Archive for the ‘Grenache’ Category

Wine Bloggers Tasting: The Acrostic Anagram Sessions!

December 29, 2010

Greetings all!

So, we’ve just very recently hosted the final Wine Bloggers Tasting of 2010 here at Monte Bello, and as always, it proved to be a delicious, and deliciously entertaining session. Many, many thanks to the bloggers who attended!

Wine Bloggers Tasting #4

With every one of these happenings, one of my tasks is to assemble the roster of wines that we’ll be tasting, and I always try and do this to a theme.

-For Session #1, we tasted exactly the same wines that Robert Parker had just reviewed, to see how the collective Blogger Palate matched up (I included a barrel sample of the ’08 Monte Bello, a five-vintage vertical of post-2000 Monte Bellos, plus the 1996 Monte Bello!) …

-For Session #2, we tasted all limited-production/winery-only Rhone varietal offerings …

-For Session #3 (held at Lytton Springs), we tasted a 10-vintage vertical of Lytton Springs …

So what to do for Session #4? Why, an Acrostic Anagram, of course!

Meaning, I poured an 11-wine flight with no discernible theme. I then explained to the bloggers that each wine’s label contributed one letter (just from the BIG letters, not every bit of fine print text!) to the puzzle. If they could guess the letters, and then get the letters in the right order, they’d find the secret phrase that gave us our theme! Because I poured the wines in the “proper” order for tasting, and not in the order of the letters, it was not only an acrostic, but an acrostic anagram!

Perhaps needless to say, when I explained my plan to a fellow Ridge staffer, I was called “a dork.”

Anyhow, care to play along? Here are the wines I selected, in the order poured:

Buchignani Ranch Carignane

East Bench

Lytton Estate Zinfandel/Primitivo

Geyserville

Nervo

Grenache

Independence School

Old School

Lytton West Syrah

Ridge Monte Bello

Geyserville Essence

Solved it yet? Ok, here’s a hint; as you’ll see below, I’ve bolded the relevant letter from each wine:

Buchignani Ranch Carignane

East Bench

Lytton Estate Zinfandel/Primitivo

Geyserville

Nervo

Grenache

Independence School

Old School

Lytton West Syrah

Ridge Monte Bello

Geyserville Essence

Got it now? No, not BELGNG IOWRE! You have to rearrange the letters! Got it now?

WINE BLOGGER

I am happy to report that Fred Swan, of the very great NorCalWine.com, was the first to successfully blurt out the correct answer. Congratulations Fred!

And lastly, a special thank you to Allan Bree, of the very great GangOfPour.com, for bringing the extraordinary trio of mystery wines we were all so fortunate to taste: 1993, 1994, and 1997 Ridge Vineyards Pagani Ranch Alicante Bouschet! How were they tasting? I think all involved agreed that “pretty” was by far and away the most appropriate descriptor, though I might add delicious, elegant, beautiful, extraordinary, enticing, and vibrant as well! Cheers Allan, that was such a treat!

Alicante Bouschet!

To close, a heartfelt thank you to Ridge Vineyards, all our participating wine bloggers, and everyone out there devotedly writing quality wine blogs; I feel very honored to be a part of both Ridge, and the wine blogger community, and 2010 was an extraordinary year for me in that regard, and for that, I thank you all! I am also very happy to report that we’ll be continuing this event is 2011, so cheers to the coming New Year!

Oh, one more thing, two other posts about this event have already gone up, you can find them here:

RJonWine

WineBookGirl

Enjoy!

Pneumonia’s Last Syrah!

November 2, 2010

Here at Ridge Vineyards, we are very excited about our participation this month in an absolutely wonderful endeavor entitled “Pneumonia’s Last Syrah.” If you’re not yet familiar with this campaign, below you’ll find a little background to hip you up to what this is all about; the text was generated by Rhone Rangers, America’s leading non-profit organization dedicated to promoting American Rhone varietal wines (our very own David Gates serves on the board!):

A recent article by Eric Asimov in the New York Times began “There’s a joke going around West Coast wine circles: What’s the difference between a case of syrah and a case of pneumonia? You can get rid of the pneumonia.” As America’s leading organization dedicated to the promotion of American Rhone varieties (of which Syrah is the most widely planted) Asimov’s article, and the response on Huffington Post by pneumonia expert Dr. Orin Levine of Johns Hopkins Medical Center, got our attention.

We share the feeling many Rhone producers have had for years that more could be done to bring attention to this wonderful grape. So, the Rhone Rangers, in conjunction with Dr. Levine and the GAVI Alliance, have created Pneumonia’s Last Syrah.

Recognizing that pneumonia can be stopped by a vaccine that costs $10, members of the Rhone Rangers invite you to celebrate their commitment to donate $10 for each case of American Syrah sold to consumers in the month of November toward providing urgently needed pneumonia vaccines to children in the world’s poorest countries. 

