Archive for the ‘Tasting Events/Opportunities’ Category

#RidgeSomms: To Dine In The Valleys

May 17, 2013

When you are Ridge Vineyards, and you have invited 12 of the best and brightest food & wine luminaries in the country to your estates, you are faced with a daunting question: where do you take them for dinner?

Part I.

If you are Ridge Vineyards/Monte Bello , and you are 2300 feet above The Valley (Silicon Valley, that is!), you go DOWN.

You go DOWN to The Valley.

You go DOWN to Cupertino.

You go DOWN to Alexander’s.

Alexanders_Front

And when you get to Alexander’s, you go find Maxwell Classen.

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Maxwell Classen is the Wine Director at Alexander’s Steak House in Cupertino, and he is a very serious cat.

Alexanders_Max

I spent an afternoon with him recently, tasting wine in advance of our #RidgeSomms event, and I was moved.

Max has mojo.

Max has gravitas.

Max is a very deep cat.

You can read a proper bio on Max here: Maxwell Klassen

But that won’t tell you the whole story. You gotta taste wine with the man. Then you’ll really know.

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What did we taste? 2000 Monte Bello, and 1995 Monte Bello.

Pairings for the entrée.

The entrée?

Dry-Aged Strip Steak, smoked Maitake mushrooms, Kabayaki butter.

(You may know the Maitake mushroom as Hen-of-the-Woods.  I know it as delicious.)

The Chef?

Gerardo Naranjo.

Alexanders_ChefGerardo

Chef Gerardo was part of the team that launched Alexander’s in Cupertino. He was Sous Chef then. He’s Executive Chef now.

And he did it the real deal way. He worked at a Farmer’s Market as a boy. He started in restaurants as a dishwasher. He earned a spot as a line cook. He climbed to Sous Chef status. Three times a Sous Chef. Then came Alexander’s.

Alexanders_Michelin

Executive Chef Gerardo Naranjo has soul.

Wine Director Maxwell Classen has soul.

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To find out Chef Gerardo’s full menu, and to get a feel for the Depths of Maxwell, please enjoy the following:

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Needless to say,  I am looking very forward to Monday evening.

I am looking very forward to the Tastes of Monte Bello, to the Flavors of Gerardo, to the Depths of Maxwell.

I am looking very forward to #RidgeSomms.

(Stay Tuned for Part II of this “Dine In The Valleys” series; next stop: Dry Creek Valley!)

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And with that, we invite you to (virtually!) join us at Alexander’s Monday night, in The Valley, for an evening of all things Ridge, and wine, and food, and Ridge!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

#RidgeSomms: One Mile High And Rising!

May 16, 2013

I’ll endeavor to roll like a composer for a moment, and see if I can’t harmonize a few contrapuntal threads.

Melody # 1 — make it the bass line — goes a little something like this: If you know football, you know Denver, and if you know Denver, you know the Broncos, and if you know the Broncos, you know Mike Shanahan, and if you know Mike Shanahan, then you know Shanahan’s.

Melody #2 — make it a muted trumpet line — plays like this: If you wine, you terroir, and if you terroir , you Terroir Radio, and if you Terroir Radio, then you also William Davis, and if you William Davis, then you Denver, and if you Denver, then you Shanahan’s.

Melody #3 — make it a Steinway — rolls like so: If you know Ridge Vineyards, then you know Christina Donley, and if you know Christina Donley, then you know she’s Coloradan, and if she’s Coloradan, then you know she knows Denver, and you know if she knows Denver she knows Shanahan’s.

Meaning, all lines harmonize at Shanahan’s.

ShanahansLogo

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Shanahan’s has one of these:

Shanahans_BestOf_Spectator

and those don’t come easy.

When they do come, they usually come because of an exceptional Sommelier.

Shanahan’s has one of those.

His name is Steve Steese. And he’s exceptional.

But don’t take my word for it.

Take the word of William Davis.

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There is no other way to put it; William Davis is a force. Dig just a snippet of this bio:

“…In 2004, he decided that a full-time career with Charmer-Sunbelt in Colorado was necessary to pursue a greater understanding of the grape, and received the Certified Specialist of Wine, the Certified Specialist of Spirits, and the highest certification from the Society of Wine Educators, the Certified Wine Educator title (CWE). Restaurants were still ‘in his blood’, and the dedication that sommeliers give to their craft is a vital part of bringing wine to the consumer, so he passed the Certified and Advanced Sommelier exams in 2007 and 2008, on his first try, and is working to achieve his MS with the Court of Master Sommeliers. The academic approach to wine and spirits also interests him, and he is passed the Advanced Certification with the Wine and Spirits Education Trust in 2010, and is studying for the WSET Diploma. If that isn’t enough, he is a member of the Guild of Sommeliers, and was the 2012 Central and South Regional Winner of TopSomm, a competition to find the best wine professional talent in the United States…”

And so forth.

