Archive for the ‘Press Reviews’ Category

10 Questions with Paul Draper: #4!

August 18, 2011

Interested in questions of oak, and wine? Want to know why Ridge still so heavily favors American Oak? Then read on, and enjoy Q&A #4 in our ongoing special  ten-question series with Paul Draper!

4-    You are one of the few remaining enthusiasts of American oak. Most people think of coconut and sweet vanilla notes when they think of American oak but your wines are very elegant. How is it possible to make such elegant wines using American oak and what is the advantage of using this kind of barrels?

In the 19th century the first growth Chateaux of Bordeaux participated in several lengthy experiments with oak from different regions.  The Chateaux at that time were using oak from the Baltic region. Their consistent results in these ten year experiments listed three Baltic areas in first, second and third place, Riga, Stettin and Lubeck, with American white oak in fourth place, Bosnian oak in fifth and French oak in sixth and the least favorite in all the Chateaux.  Only with the first World War and the poor relations with Germany did the Chateaux turn to French oak.  Most California producers who used or still use American oak did not insist that it be air-dried as in Europe rather than kiln dried quickly in a very hot enclosed building.  They typically did not select the regions or the coopering methods carefully and their wines gave American oak a bad reputation.  We believe after forty years of experience and comparing the wines each year against a small control of the best French oak barrels that American oak properly dried and coopered is as good or in our opinion finer than French oak.  Far more American oak is used today in California and in the world than was true twenty, thirty or forty years ago.  The cult and best known wineries in California pride themselves on imitating the French and using French oak unquestioningly without experimentation.

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.
 
 
 

 

 

10 Questions for Paul Draper: Number Three!

August 17, 2011

Please join us as we continue on with our special  ten-question series with Paul Draper; here is Q & A Number Three!

3-    In recent years we’ve seen several new cult wines from California, most of them more expensive than a Bordeaux First Growth. How is Monte Bello different from most of these new wines?

 As with the garage wines of Bordeaux, the California cult wines are not a serious part of the fine wine industry.  These cult wines typically are made from over ripe fruit that produces heavy wines with alcohol well over 15% that should be drunk as young wines as they do not age well.  Monte Bello is made from fully ripe fruit with firm acidity and develops over twenty years and typically ages beautifully for thirty or more years.

 

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.
 

 

 
 

10 Questions For Paul Draper: Question #2!

August 16, 2011

Our ten-question series with Paul Draper  continues today with question #2!

2-    You are a big enthusiast of Santa Cruz Mountains terroir. How is it different from Napa Valley?

 There are two major differences between our vineyards on Monte Bello ridge in the Santa Cruz Mountains and the best vineyards in Napa Valley. First, most of the vines on Monte Bello have their roots in limestone subsoils.  There is no limestone in Napa Valley. My French winemaker friends think this is important because limestone soils are prized in France for the minerality they contribute to the wines.  Second, and more important in my view, is that the elevation of our vineyards ranges from 1,600 to 2,600 feet and their proximity within sight of the Pacific Ocean 15 miles to the west gives us a considerably cooler climate than Napa Valley.  We are even cooler at night than Bordeaux but slightly warmer during the day.  We are above the summer fogs so we can fully ripen the grapes, but the cooler temperatures give us brighter, fresher fruit and firmer acidity.  Over the last fifty years our alcohol levels have averaged between 12.9% and 13.1%.  Those of the top wines of Napa Valley have averaged over 15% for the last fifteen years.

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.

10 Questions for Paul Draper: #1

August 15, 2011
With this post, we launch a 10-day series of questions and answers with Paul Draper, Ridge Vineyards’ winemaker and CEO. Enjoy!
 

Paul Draper

1-    In 1976, the famous Paris tasting showed the world the potential of California and the New World to produce wines that could compete with the most famous French wines. In the second edition of Paris tasting in 2006, Monte Bello 1971, 35 years old, was elected the best wine of the tasting. Was this victory a proof that California wines are not only good but can age as well?

