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So you know all there is to know about good 'ol Rock n Roll...
Let's prove it, ace. Test your knowledge and reminisce about the music legends that changed the whole game.
There's a reward if you know your stuff.
This risotto is what dreams are made of. Seriously. Packed with fresh seasonal veggies from the farmers market, a bit of butter and a fistful of parmesan, this pairing takes Karma Coma Supernova to a whole new level. Take your time with this recipe – it's worth every second spent standing over the stove.
We recommend throwing on this playlist, pouring yourself a glass of Karma Coma Supernova and basking in the good vibes coming your way. ✌️
Serves 6
Ingredients:
1 qt chicken stock
water, as needed
2 ears sweet corn
1 ea yellow squash, cut into 1/2" half-moons
1 ea zucchini, cut into 1/2" half-moons
8 oz oyster mushrooms, cleaned and separated
olive oil
1 ea yellow onion, minced
1 head garlic, minced
1/2 c dry white wine
1 1/2 c Arborio rice
4 tbs butter
1 c parmesan cheese, finely grated with a microplane
kosher salt, to taste
black pepper, to taste
microgreens (optional) to garnish
Tools Needed:
chefs knife
cutting board
1 sheet pan
mixing bowl
1 large cast-iron skillet or sauté pan with 4" sides or a dutch oven
1 wooden spoon or heat-proof spatula
1 microplane
tasting spoons
serving bowls
Method:
Heat oven to 425º F
Bring chicken stock to a low simmer over the stove and hold for later use.
Cook sweet corn in salted, boiling water for 5-7 minutes or until tender. Using a sharp knife, remove kernels from the cob and set aside for later use.
Coat mushrooms in a bit of olive oil and season generously with salt and pepper. Spread evenly over a sheet pan lined with foil. Roast in the oven at 425º F for 15-20 minutes, stirring halfway through the cooking process until mushrooms are brown and slightly crispy. Set aside for later use.
Meanwhile, toss zucchini and yellow squash in olive oil and season generously with salt and pepper. Sauté over medium-high heat until edges are slightly browned and squash is just softened. Remove from pan and set aside for later use.
Finely mince onion until pieces are approximately the size of a grain of rice. Mince garlic and set aside.
In a large cast-iron skillet, heavy sauté pan or dutch oven, heat approximately 2 tablespoons olive oil until you see a slight ripple indicating the oil is hot. Add minced onions, season with salt and sweat until translucent and completely soft (taste the onions to make sure they are soft. Nobody likes crunchy onions in risotto). Do not brown. Once onions have cooked, add garlic, season and stir until fragrant. Add Arborio rice and stir to coat with oil. Keep on stirring – do not brown the rice!
When the rice has taken on a slightly translucent appearance (approximately 2-3 minutes), add the wine and stir continuously. Tip: Make sure to rub your spatula across the bottom of the pan to pick up any bits of fond from cooking the onions and garlic! Reduce wine while stirring gently until fully absorbed.
Adding 1/2 c of stock at a time, continuously stir the rice until all the liquid has been absorbed. This process may use more than 1 qt of stock – if you need more liquid, water can be used to finish the cooking process. Tip: The continuous stirring, along with the slow additions of liquid, is what creates the creamy texture Risotto is known for. Don't rush this step, and don't ever leave your pan unattended. Taste the rice throughout this process to test for doneness and season as needed. Rice should be al dente.
Add butter and parmesan and stir until fully incorporated. Add mushrooms, squash, and sweet corn, reserving a bit of each vegetable for garnish. Taste and season as needed.
To serve, garnish with a bit of the reserved vegetables, a bit of freshly grated parmesan and microgreens (optional).
Tip: Have leftovers? Cool mixture and form into 1" balls or small disks. Coat with flour, egg wash and panko to fry up for some killer Arancinis later on in the week! (These can also be frozen for up to 1 month)
Recipe by Grace Coyne
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Not going to lie, there are very few things in life that we love more than good ol' tacos.
Take your dinner to the next level with this Chile Verde recipe and a bottle of Super Geisha, our latest Pét-Nat and current obsession.
We promise you won't regret it.
Makes 1 Gal
Ingredients:
Olive Oil
5 Yellow Onions, small dice
2 heads Garlic, minced
2 Serrano Peppers, seeded & chopped
2 Jalapeño Peppers, seeded & chopped
5 lbs Pork Shoulder, cut into 1" cubes
1 qt Chicken Stock
20 Anaheim or Hatch Chiles (can substitute canned chiles if fresh are unavailable)
15 Tomatillos
1-2 Tbs Cumin, ground
1-2 Tbs Mexican Oregano
1-2 tsp Corriander, ground
Kosher Salt, to taste
Black Pepper, to taste
Method:
Heat oven to 400º F
Dice onion, Serrano and Jalapeño peppers and transfer to a bowl. Mince garlic and set aside.
Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion and chopped peppers to the pan, season with salt & pepper and sweat until soft and onions are slightly translucent. Add minced garlic and cook until fragrant (do not brown). Add Cumin, Oregano and Corriander and stir until fragrant. Remove from heat and set aside.
In a bowl, coat cubed pork with oil and season generously with salt & pepper. Allow pork to marinate for ~5 minutes. Using a dutch oven or heavy-bottomed pot, sear pork over medium-high heat in small batches until browned on all four sides. Deglaze with chicken stock in between batches, adding the deglazing liquid to cooked pork mixture. Wipe pan between uses and add fresh oil to sear the next batch. Once all the pork has been seared, combine with onion, pepper and garlic mixture.
Tip: Don't overcrowd your pan with pork – if cubes are placed too close together, you will not achieve a sear on your meat. The browning process is what helps creates the rich flavor in this dish, so take your time!
Meanwhile, remove and discard papery skins from tomatillos. Place tomatillos on a sheet pan with the whole Anaheim/Hatch chiles (if using canned chiles, only the tomatillos need to go in the oven). Drizzle with olive oil and place pan in oven to cook for approximately 10-20 minutes, or until the peppers are slightly blistered/charred and tomatillos have softened.
After removing sheet pans from the oven, place peppers into a ziplock bag for 5 minutes. This allows the skins to soften. After 5 minutes in the bag, remove skins and seeds from peppers and place them in a food processor or blender with tomatillos and puree until smooth.
Tip: Skins can be easily removed by wiping the peppers with a paper towel or gently scraping with a knife.
Add tomatillo and pepper puree to the pork mixture and simmer over low heat for approximately 2-3 hours, or until pork is fork-tender.
Serve with corn tortillas and your favorite accoutrements.
This recipe freezes well!
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How would you describe your art style to somebody that's never seen it?
I aim to encapsulate a timelessness in my work in hopes that it can live on past our lifetime. Despite my work being digitally created I try to capture the imperfection of the human hand. Timelessness and imperfection.
What are your inspirations?
My biggest inspiration is existence. In all it’s mystery and awesomeness. That, to me, is a bottomless well to draw from.
For the piece we used on the wine Going Home, what were you trying to capture?
I was hoping to capture a sense of homesickness and that feeling of being out of place and knowing there’s a place that’s more suited for you than where you are right now.
Do you see any similarities between winemaking and illustration?
I think within any form of creation there is a similarity. Humans ability to create something from what we have around us. We are innovative creatures and with enough will we can create some truly beautiful things!
My name is Daren Thomas Magee. I am an Ojai, California based freelance illustrator, muralist and designer. My inspiration comes from many sources, natural and supernatural. The aim of my work is to speak to the space between imagination and reality, my hope is to leave you to float off in that liminal space into someplace entirely new.
About Going Home
Whether it is your hometown or someplace otherwordly, finding a place of familiarity and comfort in your surroundings represents the journey that all of us are going on. Going Home.
This wine, with artwork by Ojai based artist Daren Thomas Mage, represents our journey of finding a sense of home even in the unknown. With an invigorated drive to double-down on the innovative winemaking techniques that our cellar team has become known for, we set out to create something that's probably never been seen before – an unfined, unfiltered native-yeast carbonic white wine.
Sounds like something from another planet, right? Check it. Carbonic Maceration is a process in which we place grape clusters in a covered tank and pump in carbon dioxide, which removes oxygen. Slowly, the grapes release an enzyme that converts the grape sugar into alcohol, bursting the berries without adding additional yeast. This process, combined with gravity, macerates the grapes into juice before we move them to a traditional press. Native yeasts from the grape skins start the fermentation process, which is a technique used in many natural wines.
But that's not what makes this wine so cool – carbonic maceration is a technique most often seen on red wines, not white wines. Due to volatile phenols linked to aromatics, it is quite difficult to successfully create a white wine using carbonic maceration. That's probably why nobody does it. Well, except for us.
It all started when we found this crazy white grape, originally from the southwest of France, called Petit Manseng. This grape has incredibly high natural acidity and tiny berries, and since carbonic maceration lowers acidity we figured it would be the perfect guinea pig for this treatment.
We were psyched when we pressed this experiment and realized the incredible tropical fruit purity that the wine had. After spending 5 months in neutral French Oak barrels sur lees, we bottled this masterpiece unfined and unfiltered, preserving every last drop of beauty in the barrel. It smells like a tropical paradise with notes of pineapple, blood orange rind, and toasted nuts. The palate is ripe and juicy with a broad mouthfeel that carries the fruit flavors of guava, lychee and honeydew over to the crisp yet textured finish.
