfredo Nogueira and Wilfredo Avelar.
Bacchanal in New Orleans, a hotspot for food and wine enthusiasts in the Bywater, is a place where people love dining outside. The Times-Picayune credited the photo to Sophia Germer of NOLA.com.
A new restaurant in town will be hosting its own tapas and tempranillo party. Guests at Galatoire’s can also look forward to a sampling of its classic dishes paired with wine. Current Crop Roasting Shop will be organizing coffee roasting classes, and a pastry pairing. Reginelli’s is conducting a pizza making workshop. At Picnic Provisions & Whiskey, patrons can learn the art of mixing an old-fashioned cocktail at an expert class which culminates in a family-style fried chicken feast. Visit the event page to check for timing and ticket costs.
Restaurant Wine Dinners will take place on June 5, at various locations
Wine dinners at local restaurants paired with visiting vintners and wineries are always part of the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience.
The night is the same, but the way NOWFE’s wine dinners play out will be as varied as the host restaurants themselves. As usual, each is paired with a visiting winery for a close look at the label’s offerings.
They range from premium venues like Restaurant August and the Grill Room, to community restaurants that modify their strategies for this exclusive event, such as Junior’s on Harrison. Details, menus, and reservation links can be found at nowfe.com.
Burlesque, Bubbly & Brunch, happening on June 9, 11 a.m., at the Omni Royal Orleans.
Burlesque, Bubbly and Brunch draws the New Orleans Food & Wine Experience to a close every year, marking one of the primary events of NOWFE.
Once the Grand Tasting wraps up on Saturday, a lively Sunday brunch in true New Orleans style awaits, complete with unlimited sparkling wine, a glitter bar, and burlesque performances put on by Trixie Minx Productions. One can have this exciting experience for just $95.
Downtown New Orleans houses Gianna, an Italian dining spot, which is a venture of the Link Restaurant Group led by Rebecca Wilcomb.
Sunday Supper, arriving on June 9, 5 p.m., at Gianna
New on the schedule this year, Donald Link’s Italian restaurant Gianna will serve a family-style, four course dinner with wine pairings, led by Gianna chef Jared Heider and Ann Kim, executive chef of the Garden & Gun Club in Atlanta. Tickets at $120.
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Email Ian McNulty at imcnulty@theadvocate.com.
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