 After the original Paris tasting in 1976, comments were made in France that with 30 years the Bordeaux wines would come into their own full potential while the California wines would have completely faded. When the original tasting was repeated in London and in California in 2006, the 1971 Monte Bello came in first place 18 points ahead of the second place wine.  This was clear evidence that some California wines could age as well or better than the best Bordeaux wines.

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

 

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.

What IS High Alcohol In Wine?

August 8, 2011

If you’re a part of the wine industry, or if you follow it, it’s hard to get away from the debate; the alcohol level debate. Everywhere you turn, it’s a dominating topic of conversation.

A recent example is a column (Decanter Magazine, September 2011) by the famed English wine writer Oz Clarke, which was summed up by Decanter’s own Adam Lechmere as follows:

There is no style revolution in California: low acid, velvet tannins and high alcohol is what Americans want from their wine and Californian winemakers will continue to feed that need.

There was, predictably, a whole host of responses to the article (and to Mr. Lechmere’s summary!), including a notable offering from Steve Heimoff (Wine Enthusiast), who wrote the following:

I’ve been saying it for years: this supposed “trend” toward lower alcohol wine is largely a fiction invented and perpetuated by writers who (a) wish it were true and (b) need something sexy to write about in their columns and on their blogs.

All of which got me thinking of an admittedly tangential, but certainly related question: what IS high alcohol?

Is it the 14% cut-off, with “high” being above and “low” being below? This certainly seems to be the most commonly deployed barometer, but is it appropriate?

Honestly, I don’t think so, because I think “high” and “low” are relative terms, and what is high for one varietal, for example, may not be so high for another varietal. To simply say that if it’s over 14% ABV it’s a high-alcohol wine is, to my mind, a fairly meaningless assessment, and one doomed to inaccuracy, because it’s devoid of context.

As far as I’m concerned, the question should be, is the wine balanced? If you’re noticing too much of the alcohol, and not enough of the other components, then it’s a high-alcohol wine. This can happen at 13.2%, and it can happen at 15.2%. Conversely, if the wines wears its alcohol well, and is integrated and harmonious, then the wine is accordingly a balanced wine, and not high-alcohol at all. This can happen at 13.2%, and it can happen at 15.2%.

Consider the Ridge Vineyards Geyserville, long hailed as one of the most consistently balanced, elegant zinfandels California has ever produced. (“Year after year, Ridge makes some of the most polished, refined, and beautifully balanced zinfandels in California.”  – Karen MacNeil, The Wine Bible)

I took a look at the past thirty years or so of Geyserville, and came up with some interesting tidbits. For example:

1996 Ridge Vineyards Geyserville, 14.9% ABV

“A powerful wine that manages to wear its alcohol gracefully” – excerpted from a Stephen Tanzer review

And from Wine & Spirits Magazine: “This is the Ridge zinfandel of the vintage and certainly one of the very best overall. Well-farmed old-vine fruit, combined with Paul Draper’s informed winemaking, provide a supple and elegant zin. Because the fruit isn’t as dense as in some vintages, the wine has a lightness and grace to it that is ideal with food. It’s dark red in color with vivid aromas of oak spice, pepper, venison, bacon, plum and wild berries, the palate supple with firm acidity. Not overly complex, just beautifully balanced and complete.”

And from Wine Spectator: “… Supple and harmonious …”

Graceful? Supple? Lightness and Grace? Harmonious? At 14.9% ABV? Go figure …

Now, take the 1998 Ridge Vineyards Geyserville. It clocked in at 14.1% ABV. And yet here is Robert Parker, the purported Godfather of Support for the “ripe” style:

“One of Ridge’s classic efforts, the 1998 Geyserville (74% Zinfandel, 15% Petite Sirah, 10% Carignan, and 1% Mataro) possesses Bordeaux-like complexity and elegance…This classy, elegant, restrained, yet authoritatively rich Zinfandel should be consumed over the next 5-6 years.”

