Archive for March, 2011

The First Wine Bloggers Tasting of 2011: The Wrap-Up!

March 31, 2011

2010 was a great debut year for our quarterly Wine Bloggers Tasting series, and I am now happy to say I think we’re off to an equally fine start in 2011; the first edition took place on 3.25.11. It was a great mix of participants–some returning veterans, some newbies–and I think it was an exceptional crop of wines on offer as well. Plus, it started hailing mid-tasting! Can’t ask for much more mountain mojo than that …

Prepping the line-up ...

In terms of what we tasted, I as always had a bit of a theme in mind, but in advance of its deployment, we first tasting a pair of rather historically significant offerings; the 2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Chardonnay, and the 2008 Ridge Vineyards Estate Cabernet Sauvignon! Why significant? These are the first bottlings to forego both “California” and “Santa Cruz Mountains” on the label, making them the debut of our “Estate” designation!

Handle with care ...

As to the theme itself, it was a VerticalModelMembershipManifesto! Meaning, I poured verticals of offerings from each of our three membership programs: ATP, ZList, and Monte Bello Collector.

In this corner,weighing in at 2004 and 2006 respectively, sporting deep purple and garnet colors, and representing their hometown of ATP, please put your hands together and give a hearty Syrah Hurrah for two vintages of the Lytton Estate!

And in this corner, weighing in at 2009 and 1999 respectively, all the way from a town called ZList, in ruby red colors, and representing two generations of competitive complexity, please ring your Tin Can Bell for the Zin Fan Del! Geyserville, that is!

And in this corner, three heavyweight champions of the world, weighing in at 1985, 1995, and 2005 respectively, sporting brilliant berry, cherry, crimson, and cranberry, all the way from Collector Town, would you please give a Jaunty Hello to the Monte Bello!

1985 Monte Bello Corks ...

In addition to tasting all the above, the very wonderful Allan Bree (who has just launched a new blog! it can be found at batonnage.net), he of the mind-bendingly impressive Ridge Vineyards library, gifted our affair with two delightfully rare rarities, a pair of Sangioveses!

Special additions ...

So, the planning was done, the inviting was done, and with just a wee bit more decanting …

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvLIGMYtvJM

… we were off to the viticultural races!

And with that said, may I introduce The Bloggers!

The Bloggers ...

In attendance for the first Wine Bloggers Tasting of 2011 (please click on a name to view their blogs):

Amy Cleary

Allan Bree

Jason Mancebo

Chiara Shannon

David Tong

Enoch Choi (Enoch left the blogosphere after having one of the most read wine blogs back in the early 2000s, you can now follow him on Twitter)

Erin Grant (Erin wines the prize for this edition, for being the first to send me a link for a new post. Well done Erin!)

Fred Swan

Liren Baker

Melanie Friedman

Thea Dwelle

Wes Barton

These are all great writers, folks; impassioned, knowledgeable, prolific, obsessed, devoted, informed, semi-insane, and phenomenal. I encourage you to visit them all!

The Bloggers, Again!

Deep appreciations to all our guest bloggers!

And for all, please stay tuned for announcements about the next edition, and if you’re a wine blogger, and wish to participate, let me know!

2009 Jimsomare Chardonnay: Tasting Notes!

March 28, 2011

If you’re not already a member of our ATP Program, now might just be a really good time to consider joining up. Why? Because we’ve just made available (exclusively to members of our ATP Program) the 2009 Jimsomare Chardonnay, and it’s utterly and completely delicious.

