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Celebrating New Year 2025 In Style
New Year is my favorite celebration. It is simply a celebration of life as it happens. Forget all this “new year, new you” nonsense, forget all the resolutions – new year resolutions don’t work, you can’t do something once in 365 days and expect that the effect will last for the next 364. So the New Year celebration for me is just an opportunity to spend time with your friends and family, and maybe enjoy some special treats – yes, I’m talking about wine and food, of course (in that specific order).
New Year celebration is an opportunity to open a special bottle (or 2, or 3, or more). I always want to decide on my celebratory wines in advance, and then the decisions are still happening at the last minute. Here is what I decided on to celebrate the new year 2025:
We started with NV Champagne Duval Leroy Brut Reserve (12% ABV), which showed beautifully with a yeasty, toasty nose, and then freshly baked bread and apples on the palate, spread over the fine mousse. Supple acidity completed the presentation, and the bottle was emptied in a matter of a few minutes.
One bottle of bubbles is never enough, so we continued our New Year celebration with NV Champagne Decotanne Brut Blanc de Noirs (12% ABV). Not so much of the toasted notes but nice fresh apples instead, followed by creamy, apple-forward fine mousse, rounder and just a tiny bit sweeter than the previous Champagne, possibly with simply a perceived sweetness just because of the fuller body. Overall elegant and delicious to the last drop.
Next I decided to open the 2012 Peter Michael Ma Belle-Fille Chardonnay Knights Valley Sonoma County (15.6% ABV). I have a complicated relationship with Peter Michael wines. When I tasted Peter Michael Chardonnay for the first time (probably 2008 vintage), I instantly fell in love and signed up for the mailing list (got on relatively quickly). Then a few of the subsequent vintages were not as good, while the price continued to go higher, so I dropped off the mailing list, and now just slowly finishing the bottles I have with various degrees of success (read: enjoyable, pleasure-inducing wines). This 2012 Chardonnay should be remembered as a success, showing a serious punch of vanilla and overripe apples on the nose, and continuing with the exact same profile on the palate. The acidity was in check, making the wine “pleasant to drink” but not much beyond that. A bit more acidity would have perfectly freshened up the wine, but oh well. Still, a very decent California Chardonnay specimen at 12 years of age.
Last but not least – 2017 Cayuse Syrah Cailloux Vineyard Walla Walla Valley (13.8% ABV). I know, 7 years is not really an age for the Cayuse wines, but hey, that’s what the New Year celebration is for – to motivate you to open a special bottle of wine. I decanted the wine for a few hours, and it opened up beautifully with smokey, earthy cherries, granite, and iodine – both on the nose and on the palate. A very elegant and delicious wine in its own right.
Not sure if food is as exciting as wine, but the New Year celebration also requires a celebratory set of dishes, something along these lines:
This year was also very special as Hanukkah and Christmas overlapped, which only happened 5 times over the past 125 years – in 1910, 1921, 1959, 2005, and now 2024. As the last day of Hanukkah overlapped with New Year Day, I took this picture to preserve such memory:
So, how was your New Year celebration? Amy special wines, special food? I’m eager to know, do tell.
And until the next time – cheers!









