tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-25895306441751535472024-03-08T04:05:56.153-08:00Calicaro Wine BlogCalicaro Wine is a California boutique winery making tiny quantities of handcrafted, artisanally made, ultrapremium red wine. Dave Ball of Calicaro maintains this blog for the purpose of discussing all things wine. We welcome your comments and responses.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comBlogger69125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-76849302527581986572010-08-29T18:39:00.000-07:002010-08-29T18:53:15.624-07:00Looking toward harvestWet cool spring. Very cool summer. Heat spike last week means we can now look ahead to harvest. Brix 20-22. Acids still high but coming down. Most all of the fruit through veraison. I anm hoping/wishing/praying all goes smoothly as we come down the home stretch! Probably picking late Sept or even into early October. All sorts of potential to be a stellar vintage!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-86122657068767861952010-08-17T07:12:00.000-07:002010-08-17T07:23:54.842-07:00The Calm Before the Storm: Vineyard UpdateIt is mid August and things are eerily calm for this time of year. The cool weather all summer has slowed down ripening and most of our fruit is just now going through veraison- fully two weeks behind "normal." Normal is in quotes because, after all, we are talking about the weather! <br /><br />The answer to whether this is a good thing or a bad thing is, like so much of winemaking: it depends.<br /><br />Slow even ripening of the fruit is clearly a big plus- it promotes more complexity and flavor and without the loss of acidity that can happen with very ripe fruit.<br /><br />On the other hand, many growers are worrying whether the fruit will ripen sufficiently before the October rains start. Picking in the rain is obviously no fun and can be bad for the grapes- the roots will take up the water and can dilute the flavors by pumping water into the grapes. <br /><br />For winemakers there is also the question of getting the fruit in and made into wine. If it all ripens at once, winemakers will be working round the clock. Winemakers hope the grapes will ripen at different times to be able to handle the flow. But we have to play the cards that Mother Nature deals us . The next three to four weeks will determine all of this!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-63353391689002619082010-01-05T08:59:00.000-08:002010-01-05T09:13:56.593-08:00Happy New Year All- 2008 Poinsett Pinot NoirOk, it's still a baby - 2008 wine and only bottled at Thanksgiving. But I get impatient and had to see how this one was coming along. Popped and poured it thorough a Vinturi (a quick way to aerate wine) this past weekend to toast the New Year.<br /><br />As I remembered from our blending of this wine... showing lots of wild berry flavors, relatively restrained alcohol, brilliant garnet color, translucent at the rim. Everything is in balance on this wine and I am very happy with how this wine is coming along. Less cranberry and raspberry than the 07 Poinsett and a tad more blue and black fruit with that wild berry element but not at all heavy, indeed quite light and very elegant. So young, very primary on the fruit but with wood, spice and earth nuances showing behind the fruit. <br /><br />In another year the fruit will recede a bit and more of the spice and earth should show. This will be a perfect food wine and should age extremely well. I would not hesitate to cellar this for ten years.<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-85473109007661607162009-11-17T16:24:00.000-08:002009-11-17T16:27:11.078-08:00Photos From the "In the Business" Wine TastingGreenville News showed up at our "In the Business" Calicaro Wine Tasting and took some great shots. What a difference a professional photographer makes! Hope you enjoy. Very nice elegant tasting. Check out those Riedel Vinum stems. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.greenvilleonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Avis=BS&Dato=20091117&Kategori=LIFE&Lopenr=911170807&Ref=PH">http://www.greenvilleonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Avis=BS&Dato=20091117&Kategori=LIFE&Lopenr=911170807&Ref=PH</a>Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-83743835046275242402009-11-07T18:29:00.000-08:002009-11-07T18:36:15.913-08:00Calicaro Wine Dinner ReminderJust a quick reminder to sign up for the Calicaro Wine Dinner at Devereaux's on Nov 19. Call Devereaux's at 241- 3030 or sign up at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.meetup.com/winemeetup/">http://www.meetup.com/winemeetup/</a><br /><br />Three fine Calicaro Pinot Noirs, two white wines and a menu designed to match by Chef Spencer at one of Greenville's finest restaurants. It promises to be a wonderful evening. Don't wait as there is limited seating for this event.