As participants, Ridge Vineyards will be donating $1 for every bottle of Ridge  Syrah sold in November, and to coincide with this happening, we’ll be releasing our new 2006 Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache! We think this is an absolutely wonderful wine, and should you happen to agree, then please consider purchasing a bottle. Or two. Or ten! Not only will you have a terrific wine to enjoy, but you’ll be helping us to contribute to a really wonderful cause.

The new 2006 Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache is one of our most highly anticipated ATP offerings (for those of you not familiar with this acronymn, it stands for Advanced Tasting Program, and it’s the name of one of our membership programs here; the one through which we release all of our limited-production winery-only wines), and based on my early tastings, I think this vintage is going to be an outstanding contribution to the Ridge Syrah canon. Here are my first-pass tasting notes from last week:

Ridge Vineyards 2006 Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache

Right out of the gate, what I’m loving about this new release is a) the extent to which the grenache is already emerging out from under the proverbial black umbrella of Syrah into the sunshine of equitable aesthetic influence (something we didn’t see happen with the 2005 until quite a bit more bottle aging had occurred), and b) the interstellar array of aromatic and taste complexities on offer … The bouquet is tremendously rich, and shows a great spectrum of flavor components: dusky dark berry characteristics laced with cocoa liquor, sweet and succulent plum notes, a fascinatingly mysterious and savory middle layer evoking fire-roasted tomatoes and grilled red peppers, bright and vivacious high-tone red fruit delivering wickedly beguiling acidity, and an archetypal Rhone dusting of white pepper and tarragon herbality … All these notes resolve into an intensely compressed mid-tone-driven front-of-palate profile, with plum and a hint of raspberry being the dominant qualities … The tannins are astonishingly, and I mean astonishingly, supple and refined; powdery without being chalky, firm without being adhesive, structured without being ungainly. In short, astonishing … The viscosity evident in the legs makes its presence felt in the back half of the mid-palate profile, drawing the primary taste sensations away from the cheeks and towards the tongue; accordingly, the sweeter side of the wine emerges, drawing an elegantly silken layer across the percolating acidity … The finish is sweet and savory to the point of decadence, though the viscosity tapers and accordingly refocuses the acidity; flavors linger long, and the robustness of the overall profile lays with grace in the chest for what seems like hours after … Really, really wonderful, this wine.

The Pneumonia’s Last Syrah campaign will run throughout the full of November, so we very much hope you’ll have an opportunity to join us in enjoying some great wine, and contributing to a great cause!

#WAFA10 -or- Wine, Confit, & You!

November 2, 2010

I’m struggling here, I really am. I have a really groovy event to chat about, and I’m torn on what to say. Of course, I could just heap praise on our Lytton Springs site — the phenom staff, the exquisite location, the multiple green-award-winning facility, the wines, the wines, the wines — and of course I could sing the praises of the organizational and community-minded spirit of the folks over at wineroad.com, those arch supporters of, and advocates for, that holy trinity of wine valleys in Northern California that is Alexander, Dry Creek, and Russian River (who are also the folks who are behind the event in question), and of course I could just  praise YOU, because YOU have apparently already rendered this event SOLD OUT!

Lytton Springs, pic courtesy of Dave Tong

What in blazes am I actually talking about? Why, Wine & Food Affair, of course!

And it’s happening this weekend! Ridge Vineyards/Lytton Springs is a proud participant, and if you have any way to get to Sonoma County this weekend — don’t rule out hiking, parasailing, transporting, extreme pogo-sticking, sack-racing, or donkeys — then I really and truly do strongly recommend that you attend. And if you didn’t get a ticket in time, then you might want to try and find a way to bribe someone who already has a ticket into giving you their ticket. (Bribes really are the obvious choice for the currently ticketless, but I suppose there are other ways to barter. Depending on who you ask … and of course, depending on what you offer …)

I kid! I’m a kidder! I’m just kidding … I’m a kidder.

Margot Kidder, with Superman

In all seriousness, Wine & Food Affair is really a kick of a happening, and if you’re going to be anywhere near our Lytton Springs facility this weekend, then I really hope you can find a way to participate. And if the Sold Out signs prove to be daunting, well, just write me with a really erudite and compelling explanation of why you should be in attendance, and I’ll see what I can do!

You can find all the relevant event specs here, by the way …

Now admittedly, that was a pretty roundabout plug for a fairly straightforward event. Perhaps what I really should have written was the following:

New Ridge Vineyards Syrah/Grenache

WAIT! That’s no fun! Ok, let’s try it again … Here are all the WORDS I should have written, but let’s let YOU put them together …

Cannellini Mazzoni Lytton Confit Syrah Duck Grenache Soup Sonoma Carignane Northern

Dig?

Confit, dig?

