Archive for the ‘Events & Photographs’ Category

Ridge Vineyards Virtual Winemaker Tasting: The Tasting Mat Chronicles

April 9, 2012

It’s not necessarily how it sounds; The Tasting Mat. It’s not a physical location.

It is, however, a physical object. It’s your guide through the tasting. And as such, it’s a very important document.

Page 1. Three wines. It begins.

2006 Grenache. Feral, wild, exotic. Delicious.

2007 Syrah. Full, rich, decadent. Divine.

2009 Old School. Fleshy,unctuous, concentrated. Sensual.

Mat 2. Three more wines.

2010 Paso Robles. Ripe, concentrated, fruit-driven. Crazy drinkable.

2010 East Bench. Full-bodied, fruit-forward, round. Crazy approachable.

2010 Geyserville. Elegant, refined, sophisticated. Crazy complex.

And now the grand finale. Page 3.

Three vintage vertical of young Monte Bello.

Wine keeps on sippin’, sippin’, sippin’, into the future …

The hard facts of the event are as follows:

Ridge Vineyards Virtual Winemaker Tasting
Friday April 13th at 5:30pm PT / 8:30pm ET

To register for the event, please click here.

To download your custom Tasting Mat, please click here.

And to order the tasting wines (order by April 9th, and you’ll still receive the wines in time for the tasting!), please click here.

Taste The New Spring Releases WITH Our Winemakers!

April 8, 2012

This is big. Big, Big, BIG.

We’re talking Honeycomb Big.

And this tasting doesn’t just have 25% MORE!

This tasting has 50% more! No, this tasting has 75% more! No, this tasting has 100% MORE! This tasting has 100% MORE WINEMAKERS!

Meaning, this tasting has ALL our winemakers! That’s right, Ridge Vineyards winemakers Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, and John Olney will be sitting down to taste wine with you!

And you, and you, and you, and you, and you! And you too!

What is this all about?

Why, it’s the Ridge Vineyards Virtual Winemaker Tasting!

Which is not unlike playing Jeopardy from home …

…except that THIS home edition is INTERACTIVE!

Which means not only do you get to play along (which in this case means drink along!), you get to ask questions along the way!

Think of it!!!

You’re home. You’re not at a wine tasting event. The simple social conventions are not in effect. Meaning, you don’t have to wear pants. You can be in your bathrobe. Or conversely, you can put on  your wedding dress. Or a suit of armor. It doesn’t matter, the point is, you can be wherever you want, wearing whatever you want! You just need internet access, and wine.

Which, if I am not mistaken, are essentially the two requirements for survival in the modern world.

The Web, and The Wine.

Anyhow, there you are. In your suit of armor, or your wedding dress. And you’re in the garden, or Tangiers. And you log in. And suddenly, there are Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, and John Olney. Right there on  your screen. Talking to you! And they’re drinking the same wine you are. And they taste, and you taste. And they say “microclimate,” and you say, “I like wine!” And they say, “malolactic,” and you say, “bacon!” And they say, “chalky tannins,” and you say, “refill!” And they ask, “What do our viewers think?” And you start typing. And you write, “Given the purported challenges of the 2010 growing season, are you able to offer a global assessment as to the character of your final offerings, or are the minute nuances of disparate growing regions too diversified across a wider swath of topographical variences to make such sweeping generalizations? And if the latter be the case, can you then take a moment to talk about how the growing season affected each of these vineyard designations, and perhaps more importantly, can you talk about how your long-standing committment to a low-yield/high-concentration model can actually ostensibly benefit from the seeming ravages of just such a challenging growing season?”

To which Paul replies …

The hard facts of the event are as follows:

Ridge Vineyards Virtual Winemaker Tasting
Friday April 13th at 5:30pm PT / 8:30pm ET

To register for the event, please click here.

To download your custom Tasting Mat, please click here.

And to order the tasting wines (order by April 9th, and you’ll still receive the wines in time for the tasting!), please click here.

When the “Mo” in “BevMo” Means Mo’ than “More” … -or- Up Walnut Creek, Without an Ah-So?

April 3, 2012

This Thursday evening, April 5th, the “Mo” in “BevMo” is not just going to mean “More,” it’s going to mean “More Ridge Vineyards.”

That’s right, Ridge Vineyards (in the form of me and some very fine wines!) is heading to Walnut Creek, California  — the BevMo Home Ranch, the Flagship shop, the Juggernaut, The Mothership – to host a tasting of the following:

2010                       Ridge Estate Chardonnay
2010                       Ridge Geyserville Zinfandel
2010                       Ridge Paso Robles Zinfandel
2009                       Ridge York Creek Zinfandel
2006                       Ridge Monte Bello
2009                       Ridge Estate Petite Sirah

If you can be there, definitely be there! Then you can taste this …

… whilst here:

Which is groovy.

