Archive for the ‘RIDGE Staff’ Category

Bryant Terry, The Inspired Vegan, and Ridge Vineyards!

February 6, 2012

As you may know, I am a lover of the “unorthodox” when it comes to pairing wine and food. And by “unorthodox,” I do not mean, for example, molecular gastronomy. I do not consider “foam” to be unorthodox at this time. I do, however, consider things like Indian Curry with Carignane unorthodox.

And I relish, and I mean RELISH, pairing vegetarian and vegan foods with our wines; I find it to be quite the refreshing upending of the paradigms in place.

In my field in general, and particularly working for a producer of highly regarded red wines, one goes to an awful lot of events where red wine is being served with steak. Many, many iterations of steak. Steak, steak, steak. Not to say it’s a bad pairing per se, and certainly not to disparage any of the hosts, chefs, and restaurants out there who have assembled and presented these pairings (I’ve been fortunate to dine in outstanding circumstances, in tremendous company, on astonishing dishes, and regret not a one of them, and am thankful to and for all of them), but the omnipresence of one governing aesthetic can oft leave one wishing for the occasional bout of alternative imagination. So again, I tend to crave the unorthodox, especially when it comes to pairing our wines.

So when the following came across my bow, you can bet I was excited; an opportunity to present Ridge wines at an exclusive VIP party in celebration of Bryant Terry’s new book, “The Inspired Vegan,” to be held at the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco, with La Cocina Food Truck (or should I say, “Soul Cocina”) cooking from “The Inspired Vegan.”

Here is the “official” blurb on Bryant’s new book …

From the author of Vegan Soul Kitchen: ingredients that inspire, unique recipes, and menus for everyday feasts.
 
Marking his 10-year anniversary working to create a healthy, just, and sustainable food system, Bryant Terry offers more than just a collection of recipes. In the spirit of jazz jam sessions and hip hop ciphers, The Inspired Vegan presents a collage of food, storytelling, music, and art. Bryant shares his favorite preparation / cooking techniques and simple recipes—basics to help strengthen your foundation for home cooking and equip you with tools for culinary improvisation and kitchen creativity. He also invites you to his table to enjoy seasonal menus inspired by family memories, social movements, unsung radical heroes, and visions for the future. Ultimately, The Inspired Vegan will help you become proficient in creating satisfying meals that use whole, fresh, seasonal ingredients and are nutritionally balanced—and full of surprising, mouth-watering flavor combinations.
 
Vegan cooking? Soul Kitchen? Jazz Jam Session? Food, storytelling, music, and art? Yeah, you KNOW I’m into this …
 
Mr. Terry has accrued accolades upon accolades along his journey; one such comment particularly resonates:
 
“Bryant Terry knows that good food should be an everyday right and not a privilege.” — Alice Waters
 
There it is again, that enacted reconciliation of high-brow artisan  seriousness and low-brow populist approachability. The head and the heart, the brain and the soul, the melody and the rhythm, the science and the mojo.
 
The event was held on January 24th, and while I personally was unable to attend, Ridge was most definitely present, in the form of our own Amy Monroe and Tara Einis, proud residents of San Francisco, and proud participants in the event at hand.
 
As I said, I myself could regrettably not attend, but thankfully, Jennifer Martine (who photographed the book itself) was on hand to snap some pics with Tara’s iPhone. Here’s a sampling of what went on at this truly singular and extraordinary happening; for example, some culinary action …
 

The menu!

The truck!

The food!

 Some guest profiles …

Guests!

Guests!

Guests!

 
 And the man capturing the guests …
 

Event Photographer Byron Malik

Capturing the guests!

 And some key and significant principles …

Renee Wilson, set to perform later in the evening

Jennifer Martine, "The Inspired Vegan" photographer

Heidi Swanson, fellow food writer

And of course, the guest of honor himself, seen here with Jennifer Martine, and Ridge’s own Tara Einis …
 

Bryant Terry, with Jennifer Martine & Ridge's own Tara Einis

 And especially, Bryant’s special guests, wife Jidan Koon (on right) and their baby girl Mila!