This might come off as a bit of a mash-note-to-self, but if you’re aware of our chardonnays, you’re probably aware of just how celebrated they are, and how accoladed they’ve been (#2 on Wine Spectator’s Top 100 List, 90+ point ratings from Robert Parker & Wine Enthusiast, Wine of the Year award from Sunset Magazine). The rarity-scarcity of the Jimsomare offering would certainly seem to enhance that cachet, but it’s the experience of tasting it that I want to share with you …

A beautiful straw yellow in the glass (hold it to the light and it will send wine fireflies sparking through your private atmospheres), it positively sparkles in the glass, and the clear and crisp highlights are counterweighted by elegantly slow-moving and gracefully viscous legs. The aromatics are pure mountain-fruit chardonnay; steely, mineral-laden, and warmly mid-to-high tone, with particularly expressive notes of pear, lemon, and honey.  Great acidity hits the palate at first sip, then spreads throughout, with notable points of vibrancy being tip of the tongue and, interestingly enough, the long finish. Mid-palate provides an emergence of discreet and mitigated oak influence; honey tones get warmer, citricity turns spicy, zest supines into subtle hints of beurre blanc. As noted above, the finish is stunningly long, and effectively sews all the components together in rather delightful fashion, while also adding in some mellow tropical fruit notes and layering on some wild yeast-derived brioche warmth. Add the faintest hint of caramel, and the journey from front to back of palate is complete. Simultaneously complex and elegant, this is a wine that wears its affability on its sleeve, yet holds within its cloaks a deeper, richer core. Drink in any season, alone, or with light-to-medium-bodied foods that favor mellow spicing and savory flavorings.

If you’re already in the ATP Program, you can click here to order this wine now, and if you’re interested in joining, please click here. Then, you can go back to the other link, and order this wine!

#RRSF Grand Tasting!

March 27, 2011

Do you plan to attend the Rhone Rangers San Francisco Grand Tasting today? If so, please make sure to visit the Ridge Vineyards table, we’ve got a tremendous roster of wines to share with you! Here is the line-up:

2009 BUCHIGNANI RANCH CARIGNANE (pre-release!)

100% Carignane

“The 2009 is our eleventh vintage from this small vineyard in the hills north of Dry Creek Valley. Planted in the thirties, forties, and fifties, it has been meticulously cared for by Dino Buchignani, a role now filled by his son Stan. Full of pure fruit and elegant structure, this old-vine carignane is enjoyable now, and will be at its best over the next four to five years.” John Olney (8/10)

 

2005 LYTTON ESTATE GRENACHE

88% Grenache, 6% Zinfandel, 6% Petite Sirah

“The two oldest parcels, planted in 1902 and 1963, are the heart of this wine. They are field blends of grenache, with minor amounts of zinfandel and petite sirah. Pure grenache from the two younger parcels contributes finesse and definition, and eighteen months in oak has integrated fruit and tannin, accentuating the wine’s exotic spice. This excellent grenache will be at its best over the next five years.” Eric Baugher (3/07)

2006 LYTTON ESTATE SYRAH/GRENACHE

50% Syrah, 50% Grenache

“Syrah’s deep flavors and firm structure complement the bright fruit, spice, and lively acidity of grenache. After twenty months in air-dried american oak barrels, the wine’s elements have integrated beautifully. Approachable now, it promises to continue developing over the next six to eight years.” Eric Baugher (8/08)

2006 LYTTON ESTATE SYRAH (pre-release!)

92% Syrah, 8% Viognier

“Viognier and syrah co-fermented on their natural yeasts in seven small tanks; we pressed early to avoid excessive tannins. Full-bodied and solidly structured, this fine syrah will develop further with ten to twelve years in bottle.” Eric Baugher (9/08)

2009 LYTTON ESTATE PETITE SIRAH (our first national-release Petit Sirah!)

100% Petite Sirah

“This hundred-percent varietal is our first national release Petite Sirah that shows the structure, balance, and complexity that can be achieved when soil and varietal are perfectly matched. It will soften and evolve over the next ten years.” John Olney (11/10)

If you require some additional information about the event, please click here. And if you attend, PLEASE send us thought, perceptions, comments, tasting notes, photos, we want it all! And mainly, enjoy!

Hi Ho Rhone Rangers, Away!

March 21, 2011

If you know about Rhone Rangers, if you like Rhone varietal wines, and if you particularly happen to like Ridge Vineyards Rhone Varietal wines, then you should just click here; that’ll sort you all the way out.