And if you can’t join us in the flesh, be there in the virtual sense! Join us in the social-media-o-sphere via The Hashtag; meaning, post up on-line, include #RidgeVineyards and #BevMo in your prose, and watch your musings mind-meld with the masses, your rhetoric reconcile with the rivuleting rimes of the resolute, your poesy pool with the perspectives of the passionate, and your opinions  orient to the oratory of the oeno-obsessed.

http://www.facebook.com/RidgeVineyards

http://twitter.com/#!/ridgevineyards

https://plus.google.com/s/ridge%20vineyards#102143133472506823527/posts

Post up!

Meaning, jump in the stream, the water is wine, and the rapids are perfectly delicious!

No matter how you wish to don your Ridge, and no matter where you wear your BevMo, this Thursday is gon’ to be tastin’ time!

Can I get an AMEN!?!

I say, can I get a HALLELUJAH?!?

Praise the Ridge!

Praise the MO!

3.25.12 was “Go, Go, Rhone Rangers!” Time …

April 3, 2012

Scenes from the annual Rhone Rangers Tasting in San Francisco, 3.25.12!

And may we say, congratulations to all the RR Gang, for another outstanding event, and thanks to everyone who attended, we hope you had as good a time as we did!

FIGS! (Footage Improvisational, Guerilla Spontaneous!)

And some static snaps for the oeno-visualic viewocities …

Ahoy mateys, away we sail, and we’ll see you on the other side of the ocean, just about this time next year!

The Spring Releases Cometh!

March 30, 2012

O come all ye faithful!

This weekend, the Spring Releases cometh!

This weekend, we’ll be debuting a whole new roster of wine offerings, and if you’re able to get to either of our two Estates (Lytton Springs or Monte Bello), you can be among the very first to try the new releases!

Just what are the new Spring Releases? Behold!

 2010 Ridge Vineyards Geyserville
(An absolutely “classic” vintage, or should I say, a vintage classic! This is a quintessential expression of why the Geyserville is held in such historically significant regard!)

2010 Ridge Vineyards Paso Robles
(One of the most sophisticated vintages in our long history with the Dusi Ranch; as complex a Paso as we’ve ever seen!)

2010 Ridge Vineyards East Bench
(Currently #2 best-selling zin in Top US restaurants!)

2010 Ridge Vineyards Chardonnay
(Wilfred Wong, BevMo’s illustrious wine buyer/reviewer/cellar master, is already predicting this for his 2012 Year-End Top 10!)

2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Cabernet
(All the hallmarks of the Monte Bello style; but styled for approachability!)

2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Merlot
(Quite possibly the new star of the show; our first Estate Merlot since 1997! This wine has got to be tasted to be believed! Ridge staff are in love with this wine!)

Now here is the $10,000 question … which wines are we going to pour at which location, and in which order?

You’ll have to come visit to find out!

The United States of Syrah: Red, White, and You

March 23, 2012

If you’ve ever had a bottle of Ridge Vineyards Syrah, you’ve probably checked out the label. And when you checked out the label, you probably saw this …

And when you saw this, you probably did a bit of a double-take, scratched your head, and went, “Wha?”

Ok, maybe not. Maybe you’re already familiar with the wines and processes of Côte-Rôtie, in the Northern Rhone. Or maybe you’ve caught onto some of the contemporarily tradition-minded Rhone offerings from Australia, or Santa Barbara. Or conversely, maybe you aren’t familiar with Viognier at all, and just didn’t know it was a white varietal.

But for most of us, when first we see this label, the inclination is to wonder at the unexpected  juxtaposition of red and white grapes in the same bottle. It just doesn’t seem … right, somehow.

There are, however, very good reasons behind why these two do reside together so well. Briefly and colloquially, it’s a triumvirate:

1. Texture. Viognier’s viscosity makes for a brilliantly smoothing and rounding counterbalance to the tannin-forward granular rusticity of Syrah.

2. Aromatics. Viognier’s perfumed floralilty makes for a deliciously decadent interweave with the darker, inkier, earthen aromatics of Syrah.

3. Color & Preservation. Aspects of the chemistry of Viognier serve to keep the parallel tines of fruit and tannin at an even pace along the developmental trajectory of cellar-worthy Syrah. Put another way, Viognier helps keep the fruit, color, and aromatics intact over the long process of tannin-softening.

