Archive for April, 2010

Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting In Pictures – 4.17.10

April 19, 2010

It was a beautiful Saturday, and nearly 500 people came up the mountain to enjoy the view, the weather, and the wine! It was our second Monte Bello Assemblage tasting (out of three total for the year), and we had Paul Draper, David Gates, Shun Ishikubo, and the whole Monte Bello Tasting Room Staff on hand to host as we poured 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay, our Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase vertical featuring 375ml bottles of 1990, 1992, and 1994 Monte Bello, and the current assemblage of the 2009 Monte Bello. But why listen to me, when you can see for yourself! Enjoy the slideshow! And remember, there is still one more Monte Bello Collector Event, the weekend of 5.22.10-5.23.10 …

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Ridge & The Wall Street Journal -or- All The Ridge That’s Fit To Print!

April 19, 2010

Pair of very interesting articles in the Wall Street Journal recently, both featuring Ridge wines; one written by Lettie Teague, and one by Jay McInerney, two most excellent scribes.

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Should you wish to give them a read, you can find Lettie’s article here, and Jay’s here.

Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase & Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting! Saturday!

April 16, 2010

This Saturday we are very pleased to be hosting a wonderful event, our Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting, during which we’ll be pouring not only the current assemblage of the 2009 Monte Bello (slated for release in 2012) and the 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay (recently awarded 95 points by Wine Spectator!), but also an extraordinary trio of back-vintage Monte Bellos as part of our ongoing Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase Series (you can read about the previous edition here).

This time around, we’ll be pouring the 1990, 1992, and 1994 Monte Bellos from 375 ml bottles, offering an unparalleled point-of-entry into the mysteries and majesties of ageable wines and their bottle-format-specific maturation rates. (My current tasting notes are below.)

On hand to host this fine event, in addition to our lovely Tasting Room Staffers, will be members of our Production Team, including Paul Draper himself, alongside our celebrated Vice President of Vineyard Operations David Gates, and Shun Ishikubo, our Assistant Production Manager.

As to event specs, here’s the gist: the event is $30/person for the general public, $15/person for members of our ATP and ZList programs, and complimentary to Monte Bello Collector members(+1 guest per membership). For our non-member guests, the event fee will be refunded to those who join the Monte Bello Collector futures program the day of the event, and for our ATP and Zlist members, the $15 event fee will be applied to any Monte Bello purchased in the Tasting Room. (For more details about this event, please click here.)

And now, on to some tasting notes!

1990 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Deep crimson in the glass, with a vivid cranberry-salmon limn, showing medium-light viscosity in the legs – rustic aromatics, rich with plum succulence and forest-floor herbality and earth — incredibly supple point-of-entry, with astonishingly youthful acidity and utterly seamless tannins — hints of raspberry and  plum mid-palate, with some cassis and tobacco interwoven throughout the palate spread –a lingering woodsiness redolent of sweet pipe tobacco wraps around the core  of meaty stew, concentrated broth, and dried fruits that makes up the elegantly weighted finish, as the mineral-driven chalkiness of the integrated tannins lays languidly across the tongue — remarkably intact for a 20-year half-bottle, and absolutely ready to drink, with no signs of degradation, only the fine emergence of secondary and tertiary maturation characteristics.

1992 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Gorgeous cherry hues sparkle in the bowl; deep, almost black cherry in the belly, widening out to a bright red cherry limn; notably adhesive viscosity in the legs — deep, dark aromatics, rich with cocoa, chocolate liquor, graphite, and black and blue berries — big, round, warm, and supple at point-of-entry, showing itself as a plush and fleshy Monte Bello right away — tannins are finely ground and well-integrated, though they definitely dominate the acidity, which takes a comparatively restrained role in the construct — Sweet and decadent fruit notes are tremendously expressive mid-palate, though without being cloying or overtly grandiose; raspberry and blackberry characteristics dominate, in that way of exhibiting both sweet fruit and woodsy seed notes — the finish is singularly mouth-coating, and the teeth-to-inner-lip tannins established at point-of-entry are still swelling in intensity at this point — the finish is long and warm, and exceedingly decadent. While certainly drinkable now, and despite the reserved intensity of the acidity, the sheer opulence of the fruit suggests this is still developing and maturing.

