Archive for the ‘Cabernet Franc’ Category

Assemblage Monte Bello! 4.23.11

April 5, 2011

From the Desks, Quills, and Wells of our PR Department:

Ridge Vineyards welcomes you to join in the Assemblage process and be among the first to taste barrel samples of the new 2010 Monte Bello!

This year’s Assemblage Monte Bello event provides you and your guests a special opportunity to experience the splendor of the Monte Bello estate. Plus, you’ll meet and mingle with the winemaking & productions teams as you sample an additional selection of rare library wines, and enjoy a delicious array of cheeses, breads and charcuterie from some of our favorite local artisan producers.

Special culinary guests for this event include:

Gayle’s Bakery (come meet owners/founders Gayle and Joe Ortiz!)

Cowgirl Creamery (say hello to owner/founder Sue Conley!)

—Fatted Calf Charcuterie (hand-slicing organic, hormone-free charcuterie on-site with their turn-of-the-century Italian slicer!)

Providing the sonic backdrop for this wonderful event will be Real Time, a highly esteemed Northern California jazz combo featuring Tim Jackson (manager of the Monterey Jazz Festival) and Marshall Otwell (Freddie Hubbard, Zoot Sims, Carmen McRae).

Tickets for this event are available on our website (please click here to purchase), and can be purchased for $40/person. Ticket purchase will add your name to an RSVP Will Call list, and your email confirmation acts as your purchase confirmation.

We look forward to hosting you!

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

March 3, 2011

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

To my fellow Assemblagers,

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

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

2010 Harvest Report!

February 23, 2011

If you’re a member of our Monte Bello Collector program and/or have an interest in Monte Bello, or perhaps just like to keep up on microclimatic tendencies on our lil’ mountain, then you might wish to know that winemaker Eric Baugher has completed the 2010 Harvest Report!

Harvest 2010

It’s been an extraordinary growing season across all of Northern California’s wine countries, and I imagine ours is not the only harvest report that will be read with some interest; all aspects of the press have been full of assessments running from the dire to the devout, with naysayers predicting doom and gloom and the optimistic touting a vintage of rare but spectacular offerings.

We are certainly of the latter school; as Eric notes below, “Despite the temperamental year, we couldn’t have asked for anything finer than what nature finally gave us.”

And with that, I give you the 2010 Monte Bello Harvest Report!

At Monte Bello, a cold, drawn-out winter brought heavy, ground-saturating rains. Budbreak was delayed a month— pushed back to late April at the 2700′ level. Persistent rain and cold weather through June delayed fruit set to early July. Fortunately the rain let up, and for most of summer, our elevation kept the vines above the fog. There were, however, more than the usual number of days when fog and cold crept up and over the ridge. All signs pointed to this being one of the latest Monte Bello harvests in Ridge history.

Careful adjustment of yields can make or break a vintage. Given the cold season, and weather volatility over the past five years, we thinned even before the fruit had changed from green to red (veraison). To improve odds of ripening the crop before any rain, we dropped 45% of the young cabernet and merlot, and 20 to 25% on everything else. Unexpectedly, the weather warmed in September, only to cool again in early October. Miraculously, heat returned in the last half of October. Harvest at Monte Bello began with chardonnay, picked from September 26 to October 19, and continued with merlot (October 3 – 28) and cabernet sauvignon (October 15 – November 5). From the start, petit verdot was the farthest behind. We had thinned half the crop after veraison, and installed reflective material below the vines on alternating rows to enhance photosynthesis. The grapes responded, ripening far more quickly than expected. Picked on October 15, they were the ripest of all the blocks.

The forty vineyard parcels were subdivided into forty-nine separate fermentations. Roughly half were from parcels designated Monte Bello, half from those designated Estate. All but a handful were sorted at the crush station. The sorting machinery, installed for the 2009 vintage, had a new component—another conveying table. This gave us a chance to do one last sort before pumping to the fermentors. Natural yeasts were healthy, and quick to start. Color and tannin were abundant, extracting rapidly. For most tanks, pump-overs were scaled back. Toward the end of fermentation, based on taste, we performed a final pump-over to fill out body, then racked and pressed. Most of the press wine was too tannic to blend immediately into the free run. These press fractions were pumped to individual barrels. Later—again determined by tasting—we may include some of the most balanced press wine.