Otherwise, let me cut right to the heart of the matter, and allow you to dig this menu:

Passed Hors d’Oeuvres

Teleme and Porcini Arancini

Yukon Gold Potatoes with Feta & Green Onions

Polenta with Braised Lamb & Gremolata

 

Spring Salad

Fig & Arugula Salad with Toasted Pecans, Laura Chenel Chevre, Pancetta (optional), finished with Fig & Port Vinaigrette

 

Entrée

Crispy Duck Confit, Savoy Cabbage, Pearl Onions, Fingerling Potatoes

Finished with Blood Orange & Anise Gastrique

 

Dessert

Meyer Lemon Cheesecake with Citrus Creme Anglaise

 

 

My, my, my, there are SO many good words up there! Starting with Teleme (do you know about this cheese? if not, remind me to clue you in!) and Porcini. Me, I was pretty much sold at that point. Interested? It gets better. Do you know where this is going to be served? Ever heard of Dogpatch Studios?

 

Yeah, that’ll do.

So what’s this all about then? Why, Rhone Rangers 15th Annual San Francisco Tasting, of course! There are a whole slew of events associated with this amazing tasting opportunity, and they’re all in orbit around the gravitational pull of THE GRAND TASTING!

San Francisco Grand Tasting

Sunday, March 27, 2011 2:00 – 5:00 PM. 15th ANNUAL RHONE RANGERS GRAND TASTING. The weekend culminates with the Grand Tasting, where over 2,000 people are expected to come taste over 500 wines from more than 100 Rhone Rangers wineries. For a list of participating wineries, click here. Sample gourmet foods from 25 or more specialty food purveyors, including cheese, bread, olive oil, charcuterie, fruits and other sweets and chocolates.  A silent auction will feature Rhone Rangers wines and wine-related items; proceeds from the auction will benefit the Rhone Rangers Scholarship Fund. This event takes place at the Fort Mason Festival Pavilion.  Come out for a great afternoon of wine, food and fun. BUY TICKETS: $45/EACH 

Here at Ridge, we are particularly excited about the Winemaker’s Dinner; that’s when the menu from above will be served, and it’s at this event that a VERY SPECIAL RIDGE ITEM will be auctioned off! Helping out with the auction? Our very own David Gates, Vice President of Vineyard Operations (and a VP on the Rhone Rangers Board of Directors)!

And here is what Ridge is offering; all YOU need to remember is LOT #15!

Lot #15 —North or South, Ridge Vineyards Hosts Your Group of Eight for A Traditional Rhone Style Lamb Lunch

Dawn Wofford (of  Benchmark Consulting), started this whole ball rolling, by donating from her other business, Lamb Valley Direct.  David Gates, VP of Vineyard Operations at Ridge, picked up the pace from there, by offering to host eight guests at either of Ridge’s vineyard sites: Monte Bello or Lytton Springs, for a lamb lunch paired with an assortment of Ridge’s gorgeous Rhone wines.  This will be a lunch to remember, with two wine industry icons/friends of the Rhone Rangers—one who could help you find work, the other who might just put you to work pruning some vines!  Estimate: priceless.

 

Well, if you’re not already in line, huddled in the rain under tarps, umbrellas, and sleeping bags, drinking brandy and coffee from a thermos, holding a weathered sign that says “Rhone Rangers or Bust”, singing folks songs with some guy named Edward who thinks he may be a bodhisattva, who really digs that your guitar has a “This Machine Drinks Wine” bumper sticker on it, then I just don’t know what else to entice you with. Perhaps your heart is two sizes two small?

If that’s the case, then I make this promise to you, if you attend this event, your heart will grow THREE SIZES THAT DAY!

Time For Another “Weird and Wacky World of Search Engine Terms” post!

March 15, 2011

It just never, ever fails to amaze me, the things that lead people to this blog.

I like to think it’s testament to the depth and range of the subject matter contained here, but it may also be that people are a tad strange.

Either way, I’m happy you found us, and good luck on your search for “Jimmie Walker Memorabilia.” Dy-No-Mite!

