Wine Store Design Part 3: Urinal Defense Fund

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

I need to make some upgrades to the plumbing in the space formerly known as California Food Mart. Today I got an estimate for a few items that hadn’t been anticipated, like adding a urinal, some other fixtures, and upgrading both the water line and a water heater. Needless to say, the costs are mounting. So help me afford that urinal (and a whole bunch of other things) by buying some wine from the d547 online shop!

To incentivize the crap (or should I say pee) out of you, any in-stock item is now 15% off. Just use coupon code “R.Mutt” during checkout and you’ll be a proud contributor to the Domaine LA Urinal Defense Fund.

Cheers!

Thanks Squid Ink!

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

I love it when people make me sound smarter than I am. Read this nice little piece by Jessica at LA Weekly’s Squid Ink blog for a preview of the brick and mortar space. Cheers!

Wine Store Design Update: Plan Check

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Just a little update on the store’s progress. Way back when I was in the early stages of escrow, I gathered all the plans for the renovation and submitted them, through an expediter, to the LA County Health Department for plan check. While I won’t be serving food at the new shop, wine is a comestible; and, even if it is consumed off-site, it therefore falls under health department jurisdiction.

As stated by the Health Department, the plan check process takes up to 20 business days, typically. Submitting our documents in early March, my designer, expediter and I timed everything so that we’d have the Health Department permits well before the close of escrow.

Cut to 40+ business days (yes, that’s eight weeks) later and finally, the same week escrow closed, the plan was checked, but not approved. There was a full page of comments for me to respond to, including a request for a letter of explanation as to how much of my business would be internet-derived and how much would be walk-in (why the Health Dept. cares about this I’m not sure…).

It’s now taken us two more weeks to get another appointment with the Health Department so they can review the changes — two weeks in which I’ve been burning some of the few precious days of free rent my new landlord has extended me (escrow closed two weeks ago).

Happily, I have finally been issued the Health Department permit, which has also enabled my expediter to pull permits from Building and Safety for the demolition and construction of the space, which could start as early as Monday.

But it could have already started if the Health Department hadn’t delayed their plan check beyond their normal 20 business days. Oh well. Just another way Los Angeles isn’t the most friendly to businesses. More on that soon.

Wine Store Design Part 2: Reflected Ceiling Plan

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Just a quick entry to follow up on my last post about the design of the store, which showed an abstract vision of some light fixtures. My designer sent me the following image, a more advanced and technical version of the aforementioned concept, along with a brief explanation of what the drawing physically represents:

“This is a “reflected ceiling plan” of the shades. To get technical, they are spun .090” thick aluminum hemispheres, 18” deep by 36” in diameter, the interiors are powder coated in three shades of purple/blue. The exterior dome, which you will see when you walk around the perimeter of the store, will be left as raw spun aluminum. There are 16 of each color composed in an 8×6 grid. A light is hung inside the hemisphere, these will illuminate the central space of the store and the display shelving that encompasses this ‘living room’.” –AB

So, now you all have a sense of what the ceiling space of the store should look like. We’re having a sample made of one of the fixtures and will show it to you when it’s completed.

get your wine on

2008 “Bebame” Red, El Dorado County, California

Cabernet Franc (65%) and Gamay (35%) from - gasp - California! And only 13% ABV, pretty modest by California standards. If I tasted this blind I would probably have said it’s from the Loire Valley. It has pretty much nothing in common with the full bodied iterations of Cab Franc coming out of Napa. Juicy, light, delicious quaffing wine.$18 a bottle

2006 Telegramme Chateauneuf-du-Pape Rouge

Really balanced and smooth, this is a bargain of a Chateauneuf. Yeah, the 07s are lauded but what would I prefer to drink? This! It’s the second label of Vieux Telegraphe, from the same property but from younger vines. And it’s a deal at $33 a bottle.2006 or bust!

NV Barcino Cava: LA Times Wine of the Week!

Delicious and just in time for New Year’s Eve…this is the LA Times Wine of the Week, and we have plenty in stock. Order online, pick-up in-store!$14 a bottle!

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freshly pressed

The Business of Saying No:

No, I am not a natural wine merchant.

And no, I am also not not a natural wine merchant.

So what exactly is my store, Domaine LA? This is a tricky question that I try to answer here.
________

A couple of months back, I participated in the first annual Los Angeles Natural Wine Week, spearheaded by Lou Amdur of Lou Wine Bar. At that time, I took some heat from a few folks around the Internet who felt I might have been merely capitalizing on a trend and didn’t see me as a true natural wine merchant.

The thing is, I’ve never claimed to be a natural wine merchant. When I started my business online a few years ago, I stated plainly that I wanted to sell wines I loved. I was an enthusiast with a fairly receptive, wide-ranging palate, and I considered learning about wine a journey I would be going on alongside my customers. While I’ve since expanded my business to include a brick and mortar space, my self-conception and mission statement haven’t really changed. But my palate has.

To be absolutely blunt about it, I used to love wines that I simply can’t stomach anymore. There are blog posts archived on my website that in retrospect make me cringe, paragraphs singing the praises of some of the most blatantly manipulated wines in the world. I once criticized a wine bar for not having any Southern Hemisphere selections; it’s now my favorite spot in Los Angeles. And today I carry barely a dozen Southern Hemisphere SKUs myself.