 
 Needless to say, it was a decidedly groovy event, and we were THRILLED to support it. I can’t encourage you enough to get involved in the world of Bryant Terry; it can literally change your life. You are what you eat, people. So eat well.
 
As a resource of sorts, here are some important links you might wish to follow:
 
Bryant Terry
http://www.bryant-terry.com/
 
“The Inspired Vegan” on Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/Inspired-Vegan-Seasonal-Ingredients-Mouthwatering/dp/0738213756
 
Event photographer Byron Malik
http://www.bmalikphotography.com/press-room.html
 
Singer Renee Wilson (seen in “Ray!”) 
http://www.reneewilson.org/
 
Heidi Swanson (author of “Super Natural Every Day”)
http://www.101cookbooks.com/
 
 
And because I can’t resist, as it’s one of my favorite topics (wearing important footwear while drinking fine wine), I just have to share this:
 
 
Thank you to all involved, this was a fantastic event! Thank you to Amy and Tara for hosting, thank you to Bryant Terry for inviting, thank you to Jennifer Martine for photographing, and thank you to the gods for good food, good wine, and good company! It’s a good world.
 
 
 
 

Things I’m Thankful For …

November 23, 2011

This is the third year in a row I’ve had the opportunity to write and present a “Things I’m Thankful For” post on this blog. Each year, on November 23rd, I have sat down in front of the typer and tried to find a way to express my gratitude for all I’m surrounded by, the blessings life has bestowed, the magic of it all. It’s impossible, but I’ve tried. And I’m going to do so again. It’s November 23rd, and this is what I’m thankful for (please note, there is likely to be some overlap with previous renditions!):

My missus, who did not so much save my life, as reinvent it for the drastic better. Who teaches me, everyday, why love exists. Who is perfect. She is who I was born to fall in love with. I am so thankful that she found me, and I her.

My daughter, who is proof that miracles do happen. The most delightful creature I’ve even known, my favorite person in the world. Who invents for me, every day, new ways to cry with happiness.

The chance to write this blog, because it means I get to write posts like this one.

The iPhone that Ridge gave me. Because while I am not, in any way shape or form, a tech evangelical, I do have to admit that Apple did a really, really good job with the iPhone.

Antonio Galloni. Because he gets Ridge, and he gets Paul Draper. Because he wrote, “Heretical as it may sound, I think the wines Draper is making today will prove to be far superior to the wines of decades past, many of which are rightly considered legendary.” Because this is true.

Grandparents, especially my daughter’s. Because this bond, this connection, this grandparent-grandchild relationship, is a friendship like no other, and a delight to watch in action. Because grandparents suffer from a most delightful strain of insanity.

Verizon’s cell phone service, circa 2008. For giving me a good connection when interviewing with Nicole Buttitta (VP of HR at Ridge) for the first time, from a truck stop in Wyoming.

Really awful looking old corks, in the necks of really old and awful looking bottle-necks, that somehow still protect really, really, really amazing mature wines. Lead-shrouded, moldy, juice-stained, and crumbling, but still doing their jobs to perfection.

Amy Monroe, Antonio Favela, Barry Campbell, Howard Hickok, Jane Occhialini, Jenny Merit, Karen Cai, Kim Korupp, Michael Riese, Nancy Tarng, Peter Yaninek, Sam Howles-Banerji, Samantha McMillan, Sonja Seaberg, Tara Einis, and Zani Nesvacil. Who have taught me that hackneyed corporate aphorisms like “”I’ve always found that the speed of the boss is the speed of the team” have within them the gold of truth, because I am of little to no worth whatsoever without the blessing of these fine people by my side. You know them as the Monte Bello Tasting Room team. I am proud to know them as inspirations; and more than that, friends.

Wine & Food pairing; specifically, Champys and Salt & Vinegar crisps.

