Product Description
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When Thomas Jefferson stated 'We could in the United States make
as great a variety of wines as are made in Europe, not exactly
the same kinds, but doubtless as good,' he could have been
talking about the future of America itself. Set against the
backdrop of Jefferson's Monticello, the great wine regions of
France, the Napa valley and the historic Virginia landscape The
Cultivated Life: Thomas Jefferson and Wine guides the viewer on a
visual journey of the life of the founding her of American
viniculture.
From Jefferson's early experiments with Italian vignerons at
Monticello, to his grand tour through France and Italy, through
his years in the White House, and then his later efforts in
retirement, The Cultivated Life: Thomas Jefferson and Wine
culminates with the realization of Jefferson's dream of producing
first-rate American wine; first in California, and now in his
native Virginia.
Review
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The Cultivated Life: Thomas Jefferson and Wine is both a
portrait of our third president and a study of our country's
founding as seen through the lens of wine. By concentrating on
one man's passion, the Emmy Award-winning documentary (which
previously aired on PBS and is now available on DVD) explores how
the of a nation's taste and culture were ed.
Thomas Jefferson was, in Napa vintner Robert Mondavi's words, 'A
man 150 years ahead of his time.' Before the Revolutionary War,
Jefferson ed Sangiovese and other grape varieties on his
estate in Monticello, Va. During George Washington's presidency,
Jefferson became the unofficial sommelier of the White House,
reforming the tastes of countrymen who preferred hard liquor to
wines from Bordeaux, Burdy and Italy.
Most notably, Jefferson was a champion of grape varieties native
to the Americas, and he saw the potential of the country's wine
as a symbol for all of America's future. 'We could in the United
States make as great a variety of wines as are made in Europe,
not exactly the same kinds, but doubtless as good,' he once
wrote.
The first half of The Cultivated Life relies visually on
portraits and marble busts of key Revolutionary War figures to
supplement the narration. While these images do little to advance
the story of Jefferson's growing relationship with wine, the
passages read from his diary are fascinating.
But when the film progresses to Jefferson's arrival in France as
a trade commissioner for the United States, wanderlust-inspiring
views of Bordeaux, Burdy and Hermitage fill the screen. In one
scene, narrator Hal Holbrook reads from Jefferson's Hints to
Americans Traveling in Europe, in which he wrote, 'On the hill
impending over this village [Tain] is made the wine called
Hermitage so justly celebrated. Go up to the top of the hill, for
the sake of the sublime prospect from thence.' As Holbrook reads,
the camera focuses on the exact view being described: The
deep-green vineyards of Tain shimmering in the bright sunlight.
Jefferson was ahead of his time in many ways. He ranked the
châteaus of Bordeaux 68 years before the Classification of 1855,
saying, 'Of first quality: Margaux, Latour, Lafite and
Haut-Brion.' And to guarantee quality, he insisted that any wines
he bought from the French châteaus be bottled at the estate
rather than at an off-premise bottler, which was a common
practice at the time.
Yet The Cultivated Life also reveals the differences between
Jefferson's tastes and those common today. For example, Jefferson
preferred his Bordeaux young and refused to age his wine for
extended periods of time. He drank still Champagne and,
surprisingly, wrote nothing about wines from the Southern Rhône
Valley, Châteauneuf-du-Pape in particular, despite their relative
popularity in England and the United States during his lifetime.
As the third U.S. president, Jefferson accrued a significant
personal debt, spending his salary on wine and food and making
the White House into something of a salon for political and
cultural debate. In fine wine, Jefferson saw the roots of an
agricultural and tronomic revolution for America. Fittingly,
The Cultivated Life highlights the tension between Jefferson's
admiration for Europe, especially France, and the potential he
saw in the United States to one day surpass the countries he
wished to emulate.
The Cultivated Life offers a look at the influence one powerful
wine collector had over the formation of the United States,
giving a taste of how our culture--now unique, but then still
modeled after Europe's--was established. What better way to honor
Independence Day than by seeing where our wine and our country
have been, and thinking about where each is going? --Wine
Spectator - Kristiana Kahakauwila