Posts Tagged ‘Rhone Rangers’

Ten Thousand Reasons Why You Should Attend The Rhone Rangers Winemakers Dinner

March 19, 2013

Reason #1: David Gates.

David Gates is our VP of Vineyard Operations. Colloquially, our Vineyard Manager.

David Gates, Ridge Vineyards VP of Vineyard Operations

David Gates, Ridge Vineyards VP of Vineyard Operations

I have had the pleasure of hosting David Gates for probably ten thousand tastings, and I can easily say, without exaggeration, that I have enjoyed every one. And I have learned from every one. Never has more impactful education been offered in more congenial fashion. When tasting with  David Gates, you don’t even realize how much vino-edu-osmosis is occurring; you’re just having fun. Then you’ll be walking down the street some few days later, and suddenly, you’ll realize you understand Deficit Irrigation.

Bam! Deficit Irrigation. Thank you David Gates.

David will be representing Ridge Vineyards and The Rhone Rangers on Friday, March 22nd, at the annual Rhone Rangers Winemakers Dinner. For this reason alone, I heartily recommend you strive to attend.

Don’t need the other 9,999 reasons? Great, tickets here.

RhoneRangers

Still feeling a woo deficit? Meaning, still need wooing? Enter the food …

Reason #2: The Girl and the Fig

If David is not enough, if your appetite for experientially infusive oenophillic passionista sustenanary sustenance simply cannot find satisfactory resolution for its predatorily ravenous aesthetic sensation maw, then consider the gustatory beneficence on offer at this tremendous event. Do you know The Girl & The Fig? To dine at their table is to know that transcendence is possible. The menu:

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-Salad of roasted local mushrooms, mixed chicories, bacon lardons, torn croutons and roasted garlic-shallot vinaigrette
-Pan fried ricotta gnocchi with black truffle
-Butternut squash and pepita pesto
-Duck confit with farro, braised cabbage & dried pears, watercress & cardamom jus
-Chocolate Napoleon with graham cracker crust, bittersweet chocolate torte and toasted almond marshmallow dessert.
-Vegetarian entree option is: black pepper fontina arancini with wild mushrooms, confit spring onions and spring pea-green garlic puree

~

Satisfactory?

Non?

Entre Les Personnes et Le Vins …

Reason #3: The Peoples & The Wines

There will be no less than sixteen wineries represented, and each will be showcasing providentially curated offerings that wholeheartedly enact a fair saintly degree of culinary companionability.

Participating wineries include: Anaba Wines, Baiocchi Wines & Vineyards, Bonny Doon Vineyard, Davis Family Vineyards, Folin Cellars, JC Cellars, Kenneth Volk Vineyards, kukkula, Margerum Wine Company, Mounts Family Winery, Petrichor Vineyards, Ridge Vineyards, Tablas Creek Vineyard, Terre Rouge, Two Shepherds and Villa Creek Cellars.

David himself will be pouring a rather fantastic selection of hard-to-find Ridge deliciousnesses; pray tell do dig this roster:

2005 Ridge Vineyards Lytton West Syrah

2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Grenache

2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache

2008 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane

***And, a double-secret-probation-rarity-from-the-innermost-vaults Mystery Surprise Wine!***

And all THAT event excitement doesn’t even factor in the auction.

Reason #4: Oh, the auction …

There are a number of amazing, amazing, amazing things that will come available during this very unique auction opportunity. Dinners, tours, priceless library releases, educational opportunities, travel, and more.

(for specific details about specific auction items, please click here)

And speaking of travel, oh, the travel opportunities …

Reason #5: Travel

Travel.

Travel.

Travel.

Travel to Australia.

Travel to famed wine locations in Australia.

Travel to famed wine locations in Australia with David Gates.

Travel to famed wine locations in Australia with David Gates; specifically to locations specifically selected by David Gates.

(Note: by locations specifically selected by David Gates, I mean locations that David himself particularly wants to visit, and in fact, not just visit, but RE-visit. Meaning, these are places and people that David has visited before, and wants to visit again!)