Wine & Food pairing; specifically, Champys and other food besides Salt & Vinegar crisps.

The Owle Bubo.

Jazz Winemaking, as performed by Paul Draper.

Guests who do all the right things in the tasting room.

The 2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay.

Drinking 2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay in the fog while watching rabbits.

The Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting, which is one of the coolest tasting opportunities I’ve ever experienced.

The Vegetarian Lasagna from Bash Catering. To Chef Jaci Rossi and the Bash Catering team, a hearty congratulations; it’s very, very hard to make truly outstanding lasagna!

The 1995 Monte Bello, for so pleasantly surprising me by quite unexpectedly transitioning from one of the tightest, most angular, most intensely structured Monte Bellos ever, to this very poised, aromatic, beautific Monte Bello that I am looking at right now, feeling very, very thirsty.

People who don’t chew gum.

Really good wine bloggers.

People who believe me when I tell them Jazz, Haiku, and Winemaking are intimately related.

People who write me e-mails about all the amazing ways our wines have been a part of their stories: births, deaths, weddings, anniversaries, reunions, etc. These e-mails remind me that what we do really is something special; we produce that which ritualizes that which you will remember forever.

Wine Berzerkers. Which is pretty self-explanatory.

Pizza.

Three-day old Geyserville out of a flat-bottom glass, with pizza. Mushroom and Olive pizza. And Geyserville.

Our vineyard and winery teams. Watching them during the 2011 Harvest reminded me all over again about what Sam Howles-Banerji refers to as their “awesomeness.”

That Kyle Theriot and Will Thomas have joined the vineyard teams.

Lytton Springs. The place, the people, the wine.

People who understand it’s important to wear cool shoes when tasting wine.

Drinking the new 2008 Buchignani Ranch Zinfandel (which, in my estimation, is the most delicious vintage since the ’04) while wearing ankle boots.

Parents who understand how to go wine tasting with their children.

The way a properly set tasting looks before anyone has arrived. The shimmering glasses, the ordered plates, the small hills of freshly sliced bread, the cool perfection of the cheeses, the crisp diamond sparkle of the water in the glasses, the wine bottles standing at attention, awaiting their deployment …

My almost-three-year-old-daughter’s hysterical one word wine reviews …

My wife’s preposterously expensive taste in wines, and that fact that two-day-old Ridge wine still consistently appeases her …

My boss, Ryan Moore, who does not regurgitate hackneyed corporate aphorisms like “”I’ve always found that the speed of the boss is the speed of the team.” Who does occasionally deploy tidbits of corporate-speak, but always with a twinkle in his eye and a twist at the corner of his lips. Who consistently forces me to come up with new and ever-more hyperbolized ways of explaining just how great I’m doing. Like stupendaliscious, or outer-galaxial.

That my co-workers keep having cool babies.

Haig’s. The greatest hummus in the world. Perfection in pairing with our chardonnays. When experiencing a line-up of excellently selected and staged food & wine pairing selections, one might be tempted to deploy a hackneyed aphorism like “No member of a crew is praised for the rugged individuality of his rowing.” Except that when Haig’s is involved, one must conclude that the rugged individuality of the rowing is indeed deeply praise-worthy.

People who don’t wear cologne or perfume.

Carignane. Especially the John Olney kind.

The 2011 Ridge Vineyards Holilday Packs. Especially the Estate Cabernet vertical, for being so good. And, oddly enough, especially the Dusi vertical, which has suprised me immensely by being truly delicious. Not because they’re not good wines; they are. But because I personally like them so much. Because I am not normally a drinker of this style. But these are really, really, really good.

The fact that my post on this blog with the somewhat laughably lunatic title of  ”Zoot! And Poetry, And Wine, And Jazz, And Steve Martin, And The Muppets, And Jack Kerouac!” remains one of the Top 5 most viewed posts of all time.

Honest people. People who say true things. Like, “Champys should only be drunk from Coupe glasses.”