It’s this last rationale, #3, that is truly at the core of the Syrah-Viognier co-fermentation construct. It can get a bit heady when you dive full bore into the chemistry of it all, but it’s fascinating stuff, so let me please introduce winemaker Eric Baugher, as he arrives to spelunk you through the caverns of co-fermentation:

The approach we take with co-fermentation of Syrah with Viognier, is to first de-stem the syrah and open the crusher rollers.  This allows a high percentage of whole berries to travel through to fermenter uncrushed.

Next, based on calculated weight, we will destem and crush the anywhere between 5-10% viognier on top of the syrah in the fermenter. 

We then wait for natural yeast fermentation to begin, and pump-over and irrigate the cap to extract color and tannins. 

The typical maceration time (crush-to-press) is 7-8 days total, with twice a day pump-overs given. 

The viognier contains colorless flavanols from the skins that extract and conjugate with the extreme concentration of syrah’s anthocyanin color molecules.  Basically, the theory is that viognier helps stabilize syrah’s color; the condensation reactions between viognier’s flavanols and syrah’s anthocyanins form highly stable polymerized molecules that stay with the wine for life.   Once these polymers form, they don’t degrade through normal oxidation reactions. 

There is also a shift in the color spectrum of a syrah that has co-fermented with viognier.  Normally, syrah has a deep ruby color.  Once viognier is thrown into the mix for the complex reactions to form, the color will shift from deep ruby to saturated purple/blue.   This has a lot to do with light absorption/re-emission quantum chemistry of the anthocyanin complex with the viognier flavanols altering the polarity and electron flow of the multi-six carbon phenol ring that forms the anthocyanim molecule, thus altering the molar extinction coefficient.  The absorption of green spectrum light (520nm) by these condensed molecules causes re-emission of red spectrum 700nm plus a stronger re-emission at 420nm (deep purple/blue).  That’s why the co-fermented syrah/viognier blend works magically, creating an inkier wine.   It’s strange how this all works, taking a dark grape and cutting it with a white variety, and end up making a wine that is even darker.   That’s the complexity of quantum chemistry, which I had the pleasure of studying many years ago while obtaining my biochemistry degree.  

Now, I should say that this co-fermentation phenomena has been a very traditional winemaking approach taken in the northern rhone valley of France.  Through centuries of trial-and-error with many other varietals of the region, the combination of syrah with viognier became the standard.  This was decided by making better wine, not by having knowledge of the complex chemistry.  The chemistry came along much later to explain why it worked so well.

And that, my friends, is, in a nutshell, not only a mini-dissertation on co-fermenting Syrah and Viognier, but also, an excellent explanation of the relationship between Ridge Vineyards, and technology. Yes, we are pre-industrial at heart, and we still do, for the most part, things the old-fashioned way. But that said, we do have a very sophisticated technical side to us; the distinction is how we deploy it, and to what purpose.

I call your attention to something Paul Draper wrote, in an essay entitled “Pre-Industrial Winemaking at Ridge”:

In a synthesis of past and present, we have taken the pre-industrial techniques and applied them in conjunction with the best, least intrusive modern equipment. We’ve been told that we have the most sophisticated analytical laboratory of any winery our size.

Combine this with Eric’s words above:

Through centuries of trial-and-error with many other varietals of the region, the combination of syrah with viognier became the standard.  This was decided by making better wine, not by having knowledge of the complex chemistry.  The chemistry came along much later to explain why it worked so well.

And what you get is a lovely lil’ distillation of the Ridge philosophy on technology. In short, we essentially rely on technology to ideally confirm what we already knew by instinct.

For example, that Syrah and Viognier taste REALLY GOOD together, when co-fermented.

The next incarnation? The 2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah. Coming to a tasting room, or a cellar, near you. Soon. Very soon. Sooner if you’re an ATP member.

And if you can’t wait even that long (i.e. when your shipment arrives), you might want to consider coming to the annual Rhone Rangers event, held this coming weekend in glorious San Francisco. We’ll be pouring it there.

Come see Ridge Vineyards, at Rhone Rangers, to enjoy the benefits of citizenship in the United States of Syrah. Three cheers for the Red, White, and You!

Huzzah!

Huzzah!

Huzzah!

Wine Bloggers Tasting: Special Anniversary Edition!

March 22, 2012

Greetings all!

The time has come for the first Ridge Vineyards Wine Bloggers Tasting of 2012, and it is going to be a rather special edition!

#WineBloggersTasting

On April 20, 2009, the very first post went up on “4488: A Ridge Blog,” and on Sunday, April 22nd, we’re going to celebrate our 3-year anniversary!

And that’s not all!