And THAT, is a serious endorsement. And THAT, is going to mean serious and unprecedented joy.

(For “official” details about the Australia trip, please click here.)

I spoke with David recently about the itinerary; how he chose it, and why. We spoke mostly about three producers he’s especially excited to return to:

Henschke.

About the visit to Henschke, just three words to know:

Hill of Grace.

And then there’s Rockford Wines, in the Barossa. I can’t quote directly David’s uniquely affectionate description of their winemaker (due to its “salty” colloquiality!), nor can I quote exactly how David described their Methode Champenoise Shiraz (something about what it will do to your socks!), but suffice it to say, David is looking VERY forward to taking both himself and his guests to this renowned location!

Lastly, D’Arenberg. Where this man rules the winemaking roost:

ChesterOsbornChesterOsborn_III ChesterOsborn_II

Obviously, this man is a great deal of fun. But don’t let the seeming tomfoolery fool you. When David went to visit him back in 1999, he learned from him a technique for handling and managing Syrah in the vineyard that forever altered David’s approach to this uniquely intriguing varietal; if you taste integrated and supple tannins balanced against restrained alcohol, balanced structure, and perfect ripeness in our Syrahs, you have to thank, in no small part, David’s visit to Chester Osborn.

Ready to bid?

~

Reasons #6-to-#10,000: [enter 9,995 synonyms for The Past Is Gone, The Future Is Yet To Happen, Now Is The Only Moment here]

Wine Zen. Meditate on it.

~

Social Media’d Up? Some good n’ plenty things for you to know:

#WineChat -
Wednesday Night Rhone #WineChat with Rhone Rangers Sonoma William & guest Randall Grahm

Rhone Rangers on Facebook -
http://www.facebook.com/RhoneRangers

Event-specific hashtag -
#RRSF

Rhone Rangers Twitter handle -
@RhoneRangers

Ridge Vineyards on Twitter -
@RidgeVineyards

Ridge Vineyards on Facebook: -
http://www.facebook.com/RidgeVineyards

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See you in San Francisco!

Be The Winning Bid & Bob’s Yer Uncle! -or- David Gates In Oz! -or- This Trip Is Fair Dinkum! -or- Australia Tastes Ace! -or- Rhone Rangers, From San Francisco to Sydney!

March 1, 2013

David Gates is a great man.

David Gates, Ridge Vineyards VP of Vineyard Operations

David Gates, Ridge Vineyards VP of Vineyard Operations

David Gates is our Vineyard Manager, and he is a great man. A great man managing great vineyards.

DavidGates

David Gates is President on the Board of Directors for Rhone Rangers.

RR

Rhone Rangers is a great organization.

Rhone-varietal wines are great.

06gle1

The 16th Annual Rhone Rangers Weekend Celebration of American Rhones in San Francisco is a great event, with great Rhone-varietal wines on offer.

RhoneRangers

The March 22nd Winemakers Dinner — part of the Rhone Rangers Celebration — is a great winemakers dinner, because it features 15 wineries with a three-course meal catered by Girl and the Fig,

G&F

followed by a live auction.

auction

The live auction is a great auction, because there is a going to be a great auction item auctioned.

DG_Aus

Let’s stop for a moment, and do a quick little word association.

If I say, Adelaide Hills, Barossa Valley, Clare Valley and McLaren Vale, what do you say?

If you said, legendary Australian Wine Regions, Bob would be your uncle.

If I say, David Gates, what do you say?

If you said, legendary Ridge Vineyards Vineyard Manager and Rhone Rangers President, that would constitute fair dinkum.

If I say, $60,000, do I hear $60,000, can I get a $60,000, and you said, $60,000!, then you’d be going to Australia with David Gates and 7 of your VERY best friends.

Which is great.

IMPORTANT CLARIFICATION ALERT!

$60,000 is the asking price if you want to scoop the bidders and PRE-BUY.

Win it at auction, who knows? Twenty bucks a head?