People who drink Champys from Coupe glasses. Because these are people who obviously have perfect aesthetic taste. And are accordingly inevitably the sorts of people who will also appreciate the opportunity that our new Historic Vineyard Series release represents. People who drink solo-varietal Cabernet Franc. And Champys. From Coupe glasses.

People who, like my father, fell in love all over again with Merlot after seeing Sideways. People who, like my father, have refused to buy Pinot Noir ever since, even though it’s kind of silly, and certainly self-defeating. People who, like my father, deserve  admiration for having principles like this. People who, like my father, remind me of aphorisms that are not all hackneyed, like this relevant one from Mark Twain: “Principles have no real force except when one is well-fed.”

That we are fortunate to oft be well-fed.

People who remember that not everyone in the world is well-fed; that in fact, far too many in the world have never, ever experienced being well-fed. And accordingly, I am thankful for people who not only remember this, but work to correct it. Or at minimum, at least walk the world with appreciation, as opposed to arrogance.

Humble winemakers like Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, and John Olney. Who are good enough to be arrogant, but aren’t.

Humble assistant winemakers like Shun Ishikubo and Muiris Griffin, who are good enough to be arrogant, but aren’t. Who are also good enough to be head winemakers, but choose instead to be part of something beautiful.

People who don’t wear skinny jeans.

People who understand that wearing skinny jeans while drinking good wine makes puppies cry.

People who listen to wine podcasts. Because that is serious dedication.

People who know that there are far better things to pair with red wine than chocolate.

People who pair sautéed mushrooms and garlic with red wine.

People who know you can pair red wine with Indian food.

People who understand that, despite the schtick, ZZ Top is actually a really good band.

People who know that Motorhead has their own wine now, and still don’t drink it, even though they really like Motorhead.

That Rex Stout’s immortal literary creation, the detective Nero Wolfe, insists on the use of Tarragon Wine Vinegar in his kitchen instead of sherry.

Good Poets. Because in this day and age of shallow superficiality, cultural devaluation, and emotional disconnect; in this age where protective irony and deliberate obfuscation rule the emotional day, we desperately need people who are still trying to connect our heads to our hearts for us.

People who understand what wine and poetry have to do with one another.

Really, really ridiculously hyperbolized wine tasting notes.

All wine writers who have not used the word “millenial” in the past year, if there are any.

Cecilia Aguilar, Chris Seguin, and Mary Devine; the dictionary definitions of Customer Service. And really nice people on top of that.

Cellos.

David Gates.

Coated tannins.

People who use terms like “coated tannins” in their tasting notes.

That I was invited to attend the Monte Bello Assemblage tasting, the greatest wine experience of my life.

Cellar Tracker, and the admirably obsessed people who use it.

Zen.

That Elliot Nett and Jason Shelton are now esteemed full-time members of the Lytton Springs hospitality team.

People who drink wine both in formal wear, and naked.

Old men who keep their belts below their bellies, as opposed to above.

Whoever first described my approach to clothing as “hobo chic,” because it’s given me a way to explain away comments about my clothing.

Ties with subtle wine stains.

Wine stains that look like the profiles of famous classical composers.

Tasting Rooms that do not play baroque classical music or Santana.

People who are willing to let themselves love, because this is the bravest thing of all.

Having someone to love.

Having something to love.

People who, when asked “Don’t you want something to love?,” answer “Yes.”

That I have had the chance to love almost every single vintage of Monte Bello going all the way back to 1964.

The things people say to one another while drinking wine, like, “You know, socks are a really great idea,” or “Pass me another crostini,” or “Ayn Rand was wrong,” or “Has it ever occurred to you that some of our best memories involve autumn?” or “Wow, that is an amazing Syrah,” or “I love you too.”