This year’s annual Wine Blogger’s Conference is being held in Portland, Oregon, and as yours truly will be a panelist for the following breakout session …

 

The Winery View of Bloggers:
We’ll hear from three industry experts (two winery representatives and a blogger turned winery marketer) who will explain whether they work with bloggers,
how they cooperate, and whether bloggers have an impact on the winery’s visitation, sales, or image.

  • Ed Thralls from the Wine Tonite blog is now the Social Media Manager for Vintage Wine Estates (includes Girard, Kunde Family Estate, Cosentino, and Windsor Vineyards as well as several boutique brands)
  • Christopher Watkins from Ridge Vineyards runs the winery’s blog, 4488: A Ridge Blog, a finalist for Best Winery Blog in 2010 at the Wine Blog Awards
  • Sasha Kadey is the Director of Marketing for King Estate Winery in Oregon, one of the largest and most active wineries in the state

… I am going to have our Wine Blogger’s Tasting filmed, in order to provide support source material for the panel! Meaning, this is YOUR chance to become a part of Wine Blogger history!

So, if  you’re a Wine Blogger, or a Wine & Food Blogger, or a Food & Wine Blogger, or a Food blogger who writes about wine, or a Lifestyle and/or Culture blogger who write about wine, then I invite you to join us!

And that’s not all!

April 22nd also happens to be the birthday of the late, great Paul Chambers, indisputably one of the greatest jazz bassists ever to walk the earth. So not only will we be listening to the music of Paul Chambers throughout the tasting, and not only will we be specifically discussing the parallel aesthetics of jazz and wine during the tasting, I am also opening up the invitations to a music blogger! So, if you’re a music blogger who writes about jazz (and hopefully, occasionally, wine!), then I invite you to join us!

As always, I will hope to have some returning “regulars” in attendance, but also as always, I will be keeping a few seats open for new guests; new blood is good!

The tasting will be held at our Monte Bello Estate, on Sunday, April 22nd, at 1pm.

If you wish to be considered for a spot at the table, please either

a) respond in the comment feed to this post

b) post on our Facebook page

c) send us a message on Twitter

And if you would, please include a link to your blog when you contact us!

Lastly, we’re going to invite one lucky wine blogger to participate virtually, so even if you can’t be in attendance at Monte Bello, there is still a chance for your to participate! If you want this to be you, let me know!

Beauty, The Beholder, & The Best Of Lytton Springs …

March 19, 2012

Lytton Springs is a beautiful place, full of beautiful people, and surrounded by beautiful vines. There is just no doubt about it.

It’s different from Monte Bello, certainly, but equally magnificent in its own special way. I really love it up there, and wish I could visit more often. But my home is on the mountain.

My Mother The Mountain.

The distance between sometimes means it’s easy to forget, easy to lose sight of the singular magicness of Lytton Springs. I get spoiled here at Monte Bello. Surrounded by all this raw and ravishing nature, one starts to imagine this is all there ever is or will be to the world; just these heights, these valleys, these swales, these slopes.

And then somethings happens; something that turns my head around, and re-reminds me all over again why I am so fond of Lytton Springs.

Sometimes it’s a big thing, like actually getting to pay a visit. When I was up for the Wine Blogger’s Tasting back in September, I was evangelical in my devotions. Getting to join the vineyard teams for harvest made for a memory I’ll forever cherish, and getting to take my daughter, who was not yet 3 at the time, into the winery so she could watch the grapes coming in was just completely magical; a true peak moment, and one that has proven to be even more influential than I might have imagined. Now, every time my daughter (who is now 3 1/4)  runs through the list of what jobs she’s going to have when she grows up, she says she’s going to be a firefighter, a ballerina, a vet, and that she’s going to work with me at the winery.

There just aren’t enough happy tears in the world for me to cry …

Parents out there, did this happen to you? I mean, I’ve always been a bit mopey, a bit weepy, a tad emotional, but this is ridiculous! I was listening to an NPR report on the radio the other day, while driving to work; it was about the Girl Scounts, and I had tears just streaming down my face the entire time. Not because the story was sad — it wasn’t — but just because it got me thinking about my baby girl growin’ up … Geez, I’m starting to tear up now, just writing this! This is ridiculous! Parents out there, did this happen to you?

Anyhow, the thing that turned my head around this time was seemingly just a little thing, merely the simple arrival of a single picture in my e-mail inbox. But it was a beautiful, amazing, striking, stunning, emotive picture, and it was dead hip as well; very cool photo aesthetic. It was a shot of vines at Lytton Springs, and one look was all it took; I had visions of Lytton dancing in my head immediately.