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-85851149103314010842009-11-04T19:20:00.000-08:002009-11-04T19:21:54.020-08:00Wine Launch PhotosHee are some shots taken by Donna Brown from the Calicaro Launch Party along with a few other wine/food related shots. Thanks Donna!<br /><br /><a href="http://www.meetup.com/winemeetup/photos/756229/11644969/#11644969">http://www.meetup.com/winemeetup/photos/756229/11644969/#11644969</a>Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-59177153731236383382009-10-30T17:16:00.000-07:002009-10-30T17:51:45.731-07:00A Lawyer Looks at Wine CriticismWhen I'm not making wine I am practicing law. This probably gives me a different perspective than some other bloggers and wine writers who have railed against "Parkerization", ie the hegemony of Robert Parker over the last thirty years in the area of wine criticism. <br /><br />I don't share their view. Not that I always agree with Parker. Far from it. Most of the criticism seems to be that Parker shouldn't dominate the market in the fashion that he has and that this continues to be a bad thing for the wine world because winemakers now tailor their efforts to suit his palate.<br /><br />I think- and this is where the legal vino point of view comes in- that this completely misses the point. When confronted with First Amendment free speech cases the Supreme Court usually says that the solution is not to stifle speech but instead to offer more of it. If you don't like what the other guy is saying, rather than coercing his silence, you should instead jump into the fray and offer your own viewpoints. Democracy- and the free markets- are messy and noisy places- and this is ultimately a good thing in preserving freedom.<br /><br />After all, Parker is only doing what ALL critics do- including those critics who think he holds too much sway over the market. And that is to offer up his opinion. The fact that too many people pay too much heed to what he has to say is not HIS problem- it is merely evidence of the extent to which he has succeeded. More power to him for doing so -not really- just kidding!<br /><br />So, rather than attacking Parker for his power, his competition needs to step up its game and offer their opinions and further develop their reputations, without tearing down Parker's. Compete in the marketplace of ideas and let the best man/woman win. Rather than shutting down speech offer MORE speech. <br /><br />The inevitablity of time will ultimately prevail if nothing else will in the meantime. Parker has been attacking the whole concept of wine bloggers and some of them have not been kind to him. <br /><br />But how many bloggers are over 40? And how old is Parker now? So, I say let him enjoy his time doing what he obviously loves. Rather than tearing down Parker, bloggers and other critics should be building their own reputations. I don't think however, that we will see the same level of hegemony by any one critic again any time soon. That era is passingDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-78744602141244758422009-10-27T21:57:00.000-07:002009-10-27T21:58:03.858-07:00Calicaro Makes a New Wine List - American Grocery!Calicaro is pleased to announce that we will be featured on the wine list at American Grocery, one of South Carolina's top restaurants. Sommelier and co-owner Darlene Mann-Clarke said our 07 "Poinsett" was "the best Anderson Valley Pinot Noir she had ever had." With her experience and the strength of their wine list, that says alot! Look for us there soon!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-4854753507307436442009-10-25T20:41:00.000-07:002009-10-25T20:43:55.419-07:00The Mystery of Wine (and Life)Thursday night wine tasting of all three Pinot Noirs: consensus was that Calicaro '08 Liberty Bridge was the wine of the night. Friday night wine tasting of all three Pinot Noirs: consensus was that Calicaro '07 Poinsett was the wine of the night. Life is a mystery! But that is a good thing, wouldn't you agree?Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-23406799044107400022009-10-19T21:05:00.000-07:002009-10-19T21:09:27.166-07:00Write a Calicaro Label - Win a Bottle!For all of you writers and wannabe writers-<br /><br />Calicaro needs some "back label" language for 2009 "Shoeless Joe" Zinfandel. Write some winning label copy and win a bottle of Shoeless Joe when released next fall. Feel free to play on baseball, shoeless stomping of grapes, the "Joe" name or fun things with Zinfandel like "Go Forth and Zin No More" We need just the back label language. <br /><br />Just email me your label language to <a href="mailto:info@calicaro.com">info@calicaro.com</a><br /><br />Good luck!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-25401235724139698232009-10-17T20:53:00.000-07:002009-10-17T21:10:20.550-07:00Is There Something in the Water?Quick- think of states likely to produce great winemakers, especially Pinot Noir makers. <br /><br />I bet South Carolina, home of Scuppernong and Muscadine, is not even a blip on the radar screen.<br /><br />So now you know where I am going with this, right? <br /><br />Here are just the Pinot Noir winemakers I know about-<br /><br />Thomas Rivers Browne- his own brand is Rivers-Marie and he is involved in many other wine projects, including Schrader. High scoring wines.<br /><br />Jamey Whetsone - Whetstone Cellars and Manifesto brand plus consults on other wine projects. Also highly regarded. Trained with Helen Turley.<br /><br />Suzanne Hagins - Lutea Wine. Organic and biodynamic wines. Have not tried but reputed to be lovely wines. Also does some consulting work for other brands.<br /><br />Another brand- the name escapes me- but backed in part by the bassist for Hootie and the Blowfish. New brand and have not tried.<br /><br />Finally, my brand, Calicaro. Also a small scale artisan project. Yes, there are alot of small scale Pinot makers, a varietly that lends itself especially to this type if hand crafted winemaking. But nevertheless, this still seems unusual. And I would be willing to bet there are a few more that I am unaware of (let me know if you know any).<br /><br />So what gives here?Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-68954957718473849722009-10-15T21:57:00.000-07:002009-10-15T22:08:14.957-07:00The Calicaro '09 LineupHere is what we are making this year: four Pinots Noir, one Cab Sauv and one Zin. We were so happy with our 08 fruit sources that we went back to each of them. New fruit sources this year include Doctor's Vineyard for Pinot and a Dry Creek Valley blend from some of the great Zin vineyards there. The Zin was a harvest time decision. Top quality fruit at a recession price. We'll pass the savings on with a very attractive bottle price south of $30/btl. <br /><br />The new Pinot will be called "The Dark Corner" and the Zin will be called "Shoeless Joe". Folks with a South Carolina Upstate connection will recognize the names. Anybody else know the signifcance of the names?<br /><br />Cheers,<br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-60526782631589429862009-10-10T16:07:00.000-07:002009-10-11T09:39:49.936-07:00High Pressure WorkSo...a week ago the Pinot had fermented to dryness and we were ready to press. What is this pressing thing all about? And why do we need to press the wine?<br /><br />Well, we don't really <em>need</em> to press the wine. There is alot of wine in the fermentation bin that can go straight into the barrel. This is called free run and some winemakers decide to use just free run wine and not use the press wine. Many say that this free run is the best quality wine.<br /><br />And I would agree <em>if</em> we were making a lighter style of wine. But we like structure, body and complexity (we like to say Calicaro is "packed with flavor and stacked with complexity") and for that, you gotta squeeze the grapes. Remember, all of the good stuff is in the skins and you get more of the good stuff out by applying pressure.<br /><br />It is our version of "shaking down" the grapes. We give them a bear hug and simultaneously empty their pockets.<br /><br />We just have to be careful not to squeeze the grapes too hard, because we will then get bitter tannins. This happens as the seeds begin to crush at the higher pressure levels.<br /><br />So we taste the free run juice and establish our baseline for taste. Then we set the Euro Press to take it to .2 bars of pressure on the mass of grape skins (which is called the must). We put a cup under and taste wine as it is released from the must. At .2 bars it still tastes alot like the free run. Next we go to .4 bars and taste again. Things now start getting interesting. More viscosity, or body, to the wine and more flavors begin to emerge.