And so many other things also, like Bud Powell, and Laura Chenel’s Melodie, and solid-color carpets and the people who love them, and co-fermenting Viognier with Syrah, and the Haiku of Issa, and Ah So Cork Pullers and the people who use them, and pacifists, and the Optima font, and typewriters from before 1960, and books, and wearing PF Flyers and a suit, and anyone who doesn’t have a mirror in their bag, and really weird and cool wine stores, and France, and fractured limestone, and grape sorting tables, and people who don’t iron their jeans, and very worn-in bandanas, and firefighters, and people who really aggressively swish while wine tasting, and the fact that spittoons are used by both oenophiles and cowboys, and romance, and candles that don’t have scents, and owls, and wine bars that don’t play house music, and restaurants that always bring out the vintage that’s on the menu, and Thai restaurants who understand that if you can’t make green papaya salad properly you shouldn’t be a Thai restaurant, and Italian restaurants who understand the same thing about gnocchi, and people who know first-hand that thirty-year-old cab goes really well with japanese-style barbecued okra, and friends of any kind, and people who don’t call me Chris after I’ve introduced myself as Christopher, and the movie Casablanca, and Ah So Cork Pullers and those that have them, and Watsonville Sourdough, and the days when one doesn’t have to cut one’s toenails, and dew, and that lunatic fringe cadre of loyalists who re-wrote the zinfandel rules, and sweet potatoes, and the taste of a wine spill being licked off the stomach of a lover, and December, and people with awful handwriting, and the paintings of Pissarro, and college radio, and really fine wine.

And most of all, I am thankful to Ridge Vineyards. By your dedication to me, and mine to yours, my family is happy, healthy and safe, and my heart is, accordingly, intact. Thank you.

And to you all, may all the best of everything be yours, and may you always have cause to be thankful.

To share a glass of wine is to share the experience of love. May you all be, feel, and share true love this holiday season.

To all at Ridge, please know I am so thankful for you.

And to every person, place or thing I have neglected to mention in this post, please know I am praying for ten thousand more years of writing “Things I Am Thankful For” posts, so that at some point, I might thank everything.

Harvest Begins On The Mountain!

October 17, 2011

It’s been one heck of a growing season. T’aint no doubt about it.

But I am happy to report that Monte Bello, the mountain itself, has officially joined the harvest season; in comes Chardonnay!

Viticulturist Kyle Theriot, mannin' the buckles ...

Jimsomare!

 We brought in one run of chardonnay before the rains came, and while the jury remains out as to its final quality, the fruit that came in on Saturday showed fantastic flavors, and after analysis, the brix levels are spot on. I tasted grapes as they came in on Saturday, and then tasted a pair of press fractions on Sunday, and it’s fine juice all the way around; needless to say, all are relieved!

Chard in the gondola ...

 There is something somewhat strange about seeing the grapes in gondola; they seem somewhat temporarily humbled. In the wild, on the vine, they were exactly that; wild. And soon, they’ll be wine; all the wilder still. But for this brief moment, the are cowed, contained, contrite, as if temporarily scolded for their wild ways. Soon, so soon, they’ll be launched into the wildness of their new lives, but for just this one moment, we, in the role of exhausted parents, get to enjoy them in their ever so temporarily suspended grace, on the cusp between their wild, unformed youths, and their eventual destinies.

Inch by inch, row by row -or- Block by block, brix by brix ...

Takin' notes; the official record ...

Cluster ...

 Such a simple gesture, to hold up a cluster of grapes, but in the hands of a winemaker, there is something both paternalistic and feral about it; something both exasperatedly punitive, and lovingly fatigued. Here, in winemaker Eric Baugher’s juice-stained hands, this living cluster could be a child by the arm, a cat by the tail, a poem by the high inverted volta …

Never forget though, it’s a working person’s game, and a hard-working person at that. It’s technology …

Machinery …

Sweat and blisters …

And a whole lot of hearts growing three more sizes every day …

I had the great pleasure of following the chardonnay as it arrived, and was subsequently delivered. And to borrow a quote from the video that follows, “we had somethin’ special” …

Pressing Pagani …

October 12, 2011

Up here at the Monte Bello Estate, we very recently hosted a wonderful group; a Japanese film crew. As it turns out, they happened to arrive on a day when the production team was pressing some Pagani Ranch zinfandel, and it proved to be an excellent opportunity to see a press happen live and in real-time.