1994 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Black to red plum hues display brilliantly in the bowl, moving from dark to light from belly to limn, with quick-moving legs bespeaking an elegant body-weight on the palate — wildly exotic aromatics that, while almost bordering on funky, at the same time exhibit utterly archetypal old-world cab characteristics; anise, currant, tobacco, campfire wood and smoke, mint, coffee, fleshy black olives, and a multiplicity of black fruits, in particular — pointed without being austere, structured without being clumsy, the beams-and-girders are front-and-center at point-of-entry, while a horde of cocoa-powder-dusted and dark-chocolate-covered fruits await their turn mid-palate — acid and tannin are perfectly balanced throughout, and the finish, while shorter than some vintages, is seamlessly palate-coating and completely devoid of both inappropriately angular distractions and short-changing hollownesses — in short, rich, complex, fully saturated, and if anything, still young, though very, very drinkable now as well.

Gwyneth Paltrow, Wine, & Ridge -or- Goop, A Burger, & Ridge Zinfandel!

April 16, 2010

Not sure I need to say too much more really. When you’ve got Gwyneth, Goop (her blog), Burgers, and some Ridge Zinfandel, it sort of feels like the post writes itself. Just take a little of:

Wine

Pairing the right wine with your meal can be so difficult; there are so many flavors to balance and courses in the meal to consider. Scratch your head no more, we’ve asked for suggestions from a team of knowledgeable wine connoisseurs – big-time sommeliers, an at-home aficionado and an insider in the business.

Love,

and mix it with a little:

One of my favorite producers is Ridge Vineyards. Ridge makes excellent cabernets and chardonnays but the winery made its bones with Zin. (from an excerpt on the Goop blog written by Patrick Keane)

And bam! You’ve got yourself a post.

And how about other pairing suggestions? Any other “Ridge and (insert food dish here)” pairing favorites?

And if you’d like to read the full article, please click below:

Gwyneth/Goop/Wine

A Rare Look At A Ridge Chardonnay From 2001!

April 15, 2010

 I very recently had the opportunity to try a rather under-the-radar Ridge offering; the 2001 Ridge Vineyards Coast Range Chardonnay.

Chardonnay is, to say the least, a rather rarefied offering in our portfolio, so to try something out of the vaults that was hard-to-find to begin with was a real treat. Anyone else out there familiar with this wine? Tried it? Tried it recently? Well, here is a quick jot-up of my reactions:

“Aromatics redolent of butterscotch and toasted honey, juxtaposed against a tropicality dominated by lychee notes, and a blend of eastern spice complexity … Not overtly viscous on the palate, definitely toasty, but notable for a great deal of vibrant acidity … The finish marks a return to the toasted honey qualities adding weight to the bouquet … rich, integrated, and ready to drink.” CW (3/10)

And here is what Paul Draper had to say about this wine, back in 2002:

“An early start to the growing season and warm late-summer weather ripened the chardonnay on Monte Bello Ridge earlier than usual. To harvest as flavors developed fully, we divided the grapes on our estate parcels and the three small, neighboring vineyards into fourteen separate pickings. With the exception of one minor tank-fermented experiment, all were handled in the same manner. The fruit was whole-cluster pressed and barrel fermented on its natural yeasts. The lees were stirred weekly throughout a long, natural malolactic fermentation, and the wine racked off the lees after eleven months. We then selected eight of the softer, more approachable lots for this lovely Coast Range. Enjoyable now, it should be at its best over the next few years.” PD (9/02)

If you know this wine, let us know!

And One For The Wine And The Line!

April 14, 2010

Is wine just a beverage? Begrudgingly, I concede there are times when this may be the case for some. But in my life, never! Wine is experiential, always! It’s history and tradition, craftspersonship and the agrarian way, art and commerce, family and farm and business and budget; it’s people and it’s stories, as it is music and poetry, and love and passion and silence and introspection and meditation and engagement and camaraderie and faith and …

Well, wine is poetry, that’s what I really wanted to talk about; that, and that poetry is wine, and that one begets the other just as the converse is also true …

So to the poets I turn, in doubt as to how to proceed with the proof that proves the theorem that wine is indeed experiential. Specifically, to Pablo Neruda’s astonishing poem “Ode To Wine.” I won’t give the whole poem away here, in hopes that you’ll follow the link below and not only read the remainder of this poem, but that you’ll also dig farther into the Neruda canon; that said, I’ll certainly leave you with the dangle of the opening and closing stanzas:

Day-colored wine,
night-colored wine,
wine with purple feet
or wine with topaz blood,
wine,
starry child
of earth,
wine, smooth
as a golden sword,
soft
as lascivious velvet,
wine, spiral-seashelled
and full of wonder,
amorous,
marine;
never has one goblet contained you,
one song, one man,
you are choral, gregarious,
at the least, you must be shared.