But what really did my head in was the fact that the picture was taken by Lauren Garcia, who just happens to be the daughter of Sandy Johnson, who just happens to be my counterpart up at Lytton Springs. For me, not only was the picture amazing to begin with, but somehow, it was also a Parent-Child picture, a Mommy-Daughter picture, and I thought about those vines, and all that history, and the fact that Sandy and her daughter are sharing it together, and it was all so clear all over again; that this is what wine is.

It is not just agriculture, but culture. It is history, it is family, it is tradition. It is spirituality, and faith, and magic, and juju, and hard work, and patience, and vision, and love. And I’ll say it again, it is family.

And it is tears. Happy tears. More happy tears than you think the world could contain. And then it does. And then the world is a vessel within which floats our happiest tears, and in its shimmering surfaces we see our true reflection, ourselves in love with the world, ourselves in love with our children.

What a beautiful place Lytton Springs is.

Ain’t No Strangers To The Rangers, Gots The Rhones In Our Bones!

March 17, 2012

March 24-25, it’s on.

It’s a rockin’ Rhone time
it’s blow your dome time, baby

The Rhone Rangers descend on San Francisco next weekend, and none shall be the same ever again.

The 24th? Winemaker’s Dinner. Who shall be there? Ridge Vineyards, of course. Along with …

Big Basin Vineyards, Crystal Basin, Curtis Winery, Davis Family Vineyards, Domaine de la Terre Rouge, Donelan Wines, Folin Cellars, Hahn Family Wines, Katin, Mount Aukum Winery, Pear Valley Vineyards, Qualia Wines, Quivira Vineyards & Winery, Tablas Creek Vineyard, Wesley Ashley Wines and Zaca Mesa Winery.

Word.

And the 25th? The Grand Tasting. The GRAND Tasting.

grand

adjective

1.

impressive in size, appearance, or general effect: grand mountain scenery.

2.

stately, majestic, or dignified: In front of an audience her manner is grand and regal.

3.

highly ambitious or idealistic: grand ideas for bettering the political situation.

4.

magnificent or splendid: a grand palace.

5.

noble or revered: a grand old man.
 
 
Impressive. Majestic. Idealistic. Magnificent. Revered. Grand. The GRAND Tasting.
 
Word.
 
 
And what will Ridge Vineyards be pouring? None other than the following:
 

2010 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane (special pre-release, winery-only offering!)

2010 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Petite Sirah (not yet released, only the 2nd nationally-distributed Ridge Petite Sirah EVER!)

2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah (new ATP release, winery-only!)

2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache (sold out ATP offering; last “public” appearance!)

1999 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah (uber-rarity from the library vaults!)

Word.

SAN FRANCISCO 2012 – A WEEKEND CELEBRATION OF AMERICAN RHONES

Recently sat down with two colleagues to start tasting some of the wines to be showcased at the event. If you wish to fly-on-the-wall yourselves, please dig the visuals …

Ridge Vineyards Spring Releases!

March 16, 2012

You’ll find me talking about these wines often in the coming weeks; the new Ridge Vineyards Spring Releases.

We had occasion to taste through them today with our very good friends from Alexia Moore Wine Marketing, and it was a wonderful day, to say the least, particularly as the tasting included two VERY RARE gems straight out of Alexia’s own cellar.

In addition to the Alexia Moore team, we had some lovely folks from Ridge on hand as well, including a very-happily-rained-on Vineyard Manager by the name of David Gates …

And a very-happily-quaffing winemaker by the name of Eric Baugher (seen here chatting with Ridge Regional Sales Managers Dan Buckler and Christina Donley) …

The tasting featured the following (listed in pouring order):

2010 Ridge Vineyards Estate Chardonnay

2010 Ridge Vineyards Geyserville

2010 Ridge Vineyards East Bench

2010 Ridge Vineyards Paso Robles

2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Merlot

2009 Ridge Vineyards Estate Cabernet

2006 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

2010 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Petite Sirah

followed by Alexia’s selections:

1979 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello Zinfandel

1979 Ridge Vineyards Glen Ellen Zinfandel

Needless to say, a lovely time was had by all. As for myself? Just another day of dirty, dirty work …

p.s. both ’79s were showing surprising well; they each still had fruit, and the aromatics were divine across the board. That said, while they did want decanting due to sediment, they did NOT want a lot of air; if you’ve got either or both of these in your cellar, drink soon, and don’t air them out for long. They’re lovely, but they’re fragile  …

And by the way, don’t remember 1979?

It had something to do with roller skating, and it looked something like this …

Take your pick. White pants from 1979, or Ridge Vineyards from 1979 …

 

I’m just saying.


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