Pressing is pretty much exactly what it sounds like; grapes are put in a container of sorts, and they’re pressed, in order to squeeze juice out.

Most of the juice that goes into Ridge wines is what you’ll see commonly referred to as “free run”; meaning, no pressing (or “extraction”) is required to obtain it. The juice essentially just makes its way out of the grapes of its own volition over the course of the fermentation process (In one of the video clips below, you’ll hear winemaker Eric Baugher –over the noise of the press! — explaining that about 75% of the available juice from the vineyard emerges as free run, while the remaining quarter continues to reside in the skins; thus, the press).

Free run juice is traditionally considered to be of a most pure, most elegant, most subtle character. That said, to make wines of the ageable and complex sort that Ridge Vineyards always strives to present, structure is very much required. And given that much of what we consider to be the vital structural components of any given wine are to be found in the skins (color and tannin, for example), a bit of extraction can potentially be very helpful in crafting a final assemblage.

For example, let’s say the free run juice of a particular vineyard parcel proves to be delicious, fruit-forward, elegant, beguiling, but just a tad light on the palate. A bit of pressed juice from the same parcel can be introduced to the “blend,” bringing a bit more intensity, and a tad more muscularity as regards tannin architecture. No tricks; it’s still the same vineyard, the same juice, the same personality, but with a modulated handling, different flavors can be obtained.

To complicate matters, we don’t just press. We do “press fractions.” Meaning, we press the same juice at different levels of intensity (i.e. pressure) and capture the results in separate tanks, so that they can be taste-tested in different assemblages with the core free run juice. Again, no tricks, just different handlings. What you’ll taste in the end is still essentially not much more than pure juice, but depending on whether press juice was added (and what “fraction” thereof it was), and in what amount(s), you’ll experience more or less of certain characteristics. To my mind, it’s a beautiful and singular way to work with what Mother Nature delivers, in such a fashion as to honor her, without changing her.

So, back to our primary story: Japanese Film Crew, Pagani Ranch Grapes, and a press.

Here are a few excerpts of me filming the filming. I hope you enjoy!

A Look Back at the Fall Release Event at Monte Bello (i.e. Event pics!)

September 9, 2011

With all the excitement of harvest looming on the horizon, and all the forward looking this involves, it does indeed seem as if a proper “look back” at the Monte Bello Fall Release Event is in order; even though it was only last weekend!

Anyhow …

On behalf of all of us here at Ridge, and most especially the team here at Monte Bello, I wish to thank everyone who attended this extraordinary happening; I don’t know who was happier, our guests, or us!

I drove up that morning nervous, exhausted, stressed, and unhealthily focused. A huge event afoot, and all responsibilities on my shoulders. I was deranged.

What paused me, and fully recalibrated my psyche, was this:

That’s what I was looking at as I was unlocking the driveway gate. I was instantly unwound.

Once inside the Old Winery Barn, it was down to my office. That’s when things started to heat up again. So much to do, so little time. Staff began to arrive, the catering team arrived, the parking team arrived. So many people. I was beginning the routine that would be mine the rest of the day; running laps around the property. I was frenzied.

But pause was soon again given. It was tasting time.

You probably know by know just how good these new vintages are showing. I was happily rediscovering. Point scores are nice, and we’re happy to receive good ones, but at the end of the day, the wines have to perform when it matters most; when YOU’RE tasting them. I mean, sure the new issue of Wine Advocate had just simply showered down praises on these wines (97 points for the 2008 Monte Bello, and 95 points each for the 2009 Lytton Springs and the 2008 Monte Bello Chardonnay!) …

… but what were YOU going to think?

After tasting the line-up, I felt very good. Very, very good. And I felt that you, too, were going to feel very, very good.

