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by
Tom Hill
A
self-admitted wine geek, Tom lives in Northern New Mexico
and works as a computational physicist at Los Alamos National
Laboratory doing numerical neutron transport & large scale
code development. He has been tasting wines since 1971, participates
locally with a couple of large tasting groups in his area,
and is practically a fixture at most California wine festivals,
such as the Hospice du Rhône, Rhône Rangers, and
ZAP. Other interests: Tom is heavily into competitive sport
fencing (foil & epee), biking, cooking, basketball, skiing,
backpacking, mountain climbing.
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Mostly New Zinfandels - March 20, 2002
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- L'Uvaggio
di Giacomo i Colombi Calif Arneis (13.0%) 2000: Pale
gold color; rather floral/hazelnutty rather stoney/earthy
slight metallic classic Arneis nose; tart stoney/earthy/steely/earthy
some floral/spicy flavor; med.long tart/stoney/earthy light
floral/hazelnutty finish; nicely done wine w/ classic Arneis
varietal character.
- Quinta
da Sonora Calif Verdelho (13.4%) 2000: Pale yellow color;
fragrant/perfumed/ perfumed talc/honeysuckle spicy/aromatic
nose; tart very spicy honeysuckle/floral lovely flavor;
very long/lingering tart very floral/perfumed/honeysuckle
finish; loaded w/ floral/fruit almost like a lean/tight
Roussanne or an Oregon PinotGris; a real value at $12.00
- L'Uvaggio
di Giacomo il Gufo Calif Barbera (14.6%) 2000: Med.dark
color; rather earthy/ dusty bit spicy/sausage/Barbera rather
Lodi-like nose; soft/flat rather earthy/mushroomy light
spicy/Barbera some unclean flavor; med.short soft/flat earthy/Lodi
finish w/ little tannins; tastes of the Lodi terroir; rather
low in acid for Barbera; underwhelming at $16.50
- R
Barbera SpinettaFamily Vineyard/Amador County JeffRunquist/Vintner
(13.2%) 1999: Med.dark color; strong toasty/coconutty/oaked
briary/sausage/spicy/Barbera nose; tart bit unclean/wet
dog fur spicy/Barbera/sausage strong toasty/coconut/oak
flavor; med.long tart/lean/hard rather spicy/Barbera
very toasted coconut/oak finish w/ some tannins; very ripe
& loaded w/ oak but interesting Barbera.
- Gallo
of Sonoma Alexander Valley Barbera Barrelli Creek Vineyard
(13.5%) 1999: Very dark color; attractive spicy/Barbera/sausage
some light/oaked clean/pleasant nose; tart elegant spicy/Barbera/sausage
light/oaked flavor; med.short tart spicy/sausage light oak
finish w/ light tannins; a nice wine but a bit too polished
& seamless and lacking in fruit and rusticity for me.
- Bogle
Shenandoah Valley Zin (14.9%) 1998: Med.light color;
bit alcoholic very ripe/overripe Amador Zin/briary/blackberry
bit raisened nose; very soft bit thin some hot/alcoholic/
volatile/fumey very ripe to overripe Amador/briary/blackberry/Zin
flavor; med.short overripe/briary/blackberry bit thin finish
w/ light tannins; tastes like an Amador Zin made by a Delta
producer; bit too overripe for me.
- Six
Hands Calif Petite Sirah (13.2%) 1999: Dark color; attractive/fragrant/peppery/spicy
some toasty/Fr.oak slight earthy/spicy rather fragrant nose;
soft rather spicy/licorice/ peppery some toasty/Fr.oak fairly
tannic rather balanced flavor; med.long minty/spicy/ peppery/PS
bit dusty rather tannic finish; needs 2-5 yrs; an unusual
rendition of Calif PS; not underacid and a bit on the rough/rustic
side but quite balanced; a very good value at $12.00
- Rosenblum
Cellars Dry Creek Valley Petite Sirah Rockpile Road Vineyard
(14.5%) 2000: Black color; beautiful/fragrant spicy
very lush peppery/blackberry/black cherry/chocolaty rather
vanilla/toasty/oak very fragrant nose; big/rich lush tannic
very chocolaty/blackberry rather pungent/toasty/vanilla/Bourbon/oaked
very spicy/lush flavor; very long quite hard/tannic very
spicy/blackberry/peppery/chocolaty/PS vanilla/oaked finish
w/ ample tannins; needs 3-6 yrs; classic Rosenblum lushness
w/ lots of bright fruit for a PS.
- Ridge
Calif Zin Sonoma Station (75% Zin, 16% PS, 9% Carignane;
14.7%) 2000: Med.dark color; attractive
vanilla/oaked spicy/raspberry very spicy/fragrant slight
stemmy/appley nose; soft vanilla/oaked/buttery lush raspberry/spicy
flavor; med. vanilla/oaked/buttery simple/raspberry/spicy
finish w/ little tannins; just a very nice drinking Zin,
nothing more; I would guess this will start to put on weight
over the next yr.
- Ridge
Calif Zin LyttonStation (84% Zin, 7% PS, 6% Grenache, 3%
Carignane; 14.4%) 1999: Med.color; strong chocolaty
more blackberry/Zin/black cherry very perfumed light Am.oaked
more interesting nose; tart bit lean spicy/black cherry/blackberry/raspberry
some milky/Am.oak flavor; med.short bit lean spicy/black
cherry/blackberry oaked finish w/ light tannins; much better
than a yr ago, put on some weight.