And hey, by the way, if you do indeed plan to be on hand to dig the festivities, and if you really want to fully swim in the social media stream, then I should tell you that the Twitterisciously Hashtagged virtual nom-de-plume is as follows: #WAFA10 … (and if you’re tasting Ridge wines, don’t forget to include #ridgewine in your tweet!)

#WAFA10 & #ridgewine!

And all THAT said, don’t let the on-site specificity leave you feeling left out; if you have a Rhone-varietal Ridge Vineyards wine at home, dig it out, and dig participating in some on-line virtual community tasting! Why? Well, not only will you be unity-planing with the on-site cats and kitties, you’ll be joining the jetstream of a particularly special charitable endeavor that Ridge Vineyards is pleased to already be on board with; it’s Syrah-centric, it helps young children dodge a disease that really should no longer still be considered a threat, and it involves drinking wine. Problem? No, of course not …

I’m talkin’ Pneumonia’s  Last Syrah, people!

Pneumonia's Last Syrah!

More on this in the next post, but for the time being, back to Wine & Food Affair. The gist of it is that we’ll be pouring a rippingly delightful selection of wines, and those wines are going to be paired with a delectable in-house-crafted dish created specifically for its contribution to the food & wine pairing paradigm, and if you already have a ticket, then don’t miss the Lytton Springs contribution, and if you don’t have a ticket, but will be in the area, then get ahold of me for some velvet rope mojo (don’t forget,erudite and compelling!), and if you don’t have a ticket and aren’t in the area, but want to join in the tasting festivities on-line, then pull some Ridge from your cellar, and join us for some virtual tasting via the hashtags noted above! (#WAFA10 and #ridgewine) …



Cheers!

Food & Wine Pairing

August 20, 2010

I have had, on a number of occasions of late, the rather exquisite opportunity to experiment with, and subsequently present, taste, and enjoy, Ridge wines in a variety of food pairing constructs, and I thought I’d share some of the pairings I was particularly fond of.

To begin, my absolute favorite pairing for our chardonnays in general, and the 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay in particular …

… is the one and only Haig’s Hummus.

If you’re a reader of this blog, then you’ve certainly heard me wax beautific about Haig’s before, and if you’ve tasted wines with me in a wine and food pairing situation, then you’ve probably heard some variation on my feelings for this hummus; that either it, or all other hummus, needs  a name change, because Haig’s is simply so much better that it is accordingly a linguistic disservice to both to link the two.

Moving on from Chardonnay, I usually like to pour one of our single-vineyard zinfandels, and preferably, one of the more elegant, subtle, and less weightier offerings; a zinfandel that expresses herb, spice, and acidity over muscularity of structure and opulence of fruit. The 2008 Geserville is just such a wine …

 

… and I recently took a bit of a gamble, and paired this with bruschetta topped with a dollop of chevre, and served with crostini …

 

I say “gamble,” by the way, because I actually  find fresh tomato dishes somewhat challenging to pair with red wines (you can see more on this here), but in this case, the pairing was delicious!

Moving on, were we to consider this a proper tasting flight, I would probably go with another zinfandel, something with a tad more muscularity, and perhaps a wine that introduces a touch of rusticity, earthiness, even shades of umami savoriness. One particular pairing caught my palate recently, the 2007 Carmichael Zinfandel (also Alexander Valley in origin, but a very limited-production, winery-only offering) paired with a delicious spread composed primarily of eggplant, garlic, and fefferoni peppers …

 

I quite like the combination of ingredients in this dish; the eggplant adds just a hint of smokiness, without being oppressive, the garlic brings a bit of bite, while the peppers add a nice blend of sweetness & spice; perfect with an Alexander Valley zin!

From here I would traditionally make a turn towards the Rhone; I’ve been pouring our 2008 Buchignani Ranch Carginane in the #4 spot quite often lately, and a particularly favorite pairing of mine for this wine is chevre topped with a sprinkle of dried basil and a drizzle of olive oil …

 

… I find that the acidity of the Carignane is a nice counter-balance to the fatter, fleshier side of the chevre’s flavor profile (enhanced by the olive oil), while the herb & spice component of the wine blends nicely with the chevre’s tanginess, and the dried basil draws just a touch of rusticity from the wine.

In the tasting room, I find I am often deploying the Buchignani Carignane as a set-up for the 2007 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Cabernet/Merlot; something about these two wines in this order seems to really serve both well.

So, as to a food pairing, one of my favorite pairings for our Cabs is one of our truly favorite cheeses around here, Cypress Grove’s Humboldt Fog, a goat’s milk cheese with a washed rind and an ash thread …

 

This is truly a magic pairing; funky, fruitful, lascivious and luscious!