Whew.

And, to find Mr. Davis in present and future times, turn your dial to Terroir Radio.

Do so right now, and you’ll find Mr. Davis waxin’ wise on Mr. Steve Steese himself, and on Shanahan’s, and on our upcoming #RidgeSomms event.

It’s all right here: Terroir Radio

Thank you so much to William for taking us One Mile High (and Rising!).

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The Donley was just in the Mile High. And so of course she rocked Shanahan’s. But here’s a little something you didn’t expect: her favorite dish? Colorado Red Trout!

Check it:

Colorado Red Trout -rice pilaf, asparagus, lemon caper beurre blanc

That’s just how The Donley rolls. Beurre Blanc-style.

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Mike Shanahan employs him. William Davis praises him. Christina Donley invites him. You think we’re excited to host Steve Steese?

You bet we’re excited to host Steve Steese! Shanahan’s in the house!

You can get yourself connected to Shanahan’s socially via Facebook & Twitter:

https://www.facebook.com/shanahanssteak

https://twitter.com/shanahansdtc

And of course you’ll get to know Steve via #RidgeSomms!

~

And with that, we invite you to join Steve Steese and all the other luminaries that make up the cast of #RidgeSomms, for an extraordinary two days of all things Ridge, and wine, and food, and Ridge!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

#RidgeSomms: The Powers of Austin!

May 15, 2013

Great restaurants are of a place.

They are an integral component in their regional eco-culinary oeno-system.

They cannot, and should not, be considered separate – or separately – from their immediate environment.

They are a thread in fabric, a note on a stave, a rhyme in a line, a dab on a canvas, a soul amongst the ten thousand things.

And we hold these truths to be self-evident.

Yet the times, are they a-changin’?

Consider the rise of the celebrity chef, the ever-expanding dominance of the chains, the collective post-globalist homogenization of the cultural landscape.

What does all this potentially mean for the great restaurants of place?

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One of the most pleasurable aspects of my #RidgeSomms pre-event research has been the opportunity to explore the restaurants and regions of origin for our guests, and what I have found time and time again is that the great restaurants of place are not only not going extinct, they are in fact thriving.

This seems, more often than that, to be continually made most possible by the passions of, and the support for, homegrown talent. Local boys and girls are growin’ up culinary, and they’re finding homes in their home cities, counties, states, and regions.

One of the most outstanding examples of this is June Rodil. She’s Texas, she’s Austin, and she’s awesome.

And because her story has SO MUCH to do with Texas, and with Austin, who better to help us learn her story than a Texas wine blogger?

And with that, it is my great pleasure to introduce to you: SAHMmelier!

After spending years in the classroom, Stay-at Home-Mom Alissa Leenher combined her love of education and wine and started SAHMmelier.  Now, between the laundry and dishes, Alissa dishes about wine, food, local events, usually seasoned with a pinch of introspection and all things SAHM.  Although she does not have formal Sommelier training, she enjoys learning about the industry while attempting to juggle all that her husband, daughter, and son throw at her. It is no wonder why she enjoys a glass, or two, of wine. Originally from Upstate New York, Alissa resides in Austin, Texas.

Alissa epitomizes the passionate Citizen Blogger cynosure, to be sure, but she also brings true journalistic discipline to her oeno-literary endeavors, and she’s drawn on all this and more to bring together a fantastic post highlighting June Rodil, and her new restaurant venture in Austin: Qui.

Qui

Here is an excerpt from the SAHMmelier post on June Rodil:

From the Driskill, she went to Uchi to work under Tyson Cole, another star in Austin and in the national realm.  She then returned to fine dining with David Bull at his next endeavor, Congress.  So where does one go from there?  To work with Top Chef winner Paul Qui, of course.

Qui, which will open this Spring, is one of the most anticipated restaurants in Austin right now.  Paul is currently involved in East Side Kings, which will continue serving creative cuisine to the trailer crowd.  Qui will take it up a notch (or three) with his flagship restaurant.  Rodil will be in charge of pairing his eclectic menu with wines and spirits.

June Rodil is no stranger to awards.  She’s been named “Texas’s Best Sommelier” by Texas Sommelier Association, Rising Star Sommelier, and Best New Sommelier in 2011 by the Wine and Food Foundation of Texas.  This month, she has also been chosen, along with eleven other Sommeliers, to attend the 2013 Sommelier Symposium at Ridge Vineyards.

To read the full post, please click here: May Looks Great For June.