Which was good, given that the first arrivals were starting to arrive, and as expected, the event had drawn out a hearty crop of serious Ridge-o-Philes. And believe you me, these weren’t the only two seriously vintage Ridge shirts I would see, though these are certainl two classic and excellent examples:

So it was go time, and we were ready. We had a great team on hand, the wines were showing beautifully, and some very key members of the winemaking team were in the house:

Paul Draper & Eric Baugher talking Monte Bello winemaking ...

Shun Ishikubo pouring 1992 Monte Bello out of magnum ...

Tara pouring below the ghosts of founders past ...

 

Zani expertly enacts the art of wine tasting merriment ...

 

Pete pours cool as a cucumber in the face of hot demand ...

No discussion of the Fall Release Event at Monte Bello is complete without acknowledging the presence of Pizza Politana. Not only did they manage to actually drive a wood-fired pizza oven up our mountain, but they then proceeded to serve some of the most delicious (and PERFECTLY paired) offerings we’ve ever had the pleasure of placing alongside our wines.
 
 
But a great idea (wood-fired pizza oven truck!), great ingredients (local, sustainable, organic, NorCal farmer’s market fare), and great pairing do not a great event make. It takes great staff, and the folks from Pizza Politana were tops.
 
 
 Things were definitely getting intense. You know when you’re starting to golf-cart the guests in that the event is really starting to happen.
 
 
Then suddenly this …
 
 
 … becomes this!
 
 
Fortunately, there was this to adjourn to (once the collective tummy was full up on pizza and wine!) …
 
 
Yeah, that’ll do …
 
 
 What a day, what a day …
 
When I began assembling the components of what have become this post, I was looking for one image, something that could somehow capture the magic of it all; I found this, and figured I had it …
 
 
Pizza and Monte Bello. Perfect.
 
But in looking through all the images I’d shot over the day, there was another idea that I just couldn’t shake, and in the end, it’s what I’ve decided to go with; the bookend.
 
After all was said and done, and I was coming down the mountain …
 
 
… I knew, finally and for certain, that all was well.
 

10 Questions for Paul Draper: Question Number Eight!

August 24, 2011

We’re coming to the finish line of our special ten-question series with Paul Draper; only three more Q & A’s to go, with Number Eight dropping today! Enjoy, and please keep your questions coming, we look very forward to posting a reader-led edition soon …

8-   What is the advantage of blending several different plots and varieties?

 As in Bordeaux, in the Medoc, the combination of a major part Cabernet Sauvignon with lesser amounts of Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot makes a finer, more complex wine than 100% Cabernet Sauvignon.  Likewise by selecting parcels that produce the most complex wines, and blind tasting to make sure that they complement each other, you can make a finer wine from a number of parcels than from a single parcel.

***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.

Ten Questions for Paul Draper: #7!

August 23, 2011

The second week of our special ten-question series with Paul Draper continues today with question #7!

7-    Jancis Robinson has compared Monte Bello Chardonnay to a Grand Cru Burgundy. Were you inspired by the great wines of Burgundy when made your Chardonnay?

 That is very kind of Jancis but I didn’t know very much about how white burgundies were made, but had a sense of what a fine white wine was all about.  We made the wines in a straight forward, non-manipulative manner and slowly perfected our techniques.  We were trying to make fine wine not imitating Burgundy but the Monte Bello terroir gave us a quality and character with some similarities to Burgundy.

***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 6!

August 22, 2011

We begin the second-half of our special ten-question series with Paul Draper today, please enjoy!

(And by the way, thanks to everyone who has been sending in their own questions, we look very forward to presenting a reader-initiated Q & A series soon; so please keep the queries coming!)

6-    Which Ridge wine would you recommend to someone who has never tasted a wine from California?

 If they are experienced in drinking Bordeaux or Chilean Cabernets, I would recommend they try our Estate Cabernet Sauvignon. If they generally like all wines, I would recommend the Geyserville or Lytton Springs Zinfandels.

