Posts Tagged ‘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.

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!

Bryant Terry, The Inspired Vegan, and Ridge Vineyards!

February 6, 2012

As you may know, I am a lover of the “unorthodox” when it comes to pairing wine and food. And by “unorthodox,” I do not mean, for example, molecular gastronomy. I do not consider “foam” to be unorthodox at this time. I do, however, consider things like Indian Curry with Carignane unorthodox.

And I relish, and I mean RELISH, pairing vegetarian and vegan foods with our wines; I find it to be quite the refreshing upending of the paradigms in place.

In my field in general, and particularly working for a producer of highly regarded red wines, one goes to an awful lot of events where red wine is being served with steak. Many, many iterations of steak. Steak, steak, steak. Not to say it’s a bad pairing per se, and certainly not to disparage any of the hosts, chefs, and restaurants out there who have assembled and presented these pairings (I’ve been fortunate to dine in outstanding circumstances, in tremendous company, on astonishing dishes, and regret not a one of them, and am thankful to and for all of them), but the omnipresence of one governing aesthetic can oft leave one wishing for the occasional bout of alternative imagination. So again, I tend to crave the unorthodox, especially when it comes to pairing our wines.

So when the following came across my bow, you can bet I was excited; an opportunity to present Ridge wines at an exclusive VIP party in celebration of Bryant Terry’s new book, “The Inspired Vegan,” to be held at the Museum of the African Diaspora in San Francisco, with La Cocina Food Truck (or should I say, “Soul Cocina”) cooking from “The Inspired Vegan.”

Here is the “official” blurb on Bryant’s new book …

From the author of Vegan Soul Kitchen: ingredients that inspire, unique recipes, and menus for everyday feasts.
Marking his 10-year anniversary working to create a healthy, just, and sustainable food system, Bryant Terry offers more than just a collection of recipes. In the spirit of jazz jam sessions and hip hop ciphers, The Inspired Vegan presents a collage of food, storytelling, music, and art. Bryant shares his favorite preparation / cooking techniques and simple recipes—basics to help strengthen your foundation for home cooking and equip you with tools for culinary improvisation and kitchen creativity. He also invites you to his table to enjoy seasonal menus inspired by family memories, social movements, unsung radical heroes, and visions for the future. Ultimately, The Inspired Vegan will help you become proficient in creating satisfying meals that use whole, fresh, seasonal ingredients and are nutritionally balanced—and full of surprising, mouth-watering flavor combinations.
Vegan cooking? Soul Kitchen? Jazz Jam Session? Food, storytelling, music, and art? Yeah, you KNOW I’m into this …
Mr. Terry has accrued accolades upon accolades along his journey; one such comment particularly resonates:
“Bryant Terry knows that good food should be an everyday right and not a privilege.” — Alice Waters
There it is again, that enacted reconciliation of high-brow artisan  seriousness and low-brow populist approachability. The head and the heart, the brain and the soul, the melody and the rhythm, the science and the mojo.
The event was held on January 24th, and while I personally was unable to attend, Ridge was most definitely present, in the form of our own Amy Monroe and Tara Einis, proud residents of San Francisco, and proud participants in the event at hand.
As I said, I myself could regrettably not attend, but thankfully, Jennifer Martine (who photographed the book itself) was on hand to snap some pics with Tara’s iPhone. Here’s a sampling of what went on at this truly singular and extraordinary happening; for example, some culinary action …

The menu!

The truck!

The food!

Some guest profiles …

Guests!

Guests!

Guests!

And the man capturing the guests …

Capturing the guests!

And some key and significant principles …

Renee Wilson, set to perform later in the evening

Heidi Swanson, fellow food writer

And of course, the guest of honor himself, seen here with Jennifer Martine, and Ridge’s own Tara Einis …

And especially, Bryant’s special guests, wife Jidan Koon (on right) and their baby girl Mila!

 Needless to say, it was a decidedly groovy event, and we were THRILLED to support it. I can’t encourage you enough to get involved in the world of Bryant Terry; it can literally change your life. You are what you eat, people. So eat well.
As a resource of sorts, here are some important links you might wish to follow:
Bryant Terry
http://www.bryant-terry.com/
“The Inspired Vegan” on Amazon
http://www.amazon.com/Inspired-Vegan-Seasonal-Ingredients-Mouthwatering/dp/0738213756
Event photographer Byron Malik
http://www.bmalikphotography.com/press-room.html
Singer Renee Wilson (seen in “Ray!”)
http://www.reneewilson.org/
Heidi Swanson (author of “Super Natural Every Day”)
http://www.101cookbooks.com/
And because I can’t resist, as it’s one of my favorite topics (wearing important footwear while drinking fine wine), I just have to share this:
Thank you to all involved, this was a fantastic event! Thank you to Amy and Tara for hosting, thank you to Bryant Terry for inviting, thank you to Jennifer Martine for photographing, and thank you to the gods for good food, good wine, and good company! It’s a good world.

Leaving #ZAP …

January 29, 2011

So much still to come from this weekend’s ZAP festival, but suffice it to say (as I begin with the ending!) that leaving ZAP was a bit of an uphill journey!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQ48dYdnStg

That said, San Francisco was, is, and always will be, an incomparably, inexpressibly beautiful city; such a joy to be there today …


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