What follows is a list of search engine terms that led people here in the past 30 days. Enjoy!

articles on alcohol mystery

meat slicer gorgeous

how are solved acrostic anagram

i always fill like

fefferoni pepper

cheese “wallace and gromit”

rick jennings muscle

as the days fly past will we lose our grasp

wine ceremonies in chinese poetry

schwarzenegger esence national colour

wine menagerie mustard glozening

cafe paris hemingway

hummingbird poems

5 gallon wine “the jerk”

dali floating eye

tom waits young

bicycle focus 2010 blue ridge-gray

thankful for my wife poems

beyonce is so beautiful

aerial snow

napkins and glasses

jimmy walker memorabilia

ridge goop

Beethoven

I love my cannabis

kid n play too hype

give a little more

painting bar piano jazz smoke

–and my personal favorite trio–

Abraham lincolns wife

artisanal bong structure

john coltrane smiling

Excellent.

More From The Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting!

March 14, 2011

Special thanks to Cowgirl Creamery, Fatted Calf, and Gayle’s!

And don’t miss our April 23rd event, when all three will be out in full foodie force!

You won’t get much closer to foodie-winey heaven than this!

Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting: The Photo Review!

March 11, 2011

The scent of history. Of crushes long past. Of laughter in the vines, stories told around the tanks, another splash of wine atop a makeshift wooden table. The sun’s magenta limn a liquid halo, ghost wine in the sky.

An old winemaker went walking out one dark and windy day
Upon a ridge he rested as he went along his way
When all at once a mighty row of blood-red grapes he saw
A-rising towards the ragged sky, and up the cloudy draw

Yippie yi yo, Yippie yi yay
Ghost wine in the sky

The Old Winery Barn. The Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting. Living History.

Barrel Tasting Weekend at Lytton Springs: The Photo Review!

March 10, 2011

Brandye Alexander: International Woman of Mystery. Intrepid Spy. Shutterbug. Viticultural Weegee. The Ansel Adams of the Barrel. The Diane Arbus of the Vine.

Call her what you will, but Brandye Alexander takes a good picture, the kind of picture that puts YOU in the picture, the kind of picture that makes you involuntarily reach out to try to touch something in the picture; the kind of picture that translates life to legend.

She makes you, for lack of a more singular way to put it, feel as if you were there.

And we’re very fortunate that she was there for Barrel Tasting Weekend at Lytton Springs, because of what she’s preserved for us; the beauty, the excitement, the passion. The flavors of the days.

Were you there? Please share with us your experiences if you were; your thoughts, sensations, photos, imaginings.

And if you weren’t, then join Brandye in a short trip into the mystic.

A Beauty To Drink: Robert Parker & Ridge!

March 4, 2011

 

 

Check out our special “90 Point Zinfandel” Gift Pack!
 
 

2008  Ridge Lytton Springs Proprietary Red Wine  

RATING:  93 points

PRODUCER: Ridge 

FROM: Sonoma, North Coast, California, USA

VARIETY: Proprietary Blend

DRINK: 2011 – 2018

ESTIMATED COST: $23-$46

SOURCE: WA, #193

Feb 2011

 Striking, intense black cherry and blackberry fruit with some spice and earth jump from the glass of the 2008 Lytton Springs, a blend of 74% Zinfandel, 21% Petite Sirah, and 5% Carignan. Dark ruby with a nice tannic overlay, the wine was aged 15 months in American oak. Spicy, impressively rich, with good acids and loads of concentration, this is a beauty to drink over the next 5-7 years.

-Robert Parker



2008  Ridge Zinfandel York Creek  

RATING:  90 points

PRODUCER: Ridge 

FROM: Napa, North Coast, California, USA

VARIETY: Zinfandel

DRINK: 2011 – 2021

ESTIMATED COST: $26-$30

SOURCE: WA, #193

Feb 2011

 Another iconic site from Ridge, the 2008 Zinfandel York Creek (79% Zinfandel and 21% Petite Sirah, tipping the scales at 14.9% alcohol) displays plenty of boysenberry, blueberry and black cherry fruit notes, a healthy dark ruby/purple color similar to the other wines, but more earth, tannin, structure and grip. This is not as forward and elegant as the Lytton Springs, nor as exuberant and flamboyant as the Pagani Ranch. It is almost a Zinfandel with a Cabernet Sauvignon soul and structure. Give it another year or so of aging and drink it over the next decade.