<br /><br />We raise the pressure in .2 bar increments and tasting. More and more. All tasting good, no bitterness. We taste the wine being squeezed out at each fraction of pressure and also taste the wine that is a blend of all of the fractions.<br /><br />At each higher fraction of pressure we are squeezing out less wine, just like squeezing a lime. At 1.2 bars something<em> </em><em>really </em>interesting happens. This press fraction <em>tastes sweet! </em>There was a slight bit of residual sugar left in the grapes and it has now been released.<br /><br />At 1.4 bars the sweetness is gone. We are getting concerned about the bitter tannins showing up. We take it to 1.5 bars and it still tastes good but decide to stop there. We are now getting only drops of wine anyway.<br /><br />We send the wine straight to the barrel and can now breathe a sigh of relief. We have made it through fermentation, the wine tastes really good, and most of the risk- that is, the many things that can go wrong in winemaking, are behind us. The wine can go through malolactic fermentation and settle down for a long winter's nap, all snugged in and cozy in the barrel.<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-69341585522022713142009-10-10T14:55:00.000-07:002009-10-11T21:37:21.905-07:00Reflections on Life as a Cellar RatBack from SF and reflecting on the life of a cellar rat. These are the people that do the day to day work in the winery and for two weeks I was proud to count myself as one of them.<br /><br />"Cellar rat" sounds like a derogatory term but those living the life are a rather happy bunch. The pay is not good but the music is cranked up, the juice/wine tastes good and the fork lifts make beep beep sounds so it is easy to get out of their way, safety being a major winery concern.<br /><br />The cellar rats range from people like me who are serious about making good wine and trying to learn everything about it, to the grizzled veterans who have worked many a harvest around the world. Some migrate with the harvest seasons, working in the southern hemisphere the other half of the year<br /><br />There were several interns who were working on their enology or viticulture degrees and several folks who had been laid off and viewed this as an opportunity to change career directions. For the most part, the extra help is welcomed, as there is so much to do this time of year.<br /><br />The winery owners such as myself, do not get paid for our harvest work. We hope to sell a little of our wine, of course.<br /><br />A surprizing number of others do not get paid either. Many are happy to do it for the experience. Kind of the urban winery equivalent of a dude ranch. In fact, every evening was crush camp, in which folks with no experience had signed up and paid money to have the privelege of sorting fruit and punching down bins. Tom Sawyer has nothing on our winery! I will say that winery work is more fun than whitewashing a fence.<br /><br />So...I miss the camaraderie, the energy and enthusiasm that people bring to winery work and the sense of pride in making something really good that you know people will savor and enjoy. As for the music...U2, Dr John, the Grateful Dead and Bob Marley I miss. The hip hop, not so much.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-5255573241646820162009-10-08T17:51:00.000-07:002009-10-08T18:36:23.619-07:00Bay Area Bits and PiecesBack from San Francisco. Lots of good work in the winery but some free time to explore the Bay Area.<br /><br />Here are a few semi-random thoughts and tips about the Bay Area.<br /><br />Calicaro's winery, which we share with a number of other small brands is located in the Dogpatch neighborhood, adjacent to Potrero Hill and South of Market (SoMa for the cognoscenti). It is part of the new urban winemaking trend. Quite an interesting and diverse neighborhood and Dogpatch is such a great name for a Southern winemaker. Maybe we need to do a Dogpatch bottling!<br /><br />Some good restaurants there tucked away inconspicuously. After wrapping up at the winery one night, a winery cellar rat handed me a split of White Hawk Vineyard Syrah and said "enjoy!" I walked up the street to Serpentine and had an amazing hamburger made from local Niman Ranch beef and an heirloom tomato salad. The peppery, meaty notes in the Syrah made a perfect pairing. White Hawk Vineyard is famous for its Syrah, and for very good reason. A memorable $20 meal.<br /><br />Blue Bottle Coffee is all the rage in SF. Individual brewed drip coffee that takes about 5 minutes or so to make. Combine that with the frequent lines at these popular places and you have lost 20 minutes plus just to get a cuppa joe. Once was enough for me. I predict the fad will pass- sure the coffee is good but it just ain't worth that!