Posts Tagged ‘2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay’

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!

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!

Ridge Monte Bello Chardonnay & The Luxist Awards!

June 21, 2010

Lovely, lovely article on our 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay (Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello Chardonnay: Relying on Nature and Tradition), and it comes in the context of us being nominated for an award from the good folks over at Luxist. How’s this for a mission statement?

Welcome to Luxist, a web site dedicated to covering the best the world has to offer on a variety of luxury and fine living topics. We feature real estate, trends in travel, the art world, shopping, fashion, gourmet food, wine and the spending habits of the rich and famous.

Well, what company we’re running in! In all honesty though, Luxist does a wonderful job of seeking out a wide array of fascinating subjects, their roster of writers reads like a veritable who’s who of the form, and mainly, it’s really quite an honor to have been nominated, since it’s in fact a Reader’s Choice Award!

You can read the article here:

http://www.luxist.com/2010/06/16/ridge-vineyards-monte-bello-chardonnay-relying-on-nature-and-tr/

And you can vote here:

http://www.luxist.com/awards-vote/wine-awards/

Cheers to you Luxist, and cheers to your readers!

Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase & Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting! Saturday!

April 16, 2010

This Saturday we are very pleased to be hosting a wonderful event, our Monte Bello Assemblage Tasting, during which we’ll be pouring not only the current assemblage of the 2009 Monte Bello (slated for release in 2012) and the 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay (recently awarded 95 points by Wine Spectator!), but also an extraordinary trio of back-vintage Monte Bellos as part of our ongoing Monte Bello Half-Bottle Showcase Series (you can read about the previous edition here).

This time around, we’ll be pouring the 1990, 1992, and 1994 Monte Bellos from 375 ml bottles, offering an unparalleled point-of-entry into the mysteries and majesties of ageable wines and their bottle-format-specific maturation rates. (My current tasting notes are below.)

On hand to host this fine event, in addition to our lovely Tasting Room Staffers, will be members of our Production Team, including Paul Draper himself, alongside our celebrated Vice President of Vineyard Operations David Gates, and Shun Ishikubo, our Assistant Production Manager.

As to event specs, here’s the gist: the event is $30/person for the general public, $15/person for members of our ATP and ZList programs, and complimentary to Monte Bello Collector members(+1 guest per membership). For our non-member guests, the event fee will be refunded to those who join the Monte Bello Collector futures program the day of the event, and for our ATP and Zlist members, the $15 event fee will be applied to any Monte Bello purchased in the Tasting Room. (For more details about this event, please click here.)

And now, on to some tasting notes!

1990 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Deep crimson in the glass, with a vivid cranberry-salmon limn, showing medium-light viscosity in the legs – rustic aromatics, rich with plum succulence and forest-floor herbality and earth — incredibly supple point-of-entry, with astonishingly youthful acidity and utterly seamless tannins — hints of raspberry and  plum mid-palate, with some cassis and tobacco interwoven throughout the palate spread –a lingering woodsiness redolent of sweet pipe tobacco wraps around the core  of meaty stew, concentrated broth, and dried fruits that makes up the elegantly weighted finish, as the mineral-driven chalkiness of the integrated tannins lays languidly across the tongue — remarkably intact for a 20-year half-bottle, and absolutely ready to drink, with no signs of degradation, only the fine emergence of secondary and tertiary maturation characteristics.

1992 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Gorgeous cherry hues sparkle in the bowl; deep, almost black cherry in the belly, widening out to a bright red cherry limn; notably adhesive viscosity in the legs — deep, dark aromatics, rich with cocoa, chocolate liquor, graphite, and black and blue berries — big, round, warm, and supple at point-of-entry, showing itself as a plush and fleshy Monte Bello right away — tannins are finely ground and well-integrated, though they definitely dominate the acidity, which takes a comparatively restrained role in the construct — Sweet and decadent fruit notes are tremendously expressive mid-palate, though without being cloying or overtly grandiose; raspberry and blackberry characteristics dominate, in that way of exhibiting both sweet fruit and woodsy seed notes — the finish is singularly mouth-coating, and the teeth-to-inner-lip tannins established at point-of-entry are still swelling in intensity at this point — the finish is long and warm, and exceedingly decadent. While certainly drinkable now, and despite the reserved intensity of the acidity, the sheer opulence of the fruit suggests this is still developing and maturing.