And to find June Rodil in the Social-Sphere, check her -and Qui- out on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/JuneRodil

https://twitter.com/QUIAustin

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We’re absolutely thrilled that June will be joining us for #RidgeSomms, and we can’t thank Alissa enough for helping us to get an authentic sense of where June is -quite literally- coming from.

If June and Alissa are any indication of the true  oeno-culinary Powers of Austin on offer in the Lone Star State, then all of us at Ridge Vineyards are sure to be raising a true Texas Toast come Monday!

~

And with that, we invite you to join June Rodil and all the other luminaries that make up the cast of #RidgeSomms, for an extraordinary two days of all things Ridge, and wine, and food, and Ridge!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

#RidgeSomms: Christina Donley Is A Moth to St. Elmo’s Flame!

May 15, 2013

For some, St. Elmo conjures images of luminous plasma. For others, Rob Lowe’s crisp jawline, and a song by John Parr.

But for Christina Donley, St. Elmo means one thing, and one thing only: Ribeye mid-rare and a half bottle of Ridge.

You may recall Christina Donley from a recent post about Chicago, but one should bear in mind that Chi’s are not the only rails The Donley rides.

ChristinaDonley

Christina Donley, Regional Sales Manager, Ridge Vineyards

As with Michael Torino, Christina Donley is a Regional Sales Manager for Ridge Vineyards, and as with Michael Torino, she covers a great deal of ground.

Behold:

Christina Donley – Regional Sales Manager (NorCal, OR, WA, AK, ID, MT, CO, ND, SD, WY, IA, IL, IN, OH, MI)

That’s hardcore.

~

StElmo-Logo_BW

The St. Elmo Steak House has been in downtown Indianapolis since 1902.

That’s hardcore too.

And, guess who’s dined there? Check this:

Jon Bon Jovi, Neil Diamond, Sammy Hagar, Daryl Hall, Waylon Jennings, Billy Joel, Lyle Lovett, Johnny Mathis, John Mellencamp, Lou Rawls, Paul Shaffer, Brian Setzer, Gene Simmons, Stephen Stills, Michael Stipe, Ann & Nancy Wilson, Neil Young, The Black Crowes, Dave Matthews Band, Foo Fighters, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Rolling Stones, U2, AC/DC, and Little Feat.

Just to name a few.

But none of that compares to the following testimonial, from The Donley herself:

Every time I go to Indianapolis, I find myself drawn to the bar at St. Elmo’s.  Like a moth to a flame.  I sit down and order the same thing every single time.  Ribeye mid-rare and a half bottle of Ridge. All the bartenders know me by name and treat me like family.

That should be just about all you need to know.

But, just in case you need to know more, it’s worth noting that the St. Elmo Steak House was named a 2012 America’s Classic by the James Beard Foundation. And that Wine Spectator bestowed upon them a Best of Award of Excellence.

But really, all you really need to do is remember what The Donley said. Like a moth to a flame.

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So are we, at Ridge Vineyards, excited that Dave Poore — Manager & Cellar Steward at the St. Elmo Steak House — will be joining us for #RidgeSomms?

You bet yer boots we are! And we hope you are too!

#RidgeSomms will be a great way for you to get to know more about Dave and St. Elmo, but in the meantime, check ‘em out on Facebook and Twitter:

https://www.facebook.com/stelmosteakhouse

https://twitter.com/stelmo

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And with that, we invite you to join Dave, Christina, and all the other luminaries that make up the cast of #RidgeSomms, for an extraordinary two days of all things Ridge, and wine, and food, and Ridge!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

#RidgeSomms: Michael Torino Sees “Red!”

May 14, 2013

Our beloved late President at Ridge Vineyards, the wonderful Donn Reisen, used to tease me by calling me an “East Coast kind of guy.” I had come from New York, it’s true, and in truth, I was happy to be teased by Donn, but it wasn’t really an accurate description. I think he said it as a mechanism of differentiation; he wore flannels and jeans, I wore a sportcoat. Thus, I was East Coast.

Michael Torino, on the other hand, is an EAST COAST KIND OF GUY. Real deal.

Torino Head Shot

Michael Torino, Regional Sales Manager, Ridge Vineyards

Michael is one of our three Regional Sales Managers (RSMs, dig!), and he covers the waterfront. The Eastern Seaboard, that is! Dig this:

Michael Torino – Regional Sales Manager (CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, NC, NH, NJ, NY, MA, MD, ME, PA, RI, SC, VA, VT, WV)

The man travels.

~

So, to bring together the Somms for our very special #RidgeSomms event, who better to turn to than our RSMs?

Michael Torino’s invitee list is three-strong, and each is strictly top-shelf. I’d like to start introducing them to you, so that by the time we get to the 20th of May, you’ll be familiar, and ready to walk with them down the aisles of Ridge.