At this time, the various lots have been put to barrel and are finishing malolactic. The incredible flavors we noticed in the fermentors have developed further. Depth of structure and complexity are unlike any past vintage. Despite the temperamental year, we couldn’t have asked for anything finer than what nature finally gave us. It was an exhausting few months for us all, but the vines have produced a truly magnificent vintage. EB (1/11)



Things I’m Thankful For …

November 23, 2010

On November 23rd of 2009, I posted a “Things I’m Thankful For …” list on this blog, in the spirit of the coming Thanksgiving holiday. I’d like to offer a new list for 2010 (though there may be the occasional overlap!) …

Things I’m Thankful For:

That despite a list of shortcoming that rivals the biblical begats, the gods and fates and powers-that-be have nonetheless chosen to bless me with an absolute miracle of a delight of a wonder of a wife, and a daughter who is to me perfection and miracles and magic …

The blessing of great parents, who are young, healthy, vibrant, and close by, and who love their children and their grand-children …

That the 1993 Monte Bello, in 375ml format, has really come into its own …

Friends near and far …

John Coltrane …

Lambchopper cheese, which is just SO good …

Han-Shan’s Cold Mountain Poems …

That the collective wisdom of Ridge Vineyards is just bent enough to have bestowed upon me the honor and opportunity of hosting this blog …

Pizza … especially mushroom and jalapeno pizza. Especially when I’m putting a piece of it into my mouth, when my mouth still has half-a-quaff’s worth of Ridge Vineyards Geyserville in it …

The new wireless surround-sound speakers that Chuck O’ Connor helped us get for the Monte Bello Tasting Room …

The book Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind …

Decanters with a rounded glass lip instead of cut glass …

That just about everyone who visits our tasting room knows not to rinse their glass with water between tastes …

Monterey Bay, and the whales who breach up from its depths into the murk and mist of a winter dusk when you’re standing on the beach with your very pregnant fiancée, wondering what on earth is going to become of you all …

Acidity, and the palates that love it …

That the 2008 Pagani Ranch just sings, and sings, and sings …

That Paul Draper and Eric Baugher and David Gates and Caleb Mosley  have all  been so kind with their time, slowly ushering me into the vast halls of their collective knowledge of vineyards, wineries, and all that Monte Bello mojo …

That everyone else at Ridge has been so equally kind to me …

Lloyd’s Tires in Santa Cruz, and the Mazda company; without them, I’d never survive the Capitola-Monte Bello commute …

Haig’s Hummus. Not only because it’s the greatest hummus in all the world’s long history, but also because it pairs so well with our chardonnays …

That Ryan Moore and his lovely missus Dulcie have joined the Ridge family …

Flat-bottom glasses and the third-day Monte Bello I drink from them …

Moleskine notebooks …

That my daughter, at 22 months, can already play a bit of piano, and a bit of saxophone, and that, when she wakes up from a nap, she turns to one of the posters on her walls and says, “Wake up, Miles Davis!” …

Head-trained and dry-farmed vines …

Every single member of the Monte Bello Tasting Room Staff …

That Sandy Johnson has been named the Lytton Springs Tasting Room Manager … and every single member of the Lytton Springs Tasting Room Staff …

That we double-decant every wine before we serve it in the tasting rooms …

Pesto …

More pesto …

That those who got a tattoo (permanent) just because it was a trend (not permanent) will in some way or another eventually get their just desserts …

Sportcoats …

Champys …

Champys and Salt & Vinegar crisps …

That I own a piano …

Drinking wine and playing piano …

Drinking wine and listening to someone else play piano …

Drinking wine …

The phrase “evidencing secondary maturation characteristics” …

All the wine bloggers who’ve been a part of our Wine Bloggers Tastings …

That almost everyone who works for Ridge has really groovy footwear …

Indian food, specifically Punjab Choley, paired with Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane …

Listening to Perry Farrell of Jane’s Addiction sing “Comin’ Down The Mountain” when I’m comin’ down the mountain …

The Pneumonia’s Last Syrah campaign …

Non-sequiturs …

Horizontal tastings of a wine in multiple bottle formats … especially when I’m in charge of decanting and tasting everything before the wines are served … and particularly if it’s Lytton Springs …

Manual typewriters. Particularly Underwoods, Royals, and Remingtons …

My daughter’s giggle …

My wife’s giggle …

People who read both Rilke and Bukowski …

People who drink both Three Valleys and Monte Bello …

Chelsea Boots from Wales and PF Flyer Tenny-Runners …

Drinking Ridge Vineyards Carmichael zin while wearing Chelsea Boots from Wales, or drinking the Ridge Vineyards Mazzoni Home Ranch zin while wearing PF Flyer Tenny-Runners …

