Posts Tagged ‘Lytton Springs’

Our Winter Wineland Winner!

January 24, 2012

If you were fortunate enough to be in Sonoma county January 14th & 15th, then I’m guessing you probably attended Winter Wineland, an absolutely delightful region-wide bacchanal of oeno-epic proportions.

Hopefully, you were able to visit our Lytton Springs Estate as part of the experience. If you did, you would have been able to enjoy a very groovy presentation on the importance of soil to our wines. This Soil Exploration exhibit was unique, informative, and perhaps best of all, it came with a contest! That’s right, analyze and learn about four distinct soil representations of four of our most legendary vineyard properties, and then try and match the soil to the wine. Winner (selected from the correct entries) gets a Ridge goody bag.

And I am happy to report that we have a winner! She is Melania Lonchyna, and she is our official 2012 Winter Wineland Soil Exploration Context Winner. Congratulations Melania! Here’s what you’re receiving as your prize:

Thanks to everyone who visited us during Winter Wineland, and especially to everyone who participated in our contest! As far as we’re concerned, you’re all winners! Except that Melania is the winner. But after that, you’re all winners!

Oh, What A Wine We Had! Winter Wineland 2012 …

January 19, 2012

Our intrepid shutterbug was at it again!

What, didn’t notice her? There, in the shadows!

She’s capturing the heat of the moment as it shows in your eyes!

She’s like Darkman, everywhere and nowhere, everyone and no one.

She’s The Shadow.

Where oh where oh where is Shadow?
Where oh where oh where is Shadow?
Where oh where oh where is Shadow?
Where can Shadow be?

She is the eye in the sky. She is your roundabout. She would give everything she owns.

She is Brandye Alexander, and she was there when you were there.

When you were at Winter Wineland!

We Feel The Earth Move Under Our Feet: Lytton Springs & Winter Wineland!

January 9, 2012

Winter Wineland is undeniably one of the biggest events to hit Sonoma Wine Country in any given year, and this year it’s going to be even bigger. Why? Because it’s the 20th Anniversary!

The theme for this very significant 2012 celebration is Wine ~ Art ~ Education, and each participating winery will  be either hosting an artist, or offering a special educational component to their tasting experience.

Winter Wineland
Wine ~ Art ~ Education
January 14 – 15, 2012
11am – 4pm each day

Hmmm … Art, or Education?

Tough call for Ridge, but in the end, we’ve selected Education as our governing theme, and the team at Lytton Springs has come up with something really and truly extraordinary.

As you probably already know, single-vineyard winemaking is at the absolute core of our endeavor at Ridge Vineyards, and our belief in the importance of terroir, and the honest, authentic representation thereof, drives just about everything we do in both the vineyard and the winery. The importance of our foundational belief in accurately, transparently, faithfully carrying the vineyard to the bottle with as little interference as is possible cannot be  overestimated, and without this faith, this discipline, this credo, questions of sustainability, organics, etc, are essentially rendered hollow. Sustaining a property you don’t believe in is but an exercise in process, nothing more, nothing less. For Ridge, we don’t farm sustainably and/organically for any reason other than that it’s the absolute best and most effective way to both honor the land, and make the best wine possible. To make wines of place is to embrace natural methods and traditions; to embrace natural methods and traditions is to make wines of place.

The word itself can be controversial; terroir.

But taken literally, it’s essentially just a reference to the earth, and as such, we thought perhaps the most illuminating answer to the question of education at Winter Wineland would be to devise a presentation revolving around the earth itself; the soil: that pure miasma of nutrient, mineral, and history from which a vine springs forth to eventually present its offspring at the altar of vinification.

But lest ye fear a heavy-handed dogma-laden session in the classroom, fear not!

The endlessly imaginative team at Lytton Springs has instead devised a rather disarmingly playful way to enjoy both your wines AND your education. After tasting four single-vineyard wines produced from four of our most legendary and highly regarded vineyard sites, guests will have the opportunity to experience a soil exhibit featuring actual soil samples from each of the relevant four vineyards, with accompanying text describing the conditions, characteristics, and qualities of each property.

Once digested (wine AND knowledge!), guests will be given the opportunity to try and match the soils to the wines via the submission of a contest entry. Once the event is over, entries will be reviewed, and a winner will be drawn from the correct submissions. Hopefully needless to say, the prize will be … ahem … groovy.

To see our calendar entry for this amazing event, please click here, and to skip right on ahead and purchase tickets, please click here.

See you at Winter Wineland!