(The above is how the poem opens, below is its conclusion.)

Drink it,
and remember in every
drop of gold,
in every topaz glass,
in every purple ladle,
that autumn labored
to fill the vessel with wine;
and in the ritual of his office,
let the simple man remember
to think of the soil and of his duty,
to propagate the canticle of the wine.

You can find the full text of this wondrous poem here.

Another One On Why The Wine And Jazz!

April 14, 2010

Every drink has its own vibe; whiskey may make you both loquacious and combative, while gin may provoke both visions and forgetfulness; beer may be for back-slapping, hi-fiving, and salty snacks, while rum can make for writing poems while watching pelicans; tea can be meditative, coffee aggressive, just as root beer brings the smooth and the creamy, while Rockstar is, well, Rockstar… and don’t get me started on Vodka and Red Bull …

But then there is wine. Wondrous, contemplative, conversational wine. Groovy and chill, foodie and fun, serious and stylized, witty and winsome …

And then there is music. Ministry is for tapping your inner serial killer, while The Clash taps your faith that being wrong is right …  Stones vs. The Beatles? Don’t even get me started. Muddy is for dancing, The Wolf is for drinking. Portishead is the champion, and Monk is the best …

The point is, everything done well has an effect on you, and when it’s done well, you invite the effect, because you trust it, and you love it. That’s why, when you know you’re going to be in fine, fine company, be it romantic, friendly, civilized or funky, you’re going to want wine. Especially if food is involved. And wondrously languid yet insightful conversation. And lots and lots of sighs of satisfaction. And perhaps comments about the moon. And asides that someone hears and says, “you’ve got to write that down!” This is a Wine Hang. It’s loose, but intelligent, gluttonous yet appreciative, decadent yet stylized, artisan yet raw. Mostly, it’s subtle. It’s not tequila, or whiskey, or vodka, or beer. It’s so very, very fine …

Which brings me to the fact that today is Gene Ammon’s birthday (born in 1925, passed in 1974). Gene Ammons, jazz saxophone titan. I first discovered him via an album called “Brother Jug”; this was also his nickname. And in rooting around on-line today, hard-scrabbling for facts about Mr. Ammons, “Jug,” and wine, I came across a quote from a freelance music journalist by the name of Derek Taylor, who wrote something so wonderful about Mr. Ammons that I just had to share it, because it not only perfectly captures the juju of this player, and not only does so via a wine metaphor, but because it inadvertently captures exactly what is so fine, fine, fine, about wine, wine, wine …

Mr. Taylor writes:

“… In each instance the emphasis is on feeling over technical display. Filled with amorous intentions, Jug isn’t interested in breaking the door down when he can just as easily gain entry with a gentle knock, a bottle of wine and a bouquet of roses…”

Exactly!

Happy Birthday Brother Jug! I lift a glass of wine to you.

For more about Gene Ammons, please click here, and for more about Derek Taylor, please click here.

More From #TRP2010!

April 8, 2010

Some very interesting seminars I’ve just attended, I must say. Elizabeth Slater on the most vital Dos and Donts for Tasting Rooms and Tasting Room staff, with a break in between for a Talk-To-The-Bloggers panel discussion that featured the announced bloggers Ray Johnson, director of the SF Chronicle Wine Competition and host of TasteWine: Ray Johnson’s Wine Blog, Christian Oggenfuss, founder of Oggenfuss Wine Marketing and host of VinTuba.com, and Thea Dwelle, she of the site Luscious Lushes (and a recent attendee to our Wine Blogger’s Tasting!); I say “announced” because there was also a special unannounced guest, Hardy Wallace, host of the Dirty South wine blog (“wine is meant to be crunk!”), and recent winner of the Murphy-Goode “A Really Goode Job” competition …

But back to Elizabeth Slater, who earns every inch of her bio’s claim that she is a “savant”; though one might also say she’s “a hoot” or “a pistol” and not be far off either!

On wine, and when to drink it? “If you wake up on the right side of the grass, that’s cause for celebration!”

On talking to customer for too long in the tasting room? “As soon as they get their credit card out, shut up!”

On the comparative  greater importance of the experience, vs. the contextually lesser importance of the wine itself? “Having a good time makes wine taste better!”