Every work in charcoal that my very talented missus has ever made …

That someone believed in me enough to publish a book of my poems, and that a wonderful work in charcoal by my very talented missus graces the cover of that book …

That Nicole Buttitta didn’t think it was prohibitively weird that my first interview with Ridge was a phone interview, with her in her office at Monte Bello, and me in a 28 ft. truck at a truck stop in Wyoming …

That on Thelonious Monk’s birthday, we are able to play 8 straight hours of his music in the Monte Bello Tasting Room …

The magnum of 1989 Monte Bello that we’ll be having on Thanksgiving …

The 2006 & 2007 Monte Bello chardonnays that we’ll be having on Thanksgiving …

The couple that brought the last third of their bottle of 1964 Monte Bello into the Monte Bello Tasting Room for everyone to taste, the morning after they’d opened it and found it to be delicious …

Wine nerds who keep handwritten tasting notes for years …

My new  Ducti Duct-Tape wallet that my missus got me,which is a replacement that the company provided when she mailed my raggedy old one back …

Film noir …

William Faulkner …

Every word between the first word of Winnie-The-Pooh and the last word of The House at Pooh Corner …

California; specifically the northern part …

The view of Northern California from Monte Bello …

That the Rattlesnake Sign is real …

The half-bottles of 2006 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Cabernet that I still have, and that I’m going to be drinking and sharing more than one of them on Thanksgiving …

Tasting Room staff who stick by their guns and always ask for proper ID …

Unorthodox food and wine pairings, like Cabernet Franc and Enchiladas …

People who understand why real funk players hated disco …

People who like to argue about vintages of Monte Bello while smiling …

People who wear black-frame sunglasses, and don’t wear white-frame sunglasses …

People who understand Coupe glasses, and why they’re the only way to drink champys …

Wine Bars that don’t play rock n’ roll OR electronica …

Ridge Vineyards wines …

Ridge Vineyards …

That I have a job at Ridge Vineyards …

And every single other thing I could mention, including Watsonville Sourdough, the poems of James Wright, well-played pratfalls, the elegance of the 1992 Monte Bello and the funky muscularity of the 1994, books, Sketches of Spain, what a really important wine tasting looks like when you’ve set up all the glassware but no one has arrived yet, the sound of cork extraction, my gorgeous amazing wife and my beautiful astonishing daughter, people who not only write poetry but read it, fog, mist, and rain, long black wool winter coats, people who nod knowingly when I quote Robert Pete Williams, burdock and wasabi, wine-colored socks, people who can wear suspenders and get away with it, a great hat, sediment in wine, wine in my mouth, cars that don’t have bumperstickers, e-mails sans emoticons, and the persistence of love and faith and belief in the face of hurt, danger, illness, age, and violence.

May your lives be full of things to be thankful for, and may you be thankful for the fullness of your lives. May you have a chance to stop, breathe, and appreciate. May you have lots of wine in your home, and lots of beauty to toast. May you use the word love in more than one context very soon. May you have a very happy Thanksgiving.

The French Laundry Cometh …

July 26, 2010

Had such a fine time today! We very happily hosted the extraordinary wine team from the impossibly fine French Laundry today; wonderful, wonderful guests, and dare I say it, wonderful, wonderful wines. Such a treat to have them here, it was an absolute pleasure to host. And what a spread of wine! Couldn’t imagine more pleasant company to share these offerings with, and I hope our guests enjoyed the opportunity to be on the receiving end of the hospitality endeavor; lord knows they’re committed to providing it, I hope we were able to offer at least a modicum of payback. Special cheers to our VP of Vineyard Operations David Gates for his exceptional touring and hosting, and a heartfelt thank you to our guests; for their participation in The French Laundry’s timeless contribution to California’s culinary legacy, and of course for their support of our wines!

As to the wines themselves, here is the rundown of what we tasted:

2008 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Chardonnay
2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay

2008 Lytton Springs (not yet released)
2008 PaganiRanch (not yet released)
2008 York Creek (not yet released)

2008 Geyserville
2008 East Bench
2008 Paso Robles
2008 Ponzo

1999 Geyserville
1999 Lytton Springs

2007 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Cabernet/Merlot (375ml)
2007 Monte Bello (not yet released/375ml)
2006 Monte Bello (375ml)

1988 Monte Bello
1990 Monte Bello
1995 Monte Bello (375ml)

For myself, quite a day. Thelong  journey from here …

… to there!

