Posts Tagged ‘Wine Blogger Tasting’

Scenes From A Wine Blogger Tasting

September 30, 2011

9.25.11 was the date, 1pm was the time, Lytton Springs was the place. Wine Bloggers Tasting, Edition III, 2011.

And before I proceed any further, a big Cheers! to Marcy Gordon, whose blog “Come For The Wine” wins the prize for swiftest post-tasting post. You can read it here.

Now, to return to the task at hand. In attendance (you can click each name to visit each writer’s site):

Alison Smith

Amy Cleary

Chiara Shannon

Dave Tong

Deb Kravitz

Fred Swan

Joe Manekin

Marcy Gordon

Martin Redmond

Richard Jennings

Thea Dwelle

And the theme? (There is always a theme!) Small-production, winery-only library wines from the Lytton Springs Estate Vineyards. I’ll let you visit our blogger’s sites to discover the list of offerings, but suffice it to say it was an exquisitely delicious array of wines!

As has been the case on numerous past occasions, my offerings proved not to be the only wines tasted; this time around, the very excellent Richard Jennings brought a surprise treat for everyone to taste …

Not familiar? Not many people are. The vineyard doesn’t actually exist any longer, and even when it did, it didn’t cast much of a shadow; it wasn’t even an acre’s worth of vines (it was located quite near downtown Sonoma), and this was in fact the last vintage that Ridge produced from this property. To see a review of this wine from back in 1992, you can click here, and as to a current review: it was fantastic! I’m not kidding you, this wine was truly, truly, truly, truly delicious; thanks RJ!

And here’s a bit of video from the tasting:

I wish to offer full and sincere gratitude to our guests. This tasting series has been a fantastic success, and so very much of that is due to the caliber of our bloggers; they’re a fascinating and deeply knowledgeable lot, and I encourage you to read them as often as you can.

I also wish to thank everyone at Lytton Springs for all the help and support. Sandy, Jason, Eliot, and Brandye, I simply couldn’t have done this without you, thank you so much! And thank you to Keren and Joany for so commandingly holding down the fort even as I was poaching your co-workers! And special thanks to John Olney (VP of Winemaking, Lytton Springs) and Muiris Griffin (Assistant Winemaker, Lytton Springs) for being so gracious with your time, and allowing our bloggers to share in, and experience firsthand, the excitement of harvest.

If you’re interested in being a guest at an upcoming tasting, please let us know either by commenting on this post, sending a tweet (#RidgeVineyards, @RidgeVineyards) or posting on our Facebook page (facebook.com/RidgeVineyards).

Cheers!

Calling All Wine (& Food!) Bloggers, Do You Want To Come Taste Ridge With Me?

August 19, 2011

Greetings all,

This is an open invitation to all who write wine blogs, and/or food blogs (or any other blog, really, providing you can essay me into believing that your presence makes sense! For example, if you happen to write a blog about Be-Bop, and are prone to deploying a veritable bevy of wine metaphors in your jazz posts, you’re in!) …

I wish to invite you to a very special edition of our Wine Blogger Tasting series. This is our second-year for this unique tasting experience, and as with the debut season last year, we’ll be hosting the third of four tastings up at our Lytton Springs facility. As with all of these events, there will be a specific theme associated with the tasting, and again in keeping with last year’s happening, the Lytton Springs edition will be uniquely Lytton-centric.

The tasting will be held on Sunday, September 25, 1pm-3pm, at our Lytton Springs Estate, in Healdsburg.

The guest list is traditionally pretty tight for these tastings, and I always try to make sure there is a good balance between “regulars” and “newbies” at the table, so if you’ve never attended but want to, please let me know at your earliest convenience, and if you’ve attended before and would like to do so again, please do the same, as no seat is guaranteed!

To give a bit of background for those who may not have been aware of this tasting series, and to give you a feel for the sorts of things we do, here is a quick run-down on the history of this event:

March, 2010 — First Edition. The theme? We tasted every wine that Robert Parker had just reviewed for the Wine Advocate, including a 7-vintage vertical of Monte Bello. For a nice wrap-up of the tasting, please click the following to read The Iron Chevsky Wine Blog: http://www.chevsky.com/2010/03/ridge-tasting-iron-chevsky-vs-parker.html

July 2010 — #2. The theme? Strictly Rhone varietal releases from Ridge: Carignane, Petite Sirah, Grenache, etc. Current and library releases both. For a full wrap-up, plus tasting notes, please click here: http://blog.ridgewine.com/2010/07/12/wine-bloggers-tasting-edition-ii-the-notes/

September 2010 — #3, The Lytton Edition. The theme? A 10-vintage vertical of Lytton Springs (plus a trio of 375ml Monte Bello from the library!). For a great post on this tasting, please check out RJOnWine.com; the post in question can be found here: http://www.rjonwine.com/cabernet-sauvignon/ridge-lytton-springs/

December 2010 — The Final 2010 Edition. Theme? The Acrostic Anagram Sessions! To see what on earth this means, please click here: http://blog.ridgewine.com/2010/12/29/wine-bloggers-tasting-the-acrostic-anagram-sessions/