$35 per bottle | 360 cases made
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That's our motto here at Tank, and when times are tough we gotta remember that we're all in this thing together. We have been beyond grateful for the outpouring of support we've seen for the Garage during these unprecedented times. Every time we see another order come in, another shoutout on Instagram, or a message in our inbox, our hearts grow an extra size. We can't wait for the day that we can open our doors and welcome all of your smiling faces back into the Garage. In the meantime, if you would like to help support our team, the best thing you can do is order our wines online. From the bottom of our hearts, THANK YOU. We wouldn't be where we are today without people like you. So stay safe, be well, and never dream alone. ![]()
The next MADE Club release is here. Going Home I Love You, California Thundercloud ![]()
Don't forget, orders of 12+ bottles ship for just $1 all day, every day. |
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With bottling on the horizon in June and July, we are in the maintenance phase of the winemaking process. That means that we are busy doing a lot of rack and returns. This process moves wine from the barrel to tank and back from the tank to the barrel, with a primary goal of removing excess sediment and introducing more oxygen into the wines. Oxygen helps freshen up reductive qualities as well as smooth out tannin structure, so it's a very important step for our Bordeaux varietals as well as more tannic grapes like Petite Sirah and Tempranillo. There are two tools that we use to complete the racking process – a bulldog or a pump. A bulldog displaces the wine using inert gas to pressurize the barrel, while a pump is a more aggressive type of movement that introduces more oxygen into the wine. We sample each barrel before racking to determine which tool is best for the job. The other important step of the racking process is barrel maintenance. While the wine is being held in the tank, we clean each barrel and rinse with Ozone, which kills any organisms in the barrel and ensures that the vessel is in tip-top condition for the rest of the aging process. After one day in the tank, the wine is placed back into the barrel and left to age. ![]()
What Tank Garage Wine Are You Obsessed With? Favorite Varietal? What's Your Dream? Favorite Band? Favorite Local Restaurant? Top 3 Songs To Listen to Right Now What Are You Doing When You're Not At The Garage? |
The man, the myth, the legend. If you didn't already know, we have the coolest cat in town runnin' our winemaking. This dude cranks out some of the best juice in the Valley and his relentless dedication to his trade continues to inspire us year in and year out. Bertus is truly one-of-a-kind, maintaining relationships with the best growers across California and gaining access to the coolest grapes we didn't even know existed. His blends are a work of art and each year we look forward to tasting his insanely-addictive cool California wines.
Bertus grew up in Cape Town, South Africa. Both of his parents loved wine tasting and he remembers running around vineyards and wineries from the time he was quite young. He attended a boarding school in Stellenbosch (a.k.a. South African wine country) and it was there that he took his very first wine appreciation course at the age of 14. He went on to study Viticulture and Enology at the University of Stellenbosch before taking the adventurous leap to the Napa Valley.
When he's not spending time tending to our barrels and blends in the cellar, he's on the road to one of the many vineyards we source from. Bertus has spent years tracking down the growers dedicated to maintaining the old vines, the underdogs and the lesser-known varietals across California. His search knows no bounds – we're pickin' clusters from Mendocino down to Santa Barbara, up to the Sierra Foothills and all the way out to the Sonoma Coast.
There's not much we can really say about Bertus that hasn't been said before. He's hands down one of the coolest people we've ever met and we can't wait to see what he's got in store for us next.
![]() 2019 was an incredible year for us at Tank, and we can't wait to see what 2020 will bring. From the fun times at our Garage Sales to releasing our first vinyl record, every day was an adventure. We feel so fortunate to get to spend time hangin' out with people like you. This next year, we promise to keep pushing boundaries, keep releasing cool California wines, and spreading those good vibes. We hope to see you around the Garage soon!
Peace Out, -The Crew From Tank ![]() ![]()
I SAY LA LALA LA LA2018 Napa Valley Red Wine
![]() ![]() Winter in the Valley – it's one of our favorite times of year. Don't let the gloomy weather fool you, January is the perfect month for a trip up to good 'ol Calistoga. This quiet time of year means less crowds and more space up at the Garage making for a chill hang with our rad staff members and cool California wines. Speaking of, we've released some killer new blends in the last few months. You're gonna wanna give them a try. See you cool cats soon.
Book a Tasting ![]() ![]() After wrapping up one of the craziest Harvest seasons on record, Bertus and his team are as busy as ever. We’re officially pressed off of all of our lots, and the wines will finish their fermentation and aging process nestled in French and American Oak barrels. After the wines have finished aging in barrels, we'll go through blending trials to determine exactly what will end up in the bottle(s) sitting on your table.
Speaking of which, just before the winter holidays, we finalized some of the latest Tank blends and put them into bottle. Get ready, because these new wines are some of the best that we’ve made. MADE Wine Club Members will be the first to try the wines when they are released early next month! ![]() ![]() Curstin, Tasting Room Manager
What Tank Garage Wine Are You Obsessed With? Alto Basso Favorite Varietal? Grenache What's Your Dream? To own a '57 Corvette convertible Favorite Band? Sweet Spirit Favorite Local Restaurant? Palisades Saloon in Napa Top 3 Songs To Listen To Right Now "The Power" - Sweet Spirit "Bored & Razed" - The Raconteurs "Cold Hard B!tch" -Jet What Are You Doing When You're Not At The Garage? Hitting up a concert with the boyfriend. 🤘 ![]() |