The Monte Bello Collector Component Tasting In Pictures!

March 8, 2010

Well, I have to say, it was just a tremendous weekend up here at Monte Bello. We hosted members of our Monte Bello Collector Program for the 2009 Component Tasting, and this is absolutely one of my favorite events of the year. It’s such a rare and educational opportunity to experience the Monte Bello in this fashion; tasting all the components separately, prior to the beginning of assemblage. Not only is it a unique insight into the mystical mojo mad scientist magic of the winemaker’s art, but it’s a great opportunity to begin to learn the wine that will eventually be yours; a deep enhancement to the experiential hoodoo of drinking wine.

But enough of words, let’s experience the visuals; if you were here, this should be a nice opportunity to relive the joys of the weekend, and if you weren’t able to be with us, then hopefully these snapshots will act an inducement of a kind to encourage a future visit. Please join us! It’s magical …

Did you see yourself in there? I certainly hope so. And by the way, a special thank you to the members of our Production Team who participated in the event. I think the opportunity to speak with them is one of the truly excellent perks of the whole experience. In the pictures above, you can see the following members of said team:

Paul Draper

Eric Baugher – Vice President, Winemaking

David Gates – Vice President, Vineyard Operations

Shun Ishikubo – Assistant Production Manager

Caleb Mosley – Viticulturist

Karen Schmidt – Director of Quality Control / Chemist

And this post wouldn’t be complete without a HUGE hearty thank you to the Monte Bello Tasting Room Staff (& participating members of the Ridge Retail Staff!), who time and time again raise the bar with their formidable displays of knowledge, hospitality, and plain old hard work. Cheers to (in no particular order) Sam Howles-Banerji, Amy Monroe, Michael Riese, Sonja Seaberg, Karen Cai, Cecilia Aguilar, Chris Seguin, Zani Nesvacil, Karen Cai, Peter Yaninek, Samantha McMillan, Barry Campbell, Darren Gardner, Tara Einis, Howard Hickok, Jay Jensky, and Jane Occhialini!

Robert Parker Scores Ridge!

March 4, 2010

 The February 2010 Issue of Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate has arrived, and in it is a wealth of commentary on a large portfolio of Ridge wines. And might I say, we fared rather well! Here are the scores:

  2003 Ridge Monte Bello 95+
  2004 Ridge Monte Bello 91
  2005 Ridge Monte Bello 97+
  2006 Ridge Monte Bello 94+
  2007 Ridge Monte Bello 92
  2008 Ridge Monte Bello (94-96)
  2005 Ridge Santa Cruz Mtns Estate Proprietary Red 92
  2006 Ridge Santa Cruz Mtns Estate Proprietary Red 91
  2007 Ridge Santa Cruz Mtns Estate Proprietary Red 88
  2007 Ridge Geyserville Proprietary Red Wine 91
  2008 Ridge Geyserville Proprietary Red Wine (90-92)
  2007 Ridge Lytton Springs Proprietary Red Wine 92
  2008 Ridge Lytton Springs Proprietary Red Wine (91-93)
  2007 Ridge Zinfandel East Bench 90+
  2008 Ridge Zinfandel East Bench (90-92)

 

97 points for the 2005 Monte Bello! Wow … And overall, that’s an average score of about 92 points. Not so very bad at all!

And for those of you who might be in the area this weekend, please note that we will be pouring the 2007 Lytton Springs (“It is a fuller-bodied, richer wine with beautiful texture, purity, and length”) and the 2007 Geyserville (“Medium to full-bodied, elegant, and pure”) in the Monte Bello Tasting Room, as well as the 2006 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate (“An attractive, round, rich, full-bodied mouthfeel, sweet tannin, and a long finish”), and should you wish to step up to our Monte Bello Tasting Flight, the 2006 Monte Bello! (“Well-balanced, dense, pure, layered, and rich”). That’s a 92 point flight right there …

AND, for those of you who are Monte Bello Collector Members who are planning to attend our member event this weekend, you’ll be tasting your newly-arrived 2007 Monte Bello! (And don’t forget the very special pre-release opportunity on the 2007 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate!)

Cheers to all, and a hearty toast to all at Mr. Parker’s publication for their kind words about our wines! And I would especially like to raise a glass to everyone on the production team here at Ridge; you make brilliant wines, and it’s wonderful to see the world responding with such positivity! Cheers! Cheers! Cheers!