March 2011The first edition of the new year! The theme? A VerticalModelMembershipManifesto! What does this mean? It means I poured verticals of both library and current releases from each of our three membership portfolios. For an insightful (and visually beautiful!) summary of the tasting, please visit Kitchen Confidante here: http://kitchenconfidante.com/ridge-wine-bloggers-tasting-spring-2011. You can also see my wrap up on our blog here: http://blog.ridgewine.com/2011/03/31/the-first-wine-bloggers-tasting-of-2011-the-wrap-up/

June 2011 #2. The theme? Our new library menu; meaning, we poured every vintage of Monte Bello that’s been confirmed as available on our new Library Menu (That’s an 11-vintage Monte Bello vertical!). For my wrap-up, please click here: http://blog.ridgewine.com/2011/06/21/wine-bloggers-tasting-2-6-17-11-the-aftermath/, and for an excellent wrap-up from NorCalWine, please click here: http://norcalwine.com/index.php/blog/10-wine-review/504-blind-tasting-11-vintages-of-ridge-monte-bello

And that, in a nutshell, is our Wine Bloggers Tasting. Would you like to attend? Then please let me know asap! You can do so by leaving a comment in response to this post,

or via our Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/RidgeVineyards

or on Twitter http://twitter.com/#!/ridgevineyards

I look forward to hearing from you, and hopefully, to hosting you!

One additional item to note; if you’re not able to attend in person, we do always have a social media component to the tastings, so if  you wish to participate virtually, just use #RidgeVineyards for Twitter, or post on our Facebook page, and then you can play along from home! Also, with each edition, we usually choose an absentee “guest blogger” to send some samples to, so do please let me know if that’s something you might be interested in!

Wine Blogger Tasting #2, Our Bloggers Begin To Chime In!

June 24, 2011

 One of my favorite things about our Wine Blogger Tastings is actually something that comes in the aftermath of every event; the opportunity to read the posts authored by our attendees. It is very much a credit to the devoutness, seriousness, and studiousness of our guests that we often don’t get to do too much talking during the actual tasting, so I always look very forward to these post-event wrap-ups, to get a fuller sense of how everyone felt about the experience.

I am happy to share with you links to three posts that have already gone up (quick work, gang!):

–”Pork Cracklins: Adventures in Cooking.” A first-timer at our Wine Blogger Tasting series, Sheri’s primary focus is on all things culinary, so I was especially pleased at the prospect of her attendance, as I love to see how foodies respond to our wine.  Plus, I LOVE the name of her blog. You can read Sheri’s post here.

–”Wine Maven In Training.” The blog of an East Coast transplant now acclimatizing to the world of Californian viticulture, penned by the winner of our contest theme (you’ll have to read the post to find out!). You can read the post here.

–”NorCal Wine.” A heavyweight contender for being the gold standard of Californian wine blogging, NorCal Wine is an excellent resource and read, so it’s always an honor when Fred attends one of our tastings. You can read his write-up here.

 Enjoy the posts!

And, thank you to our guests! It is a pleasure to read your work, and I thank you for sharing your tales.

Wine Bloggers Tasting #2, 6.17.11, The Aftermath …

June 21, 2011

Now THAT was a tasting! An 11-vintage vertical of Monte Bello, tasted blind, with a challenge; try and guess the appropriate chronological order. Needless to say, we put our bloggers to work!

Not to mention our staff, who were charged with the responsibility of opening, decanting, and tasting all those bottles!

Here at Ridge, we’ve just released a veritable treasure trove of Library Monte Bello, based on innumerable internal tastings and endless analyses as regards prices and inventories. The end result is a truly spectacular arsenal of back vintage Monte Bellos the likes of which are rarely seen. So it seemed like a good idea to debut some of the key releases with our bloggers.

Accordingly, we tasted the following Monte Bellos: 1977, 1978, 1981, 1985, 1990, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, and 2006. Plus, just for good measure, I threw in a barrel sample of the new 2010! Which makes 11. Our Monte Bello goes to 11.

To match the drama of the tasting, we hosted our bloggers in a brand-new, never-before-seen tasting environment! (Stay tuned to this story, cuz this is gonna be big!) It’s a stunningly beautiful room, with every inch dialed in to support not only a sumptuous showcase for the glorious surroundings of our vineyards, but a highly engaged, sensorially analytical tasting experience as well. It was such a pleasure to host and taste in there, and I look so forward to introducing you all to this amazing new space!

One of the key assets to the room is full media capability, which came in very handy for this tasting, as we were able to very successfuly monitor all the Twitter activity the tasting generated. Thank you Twitterfall!

Tasting with Wine Bloggers is a somewhat unique experience; a living duality of funk and finesse, devoutness and derangement. On one hand, these are very, very serious tasters who do what they do for no reason other than that they are passionate about it; they are not “professionals” in the traditional fiscal sense of the word. On the other hand, they are stranger, more eccentric, and often more opinionated than your “traditional” journalist. In short, they are both fun and funny, and they are also often somewhat singularly socialized, peculiarly impassioned, and both silent and loquacious in equal measures.