The #6 spot in a 6-wine flight invariably goes to something with some huskiness, muscle, and depth, and in this case, I’m going to mention another of my favorite pairings, our 2004 Lytton Estate Syrah (co-fermented with viognier, and winery-blended with two small blocks of old-vine grenache), with an olive tapenade …

 

This pairing is all about dark, deep, rustic, earthy, fleshy flavors, and a great way to end a flight crafted to achieve a trajectorial experience in which the movement from lighter to heartier flavors is the key architectural determinant.

So there you go, a small sampling of some of my favorite recent pairings. How about you? Any particular pairings for Ridge wines that you’re particularly fond of? I’d love to hear about them!

Wine Bloggers Tasting, Edition II, The Notes!

July 12, 2010

The Line-Up: About To Be Decanted And Tasted

Well, we’ve just completed the second edition of our Wine Bloggers Tasting, and with a belly full of Rhones and cheese (Triple-Cream Gouda, Blue Stilton, and Farmhouse Cheddar, atop Watsonville Sourdough), I’m now sitting down to pen some proper tasting notes. 

A Spread Of Carignane

But first, a hearty cheers and thank you to our attendees, all of whom proved to be winning companions, gracious guests, insightful tasters, and a lot of fun! I’ll be posting a summary of their write-ups as they come available, but I encourage you to visit all their sites whenever the mood strikes. You can find links here

Decanting The Carignanes

Our theme for this tasting was a selection of Rhone varietal wines that are released through our ATP program; meaning these are wines that are extremely limited-production, and available only through the winery, either via the member program, in the tasting rooms, or online. 

Through The Drinking Glass

I set the tasting up as a series of mini-verticals, with all but one vertical being two-vintages wide. The exception was the first series we tasted, a trio of Buchignani Ranch Carignane. We tasted the 2002, the 2005, and the 2008 vintages. 

The Bloggers

2002 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane 

Very rustic nose, loads of minerality, with a hint of mulchy herbality and some autumnal dried fruits. A simmering crimson in the glass, evidencing medium-to-light viscosity …tremendous acidity right out of the gate, with some semi-sour cherry, a trace of menthol, and some black herbs alongside … mid-palate sees the acidity spreading from tongue-tip to side-of-tongue, and allows for the emergence of some coffee ground notes mixed with fennel, chicory, and a hint of dried cranberries … not a particularly long finish, but acidity remains omnipresent … would love to have this at table with a high-fat-content dish that is thickly sauced but lightly spiced … 

Tasting Notes!

2005 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane 

Just a wealth of fruit on the nose by comparison; not to belittle the previous, but rather, to magnify the distinction … primarily laden with pluot notes, hints of tangelo and blood orange, with a drop of quince to boot … rounder, fleshier mouthfeel; a tad more viscous, but still positively singing with acidity … lighter in the core of the mid-palate mouthfeel, but ringed with vibrant spice and acidity around the perimeter, and introducing a rather exotic panoply of eastern, almost curry-esque spices … the mouthfeel is slightly longer and rounder than the 2002, but is still stepping out acidity first … and courtesy of the buoyant acidity, but in deference to the fleshier fruits, this wine for me begs for cheese pairing; at the moment, it’s going very well with Cypress Grove’s Humboldt Fog … 

Iron Chevsky and Dan Snyder

2008 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane 

A lil’ baby by comparison, the 2008 is just emerging from swaddle, and as such is only just beginning to show the deep purple-y fruit and caramel-y aromatics that traditionally seem to mark our young carignanes … the nose is a tad more berry-laden, with the fruit showing a bit more preserves-like concentration …  more flesh-ful at point-of-entry than either of the previous 2 vintages, accordingly rendering the still-notably-vibrant acidity to a comparably more subservient role; don’t get me wrong, there is acidity to spare here, but fleshier opulence of the fruit provides a more aggressive counterbalance … some tannins here as well, providing a pleasing scaffold for the fruit to hang on … as above, not a particularly long finish, but oodles of food-friendly acidity here as well, though if you’re looking for a sipper as opposed to an at-table offering, this is probably the best bet of the three … 

Dave Tong and Fely Krewell

Next up was a pair of Syrah/Grenache blends from our Lytton Springs vineyards; 2006 & 2005. These are both 50/50 blends, with the ’05 being already sold out, and the 2006 slated for a late fall release. In both cases, the Grenache was fully crushed, while the Syrah was fermented whole-berry, and also in both cases, the two varietals were fermented separately prior to assemblage. 