Hmmm …

Now, let’s jump all the way back to 1982! What did the critics say then? Well, Wine Enthusiast called the nose “overripe.” It was 12.6% ABV! But, lest you go thinking, “Aha! See! That’s the way it used to be done, lower alcohol!”, jump back even further to 1978, and you’ll find the Geyserville coming in at 14.9% ABV, and being described by the very same Wine Enthusiast reviewer as: “Deep, complex … almost Burgundian style.”

The point being that, while the alcohol levels vary notably (something the reviewer notes, insomuch as he calls the 82 “low alcohol” and the 78 “high alcohol”), the quality remains consistent, and balance is paramount.

In its many-decade history, the Geyserville has been as low as the low 13s, and as high as the high 14s, and it has accrued praise and appreciation throughout, and given great joy and pleasure to those who have tasted it.

So is Geyserville a “high-alcohol” wine?

Don’t bother answering, says me, because it’s the wrong question.

And on another note, Steve Heimoff made an interesting comment to his own blog post (in response to an earlier comment in the feed); when he wrote:

All I’m saying is that, from my vantage point of tasting nearly 5,000 California wines a year, I don’t see them moving away from high alcohol, especially the Cabernets.

Which of course got me thinking of the Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello.

So I did the same sort of thing as I did with the Geyserville; I went looking back through the long history of Monte Bello, to see what I could discover about alcohol levels. Dig this:

The 1970 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello was 13.5% ABV.  The 1962 (the first Monte Bello ever produced) was 12.4% ABV. The median there is about 13% ABV. The 2007 Monte Bello (current vintage) is 13.1%ABV.

Interesting.

Now, are we the exception to the rule? Perhaps. Perhaps not. But I’m pretty sure it’s not the Monte Bello that Steve (or Oz) are talking about. And I’m certainly not presenting the above as any sort of challenge to their points.

Rather, it’s just another way of approaching my primary thesis, which is that,  at the end of the day, I truly believe we should be debating balance first and foremost, not alcohol levels. ABV is certainly a legitimate sub-category in any debate about any given wine (as are fruit, minerality, structure, spice, acidity, etc.), but it’s just that, a sub-category, and nothing more or less.

Now, I should disclaim all the above by saying I recognize that Oz Clarke and Steve Heimoff are talking about something a little different; what they’re essentially talking about is the continuing dominance of a style despite a sea of rhetoric seemingly indicating a sea change in another direction; their point seems to be that it is everything from wishful thinking to out and out hypocrisy to believe that the style in question is in fact changing.

This is not what I’m on about. They may in fact be right. But my concern is the focus of the debate itself, which I believe may need some re-framing; getting away from primarily obsessing over alcohol levels, and the question of high vs. low alcohol wines, and focusing instead on the question of balance.

And on yet another note, I think we also need to be careful about getting too cynical about our wine buyers out there.

As wine producers, I think we can actually happily show great respect for, and faith in, our consumers and their palates. They may not all understand secondary malolactic fermentaion, or know what the word “veraison” means, or be able to discuss the difference between pad and membrane filtration methods, or define “brix levels,” but they can tell balanced from unbalanced, on a visceral if not always analytical level. And that’s a great thing. And sure, they might buy the “fruit bombs” sometimes, but they buy lots of other styles too, and that’s also a great thing. Their ability to discern and to experiment, to learn and to change, to vary and to sample; this is what keeps us all in business. And believe you me, they can spot a good wine, and they can spot a not-so-good wine, and the difference is balance. Balance is what give a wine its magic; that unnameable certain something that makes one wine an “excitement wine,” and another one not. And I truly believe that, in the end, that’s what wine consumers are responding to.

Balance. It’s what makes a wine sing.

I see it every day in our tasting rooms. I see it in their faces, that slight and subtle, inward-looking smile that twinkingly emerges when a magic wine hits their palate. They may not always know the what, where, how, and why of why the wine tastes the way it does, but they can sense it when it’s good.

And I say it’s good, when it’s balanced.

Unbelievable “Three Decades of Monte Bello” tasting! Open to you!