Tasting Notes: 15-Vintage Monte Bello Vertical! (Milestone and Milestones!)

February 19, 2010

Well, this is a bit of a milestone post for what is still quite a young blog; it’s the 200th post! Accordingly, I want to do something a little special to mark the occasion, and this is what I have to offer:

I very recently had the astonishingly great pleasure of sitting at table with Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, David Gates, David Amadia, Nicole Buttitta, Karen Schmidt, and Shun Ishikubo of Ridge, and Guillaume Bienaime and John Sanders of the very fine restaurant Marché in Menlo Park, to taste through 15 vintages of Monte Bello! Needless to say, it was one of the more extraordinary tasting experiences of my life. My only regret is that we didn’t have all day to sip and savor! But this was work …

So, given the rigor and intensity of the tasting, combined with the unavoidable time constraint of a morning tasting on a workday, we had to move pretty seriously and rapidly through the offerings, and accordingly my notes are somewhat brief and a bit riffy, but I hope they give you at least a reasonably in-focus picture of what an utterly astonishing palate experience this was … sprinkled throughout are some observations from Eric Baugher as well, who very kindly gave me a copy of his notes as a resource.

We tasted the wines in groups, the first of which was a foursome comprised of the 2000, the 2002, the 2004, and the 2005 Monte Bellos. First though, for a proverbial wetting of the whistle, we sampled the 1999 Monte Bello Chardonnay. Mon Dieu! What a delicious wine!

1999 Monte Bello Chardonnay

Warm and nutty on the nose, with hints of caramel, butterscotch and vanilla, and a rich and complex tropicality. Mouthfilling and pleasantly viscous without being at all cloying. Mid-palate weight is intensified by strong minerality and a hint of bread-y yeastiness. The finish is long and woody, yet shows lots of bright acidity. Starting to develop secondary and tertiary maturation characteristics, but still delightfully youthful …

Ok, back to our inaugural foursome: 00, 02, 04, and 05 …

2000 Monte Bello

Elegant and playful, yet deeply concentrated, exhibiting bright notes of pomegranate and cranberry layered over a compellingly dark sub-strata redolent of cocoa, leather, fennel, and cigar-box; notable for the juxtaposition of weight and beauty, deep coloration and vibrant concentration …

2002 Monte Bello

Muscular, viscous, and tannin-forward, with rich notes of tar and earth coating a core of crisp bright red fruits and spicy dried fruits; cherry on the red side, black currant on the dried side … definitely youthful and fragrant, but notable for depth of both strength and length …

2004 Monte Bello

Minty and eucalyptal, with strong hints of cherry and menthol; very vibrant and herbaceous, with deep layers of cassis, leather, and tobacco … very elegant and complex, resolving nicely, and showing classic Monte Bello minerality …

2005 Monte Bello

Big, fruit-forward, and intensely structured, with a vast and complex array of fruit profiles brimming away in the bouquet and infusing the body … loads of mountain fruit character, led by a rich blueberry layer and followed by a delightful violet-laden florality … hints of cassis and blackberry, with a saturated peppering of clove and cardamom over nicely chalky tannins …

Not a bad way to lead off a flight, not by any stretch of the imagination! From there, we proceeded to our next foursome, this time a close look at some key vintages from the nineties: 1991, 1992, 1995, and 1997.

 

1991 Monte Bello

I’ve waxed rhapsodic about this vintage many times before, sometimes to almost embarrassing effect (dig this post!), and this tasting did nothing to dissuade me from the very firm conviction that my affections are most decidedly not misplaced. It’s just wonderful, a fully completed circle, every component perfectly placed, a ballet of integration, reconciliation, and harmony; ripe but tempered, complex yet approachable, dark but fruitful, buoyant yet earthy. A treat to taste …

1992 Monte Bello

Astonishingly complex aromatics, very expressive, with a rich perfume. Elegant but well-structured, with very juicy, concentrated fruit. Nicely compressed juxtapositions of licorice and violet, and cigar and pine. Very present acidity and lively fruits transition from a dense middle through to a long and enticing finish …

1995 Monte Bello

Very firmly structured, and defiantly structure-forward. A nice touch of earthiness, and big fruits paving the way for controlled and subtle acidity. Nice blend of forest floor and wet stone co-mingling with hints of cola and black licorice, making for an overall powerful and complex offering …