***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.

Old Vine To Table

June 6, 2011

Monte Bello is a storied locale. There is no getting around it. It’s where Ridge began. The first vintage was 1962. It’s 2011 now. That’s a lot of years to be making wine, and a lot of years to be hosting people for tastings. Talk to the old timers. They remember when it was just Paul Draper, sitting on a bench, ladling Monte Bello out of a soup tureen while feral dogs ran wild through the vineyards. (Disclaimer: Paul never used a ladle.)

Seriously though, things have changed a bit, and also not so much. But the point is, Monte Bello has a lot of history notched into its belt when it comes to tasting wine.

Lytton Springs is the diamond in the rough. History for days (can you say 115+ year-old vines?), a stunning legacy of Single-Vineyard Estate Wines (anyone notice that bit from Thomas Keller –French Laundry– about how he would choose Lytton Springs if it was to be his last wine on earth?) but a wee youngun’ when it comes to tastings.

Have you been there? If you have, then you don’t need no stinkin’ convertin’. But if you’ve not yet made the pleasure of acquaintance with all that goes on up there, I am here to help you dig it to the fullest extent of your cranial-emotive capabilities.

The staff at Lytton Springs? Amazing. The location? Amazing. The wines. Amazing.

But I am telling you, they also know how to put on an AFFAIR! I mean, a Top-Shelf, Grade A, USRDA approved, #1, Top of the Pops, Presidential Seal of Approval, HAPPENING.

Take the very recent Old Vine to Table event as but one example. And then hire a detective, who is able to travel through time and space, in a rocket ship, to go find your mind. Because it will be blown.

Put another way, what an event!

Just a little something Lytton Springs threw together for some members. Just a little somethin’ somethin’ …

Meaning, a gourmet four-course meal amidst the backdrop of our century-old vines. With featured wines including the following:

–1987, 1994, 2003, 2004 & 2008 Lytton Springs 

–1995 Monte Bello

–2007 Geyserville Essence

And did I mention that dinner was prepared from ingredients entirely sourced from Tara Firma Farms in Petaluma? Or that Farm owner Tara Smith and her husband Craig were on hand to host? 

And if that’s not enough, did you also know that Winemaker John Olney, President Mark Vernon, Vice President of Vineyard Operations David Gates, and Vice President of Sales David Amadia were also there?

I mean, hell’s bells, this thing was interstellar on fire magnificent!

Alright, dig, I know, you want to know more about the food. Well, menu up yourself!

Passed Hors d’ Oeuvres

House Cured Wild Pacific Salmon

Spring Pea Blini, Flowers & Bell Creme Fraiche

Pickled Beef Tongue Crostini

Farm Egg, Maple, Brioche

1st Course

Chicken Crepinette, Maitake, Pickled Grapes

2nd Course

Slow Roasted Pork Tenderloin

Spoon Bread, Cilantro, Hibiscus, Charred Pineapple

3rd Course

Braised Brisket

Redwood Hill Cheddar Fondue Potatoes, Fava Beans, French Onion Broth

(cheffed up by the very great folks at Feast!)

Oh yeah, that’s the stuff.

I’m just sayin’, this was some kind of special event, and do you really want to know what made it the special-est? Not the century-and-then-some- old-vines, not the roster of Ridge principals on hand, not the Fondue Potatoes (though good lord, that sounds good!), not even the wine. It was the guests in attendance. Just really fine, fine, folks. The best.

On behalf of us all, thank you for attending this very special event. It was such a pleasure to have you.

And to everyone out there, while we can’t promise an event like this every day, we do really want you to visit us, because we love what we do; we love these wines,we love the how, where, what, why of how they’re made, and more than anything else, we love to share them with you, to talk about them with you, and perhaps best of all, to hear from you later, when you tell us all the amazing stories about the how, where, what, why of how you ended by sharing the wine you took home from us.

Old Vine to Table? Certainly. But event more than that? Us to You.


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