Becoming YOUR Bottle …

December 15, 2011

The bottling line. Does it conjure anything for you? Me neither. At least, it didn’t used to, before I worked on one. Then when I did, for the first time, bottle, I thought it was mesmerizing. At first. Then, I thought it was tiring. Long, tiring, even kind of boring. It was too physical to be meditative, too repetitive to be interesting. So again, no conjuring. The bottling line. No resonance.

Then I received this picture …

The picture came from Will Thomas, our viticulturist up at Lytton Springs. This is a shot of the bottling line at Lytton; they’re bottling the Ponzo Zinfandel. And for some reason, it really struck me. The bottling line.

It occurred to me that there is something that happens on the bottling line that is completely, utterly unique amidst all the processes involved in the making of wine.

It is on the bottling line that wine — a lot of wine; gallons upon gallons upon gallons of it — transforms from wine in the grand abstract, to the very specific reality of YOUR bottle of wine. On the bottling line is where that grand mass of liquid, housed in some enormous tank, or spread out across a multitude of anonymous barrels, becomes YOUR personal bottle of wine. YOUR bottle of wine is born on the bottling line.

Who can know now what might happen to that bottle, what might become of it, what unforgettable experience or ritual it might play a role in? It might be the wine on the table at the restaurant you dine in on the night you ask your lover to become your spouse. It might be the first wine you taste in the first hours after your first child is born. It might be the first wine you serve with the first holiday dinner you cook the first year after your grandmother passes away. It might be the wine you pour on your father’s grave as they return him to the earth from whence he came. It might be the wine you drink to celebrate the 50th anniversary of your wedding. It might be the wine you give your son the night he becomes a father. It might be the wine your share with a best friend you reconnect with after 20 years of not talking. It might be the wine you drink with a great loaf of bread, an excellent hunk of cheese, and a really good book, all by yourself, on some beach somewhere, on some anonymous Sunday, some year, in some country, that is in fact one of the most pleasant days of your life.

That wine may have just been born on the bottling line.

Picking Lytton West: The Movie!

September 29, 2011

My time experiencing #Harvest2011 up at Lytton Springs this past weekend concluded with an extraordinary opportunity; the chance to tag along with the vineyard teams as they picked at Lytton West!

My phone started ringing at about 5:30am. It was Will Thomas, viticulturist at Lytton, rousting me out. In 15 minutes, I was outside the hotel, shrouded in the damp morning mist, coffee cup in hand, awaiting the arrival of his truck. He pulled up, and I got in. In the dim light, he pointed out on his vineyard map the blocks getting picked that morning: Block 33 (Carignane) and Block 45 (Zinfandel).

We drove past the Lytton Springs winery, turned off the main road, and began to wind through the vineyards. We pulled up and stopped at what I can best describe as a compound of sorts; the epicenter of the vineyard crew’s lives during the harvest, where they eat and sleep, and the jumping-off point for a new morning’s picking.

When we got to the blocks to be picked, Will hit the ground at a quick pace, prowling the rows like a hungrily alert panther, eyes darting this way and that, seeing all.

Acutely aware of my interloper/outside status, I went off on my own as soon as possible, in hopes of both observing unawares, and staying out of everyone’s way. Picking began in the Carignane block.

It was a  fantastically beautiful morning, and dewdrops shivered in anticipation of the sun’s light beginning to seep into the vinerows.

If you’ve never seen a vineyard crew at work, it’s quite remarkable. You’d be utterly and completely astonished at how rapidly they work. I’ve experienced it countless times, and I am still flabbergasted every time. Almost before it started, it was over. Block 33 was picked.

And the sun had barely crested the hills.

I got back into the truck with Will, and we drove to the next block; zinfandel.

And suddenly again, with a rapidity impossible to describe, it was over. Block 45 had been harvested.

For the crew, their day was over, but for David Gates (Vice President, Vineyard Operations) and Will Thomas, the day was only just beginning. The math, science, and technology of harvest is a whole other game altogether, and it begins with entering vital information into our systems; varietal, block, tonnage, etc. Without this info coming in on time, the winery can’t be prepared for the arrival of the fruit. David and Will put their heads together, and did the math.

When Will finally dropped me off back at my hotel, I was tired. Not physically tired (after all, I hadn’t actually been picking!), not sleep-deprived tired (5:30am isn’t all that bad after all!), but brain-tired; exhausted by all I’d witnessed, and weighted down by all I’d learned. I felt wonderful!

My challenge then was to try and assemble all the raw photographic material I’d collected into something that would do justice to the experience, but as I sifted through it all, I found it nearly impossible to fully create anything that could accurately express my admiration for our team’s performance in the vineyards; they work so extraordinarily hard, pick so masterfully clean, and consistently deliver such outstanding fruit. I was at a loss. So I did very little. I simply strung together my series of mini-vids, and let them speak for themselves. I hope you enjoy this!