-Robert Parker

 

2008  Ridge Zinfandel Pagani Ranch  

RATING:  94 points

PRODUCER: Ridge 

FROM: Sonoma, North Coast, California, USA

VARIETY: Zinfandel

DRINK: 2011 – 2019

ESTIMATED COST: $30-$33

SOURCE: WA, #193

Feb 2011

 The 2008 Zinfandel Pagani Ranch is a blend 85% Zinfandel, 10% Alicante Bouschet, and the rest Petite Sirah that tips the scales at a lofty 15% alcohol. Possessing ripe black cherry and blackberry fruit intermixed with some wood spice, earth, and subtle herbs, this wine cuts a broad, rich, full-bodied swath across the palate. More exuberant and richer than the more elegant Lytton Springs, this is full-throttle Zinfandel at its best, but beautifully pure, textured, and long. It should drink well for 7-8 years.

-Robert Parker

 

2007  Ridge Chardonnay Monte Bello  

RATING:  92+ points

PRODUCER: Ridge 

FROM: Santa Cruz Mountains, Central Coast, California, USA

VARIETY: Chardonnay

DRINK: 2011 – 2021

ESTIMATED COST: $75

SOURCE: WA, #193

Feb 2011

 The 2007 Chardonnay Monte Bello (100% Chardonnay, 14.4% alcohol) has a floral nose of white flowers, honeyed citrus, subdued, almost indistinguishable oak, but complex aromatics. Medium to full-bodied and bottled unfiltered, this is one of the more impressive Ridge Chardonnays I have tasted. The oak has been pushed to the background, and the floral, honeyed citrus fruit notes dominate. The wine is beautifully textured and capable of lasting up to a decade or more.

-Robert Parker

 

2007  Ridge Monte Bello  

RATING:  92+ points

PRODUCER: Ridge 

FROM: Santa Cruz Mountains, Central Coast, California, USA

VARIETY: Proprietary Blend

DRINK: 2016 – 2041

ESTIMATED COST: $98-$150

SOURCE: WA, #193

Feb 2011

 A retaste of the flagship wine, the 2007 Monte Bello (a blend from this famous estate of 79% Cabernet Sauvignon, 10% Merlot, 9% Petit Verdot, and 2% Cabernet Franc) reveals a dense ruby/purple wine with a floral, blueberry, and earthy cassis nose and elegant mid-weight flavors with impressive purity and classicism. There is good acidity, firm tannin, and modest alcohol (13.1%). This is not the most concentrated or powerful Monte Bello, but one built on finesse and elegance. According to the back label, only 41% of the production made it into this wine from the 103-acre estate vineyard. Give this wine another good 5-7 years of bottle age and drink it over the following 20-25 years.

-Robert Parker

A Seat At The Table: A Day In Which I Am Invited To Participate In The 2010 Assemblage Tasting!

March 3, 2011

It was with great anticipation and an understandable degree of nervousness that I hoisted a full rack of Riedels into the back of my car, settled in behind the wheel, and commenced the drive up from the tasting room to the upper winery. I had been invited to join the Monte Bello First Assemblage Tasting, and was acutely aware of what this meant; this was to be history quite literally in the making, and I was to be an active participant.

Monte Bello Road never looked so beautiful. Most of the vines had already been pruned, and they stood in their erratic rows riding the undulant slopes like thin adolescents nervous in the company of others, yet somehow noble in their certainty of belonging in the world. Those that had not yet been pruned seemed so wild by comparison; frozen in a moment of windy delight, the delicate tendrils of their frames arching and twisting in the swelling morning sunlight.