For this tasting, heads went down right away. The tasting was afoot.

Regrettably, I didn’t get an inordinate amount of time to mull over tasting notes; I was busy with the planning, implementation, and hosting duties; we’ll have to wait for our bloggers to chime in with their observations, but I can certainly give some quick notes and impressions:

1977 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Having tasted some 60+ different bottles of this wine during a large member event recently (the Monte Bello Final Assemblage Event, held for our Monte Bello Collector members), I can firmly state that a) I am a big fan of this vintage, and b) this was a very good bottle. It is mature, certainly; not a lot of primary fruit, and fully dominated by secondary and tertiary herb & spice components, but it’s also zestful and spicy, elegant and stylish, and very well put-together. One recommendation, if you’re serving this wine, give it a VERY gentle decant, and serve within 20 minutes.

1978 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

One of the greatest of the 70s vintages, showing no signs of degradation; still a lot of fruit, good if subdued structure, and a real tangible decadence that is devoid of anything cloying; rather, it’s discreetly sensual and quintessentially refined. Same recommendation as above as regards decanting; this won’t need much more air …

1981 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

An internal staff favorite, for sure, and with good reason. Loads of low cedar and tobacco in the nose, plus a healthy dose of plum, black currant, and black pepper. Great juice, light and playful on the palate, with a round, sweet finish. For whatever reason, I find this to be a very romantic wine; it drinks like soft music, cuddles like Sunday night movie night, flickers like candles and kisses with sweet languidity.

1985 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

One of the great and archetypal “old world” Monte Bellos, with lots of lead/graphite minerality, red and brown wood notes, and some great earthiness balanced against a voluminous body. Remarkable too for the density of the fruit.

1990 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

A vintage that’s come in and out of focus for me over the years, but which showed very well in this tasting. Lots of the cool-climate Monte Bello characteristics; a sort of eucalyptal herbality, a comparatively leaner mouthfeel, and tremendously vital acidity, but all this combined with big, rich fruit, and lots of mountain brambliness and dark berry … still young, though no longer discordant. One blogger guessed it as a late 90s vintage!

1994 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Didn’t love the first bottle we served of this; while the taste was fairly enticing, the nose bordered on off-putting, and didn’t reallyseem to want to blow off. So we opened and prepared a second option, and found much better aromatics, though truth be told, the first bottle had in fact blown off much of its funkiness by this point. That said, the second bottle was the one we went with. Much more seamless, with fruit balanced against spice, tannin against acid, and while rusticity is definitely still a big part of this wine’s personality, it was well-integrated into the overall construct with the second bottle.

1995 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

I’ve written quite a bit about this wine of late, so the short version is that FINALLY this wine is starting to show itself. One of the biggest, most intense, more dramatically structured Monte Bello vintages ever, this wine is finally starting to allow some of its prettiness to emerge, in the form of some lovely lilac and lavender notes, overlaying a wealth of rich blue fruit and some dark cocoa and chocolate notes.

1999 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

This is a vintage that just seems to continue its ascendancy every time I taste it, and it very much seemed to capture the imaginations of the bloggers as well. This is a wine that, put simply, is in fuego. All its harmonic components are in sync, all its melodies in harmony. Given that it’s a vintage that has, in the past, been the subject of some speculation as regards a posited lack of ageability, it’s particularly wonderful to see it showing so fresh, and so lively. It certainly still shows some of the chewier dried fruit characteristics that have held hallmark status in its profile all along, but wrapped as they are now in luscious fruit and well-coated tannins, its hard to say anything other than that this is a happening vintage.

2000 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

Oddly enough, by comparison to the above, this is a vintage that didn’t seem to engender much commentary from the bloggers in attendance; strange given the exalted status of this wine, courtesy of its legendary showing in the Young Cabernet portion of the Judgement of Paris re-enactment. Given that the tasting was blind though, of course no one would know the vintage, and perhaps free of its associative powers, it simply didn’t bring the excitement? I decided to taste this wine again, in the privacy of my office, to really try and get a handle on this mercurial and much-debated, oft-misunderstood vintage. Given the seriousness of the endeavor, I called on the ol’ typer:

And this is what we came up with:

(please click to see the full view)

And so, continuing on …

2006 Ridge Vineyards Monte Bello

One of my personal favorite vintages, and one that seemed to go over quite fine with the gang as well. So young still, but already evidencing foreshadowings of the complexities to come; I think this is going to be one of the greats, showing all the multi-tiered layerings that have always been the hallmark of “classic” Monte Bello vintages …

And lastly, I am happy to report that, by almost all measures, the 2010 barrel sample was a total hit. VERY, VERY excited about this vintage, as all at Ridge are …

And so that’s that, another fine wine bloggers tasting notched into the neck of our bottle. Thanks Bloggers! Until next time, excellent quaffing to you!


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