We begin with Fred Cabrera. He is the Director of Wine for the Red Restaurant Group, and thus a true landmark on the Florida Steakhouse landscape. Check this out:

Red

Fred Cabrera

Red Restaurant Group Director of Wine

As Director of wine, Fred Cabrera oversees the wine and spirits program for Red the Steakhouse South Beach. Red the steakhouse splashed on the Miami scene in 2008 and quickly became a destination spot for great food with one of the city’s most extensive wine selections. Since then the group has opened up Red the Steakhouse Boca Raton and Rosso Italia Boca Raton which Cabrera oversees as well. The Restaurant’s wine lists are recognized annually with Wine Spectator Awards of Excellence and -for the past 2 years- in South Beach Best of Award of Excellence.

Cabrera Graduated from the The Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, New York with a Bachelors degree in Culinary Arts Management. There he studied food and wine pairings with some of the most experienced educators in the industry. His culinary background he uses as a reference to showcase wines while enhancing the food. As part of the curriculum, he attended Viticulture lectures at UC Davis and was the Graduation Commencement Speaker.

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Now, all that right there is more than enough to rank Fred Cabrera at the top of the wine game, but there is more than meets the eye when it comes to a #RidgeSomms invitation!

I corresponded with Mr. Torino quite recently, about his #RidgeSomms invitees, and I got quite a set of tales when it came to Fred & Red. Behold:

How did you and Fred first meet?

I first met Fred while on a work-with, with the Key Account Manager for TransAtlantic (our FL distributor), Thomas Tremel. Since that initial meeting I have had dinner at Red several times, and visited Fred on a few more work-withs and tastings.

Can you describe the first moment you know this was someone you could build a relationship with?

A few months after first meeting Fred I brought my wife in for dinner for her birthday, Fred was extremely hospitable and went out of his way to make that dinner extra special for us.

MrsMichaelTorino_Red

Mrs. Michael Torino, celebrating at Red!

What do you feel distinguishes Fred/Red from the rest of the crowd?

Miami Beach has no shortage of steakhouses and many of them come and go pretty quickly. You really need to be doing something special to have staying power. Red has managed to do this by combining excellent food, a well-curated wine list, and a great vibe that is still comfortable to have dinner in; many South Beach restaurants push that too far and feel more like a nightclub than a restaurant. It is a tight line to walk and Red does it very well.

If you went to dinner at Fred’s restaurant, what would you order?

I would start with Stone Crab Claws in season (this is Miami) and for my main course I would have Bone-In Ribeye and the off-the-menu Lobster Mac n’ Cheese side.

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Lobster Mac n’ Cheese!!! Totally brilliant …

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Ladies & Gentlemen, may I present the very excellent Mr. Fred Cabrera!

Fred Headshot

Fred Cabrera: Red Restaurant Group, Director of Wine

Want to know more about Fred and the Red Restaurant Group? Ch-ch-ch-ch-ch-ch-check it out!

Twitter @Decantedmagnum

https://www.facebook.com/fred.cabrera.5

https://www.facebook.com/RedtheSteakhouse

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And so, we invite you to join Fred, Michael, and all the other luminaries that make up the cast of #RidgeSomms, for an extraordinary two days of all things Ridge!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

Sommelier Symposium: Paul Draper, Twelve Top Somms, and You!

May 13, 2013

The 2013 Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium:

Paul Draper, Twelve Top Somms, & You!

(please scroll to the end of this post
for an updated list of #RidgeSomms posts!)

The Annual Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium takes place over two intensive days, and this year, we are inviting you IN!

Please join us, and enjoy unprecedented behind-the-scenes virtual access to one of our most exceptional, yet heretofore private, annual events.

You can friend it on Facebook, follow it on Twitter, read it on our Blog, or watch it on YouTube, but no matter which channel is your go-to tune-in for all things wine, these sessions are sure to swing, and we want you in the club!

Join Paul Draper and a winemaker’s dozen of the best Sommeliers from around the country for two days of winery tours, barrel tastings, library verticals, wine dinners, and more.

You’ll tour Monte Bello’s century-old barrel rooms with winemaker Eric Baugher, and walk Geyserville’s rows of century-old vines with vineyard manager David Gates; you’ll experience eco-sustainable Lytton Springs with winemaker John Olney, and tour the famed Radoux Cooperage with Paul Draper. From barrel to bottle, Santa Cruz to Sonoma, you’ll follow our Sommeliers as they enjoy two intensive days of all things Ridge.

In short, when they’re here, you’re here!