I had never yet had the honor of attending an assemblage tasting, and knew nothing of what to expect, yet somehow, as I entered the room to find Eric Baugher hunched over a countertop’s worth of decanters, beakers, funnels, and an iPhone set on Calculator, it was as if I’d seen it all in a dream. I hadn’t of course, but it was that kind of familiar. Within me the ratio of fear to excitement began to shift; I was calming even as my heart began to beat a little faster.

For those of you who may not be familiar with the process by which Monte Bello is brought to fruition, or “assembled,” I’ll do my best to offer a brief description, but to do this requires a return to the vineyard, for it’s there where the process truly begins. Ridge Vineyards practices something called “Differential Harvesting,” or “Sub-Parcel Harvesting.” It’s a viticultural methodology deployed in the service of capturing every micro-climatic nuance that may exist even within the boundaries of a single vineyard designation. Imagine an artist’s palette, flush with a rich and ripe array of shades, hues, and colors. It is with this range of options that a painter builds their work, relying on each idiosyncratic variation available on a color by color basis. A masterwork couldn’t be possible without the singularity of these microtonal variations being on offer. If the colors were all swirled together, the artist would end up with one amorphous, indistinct, and characterless tone with which to try and make something special; a near impossibility given the circumstances. Such is the same for a vineyard. Take a property like Monte Bello, with all its near-endless variabilities: slopes and valleys, young vines and old; north-running rows and west-running rows; near-constant sunlight and covering shade; mineral shifts and crop cover changes. Harvest this all together? Why, you’d be insane to! The preservation of each individual micro-climatic singularity makes a masterwork possible; not easy, mind you, but possible!

Differential and/or Sub-Parcel harvesting essentially simply means that we sub-divide the entire vineyard up into much smaller parcels; we then harvest each “lot” (or “block’) separately, in order to preserve it as a potential “ingredient” in the final assemblage (or “blend”) of Monte Bello. It’s essentially a way of eking maximum complexity and consistent individuality out of a property in the service of creating a supremely complex wine, without having to rely on trickery or retroactive corrections to achieve a desired result. Each block is separately harvested, and separately fermented, preserving its fruit as a pure and authentic expression of that portion of the vineyard, and rendering it a unique, and uniquely natural, ingredient on offer to the final assemblage of Monte Bello.

Which brings us back to the winery, and to the assemblage tasting. The assemblage tasting is essentially the system by which fermented juice from each lot is first independently assessed, and then assessed again in the context of an assemblage, or blend. The First Assemblage Tasting is accordingly exactly as titled; it is the first time the tasting team generates and creates an assemblage. Will it end up becoming the final Monte Bello? Only time will tell …

The great wooden table is both practical and elegant, functional and beautiful. Looming through the windows are fermentors and all the other apparatuses of a working winery, and sounding in the background are the thumps of pumps and the cheerful whistles of the crew as they go about the nuts and bolts business of making wine. On the table itself, one of my favorite sights; a tasting about to happen. Clear and shimmering glassware in perfect synchronicity, baskets of fresh artisan bread warm in the low light, wedges of rich and moist cheeses, carafes of water and bottles of olive oil. Soon each empty chair will be filled with a taster, before whom will wait a lined yellow notebook and a pen; these begin clean, but by day’s end they’ll be stained a mosaic of vivid purples, garnets, and ruby, as will teeth and tongues, fingers and napkins.

I begin by shadowing Eric for nearly 45 minutes; an intricate dance to say the least, as he barely leaves his place the entire time. By shadowing, I mean I follow each movement of a finger, each splash into a bottle, each tap upon a key, each mark of a pencil, all the while peppering him with questions. I have joined the second day’s tasting, so I have much to catch up on. How many blocks have “made the cut” so far? How many will comprise our core, and how many will be tested for potential inclusion? How large was each block, and where is it planted? I go dizzy a bit trying to keep it all straight, but the gist emerges to be this; 24 lots are still in the running, the smallest of which is about 2 barrels worth of juice, the largest about 14 barrels. All are solo varietal lots, save for one co-fermented cabernet sauvignon-cabernet franc option. Of these 24, 9 have been selected as the “core” assemblage for the tasting to come (this is the “control” we will commence the tasting with; please see below), and 4 have been held out completely for the time being, leaving 11 additional lots to be cycled in and tasted.