Could be a bonzer night for the right kind of tall poppy … might be you at the corner table cryin’ Stone The Crows!

But enough of my earbash, here’s the Ridgy-Didge:

DG_Aus

Taste of Australia

with David Gates, Ridge Vineyards

 10 Days – San Francisco to Sydney

January 6th – January 15th, 2014
10 Days – San Francisco to Sydney
Exploring the Wine Regions of:
Adelaide Hills, Barossa Valley, Clare Valley and McLaren Vale

Enjoy all the beauty and grandeur of Australia, from the Sydney Opera House, the largest fish market in the southern hemisphere, and the most spectacular harbors and secluded beaches, to picturesque Adelaide Hills, private vineyards, Methode Champenoise cellars, Grange tastings, special blending sessions, private transfers, exquisite accommodations, and much more.

Trip to be auctioned at the Rhone Rangers Winemaker Dinner in San Francisco on March 22nd.
Click here purchase your tickets for the winemakers dinner.

Buy now: purchase the entire package in advance of the auction for the “buy now” price of $60,000 for a group of 8 people.
For details of trip, questions or to purchase contact Cardoza-Bungey Travel at 650-325-5600
or email rhonerangers@cardoza.com.

Click here to learn more about David Gates.

~

Who’s yer uncle?

Bob’s yer uncle.

California Dreamin’: Rhone Rangers in LA!

May 31, 2012

If I might borrow a bit of press-speak-ease …

The Rhone Rangers ride into Los Angeles on Sunday, June 3, 2012, with over 45 wineries pouring their American-grown Rhone wines. All events take place this year at the recently renovated Vibiana, an historic site located in the vibrant downtown area of Los Angeles at 214 South Main Street, near the LA Times Building. TICKETS NOW ON SALE!

That’s right cowboys and cowgirls, the Rhone Rangers are ridin’ into the City of Angels, and they’re bringing wine!

Just a partial list of some of the great producers you might taste with, should you choose to attend this Smorgasborg of Syrah, this Sensorium of Cinsault, this Plethora of Petite Sirah, this Cornucopia of Counoise, this Gift of Grenache, this Multiplicity of Mataro, this Rush of Roussanne, this Vivacity of Viognier, this Prize of Picpoul:

Adelaida Cellars

Bonny Doon Vineyard

Curtis Winery

Fess Parker Winery & Vineyards

Frick Winery

Halter Ranch

Qupe

Tablas Creek Vineyard

and of course, yours truly, RIDGE VINEYARDS!

And speaking of Ridge Vineyards, did you know we have a special DOUBLE SECRET PROBATION Promotion, just for you?

Well, we do!

Just click the following link to purchase tickets:

http://www.rhonerangers.org/calendar/losangeles.php

and when prompted, enter the following code:

RR-Ridge

and then STAND BACK! Cuz this loco bronco is about to up and buck …

Ok, dig this. May I present, VIBIANA!

Yeah, that’ll do …

What’s that you say? What are WE pouring? Oooh, wouldn’t you like to know!

Riddle me this, my brother, can you handle it?
Your style to my style, you can’t hold a candle to it.

Ok, I’ll tell you …

2010 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane (100% solo varietal old-vine Sonoma Carignane)

2010 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Petite Sirah (estate-grown Petite Sirah from our Healdsburg vineyards)

2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah (co-fermented with 12% Viognier in a Côte-Rôtie-via-N.Cal way)

2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache (the Royals of the Rhone in a 50/50 blend)

It’s a Rhone thing, so you GOT to understand!

Whew. Turn me loose.

p.s. if your Rhone Rangeriness feels fitter on twitter, and if your reet petite can’t get sweet unless your suite is replete with a connective tweet, then you must hop on the Sonoma William wagon and wheel-rut your way into the oneo-sphere with the social Vaquero himself, Senor Simple Hedonisms!

Check the scoop here if your bag is to hashtag the rah-rah on #RRLA …

3.25.12 was “Go, Go, Rhone Rangers!” Time …

April 3, 2012

Scenes from the annual Rhone Rangers Tasting in San Francisco, 3.25.12!

