Category: Support & Mgmt
Mount Airy winery has the mead festival-goers need
By admin on Oct 2, 2009 | In MDRF News, Vendors, Support & Mgmt | Send feedback »
Link: http://www.gazette.net/stories/10022009/businew174504_32526.shtml
Thousands of gallons of honey-based mead, forerunner of today's beer, are transported each year to the metal coffers of people who look like cast members from "The Private Life of Henry VIII."
The anachronistic image stems from the partnership between Linganore Winecellars in Mount Airy and the Maryland Renaissance Festival in Crownsville. It is one of the several partnerships the festival shares with businesses in Maryland, although its relationships with Linganore and another local winery feature the most reciprocity.
"People who never knew mead existed try it at the festival and come here," said Anthony Aellen, president and winemaker at Linganore.
The winery was established by Aellen's father in 1971. The Aellens have been making mead in basements since emigrating from Europe in 1912.
Linganore has provided mead and other wines to the festival for 20 years, including when the festival was still in Columbia. The drink, which was mostly popular in Europe and continues to be so today, usually takes about a year to prepare and, aside from the equipment involved, is made using the same methods as 6,000 years ago, Aellen said.
"The neat thing about it is that is exposes people to a product that is the oldest fermented product known to man," Aellen said. "People taste it and go, ‘Wow, it tastes like honey,' and you go, ‘Well, yeah, that's what it's made from.'"
Linganore Winecellars is the largest vineyard in Maryland, according to the Maryland Winery Association. Linganore planted its first vines in 1972 and has been selling wine since 1977. Aellen said previously that Linganore expects to sell more than 50,000 cases in 2009.
Mead dates to a time when everything was sweetened with honey, as sugar was a luxury until the mid-1800s, when it became the primary sweetener, Aellen said. The drink is also associated with darker legends of the honeymoon, which tell of grooms kidnapping their wives and hiding them for a month, toasting the "marriage" with mead upon eventual return to the family, he said.
"It's neat to re-create an old-time product and watch the reaction on someone's face," Aellen said. "It's also nice to have with ham or salmon — there's so many different things you can do with mead."
He said the partnership with the Renaissance festival complements both businesses, giving the festival a period beverage and Linganore happy customers eager to try it.
"Jules and Justin [Smith] are a charm to work with," Aellen said of the family that owns and operates the festival.
The other winery involved in the festival, Basignani Winery of Sparks, has sold three different wines to the festival for about six years, including chardonnay, Riesling and the blended Marisa.
"It gets our wine exposure. It's fabulous for us," owner Lynne Basignani said of the festival partnership. Basignani approached the festival about selling its wine and has provided about 50 cases to the event each year.
The winery is 23 years old and grows 80 percent of its own grapes.
Basignani said wine works for any type of festival atmosphere, and thinks the local touch lends something special to the Renaissance festival.
"We've had people come to our winery after trying at the festival. We're always happy to have our wine poured anywhere," she said.
Similar business synergy with the festival can also be found among Maryland's location for Medieval Times Dinner & Tournament restaurant, which began in Kissimmee, Fla. Medieval Times hosts meals served in period style and accompanied by medieval tournaments and re-enactments.
Medieval Times' Baltimore Castle at Arundel Mills in Hanover cross-promotes with the festival, offering family-of-four giveaways before each show and handing out festival brochures at both its gift shop and ticket office. In exchange, the Renaissance festival distributes Medieval Times brochures at information desks and invites Medieval Times actors to demonstrate at the festival to generate interest. This year, though, Medieval Times had to cut back on the demonstrations and had just two of its players greet festival-goers because of the recession.
"We've been doing it every year since we opened here in 2004," said RaeAnn Cinquanto, marketing manager for the Baltimore Castle. "People have left the festival and come here in the past."
Cinquanto said Medieval Times has partnerships with surrounding Renaissance festivals in its other locations, but its closeness to Maryland's festival works especially well. People also used to think Medieval Times was part of the Renaissance festival, she said.
"It's guerrilla marketing," she said. "The Maryland Renaissance Festival has been around for a long time and has a big audience."
pulled from: http://www.gazette.net/stories/10022009/businew174504_32526.shtml
Peterka article in Baltimore Sun
By admin on Sep 4, 2009 | In MDRF News, 2009 Entertainment, Support & Mgmt, Castmembers | Send feedback »
Very nice write up of actors at MDRF: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/anne-arundel/bal-ar.rennfaire06sep06,0,1143214.story
Work at the Festival!
By admin on Aug 18, 2009 | In MDRF News, Support & Mgmt | Send feedback »
Employment Opportunities
Employment Instructions
If you are interested in participating in the 33rd Annual Maryland Renaissance Festival, please download & fill out the Employment Application. Applications for this year are accepted through the current season, but will only be responded to as needed.
All applicants must 14 years or older.
Please mail or fax your completed application to:
Maryland Renaissance Festival
Employee Coordinator
PO Box 315
Crownsville, Md 21032
Fax No: 410-573-1508
Application: http://www.rennfest.com/pdfs/Employment-Application.pdf
MDRF has their own blog!
By admin on Aug 15, 2009 | In MDRF News, Support & Mgmt | Send feedback »
What a great idea!
The Daily Record: Md. Renaissance Festival looking for bigger digs
By admin on Aug 10, 2009 | In MDRF News, MDRF: The Next Generation, Support & Mgmt | Send feedback »
Since 1984, the Maryland Renaissance Festival has annually transformed a 25-acre plot of forest in Crownsville into the “Faire,” a replica of a bustling 16th-century European village. That could soon change, though, as its organizers are looking to grow the event further by moving it to a larger site.
Magician and Baltimore resident Brian Wendell Morton will be performing for the 11th year when the festival begins at the end of the month, and he relishes the chance to perform at what he calls a “cheerful, family-friendly event.”
“It's a way to step out of your daily life into a fantasy world,” Morton said.
Even if the festival should move, the local performer claims he would remain a loyal participant.
“I'm sure it will still be the Maryland Renaissance Festival,” he said. “If it happens, it happens and I'll roll with it.”
for more info: http://www.mddailyrecord.com/article.cfm?id=12139&type=UTTM