Posts Tagged ‘Paso Robles’

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!)

Harvest 2010: The Dusi Ranch!

September 14, 2010

As I noted in a previous post, Harvest 2010 is picking up steam here at Monte Bello, with the first arrival of fruit from the Dusi Ranch in Paso Robles coming in just late last week. The fruit from this property is always a joy to sample; it’s quite an unusual vineyard, both in general, and in our specific portfolio. For one thing, it’s planted entirely to zinfandel, which is extremely unusual for a Californian vineyard with 80+ year-old vines. It’s also the only vineyard we work with that is located south of the Monte Bello vineyards.

Anyhow, since we’re talking Paso, I thought I’d share some recent pics that our Marketing Manager Heidi Nigen took; she was down in Paso with our VP of Vineyard Operations David Gates last week, taking a preliminary look at the Dusi fruit in expectation of its imminent arrival.

Take Me Home, Paso Roads ...

The Dusi Ranch

Vineyard

First RIDGE Zinfandel Paso Robles: 1967
Location: 3 miles south of Paso Robles, east of 101.
Elevation: 760′
Soils: Rocky and gravelly with some areas of light soil
Age of vines: Zinfandel, planted 1923. (40 acres).
Training: Head trained (no trellis), spur pruned. Dry farmed.
Yields: 1.5 – 2.0 tons/acre
Climate: Hot days, cool nights.
Exposure: Full exposure in all directions
Owner: Benito Dusi

History

Dusi Ranch is the only Ridge vineyard south of the San Francisco Bay area. It is planted entirely to zinfandel, unusual in a vineyard more than eighty years old. Purchased by Sylvester and Catarina Dusi in 1924, the property has been farmed for many years by their son Benito, the present owner.

Benito Dusi!

Horizontal Multi-Designation Zinfandel Tasting With Friends Of The Winemakers

June 30, 2009

This past weeskend, I had the great pleasure of hosting a very interesting group, and presenting them with a very interesting tasting flight. The group in question was Friends of the Winemakers. Per their website, they are “a non-profit corporation whose purpose is to preserve the history of winemaking and the enjoyment of wine in the Santa Clara Valley and the Santa Cruz Mountains; to share the knowledge with others; and to stimulate interests about vineyards, varieties of wine, and the process of wine production.” The flight in question was a horizontal multi-designation zinfandel tasting. By “horizontal” I mean that all 6 wines were of the same vintage; in this case, 2006. And by “multi-designation” I mean that each zinfandel we tasted was comprised of fruit from one vineyard only, and each wine was from a different vineyard designation.

RIDGE Vineyards practices what we refer to as single-site winemaking. Save for one exception, all the wines in our portfolio are comprised, as noted above, of grapes grown on one single vineyard; accordingly, most of our wines are named for the vineyard property, as opposed to, say, the varietal. Given that we deploy a notably non-interventionist methodology in the vineyard (hand-harvesting, head-training, dry-farming, etc.), each vineyard that we work with has very different characteristics on offer as far as micro-climate, topography, soil type, vine history, etc. Meaning that the differences in taste between each wine ideally have to do with differences in the vineyards. Put another way, we practice single-site winemaking as a way to try and capture, as best as possible, the singular qualities of any particular vineyard property. To say this is to capture “terroir” is to invite critical debate to be sure, as the term has become rather loaded; suffice it to say that our wines taste the way they do primarily because of where they come from. If thats’ terroir, so be it.

Anyhow, the idea behind this special tasting was to try and showcase some key ways in which single-site winemaking can affect the character of a wine. For this 6-wine flight, I set up three sets of two wines to taste side-by-side, with each duo being selected to effect a compare-and-contrast between two sides of a spectrum.

For the first pair, I selected the 2006 Ponzo as an example of a Cool-Climate zinfandel, and I selected the 2006 Paso Robles as an example of a Warm-Climate zinfandel; for the second duo, I selected the 2006 Pagani Ranch as an example of an Old-Vine Interplanted zinfandel blend, and the 2006 East Bench as a Younger Vine Solo Varietal zinfandel; for the final duo, I selected our “Flagship” zinfandels, the 2006 Lytton Springs, and the 2006 Geyserville.

I am happy to report that in each case the collective response to the pairings was that all involved agreed there were marked differences between the two wines being compared. To my palate, the distinctions were very clear; in the first duo, the Ponzo, being a cool-climate offering, is leaner, more elegant, with a heightened focus on acidity and spice as opposed to opulent fruit. The Paso Robles, conversely, being a warmer-climate offering, is all about fruit; ripe fruit, sweet fruit, big fruit. In the second duo, the Pagani is multi-tiered and multi-dimensional, showcasing a veritable potpourri of aromatics and spices, yet its bodyweight and mouthful are comparatively subtle; the East Bench, on the other hand, is all adolescent muscularity. It’s big, and firm, and structured, and it showcases great depth. In the final duo, we see, I think, the clearest proof-of-concept of just how important site-specificity is; on paper, these wines are very similar. They’re both zin blends backed by complimentary Rhone varietals. They’re both RIDGE wines. The vineyards are located within just a few miles of one another. And so on and so on. But yet they’re very different wines! Soil type is the primary answer here; the two properties share very little in the way of common soil type, and accordingly, they show very different characters. Again to my palate, the Lytton Springs is a quintessential expression of California fruit; fruit in all its opulent, fleshy, sweet beauty. Not too ripe, not too plush, just plain delicious. And the Geyserville is all about complexity; tertiary flavors, multi-dimensions, the spice, the earth, the rusticity. Together, these two “flagships” form the twin pillars of our zinfandel program.

And that was our Horizontal Multi-Designation Zinfandel Tasting! It was a lovely tasting, and I thank the Friends of the Winemakers for the support and their participation.


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