2013 NAPLES WINTER WINE FESTIVAL
- Photos: 2013 Naples Winter Wine Festival auction
- Photos: Winter Wine Festival - Edwards Residence
- Photos: Wine festival lot room
- Photos: NCEF Meet the Kids Day 2013
- Photos: Ferrari F12berlinetta delivered to Naples for Winter Wine Festival Auction
- Photos: Charity - Now I see Hope
- Video: Winners of Lot 4 at Wine Festival auction
- Video: Before start of Wine Festival auction
- Video: Preview of Wine Festival auction lots
- Video: Ferrari to be auctioned at Wine Festival
- Naples Winter Wine Festival raises $8.5 million for Collier children's charities
- Wine Festival trustee sees red Ferrari in his future
- Live Blog: Naples Winter Wine Festival Auction
- Charities of the Wine Festival: Event showcases kids' needs to festival-goers
- Naples Wine Festival: Good food, good wine for a good cause
- Charities of the Wine Festival: Deciding which nonprofits get grants is tough call
- Charities of the Wine Festival: H.U.G.S. provides mental health screenings, counseling to local students
- Charities of the Wine Festival: New Operation Strides helps veterans heal with horses
- Winter Wine Festival: STAR program focuses on preschool-aged children with behavior problems
- Charities of the Wine Festival: Children's mental health a focus in 2013
- Gramercy's Anthony heads Naples Winter Wine Festival star chef corps
PAST COVERAGE: NAPLES WINTER WINE FESTIVAL
- 2013: Get complete coverage
- 2012: Get complete coverage
- 2011: Get complete coverage
- 2010: Get complete coverage
- 2009: Get complete coverage
- 2008: Get complete coverage
- 2007: Get complete coverage
- 2006: Get complete coverage
- 2005: Get complete coverage
- 2004: Get complete coverage
- 2003: Get complete coverage
- 2002: Get complete coverage
- 2001: Get complete coverage
- SPECIAL SECTION: Find videos, photos and stories about past Naples Winter Wine Festivals »
Any good meal needs collaboration.
Whether it is a blending of ingredients in a dish or the taste of the wine after that perfect bite, it's about partnership.
Collaboration is also essential for a successful charity event. So there was probably no better way to kick off Naples' largest charity event than with the pairing of wine and food to benefit children in Collier County.
"We enjoy wine and we enjoy food, but most of all we enjoy seeing the smiles on the kids' faces," said John Jordan, a festival trustee a co-host of a vintner dinner.
Sixteen homes opened their doors Friday to those Naples Winter Wine Festival attendees for dinners, which paired famous chefs from across the world with some of the world's best wine makers.
The vintner dinners are the prelude to today's auction, which will raise money for the Naples Children & Education Foundation, the charitable arm of the Naples Winter Wine Festival.
Festival co-chairman and vintner dinner co-host Bob Edwards said he was excited about the lots that were lined up this year and was looking forward to the auction.
"It all benefits the children of Collier County," he said.
Bob and Terry Edwards' dinner, which they co-hosted with Jordan and his wife Barbara, was held in the Edwards' contemporary home in the Pine Ridge neighborhood in North Naples. The 22 guests sat among three tables decorated with giant centerpieces composed of red flowers like garden roses and anthurium to play off the Edwards' collection of contemporary art.
Michael Anthony, the executive chef and partner at the Gramercy Tavern in New York, said he developed his menu around the region the restaurant is in and the season.
"We want to tell our story using the lens of the region," he said of the local ingredients that he purchased in New York and brought with him.
He also chose the dishes because they pair well with the wine from the Shafer Vineyards of Napa Valley, Calif.
"You have these powerful and beautiful wines with a full profile," Anthony said. "The food has to live up to the wines."
Among the dishes were a poached lobster with ancient grains, cauliflower and a burnt orange sauce, and a braised beef cavatelli dish with carrots cut into perfect cubes.
Bob Edwards said his goal for Friday's dinner was for his guests to have a good time, but to also start thinking about the charities they would be help and the dreams they could make possible.
When asked if he had a goal for today's auction, Edwards said he didn't have a specific number in mind.