To drink a Ridge wine has always been, for me, an intensely experiential event; my future experience of our wines has been immeasurably enhanced by my time in the vineyards. I offer my sincere gratitude for having been granted the opportunity. To all on the crews, to Will, and to David Gates, I say thank you!

Harvest 2011: Everybody Must Get …

September 15, 2011

One of the things that has always impressed me about Ridge Vineyards, and particularly about the good folks who work for Ridge Vineyards, is the extent to which not only does everyone wear a great array of hats around here, but that everyone wants to!

In no realm is this more evident than when it comes to the actual practice of producing wine, and at no time of the year is this more evident than Harvest. Everyone gets into the act, and for those not directly part of the production teams, it’s a tremendous learning opportunity for all concerned.

This year, even our Regional Sales Managers (the “RSMs,” colloquially) got the chance to get their hands dirty, logging some heavy miles in the vineyards and in the winery. And mind you, these are Planes, Trains, and Automobiles folks; these are the ones constantly on the move, city to city to city, wine dinner to wine dinner to wine dinner, wine shop to wine shop to wine shop. They are, by definition, urbanites. The cities are their bread and butter, the roads and the skies their realms. They accrue miles like kids collect Tetris points. They need new tires every four months. They do not have permanent addresses. Ok, that last part isn’t true, but what is true is that they are most decidedly not farmers.

And yet, just last week, there they were, heading out into the vineyards.

And in good company too; alongside RSMs Dan Buckler, Christina Donley, and Michael Torino, were David Gates (VP of Vineyard Operations), Kyle Theriot (Monte Bello Viticulturist) and Eric Baugher (VP of Winemaking, Monte Bello); a formidable cadre of viticultural knowledge, and a great team to work beside.

David Gates runs the show in our vineyards, and he led the RSM crew on a sampling expedition, a key endeavor as we near the official beginnings of Harvest 2011.

If you’re not familiar with sampling and why it’s done, you might want to check a previous post (found here) but it’s essentially the practice of collecting grape samples from multiple locations in the vineyards, to test them for progress. The grapes are sorted into small Ziploc bags …

crushed (being done below by Regional Sales Managers Michael Torino and Dan Buckler) …

…and once turned into juice …

… tested.

Here is Regional Sales Manager Christina Donley, assessing some juice with a refractometer, a field device used to determine sugar levels (Brix) in grapes …

These RSMs came to work, and work they did; not just at Monte Bello, but also up at our Lytton Springs Estate …

and even all the way down south to Paso Robles, where they were greeted, hosted, and put to work by legendary grower and long-time Ridge partner Benito Dusi …

Eric Baugher with Benito Dusi

 
So next time you see a Ridge Vineyards wine on a shelf, or on a wine list, remember that it wasn’t a salesperson who got it placed there, it was a grape sampler!
 
 
 
(Special thanks to Heidi Nigen, our Marketing Manager, for the great pics!)

Fall Release Event at Lytton Springs Next Saturday! It’s Goin’ ON!

September 6, 2011

(Spoiler Alert: This post is about the Fall Release Event at Lytton Springs on 9.10.11!)

There are a lot of things going on at Lytton Springs right now. 

For example, as I write this, many miles away in the wilds of Santa Cruz, the moon is probably rising in the brightly dusking sky above the Healdsburg vineyards …

And when the sun rises tomorrow, the Lytton grapes will again be in full swing, and looking beautiful …

And just as there are new vintages emerging on the vines, so too are there new vintages emerging in the bottle …

The 2009 Lytton Springs is dropping. And rising. Dropping and Rising. Dropping mad science like Galileo dropped the orange.

Or, put another way, Three. It’s the magic number.

2009 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Springs
2009 Ridge Vineyards Pagani Ranch
2009 Ridge Vineyards York Creek

Three. It’s the magic number. No more, no less.

Now you may try to subtract it
But it just won’t go away
Three times one?
(What is it? )
(One, two, three! )
And that’s the magic number

Three new vintages, three new zinfandels. All part of the Fall Release Celebration. You were just here, won’t you, at Monte Bello? And you’re just about there, aren’t you, at Lytton Springs?  

Lord knows you ought to be; this is gon’ be special … And,we’re celebrating the release of not only the three zinfandels above, but also new Monte Bello vintages; both Cabernet and Chardonnay!