August 1, 2011

It’s exactly one month until Cabernet Day. That is to say, #CabernetDay!

#CabernetDay!

The second annual.

It’s an international phenomenon, a worldwide celebration of all things Cabernet, taking place across all social media platforms.

In Bangladesh? Join in! Buenos Aires? Can’t wait to chat! Baltimore? See you on Facebook! Blaenau Ffestiniog? I’ll be looking for your tweets!

Ridge Vineyards is ALL IN on this one, boyos and birds!

Ever heard of a lil’ ol’ wine called Monte Bello? You can bet we’ll be doing #CabernetDay. And dig how we’ll be doing it …

On September 1st, at both of our estate locations (Lytton Springs and Monte Bello) we’ll be offering special by-appointment seated tastings of not only a three-vintage vertical of our Estate Cabernet (2004, 2005, & 2006), but a THREE-DECADE VERTICAL OF MONTE BELLO! And not just any three-decade vertical, mind you. We’ll be tasting the 1985 Monte Bello, the 1995 Monte Bello, and …. drum roll … the 2001 Monte Bello! Yup, the vintage that just got a 99 POINT RATING FROM ROBERT PARKER!

Listen, I’m biased, and I admit it. There is a reason I work for Ridge Vineyards. But I’m telling you, with total objectivity front and center, you’re simply out of your mind if you miss this. This is one of those rare tasting opportunities that just don’t come along that often, and I really, really, really hope that you can come. 

Now, of course I won’t really think you’re insane if you miss this. I just really  think you should come taste these wines with us. I really do.

So, on to the important part. To reserve your place at the tasting table, just click here.

There, you’re done.

In fact, you’re already here. It’s already the 1st. You’re already seated at the table. Your host is pouring the first wine into your glass. Angels are out in broad daylight, plucking soothing melodies on harps of gold outside the window. The sun’s soft finger is lightly brushing the back of your neck. All over the world, people are laying down their guns. The markets are surging. The wind whispers your name, and you say “Yes, it is I.” Somewhere a puppy is born.

If the puppy and the angels and the 99-point rating didn’t get you, here is a look at the wines we’ll be offering:

1985 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Excellent umami aromatics! Plus, lovely wafts of cedar and pipe tobacco, with a hint of boysenberries. Meticulously elegant point-of-entry, laying soft on the tip of the tongue and skipping into the cheeks with some nice acidity and a touch of sweetly, modestly covered tannin. Good dark fruit mid-palate, with some rusticity and earth rumbling through. Not particularly weighty; an easy sipper. The finish shows a bit of the age, but no degradation, just nice, mature, pure and quality Cabernet fruit. As gentle as it gets, and fascinating accordingly. 

1995 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Rich, concentrated, compact and compressed nose, a muscular jolt of big red fruit, cassis, anise, fig, and leather. Huge at the front, taking up every available space at point-of-entry. Unctuous and lush, a whole lot of wine on offer. Mid-palate opens up and shows some cherry and mixed red berries, and spreads a plush quilt of viscosity seamed with fine-grained tannins and a lingering hint of eucalyptal herbaceousness. The finish is intensely structured; amazing for a wine that’s been in bottle nearly 15 years. Almost impossibly youthful still, but with a load of meat on the bone.

2001 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Good lord, what a lot of wine! This is an intense, intense vintage; the nose is positively loaded! Ripe, rich, sweet, cola and licorice and blackberry pie! The mouthfeel is just about as viscous as the aromatics would lead you to believe, with a luxuriant point-of-entry and a multi-tiered middle that, despite all the decadence, ripeness, and viscosity, still manages to showcase the herbs, spice, and forestation of a classic Monte Bello. The finish is strong on blue fruit and nice dusky tannins, but overall, the wine is still almost mind-bendingly young. Perfect proof that big doesn’t mean sabotaging balance; this is every bit as graceful as, say, the 1985 described above, but this is a bigger, wilder rendition.

If you’d like to see Eric Baugher’s recent tasting notes on this vintage (Eric is our VP of winemaking here at Monte Bello), well, good luck!