By and large, my palate-shift is reflected in what I bring into the store. Chris Ringland and Mollydooker have been replaced by Eric Texier and Thierry Puzelat; the California fruit- and alcohol-bombs, for the most part, have given way to wines from La Clarine Farm, Donkey and Goat and LIOCO.

As a result of my largely obscure inventory, almost every day I’m faced with customers asking for items that I don’t stock. On a regular basis, I hear:

“Do you have Rombauer Chardonnay?”

No, I answer.

“Do you have Caymus?”

Afraid not, I reply.

“What about Blackstone Merlot?”

So sorry, but no.

“Where’s the Veuve Clicquot? This is a gift. I need the recipient to know it’s nice!”

Sigh.

Saying no to people sets up a potentially risky relationship that may start and end with that one exchange—many customers want what they want and aren’t open to alternative suggestions. In other cases, however, that simple “no” can be the beginning of something beautiful, a dialogue that winds up with a customer who came in looking for the Prisoner instead going home with something like Morgan Twain-Peterson’s Bedrock Heirloom Red, a wine which, while perhaps not 100% natural, is a more honest “made in the vineyard” (yes, I know this is also a cliché) version of what the Prisoner purports to be.

Of course, sometimes that customer really just wants the Prisoner. Which leads me to my major confession here: despite more than a bit of ambivalence, I continue to sell the Prisoner, along with other wines that are by no means natural, wines that are quite frankly manufactured. The Prisoner sits on the shelf right next to the Bedrock Heirloom Red, and for the time being, it will stay there. At least twice a week people come in asking specifically for this wine, and, for several reasons, it’s a request I’m not—yet—willing to deny.

Even though I no longer drink the Prisoner, there was a time–not too long ago–when I did so happily. When I first started getting interested in wine, it was a bottle that captured my imagination and helped launch me on the journey I remain committed to today. So maybe I keep the Prisoner around out of a sense of nostalgia. Or maybe I keep it around to remind me how far I’ve come. Maybe I keep it around hoping that for those who ask for it, it will simply be their starting place just as it was mine.

Or, more cynically, maybe I keep it around because people buy it. Maybe it’s a crutch to lean on when I’m too tired to hand-sell the less familiar items on my shelves. Seeing something recognizable is comforting to consumers, and that comfort somehow lends me credibility; credibility is a precedent to trust. Trust is what enables me to recommend something different to a customer who normally drinks the Prisoner.

In this sense, the Prisoner is of great value to me, not just as an easy sell, but even more so as a gateway to all the other wines I have available. I don’t know that I’d be able to move as much of the Bedrock, an unknown wine with a tiny case production, without the Prisoner right next to it.
______

Saying no is extremely hard. Right now, I’m willing to do so 90% of the time, maybe even 95%. Call me a coward or a fake if you want. But I know where I started out, and it’s been a logical evolution. And while I’m headed in a particular direction, guided by my palate, it’s safe to assume I won’t ever be a 100% “natural wine merchant.”

I like to think there’s room for somebody like me—somebody with confidence in her tastes, who also takes into account modes of production in buying decisions; someone who has a particular point of view, yet retains an inclusive attitude. I am strong in my opinions, and enthusiastic in my passions. I never judge my customers, and hope that they’ll be as open-minded and respectful of my offerings as I am of their preferences.

So far, it seems to be working out. In recent months, I’ve brought in only one case of the Prisoner (less than a thousandth of a percent of its total production) for every three cases of the Bedrock (1.3% of its total production).

So, what am I?

I’m not a natural wine merchant. And I’m not not a natural wine merchant.

I’m a work in progress. And I’m okay with that.

wine jargon

Frizzante
From Wikipedia: Frizzante is an Italian wine term term for semi-sparkling wine (as opposed to Spumante, which is generally used for fully sparkling wines). Frizzante wines generally owe their bubbles to a partial secondary fermentation in tank. You might notice a light fizz or tingly sensation on the tongue with a Frizzante wine, compared to the more carbonated sensation that more fully sparkling wines yield.


Scorekage
Okay, so we made up this word yesterday after a great restaurant experience. We brought a bottle of wine with us, expecting to pay a corkage fee. But the restaurant either forgot to charge us the $15, or decided to be nice to us. We scored! Hence, “scorekage” has entered our lexicon. This can also refer to BYO friendly restaurants that don’t charge for corkage under any circumstances.


Frizzante


March 29th, 2008

Scorekage


March 23rd, 2008

Rioja


March 3rd, 2008

grapewise

DomaineLA Store Contact Info
If you’re looking for our brick and mortar shop, here’s where it can be found:

6801 Melrose Avenue

Los Angeles, CA 90038

(323) 932-0280

Hours are 11AM to 8PM, Monday through Saturday and noon to 5PM on Sundays.

Read more…

Fabulous & Frugal!
Our friends launched a new site and domaine547 is a featured wine columnist in their premiere edition! Go check out Fabulous & Frugal for some fantastic lifestyle tips for living the good life during what, for most of us, is an economically challenging time. There’s much more than wine there, and we’re thrilled to be a small part of the start of what will surely be a successful venture. Congrats to Brandi & Steph for their achievement!

Read more…