1997 Monte Bello

Showing remarkably youthful still, and still opening up accordingly. Fully structure-forward, and still flexing its impending complexities … Starting to develop deep mountain fruit characteristics amongst the already present Monte Bello minerality, and clearly heading for a deep and seductive mid-palate around a nicely earthy core …

This foursome was followed by what I think we all collectively agreed was the surprise grouping of the bunch, a five-wine vertical of 80′s era Monte Bello: 1981, 1984, 1985, 1988, ands 1989. I say surprise because this decade as a whole has suffered some disparagement in the past, but to our collective palates, this was easily the most difficult group to pull favorites from; they all showed magnificently!

 

1981 Monte Bello

Deep, deep notes of fudge, chocolate, and cocoa, below an nearly-as-dark-layer of tar and chipotle, sewed together with a decadent chord of umami notes. Loads of black fruits, firm tannins, and still-lively acidity, and showing secondary and tertiary characteristics redolent of balsamic and molasses …

1984 Monte Bello

A very pleasant mintiness on the nose, with lots of red fruits and a hint of menthol and eucalyptus. A near feral intensity to the fruit layers, dominated by an almost sweet cherry character. Intense, pungent, and powerful, with great structure and length …

1985 Monte Bello

Woodsy, and very complexly so, with hints of caramel, vanilla, and cream blending with a slight citricity to almost evoke a caramel apple, wooden stick and all … Tremendously bright and youthful acidity, very fresh and young, with a subdued yet complex bouquet followed by a creamy blue-fruit laden middle and an herb-and-spice laden finish …

1988 Monte Bello

Archetypal “old-world” aromatics showing a concentrated mosaic of black cherry, cola, cedar, leather, and earth, with a concentrated mid-palate blending wild mountain fruit and exotic spice; perfectly resolved and structured, with still-youthful acidity and tannin …

1989 Monte Bello

Lots of fascinating structural components on offer, including dried currant, olive, and tobacco on the nose, and cedar, clove, and anise at entry. Complex without being weighty, with multiple layers of mineral, spice, and sweeter fruits mid-palate, closing with a firm and structure-forward finish …

The final grouping was a two-wine group, and this was really the treat of the bunch, both for the rarity, and the caliber! We first tasted the 1978 Monte Bello, and then the 1968! Unbelievable …

 

1978 Monte Bello

Decadent hints of stew, blood, and iodine simmering in the aromatics, meaning meaty, but not in an umami way, more Wellington-esque … Wonderful second and third tier characteristics on display, including clove, sandalwood, tobacco, and cedar, modulating sweet and concentrated fruits into an earthy and complex body, finishing very lively and vigorous …

1968 Monte Bello

Just astonishing, a 42-year-old wine, and yet still showing so much power, complexity, and concentration. Lots of classic mountain minerality, dried fruits, and sweet sauce notes (plum and balsamic), with a structurally enticing duskiness foreshadowing a rustic mid-palate, and closing with a completed-circle reappearance of marrow-like notes couched in a wrap of sandalwood and cigar …

And that was it for the tasting. I don’t think I’ll ever forget it. And while I recognize that the purchase of an older-vintage Monte Bello is not an every day investment, I heartily encourage you all to find a way to sample some of the these older vintages, whether through purchases, or via one of the special tastings that we host in our tasting rooms., It’s an experience that will not leave you for a long, long time …

And thank you to the powers that be for letting me be a part of such an extraordinary tasting!

The Event Of The Century?

February 8, 2010

Ok, maybe not the event of the century, but certainly an EXTREMELY noteworthy one! What is it? It’s this:

The Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase!

And what exactly does that mean? It’s means this:

Please join Ridge Vineyards as we taste an extraordinary vertical flight of library Monte Bello bottled in 375 ml format! Not only are half-bottles an economical way to take home a bottle of our flagship Monte Bello Cabernet blend, but courtesy of the accelerated development of wines bottled in smaller format, these very cellarable vintages are ready to drink now! So, as these bottlings are only available in extremely limited quantities, this event accordingly constitutes a very unique opportunity to taste and purchase rare Monte Bello offerings; the 1987, 1988, and 1993 vintages will be priced at $85, $100, and $100 respectively (special event-only pricing!), or, you can purchase the trio for $250.00!