The important things to note in there are words like “Fresh, alive, layered, complex,” and “youthful/delicious,” and “young and capable +15-20 more years.”

Anyhow, the amazing thing about the whole #CabernetDay phenomenon is that it really and truly does play out as envisioned; we participated last year, and it was truly remarkable. People from all over the world, literally, tasting their favorite Cabernets at the same time, sharing their thoughts on-line, engaging in dialogue, talking. This is what wine does. It makes you talk. With other people. About pleasant things. Like wine.

Seriously, every liquid indulgence has its effect; beer makes you sleepy and want to play pinball. Tequila makes you quiet and want to hit people with pool cues. Vodka makes you dance way too much, and not well, and then completely forget that you danced way too much, and not well. Martinis make you have more martinis, taking you swiftly  from sophisticated to unconscious. Absinthe makes you see dead people. But wine? Ah, wine. Wine makes you nice. And comfortable. Wine makes you feel like cooking, and sharing your cooking with other people. Wine makes you not only tell good stories, but listen to them as well. No one ever opened a newspaper and read of a murder-suicide committed after drinking a bottle of single-vineyard Cabernet. No, wine makes you congenial, and poetic. Wine makes you like music, and bread. Wine makes people love people.

This is what happens on #CabernetDay. People love people.

And now, with our new and very special #CabernetDay tastings, you can love Cabernet and people both, and you can do so both virtually, and in proximity.

Please consider yourselves invited.

99 Point Rating!

July 12, 2011

Have you heard about the latest issue of Wine Advocate, Robert Parker’s legendary publication? The one profiling California reds? Issue 195? There is a Ridge Vineyards wine reviewed in this issue, and boy oh boy does it get a fine treatment!

Here is how the Wine Advocate defines a wine that receives a rating of 96-100 points:

An extraordinary wine of profound and complex character displaying all the attributes of a classic wine of its variety. Wines of this caliber are worth a special effort to find, purchase, and consume.

Which makes a 99-point rating seem pretty spectacular, I’d say! Which means that the Ridge Vineyards 2001 Monte Bello has just received, well, a pretty spectacular rating!

The review opens this way:

“A resoundingly great effort from this iconic producer.”

And concludes with these words:

“…make no mistake about this Monte Bello — it is a great wine.”

Not so very bad, as my Grandpa used to say. Not so very bad indeed.

 

(For more about Monte Bello, and the Monte Bello Collector futures program, please click here.)

Wine In The Shower …

July 11, 2011

Wine In The Shower …

You may have seen an article today of the same name  (“Wine in the Shower — Study Explores New Occasions When Millennials Drink Wine”), which is the latest in a long line of explorations in pursuit of that de rigeur marketing holy grail, The Millenial. The wine industry is no different than any other, it would seem, in that the question of The Millenial is apparently on everyone’s lips in our industry too.

In this particular case, the article is an adeptly focused attempt at highlighting, via fairly extensive polling, some of the behavioral differences that drive wine consumption for this new and fascinating market demographic; namely, an expanded definition of when one should be drinking wine, and a shedding of some of the ritualized artifice that oft surrounds the world of wine. The example that gives the article (and this blog) a title is a quote from one of the pollees, who notes their preference for a wee glass of the grape whilst in for a quick dunk under the rivulets.

So, that said, If I might pat my own back for a moment, I would just like to point out that, in this post, which went live on May 26, 2011, I included video of wine in the shower.

That’s what I did.

Poet Charles Bukowski, drinking wine and giving a reading

And on top of that, in this post, I offered up some of my own preferences for rather more eccentric wine drinking occasions. For example:

At heart, other than my father, I learned to drink wine from The Beats. Wine went with wild poetry readings, and mountain meditation sessions. Wine went with trains, and camping. Wine sometimes went with nothing other than, well, wine. Just wine. And mainly, wine went with people. It was living with people, in a memorable way. Being where you were, and demanding nothing less that an exhilarating devotion to the moment …

From my father (the true architect of my personal house of wine), a professor of literary criticism rooted in an Italian Marxist tradition, I also learned that wine goes with lividly vibrant political arguments between hairy professors wearing plaid sportcoats with leather elbows, or strangely somber yet passionate poetry readings headed up my bespectacled and shambolic graduate students. And I especially learned that wine goes with family. “At table.” One of my favorite phrases of all time.