Roland Dumas, Thea Dwelle, & Jason Mancebo

2006 Ridge Vineyards Syrah/Grenache 

Loads of farm-fresh strawberry preserves on the nose, seeds and all, and not a tad cloying; just bright, buoyant, fresh, mid-to-high-tone red fruit, with a deep underlayer of anise and fennel and sweet clove … a very decadently mentholated cocoa-and-mint sensation at point-of-entry, spreading into a harvest-berry-galette mode mid-palate; meaning a sweet breadiness mingling with a richly complex baked-fruit compression … finish is long and vibrant, with structure to spare, bespeaking a long and harmonious future; no hurry on this one; tannins alone guarantee great longevity, particularly as the intensity of fruit is more than primed to keep pace … 

Liren Baker, Wes Barton, & Richard Jennings

2005 Ridge Vineyards Syrah/Grenache 

All the great fruit of the above on offer in spades, with just a hint of ever-so-slightly funky reductivity still lingering in the aromatics … a great tarry-dark layer providing the aromatic carpet upon which the mixed-berry furniture is arranged; mostly blueberry in character, with subtle hints of blackberry and black plum; key word being “black” … very structure-forward at point-of-entry, with an intense display of tannins early on, primarily in the tooth-to-lip realm … while the mid-palate is somewhat narrow, not yet spreading into the cheeks, the concentration is impressive … the finish feels a bit cut-short, with all the muscle on display early; this is a wine that, while more mature than the ’06 by date, seems younger in character, and seems to want a tad more bottle age to fully open up and display its full range; the structure is there, as is the undercurrent, we’re just waiting on the bright fruits to emerge … 

Jason of Jason's!

From the Syrah/Grenache we moved to a duo of Lytton West Syrahs, both comprised of fruit from a western parcel on the Lytton Springs property, and in both cases, featuring co-fermented viognier; 9% in the 2003, and 6% in the 2005. 

2003 Ridge Vineyards Lytton West Syrah 

Intensely, intensely sweet fruit on the nose; so concentrated, so compressed, so decadent, with a certain woodiness afoot as well … and more of the same on the palate; for those who like a complexly fruit-forward spread of sheer fleshly opulence, this really ought to appeal; that said, loads of late-emerging tannins to scaffold the fruit, and youthful acidity as well, but the real story here is just fruit, upon fruit, upon rich, sweet fruit; not over-ripe by any means, and not overtly viscous as regards mouthfeel; meaning, essentially, sweet in character, if not in actual RS … post-meal, in the big chair, by the fire, leather-bound book in hand, chocolate on the night stand, sheep dog asleep at your feet, yessir, yessir, yes … 

2005 Ridge Vineyards Lytton West Syrah 

Far more driven by a salmagundi of  herb-and-spice than the ’03, this still has loads of rich fruit on the nose, but is demonstrably less sweet in overall character … licorice, fennel, anise, and an autumnal chutney’s worth of dark minty herbs dominate, escorting in a subtle parade of blueberry and ollalie berry as the nose opens … succulent if not decadent at point-of-entry, leading to concentration if not compression; meaning the mid-palate is rich but not overt, intense but not abrupt, emotive but not ecstatic … a unique sort of blueberry lacquer coats the tongue with a rich, saucy fruit and seed profile, leading into a shorter, crisper, perhaps more focused finish than the ’03; two sides of the viticultural coin, these two; compote-sweet on the one side, mincemeat-spicy on the other … 

And lastly but most definitely not leastly, we concluded our tasting with two vintages of our Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah … 

2006 Ridge Vineyards Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah 

Given that this is a wine with decades, if not centuries, of ageability written into its very DNA, it’s not surprising that this very young, yet-to-be-released offering isn’t giving up much in the way of aromatics just yet; hints of dark, inky, black fruit goodness, but only hints … the point-of-entry is predictably tannin-heavy, though as the wine moves to mid-palate, its notable how much blueberry-esque fruit tones begin to emerge from the primordial LaBrea of young petite sirah structure … the finish is tannin, tannin, and more tannin; pleasing tannin, mind you, and cloaking a very sincere and earnest display of kinder/gentler petite sirah inkiness, but this is, at this point, a wine to watch, but not to drink … come winter, when this sees release, look for me, and a wedge of aromatic cheese, to be hiding in your basement, with a candle lit, reading Dickens … 

2003 Ridge Vineyards Dynamite Hill Petite Sirah 

Mitigated expression of aromatics here as well, though there are a few more balls being juggled; in addition to the near-ubiquitous blackness of fruit notes, and the inky compression of herbs, there is a hint of some pleasantly by-comparison higher-tone fruit coming through in the bouquet … the wine really comes alive at point-of-entry, with a surprisingly resolved mouthfeel lush with integrative complexities afoot … little in the way of acidity coming through mid-palate, but the elegance of the fruit is almost astonishingly delightful; if you know someone who thinks they don’t particularly care for petite sirah (some of the more common complaints being that petite sirah can occasionally, if mishandled or grown in inappropriate regions, be prone to being too heavy, too dark, too inky, too muscular, too mono-dimensional), this is, I think, a brilliant point-of-entry into the PS. I Love You world …

2004 Lytton Estate Grenache: New ATP Release, And, An After-Hours Event To Celebrate!

November 13, 2009

A new ATP wine has arrived on shore from the blustery viticultural seas! And yes, I admit that’s a weirdly inappropriate nautical metaphor, but a swashbuckling wine like this deserves … well … an eyepatch!  