And dig this…

Station #1

To pair with Chardonnay

Rock Shrimp & Scallop Sausage, Vanilla Bean Buerre Blanc & Cilantro Pistou

Station #2

To pair with Zinfandel

Sonoma Duck Sausage Kissed with Smoke, Cipollini Onion & Cherry Chutney

Station #3

To Pair with Zinfandel

Chicken-Apple Sausage, Apple Kraut, Soft White Bun

Station #4

To pair with Zinfandel

Sicilian Pork Sausage, Silky Polenta, Grill Roasted Pepperonata

Station #5

To pair with Cabernet

Sonoma Lamb Sausage with Piquillo Peppers & Chickpeas, on a Cumin Seed Bun

I’m sorry, did someone just say Vanilla Bean Buerre Blanc ?

The point being, you NEED this event. You NEED an entire barfull of chardonnay glasses …

…full of chardonnay.

And you NEED to drink wine in a BARREL ROOM …

…because that’s just hip.

What is hip?

Hipness is
what it is!
 

Join us, won’t you?

For more details, and to purchase tickets, please click here. The Fall Release Event at Lytton Springs.

Overpowered by Funk. Funk out.

(images courtesy of Brandye Alexander)

The Last Chance Monte Bello …

August 30, 2011

It’s her last chance
Her timing’s all wrong
Her last chance
She can’t idle this long
Her last chance
Turn her over and go
Pullin’ out of the last chance texaco
The last chance
–from “The Last Chance Texaco” by Rickie Lee Jones

Don’t YOU idle too long, and don’t let YOUR timing be wrong!

There is a three-vintage vertical of Monte Bello waiting for you just around the next turn, and this is your last chance to pull out and find it!

And this is not just any three-vintage vertical, mind you. This is a three-DECADE, three-vintage vertical!

 This is the 1985 Monte Bello (“…great intensity to its mineral and currant flavors … will age gracefully for years … Wine Spectator, 2001), the 1995 Monte Bello (Top 100 Wines of the Year, Wine & Spirits Magazine), and the 2001 Monte Bello (99 points, Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate)!

And this majestic trio will be prefaced by another three-vintage vertical, the 2004, 2005, and 2006 vintages of our Estate Cabernet!

Have we lost our minds???

No! It’s just #Cabernet Day!

You can read an in-depth blog post about Cabernet Day here, or you can just cut to the quick and get your tickets here.

If you love Cabernet, this is an unprecedented opportunity to celebrate both in virtual solidarity with like-minded believers around the globe, and right here at home, at either of our estates: Lytton Springs or Monte Bello. Both don’t delay, Cabernet Day is this Thursday, and there are only a few tickets left.

Turn her over and go, it’s the last chance Monte Bello!

10 Questions For Paul Draper: Number 6!

August 22, 2011

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

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

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

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

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.
 

 

 

10 Questions with Paul Draper: #5!

August 19, 2011

The question seems almost inevitable, and today Paul addresses it; the question of alcohol levels in zinfandel. Enjoy Q & A # 5 in our special ten-question series with Paul Draper!

5-    Your Zinfandel based wines such as Geyserville and Lytton Springs have low alcohol levels as compared to other wines made with Zinfandel. Why is it so and how can they age so gracefully for so many years?

 Zinfandel must be grown in warmer climates like Napa, Sonoma or Paso Robles to develop the fruit flavors that give it its character.  As with the over-ripe Cabernets of Napa today, Zinfandel only needs to be fully ripe, not over-ripe, to produce the most complex, age-worthy wines.  It does ripen quickly if days of very warm temperatures come during harvest; however, if you are sampling carefully and are determined not to make over-ripe wines, that can usually be avoided.  We have worked with over fifty old-vine Zinfandel vineyards over the last forty years.  The Geyserville we first made in 1966 and it has proven to be one of the most consistently fine wines. Likewise we first made the Lytton Springs in 1972 and it has rivaled the Geyserville in its consistency of quality and ageability. We took over the Geyserville vineyard in 1990 and purchased Lytton Springs in 1991 because of the quality of those terroirs.  All but a few of the others were dropped after a year or after ten years.  These wines come from particularly great sites.

***Do you have a question for Paul? Let us know! wine@ridgewine.com***

(“10 Questions for Paul Draper” questions composed by Rodrigo Mainardi of Mistral, Brazlian Distributor for Ridge Vineyards)

Paul Draper grew up on an eighty-acre farm in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. After attending the Choate School and receiving a degree in philosophy from Stanford University, he lived for two years in northern Italy. Later he attended the University of Paris and traveled extensively in France, gaining practical experience in traditional winemaking. In the mid-sixties, with a close friend, he set up a small winery in the coast range of Chile and produced several vintages of cabernet sauvignon. He joined Ridge Vineyards in 1969, and presently resides atop Monte Bello Ridge with his wife Maureen and daughter Caitlin. He is known for his crafting of fine cabernets and chardonnays from the Monte Bello estate vineyards, and as a pioneer in the production of long-lived, complex zinfandels.

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