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What:

Ridge Vineyards Sommelier Symposium, 2013

 

When:

May 20th & 21st, 2013

 

Where:

4488: A Ridge Blog

Ridge Vineyards on FacebookRidge Vineyards on Twitter
RidgeVineyards on YouTube

Just filter for #RidgeSomms, and you’re IN!

~

To read additional #RidgeSomms posts,
please check out the selections below!

#RidgeSomms: To Dine In The Valleys (5.17.13)

#RidgeSomms: Jackets Are Preferred (5.17.13)

#RidgeSomms: One Mile High And Rising! (5.16.13)

#RidgeSomms: The Powers of Austin! (5.15.13)

#RidgeSomms: Christina Donley Is A Moth To St. Elmo’s Flame! (5.15.13)

#RidgeSomms: Michael Torino Sees “Red!” (5.14.13)

Building The 2012 Monte Bello: Part II

May 10, 2013

We’ve just completed the second round of the Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting, and the blend is in!

It was quite a remarkable tasting; somewhat unique in its architecture, as compared to some past editions, in that it was essentially divided into three distinct phases: Audition, Assemblage, and Vertical.

For those of you not familiar with the process by which the Monte Bello is created, I humbly direct you to the following posts:

Beauty Is A Rare Thing: Building The 2012 Monte Bello

Building Monte Bello: The 2011 Assemblage

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

The Second Assemblage Tasting was held in The Old Torre Winery Barn, and in attendance were the following:

Paul Draper
Eric Baugher
John Olney
Shun Ishikubo
David Gates
Kyle Theriot
Shinji Kurokawa
Amy Monroe
Christopher Watkins (me)

~

As the warm spring sun began to wend its subtle tides through the warming window panes, Eric inaugurated his singular oeno-alchemy…

Eric_Preparing

… as, one by one, we sought our seats and prepared our palates.

Thebeginning

We began with an auditioning of sorts; a blind tasting, 5 glasses …

5glasses_I 5glasses_II

… no explanation, no context, only the instructions: taste, assess, write, vote; 2 plusses, 2 minuses, 1 neutral.

MoleskineNotes

When the veils were lifted, we were found to have been auditioning 4 blocks’ worth of possible inclusion candidates (three different cab lots, and a merlot option); snuck into the line-up was the First Assemblage, crafted back in April. Two of the lots received majority votes. Then it was on to Round II.

Five glasses again, blind tasted again. And again, the directive: taste, assess, write, vote; 2 plusses, 2 minuses, 1 neutral. 4 of the 5 lots fared very well; one block fell by the wayside for showing a bit too ripe.

With Round III came the “proper” assemblage process: two glasses; one with the “control” (in this case, the First Assemblage), one with an “addition.” A and B. Taste, assess, write, vote. Plus or Minus.

Eric&Shun_Pouring

Eric Baugher & Shun Ishikubo

“A” took it by a nose, 5 to 4. A 7% addition of South Slope South Cabernet (S3).

Round IV. Two glasses again. A and B. Control (now including S3) and Addition.  “B” essentially sweeps; a 7-2 majority. A blend of Camp and Back Hills falls by the side of the vineyard road.

Paul_Tasting

Paul Draper

Round V, an override! I am on the right side of history for this one; I alone voted with Paul and Eric in favor of a 10% addition of 10-acre cab, and as is his right, Paul opted for the addition. None complained, it had been a tough vote.

David Gates

David Gates

Round VI, we would find out later, found us debating the future of a block I’d loved on its own; my colleague Amy as well, joined by David Gates; however, David, a veteran of the assemblages, predicted it would not, in the end, be “assembled.” He was right, it lost out to a 6-3 majority in favor of the control. But I am holding out for a solo bottling; on its own, the block is beautiful.

Paul&John_Talking

Paul Draper & John Olney

Round VII, the final round of the Assemblage. “A” took the majority, which was the control, but Paul and John came out swinging in favor of the addition; a small block of stressed Merlot. To be continued …

And then came the final round. A 6-wine blind vertical of Monte Bello; the preceding 5 vintages, plus the “new” 2012.

MonteBelloVertical

I wrote “proper” tasting notes on each, and was able to spot almost all of them as what they were, though much to my surprise, I confused the 2009 and the 2007 (which, I would say, says a great deal for how the 2007 is currently showing, given the overwhelmingly positive critical response we’ve received for the 2009 of late –Wine Advocate: 98 points, International Wine Report: 97 points, International Wine Cellar: 96 points, Wine Spectator: 95 points–given that we’re currently offering the 2007 in our tasting rooms, perhaps a good time to visit!)