And when is this happening? It’s happening on Valentine’s Day Weekend! February 13th & 14th, 11-4pm, we’ll be offering a very special Monte Bello Tasting Flight comprised of our 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay, our 2006 Monte Bello (current vintage!), and the three-vintage half-bottle Monte Bello vertical! This flight will be available for $30/person for non-members, and $15/person for members. (And hey members, don’t forget that February is a Membership Month, which means you can extend your member pricing on the Monte Bello Tasting Flight to as many guests as you wish to bring with you!)

The Trio

In the esteemed company of Paul Draper and Eric Baugher, I had the great privilege of tasting through a wide array of older-vintage Monte Bellos in half-bottle as we prepared for this event, and what follows is a brief compendium of our tasting notes on the three vintages we selected for this weekend:

Tasting Notes
Monte Bello Vertical: 1987, 1988, 1993
(375 ml)
Tasters: Paul Draper, Eric Baugher, Christopher Watkins

1987 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello, 375 ml
$85/btl.
(Event-Only Pricing!)

Notes of sweet fruits & candied fruits resulting in a singularly nectar’d florality, co-mingling with aromatics redolent of sandalwood, charcoal, underbrush and chapparal — Palate notes of olive, tobacco, orange peel, raisin, and cedar —An enticing juxtaposition of sweet and sour, with a very earthy, very rustic character — Structurally, very vibrant acidity and notably chalky tannins make for a Monte Bello that is developed, resolved, and ready to drink. 

1988 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello, 375 ml
$100/btl.
(Event-Only Pricing!)

Opulent and complex on the nose, with a fine mix of crushed rock minerality, black currant, baked pie cherries and mixed berry jam (Marion and Logan), leading to a sweet center exhibiting bright red fruits, faint strains of pomegranate & leather, and a superb intensity — Mouthfeel-wise, very dense, very full — Structurally, lively acidity, and firm tannins decidedly present but resolved — All in all, a fine mixture of layered mountain fruits, buoyant acidity, muscular tannins, and an elegant resolution. An ideal drinker.

1993 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello, 375 ml
$100/btl.
(Event-Only Pricing!)

Exotic nose blending mint & red current with Umami notes of soy and teriyaki, plus an additional layer of eucalyptus and bay leaf counterbalancing caramel apples, spiced chocolate, and vanilla — Rich mid-palate fruits mixing with secondary wet stone and tertiary mixed olives to form a complex center — Appealing, integrated, and just a bit different — Very well structured, and ready to drink. 

The Pour

We did a little sneak preview of this vertical at our First Friday event on the evening of the 5th, and a very well-regarded wine blogger who was in attendance has posted his tasting notes on-line, should you wish to read some additional perspective. Here is what he wrote:

’87 Monte Bello (SCM)
(Includes 5% Merlot, 3% Cabernet Franc. 11.7% alc.)
Nose – warm spicy cigar box and rich dark fruit, lovely peppery tobacco.
Lighter body with intense tobacco and black currant, smoky, good minerality, dusty tannin, blackberry. 92 pts

’88 Monte Bello (SCM)
(Includes 3% Merlot, 2% Petit Verdot. 12.9% alc.)
Nose – smooth full purple fruit, kind of rustic, creamy, cardamom, smoke, dried herbs.
Sweetish tart boysenberry, smoke, blackberry, blue elderberry, plum, black currant, dusty/woody tannin. Comes together a bit odd in a way – tart, round youthful fruit, light body – that more time may help. 88+ pts

’93 Monte Bello (SCM)
(Includes 7% Merlot, 7% Petit Verdot. 12.5% alc.)
Nose – minty lamb, smooth, intense, shy and youthful blackberry and black currant, eucalyptus, pineapple sage.
Lanolin, blackberry and black currant, smoky and tart, dusty and slightly grippy tannin, blue elderberry, dried sage. Very youthful. Funky jujube note and a touch of cedar. Should peak in about 15 years. 92 pts

The Swirl

So, in conclusion, I humbly submit that there is simply no better way to celebrate Valentine’s Day Weekend than to attend this remarkable tasting. Whether you’re in love and with your lover wishing to relish the delight and decadence of ready-to-drink Monte Bello, or whether you’re single and celebrating that you don’t have to share, this is not an event to be missed! And do note that this very special tasting flight will be on offer at both our Lytton Springs and Monte Bello Tasting Rooms.

The Line Up

February 13th & 14th, 2010: Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase!

February 13 & 14, 11-4pm
Monte Bello Tasting Room (Cupertino) & Lytton Springs Tasting Room (Healdsburg)

$15 for all Ridge Members, and $30 for the public.

