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Inaugural Worcester Wine Festival Proves to be Major Success

Worcester Mayor, Joe Petty, cutting the ribbon for Central Massachusetts' inaugural Worcester Wine Festival.

When the organizers of the Worcester Wine Festival began formulating the inaugural event, they were not exactly sure what to expect. Now that the dust has settled on the weekend’s festivities, they know all their hard work was well worth it.

“We had over 1,300 people attend our events this weekend,” said Ed Russo, one of the founding members of the Worcester Wine Festival, LLC. “With 2017 being our inaugural year, we were more than pleased at how the Festival was supported by the Central Massachusetts community,” he added.

Worcester Wine Festival 2017The Festival kicked off Friday night, October 6th with a reception at Lock 50 Restaurant and Wine Bar in Worcester for special guests, sponsors, and wine industry insiders. On Saturday, October 7th, the day was filled with a variety of events including brunches, wine tastings and wine dinners held at various venues and restaurants across Worcester. On Sunday, October 8th, before a lobby full of anxious VIPs, Mayor Joseph Petty cut the ribbon at exactly 11:30 to open the Grand Tasting at Union Station.

At the Grand Tasting, visitors were provided a wine tote courtesy of Julio’s Liquors (Westborough) and Lock 50 Restaurant & Wine Bar that included a commemorative Festival tasting glass. Once in the Grand Hall at Union Station, they were able to sample tastes from over 200 wineries, 5 breweries, and 4 distilleries while also enjoying small tastes from 6 different specialty food vendors. VIP ticket holders were treated to an additional experience including the ability to taste 30 unique and rare wines as well as additional food tastings.

“Everyone associated with the Festival worked extremely hard to prepare for this event and it showed,” said Luke M. Vaillancourt, one of the Festival’s founders. “Attendees were pleased with the variety of choices as well as the knowledgeable staff who helped guide them through each and every tasting. The overwhelming response from our attendees was they can’t wait for next year,” he added.

In addition to the excitement of the Grand Tasting floor, the Festival conducted 4 educational seminars where attendees listened intently and learned from industry experts in an intimate setting. The seminars were curated by Toni DeLuca of Julio’s Liquors, Westborough, MA.

“The planning and production of the Festival were outstanding. The showcase of wines at the Grand Tasting was exceptional and the educational seminars were unique and interesting. I can’t wait to attend the event next year,” said Joe Paparella, one of the Festival VIP guests and Chapter Chair of the Worcester Chapter of the American Wine Society.

The event was supported by some of Central Massachusetts biggest names. Worcester Art Museum signed on as Presenting Sponsor and Discover Central Massachusetts provided endless marketing support. Julio’s Liquors, Westborough MA provided expertise in organizing the wine vendors, curating the Educational Seminars and acting as the Festival’s retail partner. Other sponsors included 145 at City Square (Roseland Residential), AlphaGraphics, Bollus Lynch CPA, Canal Lofts (Winn Companies), Commonwealth Consulting Group, Dana Lane Photography, Enterprise Cleaning, Erb Photography, FletcherTilton Attorneys at Law, Herlihy Insurance, Interstate Specialty Products, Lock 50 Restaurant & Wine Bar, MassFoodies, Music Worcester, Polar Beverages, Renewal by Anderson, Riedel Wine Glass Company, Shea Management, Voss Water, Unibank, Worcester Business Journal and WSRS.

Plans are already being made for next year’s event which the organizers vow will top the 2017 event.

Worcester Wine Festival 2017
Worcester Wine Festival 2017
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A Quick Bite with Heather Mangione

Heather Mangione sits down with Mass Foodies

While you can spend your whole life trying to eat your way through New York City, it would take you just as long to navigate the food scene of Brooklyn as old-world New York collides with haute hipster taste. The food culture of New York has always been one to admire, and in the epicenter of its soul are the diverse dishes of Brooklyn. The stereotypical views of pizzerias and one-of-a-kind bagel shops are fleeting, but that doesn’t stop the Brooklynites from puffing out their chest when claiming the best Sicilian in all of New York. I mean, who cares about those other boroughs when you’re from Brooklyn, right?

Heather Mangione, a community relationship manager for United Way of Central Massachusetts by day and founder of Airspray – an LGBTQ community organization that brings people together through dance parties and social events – by night, is a Brooklynite trying to live out her foodie dreams in Worcester. While Brooklyn and Worcester can be a tale of two cities when we get down to the nitty-gritty of food culture, it seems that there may be a small – teeny tiny – resemblance in some corners of Worcester to Brooklyn itself. Places like deadhorse hill, Armsby Abbey, and Birchtree Bread Company – some of Mangione’s favorites – hold their ground with that haute hipster experience we all seem to drool over.

“I’m from Brooklyn, New York,” said Mangione. “And I’m a hundred percent Italian – specifically Southern Italian as my family is from Sicily and Naples – and the food is a huge part of my nationality and my background. Food is the main focus around any and all family gatherings.”

Growing up with a Southern Italian family means eating some of the most diverse Italian-styled foods to date. Southern Italy is a melting pot of food influencers inspired by the Greek colony of Siracusa back in 734 B.C. with their introduction of sweet wine, figs, pomegranates, and walnuts, and the Arabic penchant for stuffed foods and the use of pistachio nuts. “On my Sicilian side, foods are heavily derived from African, Greek and Mediterranean backgrounds and on my Neapolitan side, seafood is big influencer – and I love seafood,” said Mangione. “I truly wish I had more time in my life to cook. I love being able to find the time to spend most of the day cooking – whether that’s preparing dinner or prepping for the week. I think cooking is a very important form of self-care and my favorite cooking gadgets are my crock-pot and my giant cast-iron pot for cooking stews, sauces, and soups.”

“I think the concept of home has dramatically changed with the societal shift towards convenience and dining out,” said Mangione. “Don’t get me wrong. I love going out to eat but I know so many people, especially young people, who don’t know how to cook and prefer to go out to eat. It’s shocking to me. I always dream of a few dishes from my Brooklyn past: my Aunt Mildred’s eggplant caponata, my mom’s chicken marsala and my dad’s shrimp scampi and there’s nothing I would cut out.”

Mangione literally translates from Italian to “the biggest eater of them all” and she found this out from a middle school Italian teacher at the peak of her sensitive self-image phase. “I was mortified!” said Mangione. “But I have totally grown to love my last name and what it means and I really celebrate that I come from a long line of seriously big eaters!” (Take that, middle school Italian teacher!)

Dining with Mangione is all about the diversity. From hosting a potluck – one of her favorite things in the world to do – to dining out at some of the city’s most eclectic places like Hacienda Don Juan, Fatima’s and Da Lat – there is a great interest in learning about the stories behind the foods. “I love the creativity people bring to the table when they’re prompted to bring their favorite dish or something seasonally appropriate to a potluck,” she said. “Food brings people together in ways that nothing else can.” Maybe it’s Mangione’s Southern Italian upbringing or maybe it’s just that spreading love is the Brooklyn way – but either way, Mangione is right: ”food nourishes the soul, the heart, and the mind.”