Nachum welcomed Moshe Kinderlehrer, Publisher & Co-Founder of the Jewish Link of New Jersey and Elizabeth Kratz, Associate Publisher/Editor-in-Chief of the Jewish Link of New Jersey, as well as founding Editor of the Jewish Link Wine Guide, to the studio during this morning’s JM in the AM to discuss the 2025 Wine Guide available now.
From the Wine Guide website:
Welcome to the Jewish Link Wine Guide
Looking at the finalized lists this year, we were pleased with the results and found them to be right on target. We know we are doing something right when we have had our five judges returning for five solid years, including Yossie Horwitz, our founding judge and the initial designer of our blind tastings which we still follow, as well as Greg Raykher, Daphna Roth, Yeruchum Rosenberg and Jeff Katz. A special thanks to Yeruchum, who helped move an incredible amount of boxes into our new tasting space across the hall and who took care of many of the technical details I was unable to complete. We are also glad that Tzvi Sabo returned to us for a second year as our wine guide staff assistant, to help catalog the wines, create the blind tastings, execute set-up and clean-up. He did an admirable job. Tzvi is also an excellent photographer, whose services we will hope to hire again for the Wine Guide Grand Tasting next year.
We are also glad to return to focus on our Israeli wine colleagues and friends with that lead article written by Josh London, with an article on the kosher wines of Burgundy written by Yossie Horwitz, another cover story celebrating Ernie Weir of Hagafen’s half-century of vintages, with pieces by Dr. Kenneth Friedman and Gamliel Kronemer about various new wines coming into kosher distribution from Georgia (in Eastern Europe), as well as a piece I wrote about an old kosher South African winery coming back to worldwide distribution. We are also glad to include a piece about Ya’acov Oryah’s special Israeli wines from Gregory Aubrey of KosherWine.com. While their wines were out of stock as our tastings were beginning, we are glad to include a feature on him regardless.
With best wishes for a kosher Pesach,
Elizabeth Kratz