Whether any of this means I’m onto something as regards The Millenial matter, I can’t of course say. Probably not. But I do occasionally enjoy a crisp but voluptuous, acidity-driven, mineral and yeast-forward white wine in the shower.

I do.

Judgment of Paris: Let the Anniversary Celebration BEGIN!

April 30, 2011

Elvis on Ed Sullivan.

Elvis Presley on The Ed Sullivan Show

 Jimi Hendrix playing The Star Spangled Banner at Woodstock.

Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock

 The publishing of Kerouac’s On The Road.

Jack Kerouac and Neal Cassady, on the cover of "On the Road"

 The publication of “The Autobiography of Malcolm X”

Alex Haley and Malcolm X

The staging of Ridgely Torrence’s “Three Plays for a Negro Theatre.”

Ridgely Torrence

The release of “Smells Like Teen Spirit”

Nirvana

 

American Music, Literature, Art. They would never be the same again. These are the moments that change forever the tides of our cultural history.

The production of well-made wine is an artisan enterprise. It is artistic, it is cultural. And like all things cultural, it changes. It is subject to whim and cataclysm both.

As Stephen Jay Gould posited decades ago, Darwinism, be it social or otherwise, is not necessarily a slow, steady arc of change. It is often stagnation and complacency, eviscerated and recalibrated by sudden, dramatic paradigm shifts that forever change the courses of development.

Thirty-five years ago this month, such an event happened to the world of wine, and specifically, to America. To California. We know this event now as The Judgment of Paris.

1976, The first Judgment of Paris

For a fuller run-down on what exactly this historic event was all about, please click here. The short version is this; in a blind tasting  in 1976, with a panel of some of the finest palates in the world of wine — a tasting that pitted the grand old houses of Bordeaux against what were then the upstart young turks of the Californian “new world” — the bulk of the top honors went to the Californians. A viticultural “shot heard around the world.”

Or was it? Had California truly “arrived?” The French response to the tasting (a response shared by many members of the viticultural intelligentsia) was twofold: a) the wines may have showed well, but they would never age, and b) it was a fluke.

Despite the fact that sales patterns changed almost overnight (suddenly, “fine wine” didn’t just come from Europe any more), the rumblings of doubt continued to be felt.

Finally, the question could lay unanswered no longer, it had to be addressed! So, in 2006, 30 years later, the reenactment was staged. To address the issue of ageability, all the original red wine vintages were tasted. To answer the “fluke” question, young Cabernets were tasted.

2006, The Reenactment

If you’re reading this blog, you likely know what happened. The 1971 Monte Bello, which had come in second behind Stag’s Leap amongst the California producers (and 5th overall out of the top 10) in the original tasting, swept the results, taking top honors at both the London and Napa tastings. And the 2000 Monte Bello won the young Cabernet competition.

So much for the debate. Questions answered, argument over.

Starting May 1st, and running through May 24th (the actual anniversary day for both tastings), we will be celebrating this historic happening, and specifically, the incomparably significant role the Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello played in these dramas. Here are the details:

–Judgement of Paris Anniversary–

May 24 marks the 5th anniversary of the re-enactment and the 35th anniversary of the original tasting. In celebration of these historic occasions, we are offering special pricing on our 2007 Monte Bello through May 24.

$125 through May 24 (regularly $145)

Special Member Pricing

Monte Bello Collector Members – $100 (750mL)

ATP & Z List Members – $115

Click here to purchase

Click here to learn about membership

Click here to learn about the Paris Tasting

We are proudly pouring the 2007 Monte Bello in our tasting rooms, and we invite you to share in this delicious taste of history.

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!


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