(speaking of quotes, by the way, DEFINITELY stay tuned for a compendium of quotes from Steve Heimoff speaking at the conference!)

Anyhow, I don’t want to spill the beans on Elizabeth Slater’s numerical manifesto of Dos and Donts, but I just have to share one from each to give you the flavor:

DO recognize that “Objections are buying signs” … very interesting …

and DON’T “Touch your hair or your face” … again, very interesting …

(And remind me to tell you what the inside dirt is on how effective the Really Goode Job endeavor was as regards actually selling cases of wine! At least, according to one person “in the know” …)

Another Day At The Office -or- Tasting Room Profitability -or- #TRP2010 -or- Santa Rosa’s New Old Town!

April 7, 2010

Greetings from Downtown Santa Rosa! Took a cab today, and the driver was lamenting the loss of quality as regards the prostitutes in this once rather more rustic neighborhood … but I’m getting ahead of myself … Meaning, I’m staying in Santa Rosa, so that I can attend the 2010 Tasting Room Profitability Conference, which has, in a rather virtuoso display of real-time Social Media proactivity, already become #trp2010 … and by the way, and perhaps by way of explanation and/or the proferrment of context, the driver was a former Navy man … as was my Grandpa …

Anyhow, I’m here with my missus and our lil’ baby girl (2 ft. 7 inches worth of Lil’ Clara Bay at 15 months! Who, might I add, wore her first pair of Levis to have lunch with Daddy during a break in the conference!), which is a digression, I admit, but I am about to start a paragraph about how my day started, which will begin with the conference itself, but actually, my day started with a baby wake-up, and mushed up apples and blueberries, and  a rapidly downed cup of coffee, and such and such …

Anyhow, the day began with my meeting up with Melissa Baker, essentially my counterpart at Ridge Vineyards, meaning she is the Tasting Room Manager at our Lytton Springs facility, while I hold down the fort at Monte Bello … and we have a pretty groovy and appropriate division of labor betwixt us as regards Social Media; she being crisp, clean, focussed, and to the point, takes care of the Tweeting, whilst I, being prone to rather ponderous and polysyllabic exercises in rhetorical excess, attend to the blog … Anyhow, the rather pregnant Melissa, in search of whatever comfort a conference hall can afford a lovely pregnant woman, wished to sit right in front, where leg stretchability was at a premium, whilst I, being rather self-conscious about my height, and accordingly normally preferring the Bob Uecher seats, but out of respect, sat up front as well, and proceeded to rapidly numb my backside courtesy of a long, low, stretch …

Ugh, digressing again … Anyhow, speaker #1 was Rick Bakas, director of Social Media at St. Supery (cheers to a great producer!), and I must say, all incessant references to bacon aside, he was truly excellent … not that I minded the bacon references, mind you. Bacon is just one of those funny words. Like coccyx  … You know, coccyx! Where I was numb …

Anyhow, this is a man to listen to, and to listen to closely, and to watch, and to follow, if you have any interest in wine, social media, and especially, if you happen to be interested in the intersection of both … More on Rick shortly …

And in fact, more on the #trp2010 shortly … must go sip some of our newly-released 2008 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Chardonnay from, well, us (being Ridge) because I have a bottle with me, and I also have Haig’s Hummus (the greatest hummus ever, bar none, so good that either it, or other hummus, should really have to change its name), Lambchopper and Herbed Chevre from Cypress Grove, and some Roasted Garlic and Cheese bread from local stars Full Circle Baking Company, and, and, and … um, I’m very hungry and thirsty now … must run. #trp2010? Very excellent … More soon!

More From Our Wine Blogger’s Tasting: Calling Luscious Lushes!

April 6, 2010

The wonderfully vibrant writing style of Thea Dwelle, she of the site Luscious Lushes, is on full display in her wrap-up of our debut Wine Blogger’s Tasting, to be found here.

Her opening paragraph ought to be good indication of the insights and enjoyments to follow:

“Silicon Valley?  Yes Virginia, there is wine in the South Bay, high above the muck of Cupertino, on Monte Bello ridge.  Long before the computer chip was invented, the Monte Bello winery was started on this ridge.  At 2600 feet, the winery is located at the apex of the hill, where the upper most vineyards are.  Winding our way past the gravel trucks and up the mountain, there were precarious hairpin turns and road closures, but nothing was going to stop me from getting to the good stuff at the top of that hill.”

Cheers Lushes! “Yes Virginia, there is wine in the South Bay” I love it!


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