One by one, the other attendees enter the room. In the end, we will be Davis-trained Shun Ishikubo (Assistant Production Manager), Shinji Kurosawa (assisting at Crush and Assemblage each year), David Gates (Vice President of Vineyard Operations), Caleb Mosley (Monte Bello Vineyard Manager), myself, Karen Schmidt (Director of Quality Control/Chemist), John Olney (Vice President of Winemaking, Lytton Springs), Eric Baugher (Vice President of Winemaking, Monte Bello), and Paul Draper. This is how we’re seated, and I am grateful for the order, as it means 4 other participants will have to voice their tasting notes before it’s my turn! It’s a remarkable group of individuals, and I am struck, not for the first time, at the illustrious company I’ve somehow found myself with. My ratio starts to go a tad haywire; the fear level rises…

I take my seat. Eric is directly behind me, still methodically pouring, measuring, and labeling. There are four wine glasses before me, plus a bread plate, olive oil dish, water glass, and spit cup. I have achieved nirvana! No, this is to be my bodhisattva moment; I will discover enlightenment, yet remain amongst the world and all its sensorial complexities. In short, I am happy. To be a fly on the wall, a gift. To have a seat at the table, an honor. To lift a glass to the mouth, an awakening.

I must pause and insist it’s not hagiography I’m after in penning these thoughts in such fashion, nor do I wish to suggest that all was solemn, portentous, and reverent. Rather, the proceedings were often comical, loose, even ribald, with laughter regularly gracing our shared airwaves. But when the silence returned, and noses returned to glasses, heads bent over notebooks, and pens began to scratch, it was as meditative, focused, and inspiring as any zendo in the world.

The tasting begins. Two of my four glasses are filled. One glass holds the 9-lot “control”, the other contains the “Control + 1”; it has had a lot added. The tasting is “blind,” no one knows which glass contains which. The tasting begins.

Retroactively deciphering tasting notes from an affair such as this can be daunting to say the least. I am an oenophilic Dead Sea scholar today, trying to reach my fingers through the seams of history to unearth a language long forgotten.

At a certain unspoken point, you feel the air change in the room. Is it so simple as Paul’s head coming up from the page, or Eric softly sighing as he stretches out his back in the confines of his chair? Was that the sound of pens being laid down? Or did some hidden and inaudible dog-whistle-high clock sound an important tone, such that we all somehow know it’s time to speak again?

It’s time to speak again. We’ve committed to our preferences — A or B — and translated them in secret to Eric. He has collated our commitments, and now we must go public. Directly to Paul’s left, Shun begins … As he speaks, I pour over my scribbles. He notes notes of cedar, yes! I got that too. And absolutely the black cherry! But then, wow! Yogurt? And pepper? Oh god, I’m out of my league, what am I doing here, I have the palate of a baseball bat … No, I’m ok, I got the plum too.

Eventually it’s my turn. I begin on the “A” glass. I note the range of cherry, from Michigan Sour to deep black. I find both black and white pepper, and a slightly sweet wood character. I declare tremendously vibrant acidity, a touch of the piquant, a slightly granular rendition of tannins … In the end, it’s a very, very close vote. “A” gets 5 votes, “B” gets four. I have a quick and silent giggle to note that I am on “The A Team.” But which is the control, and which had the addition? “A,” it turns out, had the addition, 18% from Black Hill. But will the majority rule? It does, “A” (with the addition) will be the new control for the second flight.