CaptainGrenache 

All tomfoolery aside, this really is a wine for the passionate, the daring, the rogueish, the rebel. It’s got fire in its belly, and it recognizes no master but the code of freedom; freedom to live, to laugh, to love! 

Now, of course I highly recommend engaging in all the appropriately oenophilic rituals when experiencing this wine; foil cutter, Ah So, decanter, double-decantation, aeration, consideration of the visual, the olfactory, the first plush dance onto the palate floor … But on the other hand, if you just grabbed this bottle by the neck and jumped into whatever fray awaits you, you’d be fine in my book … I mean, you’d be welcome on my ship! My ship of lost souls, on the seas of the damned! 

PirateDrinkingGrenacheOk, ok, I’m getting a little carried away again. But I’m TELLING you, tasting this wine makes you feel, I don’t know, FREE! It’s emotionally emancipating, and it makes you feel a little dangerous, a little more willing than usual to take that extra step into the sensual unknown …Perhaps it’s the history of the Grenache in our vineyards; they were a discovery. And an unexpected one at that. So really, Ridge was in fact a wild band of explorers! Seriously though, this “discovery: is documented in the winemaker notes for this wine:

Ridge became involved with grenache quite by accident when, in 1972, we first harvested the vines on the eastern hills of Lytton Springs. Though we didn’t know it then, one of the hills—planted in 1902—had a high percentage of grenache, interplanted with small amounts of zinfandel and petite sirah.

Maybe it’s the age of those elder Grenache vines; they date to 1902, an altogether different era. An era when pirates ruled the seas, and tall tales of their adventures captivated the hearts and minds of young readers everywhere, readers who imagined themselves as those brave and daring ruffians flying across the high seas with nothing to think of but the passion on the moment … 

HowardPyle_BookOfPirates

The image above is from Howard Pyle’s Book of Pirates, which was published … you guessed it! 1902. So there! The 2004 Lytton Estate Grenache IS SO a pirate wine.  

Anyhow, here are some reasonably proper tasting notes:

Appearance:

Deep, deep ruby tones, with a nearly black core, and a subtle magenta limn; substantially viscous glaze in the bowl, that somehow still allow for reasonably narrow and swift legs to do their running …

Aromatics:

Spoonful upon spoonful of cocoa powder, shaken over richly ripe black cherries, on a plate piled high with warmed autumnal nutfruits. Very slightly minty, with a faint trace of rootiness as well. Definitely still a little tight in its youth, awaiting a fuller expression of fruit …

Front:

Black cherry, black grape, warmed strawberries, blueberry, loganberry, just a whole panoply of low-tone fruit notes, but all decidedly low-acid in character, with an emphasis on dense and darkly fleshy opulence, as opposed to overt vivacity.

Mid-Palate:

A certain degree of chalky tannins and granular minerality counter-weighting the tongue-side acidity that begins to emerge. Powerful on the palate, without being particularly weighty; a rather enticing yet somewhat unfamiliar integration of force and restraint …

Finish:

By the time I reach the finish, the true decadent power of this wine has become evident; every portion of my palate is covered with a plush duvet of sweetly ripe, yet muscularly structured weaves that twine together fruit, spice, and minerals. It’s as if I’ve dipped my weary tongue into the soothing reward of an autumnal herb and fruit bath at some secluded vineyard spa …

Summary:

It’s a pirate wine, pure and simple. It’s flamboyant, yet determined. Wild, yet clever. At once aggressively forceful, yet deceptively wily and restrained. It doesn’t trust you right away; rather, it reveals its secrets slowly, only after your palate has proven its mettle. Join its crew, stand by its side through thick and thin, and a treasure chest of rubies is yours …

In closing, both our Lytton Springs and Monte Bello Tasting Rooms are celebrating the release of this wine with the wonderful members of our ATP Program on Saturday night. If you’re an ATP member, and you’re in our respective areas, then we certainly hope you’ll be in attendance. And if you’re in our areas, and not yet an ATP member, this might be a good time to consider membership.  I’m just sayin’ …

So, from the deck of my ship, I extend my hook your way, and ask you, “Are you ready for the adventure of a lifetime?” Then join us! For now is no time to be a drivelswigger! It’s time to climb up Jacob’s Ladder, dodge the Hempen Halter, quit Swinging The Lead, and lift your Black Jack full of wine to the heavens! All Hands Hoay!

Oh, and here’s the specs on the event, just in case!