1994 Monte Bello (375 ml)

Black to red plum hues display brilliantly in the bowl, moving from dark to light from belly to limn, with quick-moving legs bespeaking an elegant body-weight on the palate — wildly exotic aromatics that, while almost bordering on funky, at the same time exhibit utterly archetypal old-world cab characteristics; anise, currant, tobacco, campfire wood and smoke, mint, coffee, fleshy black olives, and a multiplicity of black fruits, in particular — pointed without being austere, structured without being clumsy, the beams-and-girders are front-and-center at point-of-entry, while a horde of cocoa-powder-dusted and dark-chocolate-covered fruits await their turn mid-palate — acid and tannin are perfectly balanced throughout, and the finish, while shorter than some vintages, is seamlessly palate-coating and completely devoid of both inappropriately angular distractions and short-changing hollownesses — in short, rich, complex, fully saturated, and if anything, still young, though very, very drinkable now as well.

A Sublime Flight Of Fancy: Tasting Notes Below! (2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay, 1999 Lytton Springs, 1995 Monte Bello, 1988 Monte Bello)

January 26, 2010

2006 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello Chardonnay

Appearance:

Pale gold in the glass, framed by a white gold halo, brilliantly limpid, showing delightfully eccentric leg behaviour unified by a light viscosity …

Aromatics:

Strong tropicality right away, with hints of crème fraîche, orange liqueur and hand-crafted soft caramel …

Front:

Viscous, slightly sweet, deeply concentrated, warm, weighty, and calling up decidedly favorable reminisces of fondues and beurre blancs past …

Mid-Palate:

Wickedly meritorious acidity co-mingling with complex mineral components and yeast characteristics that merge perfectly with integrated barrel notes …

Finish:

Somewhat unexpectedly elegant, almost timid, at least in context of the full-structure-weight implied by the forceful entrance; acidity is certainly present, and the finish is appropriately complex, but it tails off slightly, growing incrementally narrower in scope as it extends …

Summary:

A beautifully built and tremendously complex wine, but definitely a wine that will benefit from some bottle maturation, as it’s still a little top-heavy as regards revealing its full expression …

1999 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Springs

Appearance:

Rich, concentrated burgundy hues throughout, halo’d by a gorgeous red-rubyfruit limn, and evidencing medium-weight legs …

Aromatics:

Sweet fruit, sandalwood and balsa; elegant, playful, buoyant, vibrant fruits; the bouquet literally jumps out of the glass asking to be noticed …

Front:

Ripe notes right on entry, but without being cloying, overly viscous, or weightedly sweet; utterly delicious!

Mid-Palate:

Beautifully resolved tannins and fully integrated acidity join complex and harmonious mid-tone fruits in a seamless blend …

Finish:

Complex, fully intact, and completely pleasing!

Summary:

Quite possibly Best In Show …

1995 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Appearance:

Impenetrably dark plum belly, firm yet graceful legs, pale and dusky ruby limn …

Aromatics:

Muted and subtle wood notes, leather and suede, baked red fruits …

Front:

Exceptionally generous mouthfeel at entry, with very firm tannins and an almost icy acidity; brisk and exhilarating …

Mid-Palate:

A virtual gumbo of concentrated fruit, soulful spice, all braced by a cavalierly buoyant architecture …

Finish:

The revelation of a tannic superstructure that is decidedly young still, but happily offset by acidity and alcohol components that have harmonized to pitch-perfection …

Summary:

Still young, already luscious, potential to spare …

1988 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Appearance:

An interweaving of brighter cranberry hues and warmer burgundy tones, sparkling in the swift yet stylishly controlled legs, and rippling out towards the opaquely bright strawberry highlights in the limn …

Aromatics:

Eucalyptal and minty, with counterbalancing hints of braised meats, sweet barbecue sauce, and mincemeat, all hovered over by the decadence of poached pear …

Front:

Rusticity and earthiness immediately on offer, with some still-blazing campfire woodsiness and smoke …

Mid-Palate:

The emergence of a complex assemblage of singularly fruit-driven characteristics; most notably Michigan cherries, calimyrna fig, dried apricot, and hints of quince …

Finish:

Elegant, unobtrusive, and impeccably gracious …

Summary:

From a structural standpoint, a fully intact wine with years of stability still to come, though the subtle arsenal of fruit traits balanced against the secondary and tertiary spice and herb components does somewhat beg a sooner sampling …

Do You Know The Way To Big Sur? -or- Big Sur Wine & Food Festival!

November 6, 2009

Any time Wine, Food, and Big Sur show up in the same sentence, I’m bound to be a very happy, happy guy. And all three of these stars will soon be in both linguistic and physio-realistic alignment, so if you have any way of making it to Big Sur this weekend, I strongly encourage you to attend The Big Sur Wine & Food Festival.  Now dig this …

wineview

And if that view isn’t enough to tempt you, consider the Mission Statement for the event:

Mission Statement

The Big Sur Food and Wine Festival is a celebration of the creative culinary arts and professional, intimate hospitality of this world-renowned region.  We aim to promote wine and food from our friends and neighbors as best as possible, and in as organic and low carbon-footprint a way as possible.

What’s not to love about that?

But if you need still more convincing, consider these lines from Jack Kerouac’s starkly morose, harrowingly poignant, and yet strangely beautific novel “Big Sur”

Ah, life is a gate, a way, a path to Paradise anyway, why not live for fun and joy and love or some sort of girl by a fireside, why not go to your desire and LAUGH…

BigSurKerouacBigSurCabin

(above: shots of Kerouac’s novel, and the cabin he lived in while writing the book, and which serves as the setting for most of the novel)

Ok, ok, let’s suppose, just as a theory, that it’s gonna take the BIG guns to get you to BIG Sur. How about a panel on regional Bordeaux-style-blends featuring Ridge, Justin, Bernardus, and Chappellet, with our very own Paul Draper on hand to speak? Would that work? Click here for more

And lastly, lastly, lastly, just dig THIS! Ridge has donated a 6L of 20o4 Monte Bello to be auctioned at the event! For a little more on this rather delectable wine, check this link out! And I mean, c’mon, six liters! Of Monte Bello! 2004!

Alright, alright, I’ve had my fun. We all know that if any of us was anywhere NEAR Big Sur this weekend, we’d be at this event. I was just having a little fun. And well, sort of internally cursing the fact that I won’t be there. But on  the other hand, I’ll be up on Monte Bello, and it’ll be gloriously, moodily fall days, and we’ll be tasting the new 2006 Old School, and the new 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay, and, well, sigh …

Sunset Magazine Awards Monte Bello Chardonnay “Best In The West” Top Honors!

October 27, 2009

Fantastic news! Sunset Magazine has just awarded top honors to our 2006 Monte Bello Chardonnay in their Sunset Wine Awards 2009 issue!

 

 

wine-awards-winners-1109-m

Here is a snippet of what they wrote:

White:  Ridge Monte Bello Chardonnay 2006 (Santa Cruz Mountains; $60) Why we chose it: Lively citrus brightens classic golden apple. Runners up: Lynmar “La Sereinité” Chardonnay 2006 (Russian River Valley; $70) // Schramsberg “J. Schram” Brut Rosé 2000 (North Coast; $130)

And you can read the whole article here.

Thanks Sunset Magazine!


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