But anyhow, in addition to my “proper” notes, I also wrote a spontaneous Haiku in response to each:

2009 Monte Bello
A walk through the trees;
wet, the path, twilit, the leaves.
Into the green mist.

2008 Monte Bello
The red blushes of
beauty; luxuriant youth,
serene  age; timeless.

2007 Monte Bello
As a great trunk’s broad
shoulders grow, ask yourself: Which
is stronger? Roots? Limbs?

2011 Monte Bello
Sweet soul perfection
of campground wisdom; as with
smoke, so with memories.

2012 Monte Bello (2nd Assemblage)
There is strength to fear
and strength to love; run from one,
run to the other.

2010 Monte Bello
Elegance within
a corset; beauty of denial,
of promise: a dream

~

When all was said and done, a new Assemblage had been born: The 2nd Assemblage. The new details are as follows:

62% Cabernet Sauvignon, 22% Merlot, 9% Cabernet Franc 7% Petit Verdot, 13.6% ABV

Welcome.

~

As we do every year, we continue to invite our Monte Bello Collector Members to experience firsthand the burgeoning development of the vintage that will one day be theirs; they have now seen the 2012 Monte Bello in its Component state (for more, please click here), in its 1st Assemblage incarnation (for more, please click here), and next weekend, they’ll sample that which we have just created, the 2nd Assemblage. And if history repeats itself, it’s quite likely this will be the Final Assemblage, meaning this will be the last opportunity to taste this wine before it goes into bottle for its long hibernation; not to awaken again until its release in 2015. For more information about this very special event, please see below:

Final Monte Bello Tasting
Saturday & Sunday, May 18th & 19th
11-5pm each day
Cupertino, CA

This event is for Monte Bello Collector members only (a total of 4 attendees per membership), there is no fee to attend, and an RSVP is required. We look forward to seeing you!

Eventbrite - Monte Bello Final Assemblage Tasting - May 18th & 19th, 11am-5pm

Assemblage Monte Bello: A Pictorial Remembrance

May 6, 2013

It was a truly beautiful morning; ripe with promise, alive with anticipation, resplendent with resplendence.

For events of this scale, we park our own cars well out of the way, high above the vines.

The walk down in the morning, before it all began, was remarkable …

AMB13_MorningOf

As the sun began its slow and stately waltz towards the Torre Winery Barn, our team began to gather, assembling the pieces of what would shortly become Assemblage Monte Bello …

AMB13_TorreWineryBarn_Prep

Glassware, of course …

AMB13_Glassware

… but no component more important than the wines themselves …

AMB13_PerroneMerlot AMB13_KleinCab_II

And of course, a little something from the Library …

AMB13_00cmb1

Yes, that IS the 2000 Monte Bello. A wine you might recognize from a little re-enactment of a little something we’ve come to know as The Judgment of Paris.

30 years down the line from the original occurrence, an oeno-quorum of sorts was re-convened to address a couple key protestations in response to the original results. For example, ageworthiness. Cue 1971 Monte Bello, thank you very much. The other complaint was, essentially, flukiness. Meaning, the claim was made that the results were a fluke, a one-off, a never-again-to-be-repeated aberration.

To address this question in 2006, young offerings were tasted from all the producers who’d performed in the original event, to see whether or not they were STILL making fine wines, or whether it HAD been a fluke. Cue 2000 Monte Bello, thank you very much.

(for the full Judgment of Paris story, please click here)

All that said, the real star of the Assemblage Monte Bello Event was of course … the Assemblage.

At this stage of the game, it’s classified as the First Assemblage; winemaker Eric Baugher was up nearly all the night before, personally pulling the barrel samples for all our guests to taste …

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Perhaps needless to say, the bottles did not go to waste. Rather, they got rather … well … used.

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That there is the vine-weathered hand of our own David Gates, VP of Vineyard Operations for Ridge, who was on hand to host. You can see him here with Aaron, entertaining the troops …

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As I hope you’ve experienced on your visits to Monte Bello -whether to this event, other events, or in the tasting room- we really have a lovely and amazing and excellent and heroic and wise and excellent group of staff members up here; as delightful and weird and impassioned and funky and spirited and knowledgeable a group of wine devotees as I could ever hope to assemble, and as I hope can be seen from the photos below, they had a great time hosting you at Assemblage Monte Bello!

Please say hello to a few of our gang: Jenny, Kim, Michael, Peter, Sam, Emma, and Jane!