And may we say, congratulations to all the RR Gang, for another outstanding event, and thanks to everyone who attended, we hope you had as good a time as we did!

FIGS! (Footage Improvisational, Guerilla Spontaneous!)

And some static snaps for the oeno-visualic viewocities …

Ahoy mateys, away we sail, and we’ll see you on the other side of the ocean, just about this time next year!

The United States of Syrah: Red, White, and You

March 23, 2012

If you’ve ever had a bottle of Ridge Vineyards Syrah, you’ve probably checked out the label. And when you checked out the label, you probably saw this …

And when you saw this, you probably did a bit of a double-take, scratched your head, and went, “Wha?”

Ok, maybe not. Maybe you’re already familiar with the wines and processes of Côte-Rôtie, in the Northern Rhone. Or maybe you’ve caught onto some of the contemporarily tradition-minded Rhone offerings from Australia, or Santa Barbara. Or conversely, maybe you aren’t familiar with Viognier at all, and just didn’t know it was a white varietal.

But for most of us, when first we see this label, the inclination is to wonder at the unexpected  juxtaposition of red and white grapes in the same bottle. It just doesn’t seem … right, somehow.

There are, however, very good reasons behind why these two do reside together so well. Briefly and colloquially, it’s a triumvirate:

1. Texture. Viognier’s viscosity makes for a brilliantly smoothing and rounding counterbalance to the tannin-forward granular rusticity of Syrah.

2. Aromatics. Viognier’s perfumed floralilty makes for a deliciously decadent interweave with the darker, inkier, earthen aromatics of Syrah.

3. Color & Preservation. Aspects of the chemistry of Viognier serve to keep the parallel tines of fruit and tannin at an even pace along the developmental trajectory of cellar-worthy Syrah. Put another way, Viognier helps keep the fruit, color, and aromatics intact over the long process of tannin-softening.

It’s this last rationale, #3, that is truly at the core of the Syrah-Viognier co-fermentation construct. It can get a bit heady when you dive full bore into the chemistry of it all, but it’s fascinating stuff, so let me please introduce winemaker Eric Baugher, as he arrives to spelunk you through the caverns of co-fermentation:

The approach we take with co-fermentation of Syrah with Viognier, is to first de-stem the syrah and open the crusher rollers.  This allows a high percentage of whole berries to travel through to fermenter uncrushed.

Next, based on calculated weight, we will destem and crush the anywhere between 5-10% viognier on top of the syrah in the fermenter. 

We then wait for natural yeast fermentation to begin, and pump-over and irrigate the cap to extract color and tannins. 

The typical maceration time (crush-to-press) is 7-8 days total, with twice a day pump-overs given. 

The viognier contains colorless flavanols from the skins that extract and conjugate with the extreme concentration of syrah’s anthocyanin color molecules.  Basically, the theory is that viognier helps stabilize syrah’s color; the condensation reactions between viognier’s flavanols and syrah’s anthocyanins form highly stable polymerized molecules that stay with the wine for life.   Once these polymers form, they don’t degrade through normal oxidation reactions. 

There is also a shift in the color spectrum of a syrah that has co-fermented with viognier.  Normally, syrah has a deep ruby color.  Once viognier is thrown into the mix for the complex reactions to form, the color will shift from deep ruby to saturated purple/blue.   This has a lot to do with light absorption/re-emission quantum chemistry of the anthocyanin complex with the viognier flavanols altering the polarity and electron flow of the multi-six carbon phenol ring that forms the anthocyanim molecule, thus altering the molar extinction coefficient.  The absorption of green spectrum light (520nm) by these condensed molecules causes re-emission of red spectrum 700nm plus a stronger re-emission at 420nm (deep purple/blue).  That’s why the co-fermented syrah/viognier blend works magically, creating an inkier wine.   It’s strange how this all works, taking a dark grape and cutting it with a white variety, and end up making a wine that is even darker.   That’s the complexity of quantum chemistry, which I had the pleasure of studying many years ago while obtaining my biochemistry degree.  