<br /><br />The Bounty Hunter up in Napa has a unique high testosterone approach to selling pricey Napa Cabernet. Animal trophies on the wall, a painting of a reclining nude female behind the bar and wine descriptions that sound like the bottles were tracked down by men on horses with high powered rifles.<br /><br />I loved it- no snobbishness and the theme works here- it is the opposite of the tuxedoed waiter sniffing and sipping from a tastevin. And get there before 6pm and try the BBQ sampler plate for 10 bucks, made in house with their custom smoker. The meat falls off the ribs and you won't be hungry for the next 24 hours. While the wine focus is Cabernet, a big Zin or Syrah is the way to go with the 'cue.<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-34356123710305775592009-10-02T23:19:00.000-07:002009-10-02T23:30:13.014-07:00An Affectionate Mondavi StoryHad dinner the other evening with a gentleman who wrote the Mondavi Winery's newsletters for several years. He had graduated from my alma mater a year after me so we swapped a few stories about college as we split a bottle of Calicaro Lone Oak Pinot. <br /><br />He then started in on Mondavi stories. Robert Mondavi was one of the most well loved and influential figures in the American wine business. As their copywriter, Jeffrey was frequently able to have dinner with the family. <br /><br />At one dinner, Robert Mondavi, who was well along in years at that point, swirled the wine in the glass so hard that it splattered everyone else at the table with a chest high horizontal spray of red wine. Mrs. Mondavi said with some alacrity, "a little less enthusiasm, my dear!"<br /><br />Jeffrey also said that the first time he met Mr Mondavi it was a 7am breakfast meeting. Mr Mondavi had personally gotten up early and gone to the Oakville Grocery to pick up sweet rolls and coffee for the meeting. Jeffrey said this was typical for him- no pretension, so down to earth. <br /><br />The wine business is full of great characters and clearly he was one of the greatest. <br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-43949814797610217322009-09-30T20:42:00.000-07:002009-09-30T20:47:47.543-07:00Pressing Pinot in SFWe pressed off our first batch of Pinot Sunday evening and press the second batch tomorrow night. First was Lone Oak Vineyard and the next is Split Rock. Using a large Euro Press we went to 1.3 bars and stopped as the first sign of bitter tannins showed up at that level. Super high quality wine this year, which makes three years in a row. One of our winemakers estimates 5-10% better than 08 which was also a very good year. Hearing great stories about the "old days" in Napa. Tell a few on the next post! Gotta run. Harvest crazy time!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-24688007994874469432009-09-20T08:23:00.000-07:002009-09-20T08:50:59.911-07:00Euphoria Food and Wine WeekendIt is late Sunday morning and the Euphoria event is winding down now. Calicaro was honored to be offered the opportunity to pour wine for the Thursday night welcome to the food and wine media people. Calicaro supplied all of the red wine and Schug supplied all of the white wine for this event. We hope to get some nice media coverage from that of course, and will post links on the blog if possible. <br /><br />We also poured at the Saturday afternoon Grand Tasting alongside other wines from all over the world. <br /><br />Although somewhat hampered by rain most of the weekend, there was great attendance at the events in which we were involved.<br /><br />Our wines all showed very well and folks loved all three, with our 08 Paris Mountian probably the favorite, followed by our 07 Poinsett and the 08 Liberty Bridge, which needs another 9-12 months of bottle age before it will really hit its stride. <br /><br />Tim Graham, executive chef from Tru in Chicago, one of the celebrity chefs in town, told me we had the best Pinot Noirs at the event. Similar compliments came from wine writers and educators, restaurant managers and retail wine shop owners.<br /><br />My response: we hand make each of our wines one barrel at a time. I don't think any other winery at Euphoria could make a similar claim. It makes a huge difference, especially with Pinot Noir.<br /><br />Dave<br />Calicaro WineDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-86534515096412407622009-09-18T12:32:00.000-07:002009-09-18T14:10:17.605-07:00In the Midst of Crazy TimeLone Oak Pinot is in and cold soaking now. Fermentation will begin in another day or so. Fruit came in in great shape and with nice balanced numbers on the brix, pH etc.