AMB13_Jenny AMB13_Kim AMB13_Michael AMB13_Peter AMB13_SamAMB13_Jane

One of the real pleasures of this event -certainly for me, and hopefully for our guests as well- is the appearance of members of our production team; this time around, it was the Vineyard Team doing the co-hosting honors. In addition to David Gates, we also welcomed Kyle Theriot, our esteemed Viticulturist here at Monte Bello …

AMB13_Kyle

Another singular aspect of these events is our continuing partnership with local culinary providers; for this year’s event we welcomed back the very fine Fatted Calf Charcuterie

AMB13_FattedCalf

… as well as a new partner: Kirstin Jackson, author of It’s Not You, It’s Brie, and the curator for the cheeses we served …

AMB13_Kirstin

And of course, no Monte Bello Event would be complete without that incredible bread from Gayle’s Bakery in Capitola. Betcha can’t eat just one …

AMB13_Gayles

Now, it should be noted that, while I referred to the 2012 Monte Bello First Assemblage above as “the real star” of the event, that is of course not actually accurate. The True Stars of the event were, as always, our wonderful guests …

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And with that, I dare say, happiness is …

AMB13_KnollII ANB13_PicnicAreaAMB13_KnollDeck

And then suddenly, come Sunday evening, it was all over.

No more wine, no more glasses, no more guests. Just the long walk back up through the vines, there to be met with the conclusionary symbol of a workday completed …

AMB13_TheEnd

A Mazzoni Island of the Mind ~or~ First Friday at Monte Bello!

May 3, 2013

Greetings!

It’s May 3rd, and it’s First Friday at Monte Bello!

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For our May edition of this very special monthly event, we will be celebrating the release of the new 2009 Mazzoni Home Ranch Zinfandel! The 2009 is one of the most notably zinfandel-forward Mazzoni offerings in recent years, and while it shows all the compact rusticity and culinarily companionable spice and acidity we’ve come to expect from this old-vine vineyard, it does so in a comparatively lusher, more fruit-driven fashion, and as such, is already showing beautifully with just two years in the bottle.

09ZMZ1-front

And dig this!

We’ll be pouring the 2009 in a two-vintage vertical with its predecessor, the 2008 Mazzoni!

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This is the last chance we’ll have the ’08 on hand as a current release, making this an especially rarefied tasting opportunity.

Making today, a good day to be a member.

So remember, if you’re a member, remember:

First Friday!

~

First Friday at Monte Bello
Date: 5/3/2013

May 3rd ~ 4-7pm

Please join us on the first Friday of each month for an evening affair of delicious wines and small bites. While this is a Member Event, we are more than happy to host guests of our members as well! We’ll have some delicious small bites on offer for your enjoyment.

Members with shipments available for pick up at this event:
ATP – Monthly
ATP – Consolidated
(be sure to note that you are picking up on your RSVP)

Eventbrite - First Friday at Monte Bello - May 2013

~

For a bit of history on the Mazzoni Home Ranch:

zmz

To Dream In Triple Cream: “It’s Not You, It’s Brie,” Kirstin Jackson, & Assemblage Monte Bello

April 25, 2013

If it’s not me, but brie …

then aren’t I free,

to eschew my filigree

of daintily

demurring second portionry

when said bounty

is offered me?

~

This is the way the mind runs whilst reading Kirstin Jackson’s fabulous book “It’s Not You, It’s Brie.”

In my estimation, the book is one of the most canny reconciliations of conspiratorial low-brow boho sass and high-brow hard-core food-nerd knowledge to be published in recent years; meaning, it is a pleasure to learn this much, and I applaud Kirstin for writing it, and I applaud the good folks at Perigree/Penguin for releasing it.

And more than that even, I applaud Kirstin, and I applaud us, for working it out for Kirstin to join us for Assemblage Monte Bello this weekend!

It's Not You, It's Brie ...

It’s Not You, It’s Brie …

Kirstin has in fact already made her presence felt; she curated all the cheeses for our Component Tasting back in March, and is doing so for Assemblage Monte Bello this weekend, and for our Final Assemblage Event in May as well. But it’s THIS weekend that the magic truly happens, because Kirstin Jackson herself will be joining us and our guests for the event! She’ll be here to mingle, talk cheese, sign books, and perhaps (see below!) offer tips on the proper time and use for AquaNet Hairspray.

~

I had a chance to correspond with Kirstin Jackson recently, about important and vital matters related to the worlds of wine and food, wine and cheese, cheese and everything, everything and everything else, and it is my pleasure to share some highlights with you here:

–Is there a line in your book that you remember first penning, that is still in the book now, in its exact original form (meaning, totally unrevised), that you are particularly fond of?

 Besides the blurbs by important people in cheese like Janet Fletcher or Max McCalman that I took hours to write? Hmmm…

 I actually got very lucky with my editor. Though she let me know if I needed to better explain something, she and the copy editors let me keep most the original wording. I do like the following lines. They actually let me use all of them. It’s about a cheese style- very aged, old, dry, pressed cheeses.