Now, I should say that this co-fermentation phenomena has been a very traditional winemaking approach taken in the northern rhone valley of France.  Through centuries of trial-and-error with many other varietals of the region, the combination of syrah with viognier became the standard.  This was decided by making better wine, not by having knowledge of the complex chemistry.  The chemistry came along much later to explain why it worked so well.

And that, my friends, is, in a nutshell, not only a mini-dissertation on co-fermenting Syrah and Viognier, but also, an excellent explanation of the relationship between Ridge Vineyards, and technology. Yes, we are pre-industrial at heart, and we still do, for the most part, things the old-fashioned way. But that said, we do have a very sophisticated technical side to us; the distinction is how we deploy it, and to what purpose.

I call your attention to something Paul Draper wrote, in an essay entitled “Pre-Industrial Winemaking at Ridge”:

In a synthesis of past and present, we have taken the pre-industrial techniques and applied them in conjunction with the best, least intrusive modern equipment. We’ve been told that we have the most sophisticated analytical laboratory of any winery our size.

Combine this with Eric’s words above:

Through centuries of trial-and-error with many other varietals of the region, the combination of syrah with viognier became the standard.  This was decided by making better wine, not by having knowledge of the complex chemistry.  The chemistry came along much later to explain why it worked so well.

And what you get is a lovely lil’ distillation of the Ridge philosophy on technology. In short, we essentially rely on technology to ideally confirm what we already knew by instinct.

For example, that Syrah and Viognier taste REALLY GOOD together, when co-fermented.

The next incarnation? The 2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah. Coming to a tasting room, or a cellar, near you. Soon. Very soon. Sooner if you’re an ATP member.

And if you can’t wait even that long (i.e. when your shipment arrives), you might want to consider coming to the annual Rhone Rangers event, held this coming weekend in glorious San Francisco. We’ll be pouring it there.

Come see Ridge Vineyards, at Rhone Rangers, to enjoy the benefits of citizenship in the United States of Syrah. Three cheers for the Red, White, and You!

Huzzah!

Huzzah!

Huzzah!

Ain’t No Strangers To The Rangers, Gots The Rhones In Our Bones!

March 17, 2012

March 24-25, it’s on.

It’s a rockin’ Rhone time
it’s blow your dome time, baby

The Rhone Rangers descend on San Francisco next weekend, and none shall be the same ever again.

The 24th? Winemaker’s Dinner. Who shall be there? Ridge Vineyards, of course. Along with …

Big Basin Vineyards, Crystal Basin, Curtis Winery, Davis Family Vineyards, Domaine de la Terre Rouge, Donelan Wines, Folin Cellars, Hahn Family Wines, Katin, Mount Aukum Winery, Pear Valley Vineyards, Qualia Wines, Quivira Vineyards & Winery, Tablas Creek Vineyard, Wesley Ashley Wines and Zaca Mesa Winery.

Word.

And the 25th? The Grand Tasting. The GRAND Tasting.

grand

adjective

1.

impressive in size, appearance, or general effect: grand mountain scenery.

2.

stately, majestic, or dignified: In front of an audience her manner is grand and regal.

3.

highly ambitious or idealistic: grand ideas for bettering the political situation.

4.

magnificent or splendid: a grand palace.

5.

noble or revered: a grand old man.
 
 
Impressive. Majestic. Idealistic. Magnificent. Revered. Grand. The GRAND Tasting.
 
Word.
 
 
And what will Ridge Vineyards be pouring? None other than the following:
 

2010 Ridge Vineyards Buchignani Ranch Carignane (special pre-release, winery-only offering!)

2010 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Petite Sirah (not yet released, only the 2nd nationally-distributed Ridge Petite Sirah EVER!)

2007 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah (new ATP release, winery-only!)

2006 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah/Grenache (sold out ATP offering; last “public” appearance!)