November After Hours – ATP Members Only
November 14
4pm – 7pm at Lytton Springs (Healdsburg) and Monte Bello (Cupertino)

Can’t make it to First Friday, but still want to pick up your ATP shipment? Our After Hours event is just the ticket. Our 2004 Grenache Lytton Estate is king this month, and we’ll pour this new release alongside the 2006 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate cabernet blend. We’ll also be showcasing the 2006 Monte Bello chardonnay; if you haven’t tasted the 2006 vintage yet, you’ll be delighted by this medium bodied chardonnay with notes of ripe pear. And what better pairing than with cheese? Harley Farms joins us at Monte Bello for the evening with their variety of unique cheeses adorned with toppings from flavorful fruits and herbs to edible flowers grown in the garden behind their goat dairy. The Lytton Springs tasting room welcomes Doralice Handal from the Cheese Shop of Healdsburg with an assortment of local artisanal cheeses paired specifically with our wine line-up for the evening.

This event is complimentary for all Ridge ATP Program Members (+1 guest per membership).

The Last Chance Chalkboard!

September 2, 2009

The Last Chance Chalkboard. What is it?

Here’s a little language from our website:

“…This will be a unique opportunity to taste and purchase special older vintage and end-of-vintage wines from the Ridge cellar … Offerings will vary at each location and bottle purchase limits will apply. Please try to arrive early for the best selections, as availability will be very limited…”

And what does that mean?

It means during the course of our Fall Release Weekend, each of our tasting rooms (Lytton Springs and Monte Bello) will be pulling some extraordinary wines from our respective cellars; to be tasted, then purchased, ’til there ain’t no more left! We’ll go one wine at a time, and when all remaining bottles of the current offering have been purchased, we’ll move on to the next wine.

Here’s a quick look at some of the  elusive acquisitions you might snare at the Lytton Springs Tasting Room:

2000 Lytton Springs (only 1 case left; what a vintage!)

2003 Geyserville (just 3 cases on hand!)

1999 Buchignani Zinfandel (only 1 case left of this brilliant old-vine zin!)

2005 Lytton Springs (the last magnums!)

1999 Lytton Estate Grenache (just over 2 cases left!)

1977 York Creek Cabernet Sauvignon (1977! Need we say more?)

And here’s a sampling of some of the rarities you might be able to acquire at the Monte Bello Tasting Room:

2001 Lytton Estate Syrah (less than 3 cases left!)

2003 Pagani Ranch (less than 1 case left!)

2005 Santa Cruz Chardonnay (#2 on Wine Spectator’s Top 100 Wines of the Year!)

1977 York Creek Cabernet Sauvignon (see above!)

2005 Syrah/Grenache (less than 3 cases left!)

1992 Whitten Ranch Carignane (16-year Sonoma Carignane! It doesn’t get rarer than this!)

If you’ll be near Monte Bello or Lytton Springs this weekend, then please come join us in celebarating the new Fall Releases, and prepare thyself for the magic that will be The Last Chance Chalkboard!

The A To Z Of Ridge -or- Thanks Gourmet Magazine!

August 24, 2009

Well, I don’t have the issue in my hands yet, but I’ve just been alerted to the fact that Ridge gets a nice little nod in the September issue of Gourmet Magazine ! (Thanks to Amy Monroe for giving me the heads-up.) If you’re not familiar with itture, Gourmet does a wonderful feature every month in which they use an A-to-Z model for alerting readers to what they describe as ”Twenty-six useful, enduring, or simply fascinating food sites, trends, and other Web phenomena.” So, in the September issue, Z is apparently for Ridge Zinfandel! Most excellent …

And inspired by this alphabeticalizing of our Ridge-ness, I have decided to assemble my own personal lexiconically Ridgeified 26-item catalogue of oenophilically Ridgeish entries … Here goes!

A: Alicante Bouschet, a unique and interplanted varietal regularly appearing on stage at the Pagani Ranch Theater, a local company specializing in delicious plays about old-vine Zinfandel.

B: Barbera, as in the 1996 Ridge California Dry Creek Barbera, as in what I tasted with two very kind and long-time Ridge-o-philes in our picnic area one very happy weekend.

C: Cabernet Sauvignon, as in the star of our Monte Bello  Feature Presentation, now showing at a table near you.

D: Dry Creek Valley,  as in home to our Lytton Springs  vineyards, winery, and tasting room. Also, as in D is for Delicious, which is the word you use when you taste wines at Lytton Springs with Melissa, Sandy, and all the Lytton Springs staff. Who rock, by the way. The staff. At Lytton Springs.

E: Enology, of course! (See Oenology!)

F: Franc, as in Cabernet Franc, legendary Bordeux varietal, and regular content provider to the Monte Bello On-Line Journal of Wine.

G: Grenache. As in the new 2004 Grenache, the new November ATP shipment.

H: As in Harvest! Not so much about Neil Young’s album though, and more about really, really big trucks driving up Monte Bello Road full of really, really good grapes.

I: Inoculations. As in we don’t. Inoculate that is. (See Uninoculated Secondary Fermentation!)

J: Jimsomare, as in the Jimsomare Ranch, and the new 2007 Jimsomare Zinfandel. Colloquially known as the ZinJim.