 “If one was ever to be threatened with cheese, it would be with a Strong and Hard cheese style. A gangster, a corrupt politician, or a mom whose kid was just bullied walks into a pub. They see who did them wrong sitting in the center of the room. Right in front of everybody, they saunter over to the culprit, lift their hands above their head, and slam a dry, heavy wheel of Vella Dry Jack or Achandinah’s Capricious on the table only inches away from their enemy’s faced. Necks snap around to see what made the sound like a wooden guillotine crashing into its base. Occasionally the mom or other angry party stabs a pocketknife in to the cheese for emphasis, but regardless, the threat is served. These cheeses are serious.”

–You mention Pat Benatar in your book. Do you have a favorite song? And did you ever use AquaNet?

 I keep it classic with Pat. Love is a Battlefield all the way. It’s when you get the best use of her opera training and her strategic move of using tights as pants. I use AquaNet at Halloween. 1940 hairstyles or hair metal bangs require it.

–After Yuba Mushroom blintzes, what would be your NEXT favorite pairing with Toma?

Wine. Keeping it close to home, an aged Ridge Chardonnay, Grenache or Zin would be lovely.

–Have you ever worked with/studied with/read Alan Dundes?

Yes. He was my anthropology senior thesis advisor at Cal before he passed away. Wonderful, old school folklorist and hilarious man with tremendous energy. He helped a lot of people realize the importance of folklore in everyday life.

–You describe Bellwether San Andreas as being a somewhat not ideal pairing partner for a plusher varietal like zinfandel; how do you think it would fair with an older-vine field-blended zinfandel like our Geyserville; a blend that features a notable percentage of carignane in the blend?

I really like that idea. Aged Zins and Rhones are great friends to sheep milk cheeses like San Andreas or Pepato. They hang out all the time. The key is to have a subtly fruited wine with good acidity when pairing with a young pecorino style like Bellwether’s, otherwise it will overpower the cheese.

–Do you like jazz?

I do like jazz. But these days I’m confused about what is actually is. And not like, is Nicki Minaj still hip hop in her raver phase?… It’s that I heard Robert Glasper speak about his Black Radio experiments (which are awesome), and I find myself wondering now where jazz starts and stops. If it does. Black Radio sounded like great live hip hop to me, with a bit of jazz. Which live hip hop often has, I mean it’s always been part of hip hop, it inspired it, but, I wonder what else is jazz is that I don’t know about.

–Are you working on another book? If yes, can you tell us a secret about it? And if not, then what’s next for you?

I’m still taking it step by step on the book level. I’d like to look a little bit beyond the United States though, so when I come back to write about domestic cheese again, I’ll come back fresh. Or maybe with a little Euro mixed in?

–What’s the coolest pair of shoes you own, and do  you wear them when you teach cheese classes?

Coolest? I’m not sure. I like to wear my grey cowboy boots a lot, and often to classes.

–Why doesn’t Limburger sell in California?

Most people here didn’t grow up on it. Its deliciousness was part of the pub culture for years in heavily Germanic areas like Wisconsin and Illinois (the cheese was originally German), when people would eat it slathered on dark bread with a side of beer. Prohibition changed the habit, but the taste remained an acquired one, mainly in midwestern states. We don’t understand the pungent thrill of it yet here.

–If the perfect time to drink a Monte Bello is when the primary fruit is still subtly present, but architecture has receded and allowed secondary character to emerge, but the wine is still fresh and forward, with only the slightest foreshadowing of the most overtly rustic and tertiary flavor components being felt, then how aged is exactly just right for Franklin’s Teleme?

It depends on how funky you like it. It will never develop those fierce washed-rind tertiary flavors like Limburger will in its third or fourth week, but I like mine with a week or so of age on it after I get it home. Sometimes I just eat it that night though.

~

Kirstin Jackson, as can be easily discerned from the above, harbors a fierce intellect, is a sharp wit, maintains an aware mind, and is a fantastic writer. I look forward to joining our guests in celebrating her achievements, enjoying her company, and luxuriating in the pungent thrill of another memorable wine event at Monte Bello.

~

Please note: We are hosting our annual Assemblage Monte Bello event at our Monte Bello Estate this weekend, and while Saturday is already sold out, there are still a very limited amount of tickets available for Sunday. As the entire estate is allocated to the event, there are no non-event tasting opportunities available, so if you wish to visit, we encourage you to purchase event tickets at your earliest convenience. Once Sunday sells out, no additional visitation will be possible.

Assemblage Monte Bello
Date: 4/28/2013 (Sunday)
11:00am – 5:00pm

Members: complimentary (up to 4 tickets)

Public: $30 per ticket

RSVP by April 25th

Eventbrite - Assemblage Monte Bello - April 27th & 28th, 11am-5pm

~

p.s. The answer to the question posed at the beginning of this post is … yes.


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