"For each lot, I have ideas of what I would like to see them go for," he said. "In any given year, we have given $6 million to $9 million to the charities. That is obviously a hurdle you want to clear."
John Jordan said partnerships are important to the wine festival's success.
"It is a group of people who can do something together and make a larger, systemic difference for Collier County children," he said of the trustees.
Jordan said many of the lots for today's auction come about because two or three couples get together and decide they want to donate something, or someone knows someone willing to donate an item.
"We wouldn't be able to do what we do without the patrons and the donors," he said. "It's like old home week. Everyone coming together."
Both the Edwardses and Jordans said they have been impressed with the way the different charities collaborate to help children in Collier County.
"Every agency is extremely important to the children they serve," Barbara Jordan said.
Edwards said he has been impressed by how the organizations that benefit from the festival have collaborated with one another.
"The collaboration grows," he said. "The directors (of the agencies) communicate with each other. They work to figure out how they can help the whole child."
Alex LaPratt, the sommelier at New York-based Jean Georges, came to the wine festival to work as the sommelier at the Edwards/ Jordan dinner.
"It's a great cause," he said. "I don't have the kind of money to contribute to this, but if I can contribute my work to a great cause, I want to do that."
Naples resident Jane Fitzgerald, who is attending her first Wine Festival, said she was excited to get involved.
"Any time you can help the children in the community," she said, "you should."
Catch of the Day: May 23, 2013




















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Comments » 22
Native writes:
(This comment was removed by the site staff.)
EnoughCorporateGreed (Inactive) writes:
The "native" must be working overtime.
F397 writes:
It is a very good cause But it a place for the rich to show off to.one another.
Native writes:
Oh no!, you can't say that, they'll remove your comment.
drolds writes:
What time Friday morning did it start? Are they still at it? That lady in the first picture looks thirsty.
itmattershere writes:
There only there cause it's a TAX de-duction.
Colorado (Inactive) writes:
You are so, so right. There isn't a charitable heart around, only tax lawyers.
Heraclitus writes:
Free BAC testing on the way out?
Beachtowel writes:
I feel very fortunate to have these charitable people doing this wonderful thing for the children of this county.
BillBrasky writes:
I agree 100% and hope they have fun doing it.
Not all rich people are bad, its just that bad rich people have the power to do so much damage.
Patton writes:
(This comment was removed by the site staff.)
BigFan writes:
It is so disappointing to see the bitterness that comes out of people when there are successful people spending THEIR money on things they enjoy. Which in turn the money benefits the under privileged children of this county so greatly. How about this, take some of that energy that it takes to comment here and got to the Naples Wine Festival page and donate something, anything to these kids. Or shut up and move on.
BigSackMan writes:
You are right. Shut up or move on. Everyone needs a way to ease their guilt and this is how they do it.
BillBrasky writes:
Or it could be they are not naive and understand the gestalt nature of reality and how people get blood on their hands without ever leaving the boardroom.
BigFan writes:
Really? You really believe that every successful wealthy person has some guilt they are dealing with and they are handling it by donating their money? You proved my point, bitter bitter and probably don't ever help anyone to any comparable relative manner in which these people do.
elf writes:
Funny how everyone thinks its just for a tax deduction. Most wealthy aren't allowed to deduct most of their charitable contributions because it is fazed out on their tax return. Just as they don't get deductions for mortgage interest or their dependents or college tuition as you all do.
Beachglow writes:
So?
Beachglow writes:
Agreed. I just never realized how jealous people who are not successful are of those who are. Too bad for them....wasted negativity.
puckdog writes:
(This comment was removed by the site staff.)
strudelbaby writes:
Not only that, but when someone wins an item at a charity auction, the only portion that is tax deductible is whatever amount is OVER the value of the item. If the item is bought for less, then none of it can be taken off taxes. And as stated earlier, WHO CARES?? 29 children's agencies in Collier County benefit from this event.
ThinkB4YouSpeak writes:
(This comment was removed by the site staff.)
roadhouse writes:
I suppose all those 47%'ers are going to have their own fundraiser, right?
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