<br /><br />First batch of Split Rock Pinot came in yesterday and is also in cold soak. This was our Clone 115. We were going to pick on Tuesday but had a minor rain delay- not a problem and fruit and numbers look fine. The Clone 667 from Split Rock gets picked tomorrow. These will also cold soak for a few days before we start fermentation.<br /><br />Our Doctor's Vineyard Pinot will come in on Monday. Cabernet Sauv from southern end of Napa (Coombsville area) has a few weeks to go before it will be harvested.<br /><br />After pouring wine at the Euphoria event this weekend I'll be in San Francisco at the winery for two weeks making all of this fruit into great wine. Lots of bubbling fermentations, punchdowns, wine pressing and barreling. The winery will be going 18-20 hours a day or more as Calicaro's fruit and fruit for other winemakers all get made into wine. Crazy fun.<br /><br />Cheers!<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-26521043143720766582009-09-13T17:41:00.000-07:002009-09-13T17:57:21.033-07:002009 Harvest- The Fruit is Coming InWe harvested our first vineyard yesterday and sorted, destemmed and began cold soak on the fruit today. In another five days or so we will begin the fermentation. The first fruit into the winery this year was from Lone Oak Vineyard in Santa Lucia Highlands. Fruit was in great shape and chemistry numbers were right where we like them to be. I know we can make some fine wine with this good juice.<br /><br />This year has been close to picture perfect. There were some concerns earlier about getting fruit to sufficient ripeness. There have been a few minor concerns about "hens and chicks" which are berries of varying size. I don't think either of these will present any problem for us. We had excellent even ripeness on our Lone Oak fruit and our two other Pinot vineyards- Split Rock in the Sonoma Coast and Doctor's Vineyard in the Santa Lucia Highlands are progressing very nicely. We will be picking both within a week to ten days. <br /><br />Our Cabernet vineyard is in the cooler southern part of Napa Valley and we will be able to get a little more hang time on it- probably the pick date will be into October.<br /><br />All in all, a great year and it is nice to breathe easier vs. the wild weather in '08. The '09 vintage has shaped up alot like '07- steady and slow with long periods of relatively cool weather and no heat or cold extremes. '07 was an easy and consistent year and it was not hard to make great wine. Anyone tasting the 07 wines is likely to agree with the consistently high wine quality across all of California and across many of the wine makers. <br /><br />'09 may even be better than '07- there is every possiblity for this result. <br /><br />Looking forward to making some amazing wines! <br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-82215780969653578372009-08-22T20:53:00.001-07:002009-08-22T21:26:10.460-07:00Pinot Blending Part TwoAfter blending the Lone Oak Pinot we moved on to the Split Rock Vineyard Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir. We again started with a base wine made from Dijon Clone 667 that had spent about 11 months in 50% new Francois Freres and Remond oak. We added varying percentages of other Dijon clone wine from Split Rock, including 115, 777 and 828. Here is our final blend: 79% 667, 10% 115, 10% 828, 1% 777.<br /><br />The final Split Rock wine is really intense and fruit forward with a strong acid backbone that will benefit from another 1 to 2 years of bottle aging. The dark cherry and berry flavors are delicious in this wine.<br /><br />Our final blending was a Pinot Noir from La Encantada Vineyard in the Santa Rita Hills (which is abbreviated as Sta. Rita Hills). Our objective on this wine was to make a more elegant and restrained Burgundian style Pinot with less obvious oak. However, we still wanted a high level of intensity, with a broad range of complex flavors. We really went all out, pulling in lots of different barrels and Pinot clones on the final blend. Here it is: 75% 115/777 co-fermented in a neutral barrel, 10% new Radoux barrel of 115/777 co-fermented, 10% 115 from a 1 yr old Francois Freres barrel, and 5% Swan (an older "heritage" Pinot Noir clone named for Joseph Swan) from a neutral barrel.<br /><br />This wine is drinking very well young. Tons of wild berry and cherry flavors- the wine has the intensity and vibracy of tiny wild fruit. It also has the crispness and acidity associated with a very cool climate vineyard.