K: As in K & L Wine Merchants, one of California’s finest wine retailers, and one of our favorite shops!

L: Lots. As in 80% of 36 lots being selected for the 2006 Monte Bello!

M: Merlot, also a great Bordeaux varietal, and also a regular and invaluable cast member of the Monte Bello Revue.

N: Nitrogen, super-important component in soil quality, regularly enhanced via beneficial crop cover.

O: Oenology, of course! (See Enology!)

P: Petite Sirah! As in Dynamite Hill. As in Particularly Potable on the Palate.

Q: Quinoa! As in,  the quinoa-and-grilled-vegetables-with-a-creamy-tarragon-and-dijon-marinade that I recently paired with the 2007 Santa Cruz Mountains Estate Chardonnay.

R: Racking, as in transferring wine from one vessel to another, accordingly separating it from lees and sediment. Not to be confused with Rocking. Which is what our wines do.

S: As in Secondary Fermentation. See Below …

T: Tanks, as in Tank Fermentation. See above and below …

U: As in Uninoculated Secondary Fermentation. See above …

V: As in Vertical Flight, as in tasting a lot of different vintages of Monte Bello  side by side!

W: Wine. Duh.

X: Xylem! As in the xylem of post-veraison berries. Duh.

Y: Yeast, as in Natural Wild-Yeast Fermentation. As in yummy.

Z: Zinfandel!

 

1999 RIDGE California Lytton Estate Grenache: Tasting Via Tasting -or- Food As Analytic -or- How A Dish Can Show A Wine’s Other Side

May 28, 2009

OK, a fairly long-winded title, to say the least. So here’s the gist: Essentially, rather than assessing this particular wine via a more “standard” tasting MO (i.e. tasting notes in the traditional sense), I thought I’d try to explain it in the context of what it was paired with at our table tonight.

Because my missus and I have a five-month baby girl at home (Miss Clara Bay), dinners aren’t quite the same as they used to be; they’re rather more rushed, and we’re often eating quite different meals from one another. Tonight, because Lil’ Miss fell asleep somewhat sooner than she’s been prone to of late, we were able to indulge in a comparatively more relaxed pace, but we definitely had different dishes on our plates. That the ’99 Lytton Estate Grenache performed magnificently, if quite differently, in its assigned role with each meal, is testament to its complexity and flexibility.

Amy (my lovely missus, and, might I say, a possessor of a quite refined palate, admittedly in recovery from the hormonal spoilages of pregnancy!) had the following:

A Mole Burrito in a whole wheat tortilla, with pinto beans, jack and white cheddar cheeses, sour cream, red pepper, and grilled potatoes. (For the purposes of this analysis, we’ll consider this the more “muscular” of the two dishes).

As to myself, I had the following:

Steamed broccoli and cremini mushrooms tossed with olive oil and sprinkled with Sale Alle Erbe Delle Marlunghe (a favorite Italian herb salt), stirred into pre-steamed tofu marinated in Bragg’s Amino Acids, topped with fresh avocado, and served over short grain brown rice. (This, for the same purpose outlined above, shall be deemed the more “elegant” of the two dishes.)

Cutting right to the chase, here’s the amazing thing; contrary to what one would seemingly expect, the “muscular” dish made the wine seem more muscular, and the “elegant” dish drew out the more elegant characteristics! Totally counter-intuitive! Rather than some sort of expected counter-balancing effect at work, the wine somehow performed high-wire acts of culinary empathy; morphing to support and engage the dishes, rather than offset them. Quite wild to experience, actually …

With Amy’s dish, given that there was alot of smoky umami-ish-ness on offer courtesy of the mole sauce, we were hoping for some degree of acidity from the wine, particularly given that we also had sour cream, potatoes, and beans to contend with. And while the acids certainly did their job, it wasn’t what one noticed about the wine. Rather, the Grenache was just flat out charitable with even more umami-ish-ness! It was just one big, savory happy family! It was as if the mole sauce (admittedly crafted elsewhere) had in fact been made with this wine!

With my dish, there were earthy notes from the mushrooms certainly, but for the most part, what came up off my plate with a more grainy (brown rice), green (broccoli & avocado), slightly sweet (steamed tofu), and slightly tangy (Bragg’s) array of notes. And what did the wine up and do? It went all floral and elegant! Tons of beautiful dried jasmine and lavender notes, everywhere! And tons of herbality, granularity, and gently sweet and tangy fruit! Stunning!

In short, this is just a ridiculously complex, and wickedly flexible culinary companion.

And on another note, it’s yet another example of how conservative our winemaker’s projections of longevity can often be. According  to Paul Draper’s label notes from 2001, this wine should have been at its best between 2002 and 2007! I think it’s safe to say that, as far as Amy and I were concerned, this wine, in ’09, was perfect, tonight!


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