The Wine

Hope to see you this weekend!

For more information about upcoming events at Ridge Vineyards, please click here.

A Whole Lotta Ridgin’ Goin’ On! -or- All The Wine That’s Fit To Print!

February 5, 2010

Great slew of Ridge information out there lately, in terms of contemporary tasting notes and other such items of interest to the Ridge-O-Philes among ye; some of it is Post-Zap commentary, some of it is Post-Ridge Events commentary, and some of it is just plain self-generated commentary, but it’s all good, all interesting, and all most appreciated! Here’s a lil’ round-up of some quite interesting articles out there:

For an excellently thorough look at a very fine line up of Ridge zinfandels from a very fine wine blog, look no further than “The Great Ridge Zinfandel Line-Up: Or, Yet Another Reason Why California is the Best State” over on Vinicultured: A Wine Blog. Here is what was tasted and notated:

  • 2005 Ridge “Paso Robles” Zinfandel | 100% Zinfandel | Paso Robles
  • 2006 Ridge “East Bench” Zinfandel | 100% Zinfandel | Dry Creek Valley
  • 2006 Ridge “Ponzo” Zinfandel | 95% Zinfandel, 5% Petite Sirah | Russian River Valley
  • 2005 Ridge “Pagani Ranch” Zinfandel | 96% Zinfandel, 2% Petite Sirah, 1% Alicante Bouschet, 1% Mataro | Sonoma Valley
  • 2006 Ridge “Geyserville” Zinfandel | 70% Zinfandel, 18% Carignane, 10% Petite Sirah, 2% Mataro | Alexander Valley
  • 2007 Ridge “Geyserville” Zinfandel | 58% Zinfandel, 22% Carignane, 18% Petite Sirah, 2% Mataro | Alexander Valley
  • 2007 Ridge “Lytton Springs” Zinfandel | 71% Zinfandel, 22% Petite Sirah, 7% Carignane | Dry Creek Valley
  •  

    For those of you who might prefer the more technical side of oeno-literature, there is an absolutely  fascinating article currently available over on “Wines & Vines” by Tim Patterson entitled “With Fermenters, Does Size Matter?”  Tim is a wine writer and home wine-maker, or garagiste, shall we say, and this is a fascinating look at the matter of fermentor sizes, and the effect this has on resulting wines. Our very own Paul Draper makes an excellent appearance in the article, and while I encourage you to dive in and read the whole thing, I’ve included Paul’s portion of the content below:

    Paul Draper at Ridge Vineyards says that Ridge tries to fit the fermenter to the size of the parcel being harvested — a portion of a particular vineyard that comes ripe at the same time. The Ridge facilities have several sizes available — all of them small by Lockwood standards, not because of some philosophy of tanks, but rather a philosophy geared toward careful parcel picking.

    The Ridge Monte Bello Cabernet ripens in patches of maybe 1- to 5-tons, and the same is true for some portions of the Zinfandel harvest from Lytton Springs and Geyserville. The Dusi Ranch vineyard in Paso Robles, on the other hand, is more rolling than ridge-y, so its lots of Zinfandel tend to be routed to larger fermenters.

    The array of relatively small fermenters offers more chance for control and probably better extraction, Draper believes. He adds an interesting historical observation: The current fondness for small fermenters is partly a reaction to the early days of California winemaking, when huge vessels produced uneven fermentations and poor extraction.

    And I’d of course be remiss if I didn’t mention to you that, as it turns out, Ridge was not just Day 23 over on Jerry Bullfrog’s Wine Stash, we were days 23-29! Meaning there is a lot of excellent reading on our wines to be found on this site; in case you didn’t catch my initial discovery of this blog, you can find out about it here; in short, it’s a great premise for a blog, and something very well worth reading, both for the Ridge commentary, and, well, everything else! But if you want to sample some idiosyncratically intensive and endearingly left-of-center contemporary tasting notes on the following wines: the 2007 Late Harvest Dusi Ranch Zinfandel, the 2005 Lytton West Syrah, the 2003 Geyserville, the 2006 Buchignani Ranch Carignane, the 2007 East Bench, the 2004 Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah, the 1992 Santa Cruz Mountains Chardonnay, and the 2006 Monte Bello, then you need to read the Bullfrog!

    Thanks for reading, and check back shortly for a follow-up round-up of Post-Zap commentary!


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