1999 Ridge Vineyards Lytton Estate Syrah (uber-rarity from the library vaults!)

Word.

SAN FRANCISCO 2012 – A WEEKEND CELEBRATION OF AMERICAN RHONES

Recently sat down with two colleagues to start tasting some of the wines to be showcased at the event. If you wish to fly-on-the-wall yourselves, please dig the visuals …

#RRSF Grand Tasting!

March 27, 2011

Do you plan to attend the Rhone Rangers San Francisco Grand Tasting today? If so, please make sure to visit the Ridge Vineyards table, we’ve got a tremendous roster of wines to share with you! Here is the line-up:

2009 BUCHIGNANI RANCH CARIGNANE (pre-release!)

100% Carignane

“The 2009 is our eleventh vintage from this small vineyard in the hills north of Dry Creek Valley. Planted in the thirties, forties, and fifties, it has been meticulously cared for by Dino Buchignani, a role now filled by his son Stan. Full of pure fruit and elegant structure, this old-vine carignane is enjoyable now, and will be at its best over the next four to five years.” John Olney (8/10)

 

2005 LYTTON ESTATE GRENACHE

88% Grenache, 6% Zinfandel, 6% Petite Sirah

“The two oldest parcels, planted in 1902 and 1963, are the heart of this wine. They are field blends of grenache, with minor amounts of zinfandel and petite sirah. Pure grenache from the two younger parcels contributes finesse and definition, and eighteen months in oak has integrated fruit and tannin, accentuating the wine’s exotic spice. This excellent grenache will be at its best over the next five years.” Eric Baugher (3/07)

2006 LYTTON ESTATE SYRAH/GRENACHE

50% Syrah, 50% Grenache

“Syrah’s deep flavors and firm structure complement the bright fruit, spice, and lively acidity of grenache. After twenty months in air-dried american oak barrels, the wine’s elements have integrated beautifully. Approachable now, it promises to continue developing over the next six to eight years.” Eric Baugher (8/08)

2006 LYTTON ESTATE SYRAH (pre-release!)

92% Syrah, 8% Viognier

“Viognier and syrah co-fermented on their natural yeasts in seven small tanks; we pressed early to avoid excessive tannins. Full-bodied and solidly structured, this fine syrah will develop further with ten to twelve years in bottle.” Eric Baugher (9/08)

2009 LYTTON ESTATE PETITE SIRAH (our first national-release Petit Sirah!)

100% Petite Sirah

“This hundred-percent varietal is our first national release Petite Sirah that shows the structure, balance, and complexity that can be achieved when soil and varietal are perfectly matched. It will soften and evolve over the next ten years.” John Olney (11/10)

If you require some additional information about the event, please click here. And if you attend, PLEASE send us thought, perceptions, comments, tasting notes, photos, we want it all! And mainly, enjoy!

Hi Ho Rhone Rangers, Away!

March 21, 2011

If you know about Rhone Rangers, if you like Rhone varietal wines, and if you particularly happen to like Ridge Vineyards Rhone Varietal wines, then you should just click here; that’ll sort you all the way out.

Otherwise, let me cut right to the heart of the matter, and allow you to dig this menu:

Passed Hors d’Oeuvres

Teleme and Porcini Arancini

Yukon Gold Potatoes with Feta & Green Onions

Polenta with Braised Lamb & Gremolata

 

Spring Salad

Fig & Arugula Salad with Toasted Pecans, Laura Chenel Chevre, Pancetta (optional), finished with Fig & Port Vinaigrette

 

Entrée

Crispy Duck Confit, Savoy Cabbage, Pearl Onions, Fingerling Potatoes

Finished with Blood Orange & Anise Gastrique

 

Dessert

Meyer Lemon Cheesecake with Citrus Creme Anglaise

 

 

My, my, my, there are SO many good words up there! Starting with Teleme (do you know about this cheese? if not, remind me to clue you in!) and Porcini. Me, I was pretty much sold at that point. Interested? It gets better. Do you know where this is going to be served? Ever heard of Dogpatch Studios?