And on it goes, round after round, flight after flight, taste after taste, addition after addition. Not all decisions are so close. Flight 2 was a 7-to-2 vote; again, the addition won. Flight 3 was another 5/4; it instigated a thorough discussion about sweet and savory characteristics; the umami factor. The word “brooding” comes up for the first time in Flight 3, though not for the last time. By flight 7, we were up to a 15-lot assemblage. But we were worried. John Olney had to leave, leaving us with only 8 tasters; we had no tie-breaker. Sure enough, Flight 7 proved a dead-on tie; 4 for, 4 against. In the end, we stayed with the control. Probably more so than any other factor, the question of tannin exposure reigned supreme; a particularly fascinating discussion, to say the least. Tasting with the production team is a very different experience than tasting with, say, sommeliers, or distributor reps, or with our Tasting Room staff. The semantics change, the palate calibration differs, the process is unique. When tannin is discussed, the question of “coating” is omnipresent; to what extent are the tannins coated or exposed? Meaning, does the fruit “cover” the tannin effectively? I think of it like this; tannin and acidity, these are the beams and girders, fruit is the walls that fill the building in. If I can “see” the tannins, then the house is either not finished, or inappropriately built (certain modernist excesses notwithstanding!).

Flight 8 saw us in the trenches again; another nail-biter. A Herculean effort would be required; for flight 9, we would carry over 2 controls, with two additions. A four-wine flight in the 11th hour. The boxer arises from his stool for the final round, legs a little shaky, gloves seeming so much heavier than they were in Round 1. This is fatigue. Palate fatigue however, was not the primary challenge; the true difficulty lay in the fact that all four wines were outstanding! How to differentiate? And by what standards? This is when the Sangha goes quiet, and the Roshi speaks. As with any koan, the answer, once spoken, is so obvious. What is “classic” Monte Bello?

After 6 ½ hours of uninterrupted tasting, we were purple of teeth and purple of tongue; fingers coated with a strange slurry of wine and olive oil; spit cups emptied ten times over. Our once pristine glasses were Pollockian in character; wild streaks marking the passions of a moment. But we were there. A First Assemblage! 16 individually excellent lots coming together to make an assemblage of astonishing concentration, power, and depth. One final hurdle, however, remained; we needed to test our creation against other recent vintages, to make sure our internal calibrations hadn’t strayed too far into insularity. Again in blind fashion, Eric disappeared this new 2010 somewhere amidst a roster comprised of 2007, 2008, and 2009. Four glasses. The Final Countdown. Ignition Sequence Initiated. T Minus 4 vintages and counting. We have lift off. The 2010 is a classic.

Driving back down the mountain, I was exhausted in a way I’ve rarely experienced; sort of a glazed-over daze that leaves one both enervated and drained. A 7 hour wine tasting. Even Paul, he having presided over so many of these events, so many of them now the stuff of legend, looked a bit winded when I left him. Yet he also looked happy. That simple word; happy. All these years, the accolades and awards, the canonizations and deifications, the decades of work, reward and work, and here was a man who was happy. As were we all.

Eric Baugher, the marionette to all our limbs throughout the tasting, our guide through the valley of taste and possibility, perhaps played us as a wistful Fur Elise, placing each note as if it had been written for the first clock at the beginning of time, letting us bask in the sounds of our own bittersweet elegance.

To my fellow Assemblagers,

Shun, it’s a joy to hear you express your observations; it’s not the singularity of your perceptions per se, but how they penetrate. And you Shinji, are the embodiment of wine as joy and thoughtfulness. David, you are the cowboy king on the great viticultural plains; the craggy gravitas of a Marlboro Man cloaking the heart of a Buddhist farmer. Caleb, you were old and wise before you were born, I collect your thoughts like psalms. Karen, never before have the words “Quality” and “Control” been more appropriately hung on someone; your palate is precision and stability, your observations are consistency and clarity. John, may the fates grant me more opportunities to taste wine through your eyes. Eric, you’re my teacher, may I have the chance to shadow you again and again and again. And of you Paul, what new could I say that’s not been said before? So I thank you, and offer you, the great wine philosopher that you are, these beautiful lines from the great poet Li Po:

To wash and rinse our souls of their age-old sorrows,
We drained a hundred jugs of wine.
A splendid night it was . . . .


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