<br /><br />My recommendation would be to drink the Lone Oak 2009- 2014, the La Encantada 2009-2018 and to lay down the Split Rock for a year, say 2010-2020 since it has the acidity and tannic structure to go longer. <br /><br />We are very very happy with the final wines and hope you will try them and like them too!<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-74802751003622100062009-08-21T22:24:00.000-07:002009-08-21T22:56:45.119-07:00Pinot Noir Blending- High Art!Not for nothing do winemakers say that blending the final wine is the highest art in winemaking. Part aesthetics, part science and clearly part alchemy, I watched our winemaker Chris Nelson, fill vials and beakers with measured quantities of wine to be blended together into test batches. Butcher paper covered the table so notes could be taken as we tasted our way through various blends. <br /><br />Spitting was mandatory- no way could the palate withstand such an assault otherwise. My acid test for the finished blend- if it was too good to spit then I thought we were getting very very close. <br /><br />The basic process is to start with your base wine and note gaps or shortcomings in the wine that could be filled by blending in other wines. Since we were making single vineyard designates it was important that all or almost all come from the same vineyard and varietal (Pinot Noir). But for those prerequisites, we could mix and match and blend to our heart's content. Once the gaps in the base wine are noted- perhaps there is not much in the way of a finish or the aromatics are weak or the wine shows a hollow midpalate, then you set about figuring through trial and error tasting how to close the gaps to make a complete wine.<br /><br />It is not pure trial and error. Chris knows his wines and barrels very well and where to go to help make a better wine. <br /><br />For example, our Lone Oak was tasting really great just as the base wine made from 667 Dijon clone fruit aged in 50% new Francois Freres oak. We tried 8 or 9 blends, adding other Dijon clones such as 115, 777 and 828 with different barrel spice box notes but everything seemed to detract, not improve on our base wine. A further insult was that the additions detracted from the incredibly smooth and full mouthfeel of the Lone Oak 667. <br /><br />At Chris's suggestion, we then added varying percentages of a heritage clone called Swan known for soaring aromatics- a very heady perfume of fruit and flowers that also adds some higher notes in the taste to balance the darker heavier fruit. WOW! We were in a very sweet spot at 5% Swan added to the 95% 667. This was our final blend on the Lone Oak, but it took us much trial and error to get there. <br /><br />Over the course of a couple of days we did this for two additional single vineyard designate Pinot Noirs, Split Rock on the Sonoma Coast and La Encantada in Sta Rita Hills. Here the blends were considerably more complex, involving 4 to 6 Dijon clones and various barrel spice box notes. <br /><br />Did I mention yet how fun this was to do? And to think that Chris gets paid to do this as a regular part of his job as a consulting winemaker for various small Pinot Noir brands! He did say he NEVER complains about his job!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-66676458498632531862009-07-23T18:37:00.000-07:002009-07-23T19:09:50.073-07:00Greenville Wine Meetup Pinot Noir SmackdownRichard Peck and I went toe to toe / mano a mano this past Tuesday night on Pinot Noir. Richard had four more restrained and elegant Pinots (at least in theory- more on that later) and I had four bigger, badder, bolder in your face Pinots (again in theory).<br /><br />There were a number of ironies in this tasting. First, the Calicaro Anderson Valley was first up on Richard's lineup. So...here I was supposedly arguing against my own wine!<br /><br />Next up for him was an Italian Pinot Noir called Grosjean, 04 Arcadian Pisoni (that tipped the scales at 15.9% alc, so much for light and elegant!) and a Morey St Denis Burgundy.<br /><br />I poured 07 Siduri Sonoma County, 06 Lucia Garys' Vineyard, 05 Martinelli Bella Vigna and 05 Siduri Sonatera.<br /><br />All showed reasonably well or better, although some of the bigger pinots were in the early stages of their drinking windows and would benefit from more bottle time.<br /><br />We had 24 at the tasting and perhapos an even split in preference between the first four and the second four. However, the Burg and the Pisoni were both quite big wines, and the Grosjean was amazingly good for an Italian Pinot (this varietal is not their forte by any stretch) with wonderful zingy acidity.