 

Yeah, that’ll do.

So what’s this all about then? Why, Rhone Rangers 15th Annual San Francisco Tasting, of course! There are a whole slew of events associated with this amazing tasting opportunity, and they’re all in orbit around the gravitational pull of THE GRAND TASTING!

San Francisco Grand Tasting

Sunday, March 27, 2011 2:00 – 5:00 PM. 15th ANNUAL RHONE RANGERS GRAND TASTING. The weekend culminates with the Grand Tasting, where over 2,000 people are expected to come taste over 500 wines from more than 100 Rhone Rangers wineries. For a list of participating wineries, click here. Sample gourmet foods from 25 or more specialty food purveyors, including cheese, bread, olive oil, charcuterie, fruits and other sweets and chocolates.  A silent auction will feature Rhone Rangers wines and wine-related items; proceeds from the auction will benefit the Rhone Rangers Scholarship Fund. This event takes place at the Fort Mason Festival Pavilion.  Come out for a great afternoon of wine, food and fun. BUY TICKETS: $45/EACH 

Here at Ridge, we are particularly excited about the Winemaker’s Dinner; that’s when the menu from above will be served, and it’s at this event that a VERY SPECIAL RIDGE ITEM will be auctioned off! Helping out with the auction? Our very own David Gates, Vice President of Vineyard Operations (and a VP on the Rhone Rangers Board of Directors)!

And here is what Ridge is offering; all YOU need to remember is LOT #15!

Lot #15 —North or South, Ridge Vineyards Hosts Your Group of Eight for A Traditional Rhone Style Lamb Lunch

Dawn Wofford (of  Benchmark Consulting), started this whole ball rolling, by donating from her other business, Lamb Valley Direct.  David Gates, VP of Vineyard Operations at Ridge, picked up the pace from there, by offering to host eight guests at either of Ridge’s vineyard sites: Monte Bello or Lytton Springs, for a lamb lunch paired with an assortment of Ridge’s gorgeous Rhone wines.  This will be a lunch to remember, with two wine industry icons/friends of the Rhone Rangers—one who could help you find work, the other who might just put you to work pruning some vines!  Estimate: priceless.

 

Well, if you’re not already in line, huddled in the rain under tarps, umbrellas, and sleeping bags, drinking brandy and coffee from a thermos, holding a weathered sign that says “Rhone Rangers or Bust”, singing folks songs with some guy named Edward who thinks he may be a bodhisattva, who really digs that your guitar has a “This Machine Drinks Wine” bumper sticker on it, then I just don’t know what else to entice you with. Perhaps your heart is two sizes two small?

If that’s the case, then I make this promise to you, if you attend this event, your heart will grow THREE SIZES THAT DAY!

San Francisco Syrah Tasting: 11/9/10!

November 4, 2010

If you read my previous post (found here) then you’re already aware of our participation in the “Pneumonia’s Last Syrah” campaign. But did  you know we’ll also be pouring at a wonderful event in San Francisco on the 9th of November to support the campaign?

To purchase tickets for this fantastic event, just click here. You’ll be supporting a very worthy cause, you’ll be enjoying Syrahs from 20 different outstanding producers, and as far as our participation goes, you’ll have a chance to taste with our very own Vice-President of Vineyard Operations David Gates.

David is one of the warmest, most friendly and approachable members of the vineyard community I’ve ever had the pleasure of meeting, let alone working with, and I encourage you to take this fantastic opportunity to talk over a glass of Syrah with him. But don’t let his folksy down-to-earthedness fool you; David is a veritable fount of knowledge, and his erudition, wisdom, and technical prowess are dazzling in the most unexpected of ways.

There are a multitude of reasons to support this campaign, and a multitude of ways to do so, and while this tasting is just one such opportunity, it’s a tasty one!

By the way, if you’d like to read more about this effort from writers outside of the organizational circle, you might want to have a look at the following rather esteemed bloggers and their posts:

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!


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