<br /><br />So...the question for me was how the Calicaro would hold up against a $150 retail Burg and a $90 Arcadian from a highly regarded vineyard? The answer is very, very well. The Calicaro was widely praised and a number of folks called it their wine of the night.<br /><br />My worthy adversary Richard sang its praises too. Were folks just getting behind the local boy and his wine? Maybe that was a factor but I was proud of the wine and it clearly was not outclassed. I am just glad it could run with the big dogs.<br /><br />As for the bigger end of the spectrum, the 07 Siduri Sonoma County which is a relatively modest 14.1 % alc Pinot, was overshadowed by its predecessors from Pisoni and Burgundy, although it is a beautiful wine in its own right- just too small a wine to follow these two. The Martinelli and the Siduri Sonatera were both drinking wonderfully in my opinion. The Lucia needed a bit more time to soften up- at least another year and it should be in great form.<br /><br />I poured some bonus bottles- a 2000 Beaux Freres that was wonderful, a 2007 Loring Clos Pepe, very big and well liked, a New Zealond Pinot from Mountford, not much talked about, and finally an 08 Tunisian Pinot Noir. Yes, a North African Pinot Noir! The amazing thing about this wine was that it indeed did taste like Pinot Noir and was not horrible. Actually for about $12 US (8 Euros) I would say it was as good as many similarly priced domestic Pinots.<br /><br />Richard and I had fun and shook hands at the end although we clearly did not change each other's minds about things. All good fun and the wine world is better for having a diversity of views. How boring would it be if it were otherwise? Hope the participants were able to tolerate all of our bantering in order to drink some rockin' good Pinot Noir.<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-35860898468776376652009-07-12T19:41:00.000-07:002009-07-12T19:52:20.516-07:00North African Pinot Noir??!!Just got back from a trip that included a brief stay in Tunisia on the coast of North Africa. Visited the ruins at Carthage. Those who remember their high school world history may recall that Carthage was defeated by Rome in the Punic Wars. <br /><br />It is hot, hot desert terrain. Not what I would consider a climate for a a cool weather varietal such as Pinot Noir. But there it was on the shelves, with a label describing the contents as Carthaginian Pinot Noir. Were there mountains in the area more conducive to growing these finicky grapes? None that I could see. <br /><br />Nevertheless the shop keeper said this was THE outstanding wine produced in Tunisia. How could I resist that pitch combined with a price of 8 Euros, which is about $12?<br /><br />Will plan to open the bottle at a Pinot Noir tasting next week as a bonus curiosity wine. One safe bet is that no one will have tasted this wine before! And it will be fun to see if they really can grow good Pinot in North Africa, a land better known for its camels.<br /><br />Cheers,<br /><br />DaveDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2589530644175153547.post-87309979251364042942009-07-11T19:59:00.000-07:002009-07-11T20:18:45.998-07:00Recommended Reading: Judgment in ParisJudgment in Paris was written by the sole reporter who actually was present at the watershed 1976 Paris tasting in which California bested France in Cabernet and Chardonnay wine. The author's motivation is to tell the full story and set the record straight, which he does in admirable style. As a credit to the author, knowing the ultimate outcome does not diminish the intrigue and suspense of the storytelling.<br /><br />The author has done his homework and we are made privy to the multitude of back stories and personalities that came together for that event. As California has moved from success to success in the last several decades, it is important to remember that such was not always the case. In the mid 1970s the vast majority of California winemaking was still jug wine, and the few producers of fine wine struggled to survive.<br /><br />This small low key tasting event may have done more to bring California into the limelight than anything else. The importance of the event only became clear in hindsight. And for the fans of Cali wine, the reactions of the French judges makes for delicious reading.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05074559138319637190noreply@blogger.com