- Ridge
Calif Zin Paso Robles (100% Zin; 14.5%) 2000: Med.color;
fairly deep/blackberry/ PR/jammy/boysenberry spicy/chocolaty
lighter nose; lighter spicy/raspberry/blackberry/jammy light
vanilla/oak flavor; med. light bright/blackberry/jammy light
vanilla/Am.oak finish w/ light tannins; lighter than the
Dusi but nice-drinking PR Zin.
- Ridge
Calif Zin DusiRanch (100% Zin; 14.6%; 42 brls) 2000: Dark
color; much deeper/ blackberry/boysenberry/PR/jammy peppery
slight Am.oaked/vanilla nose; rich big ripe blackberry/boysenberry/jammy/chocolaty
light oak flavor; long blackberry/boysenberry/ jammy/peppery/spicy
bit dusty/old vines Am.oak finish w/ some tannins; needs
a few yrs; much deeper & bigger than the regular Paso
Robles but very much the same flavor profile.
- Ridge
Calif Zin Lytton Springs (80% Zin, 20% PS; 14.8%) 2000:
Dark color; slight volatile/ fragrant/perfumed blackberry/Zinberry
rather ripe more high notes nose; light tart/ simple blackberry/Zinberry/spicy
bright fruit slight hot/volatile flavor; med. bright/ blackberry/Zinberry/raspberry
light vanilla/oak finish w/ light tannins; a nice-drinking
pleasant Zin that may evolve some; not up to the '99 at
the same point in time.
- Ridge
Calif Zin Lytton Springs (70% Zin, 17% PS, 10% Carignane,
3% Mataro; 14.5%) 1999: Some darker color; slight reduced/funky
pungent/toasty/oak blackberry/boysenberry quite spicy lovely/complex
nose; soft fairly rich/pungent/toasty/oak big blackberry/
boysenberry flavor; very long/lingering blackberry/boysenberry/very
spicy/dusty rather pungent/toasty/oak some complex finish
w/ some tannins; needs a yr or two yet; still my favorite
LSZin of the '90's.
- Rosenblum
Cellars Sonoma Valley Zin Monte Rosso Vineyard (16.8%; 8%
PS, 7% Unidentified) 2000: Med.dark color; rather volatile/EA/perfumey
very ripe/raspberry/jammy bit overripe/ raisened nose; rather
hot/volatile raspberry/perfumy loads of raspberry/ripe/fruit
flavor; long rather hot/fumey loads of ripe/overripe/raspberry/fruit
finish w/ light tannins; a bit on the overripe volatile
side & lacks structure & tannins.
- Cline
Calif Zin (14.0%) 2000: Med.lighht color; very earthy/Lodi/mushroomy/plummy
rather charred/oak/pungent/burnt nose; very soft very earthy/plummy/mushroomy
some Lodi/Zin/fruit almost vegetal flavor; med.short burnt/charred/oak
dusty/earthy finish w/ little tannins; not up to the previous
few vintages for their Calif Zin; seems to have mostly Lodi
Zin therein.
- Marchesi
di Barola Riserva Barolo (13.5%) 1978: Med.light color;
rather dried rose petal/Nebbiolo/lilacs/cherry bit pungent/charred
complex nose; hard/tannic lilacs/floral/ dried rose petal
some spicy/dusty complex flavor; long light floral rather
hard/tannic finish; a lovely old Barolo complexity but a
bit dried out & hard/tannic on the palate. Howard&Rhoda's
mystery wine.
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And
the usual muddled thoughts from the bloody pulpit: |
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Arneis: One of the world's minor white varietals that I
see no signs is destinied for greatness. Most widly grown
in the Italian Piemonte, where I find the wines display
a very strong earthy/stoney character on the nose and the
palate. IlPodere (Jim Clendennan) once made one I liked
a lot w/ a strong perfumed/floral character that suggests
other varieties were blended in, but he dropped the wine.
Seghesio also makes one that I find a bit dull and a bit
too oaked. This Giacomo struck me as the purest expression
yet of Arneis. Nice wine, but just that.
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Verdelho: This is, of course, a Portugese varietal. I don't
recall that I've ever had it as a single varietal
from Portugal. It is also planted some in Australia, where
I've had maybe 4-5 examples, none particularly memorable;
nice, but just that. This Quinta da Sonora was easily the
best I've ever had; quite a lovely perfumed white.
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Save the Ridge & Rosenblum wines, the remaining wines
all came from my recent foray thru Corti Bros. in Sacramento.
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Barbera: Barbera is one of my favorite varieties, which
I came to love (both Calif & Italian versions) from
the early ones from Montevina. For long time, it was regarded
in the Piemonte as the peasant's wine and made with a certain
rough/rustic/tannic style. Much like Zin in Calif, it was
only recently that Piemontese vintners have been giving
the variety the respect it deserves and making GREAT wine
from Barbera, and charging corresponding prices for it.
Some of these have been terrific/world-class Barbera. But
my favorite ones are still from Calif, where it seldom receives
the respect it deserves. The old Barberas from Louie Martini
were legendary. I was never that impressed with them
and thought they displayed the typical Martini winemaking
style...age that sucker into senility in large redwood tanks!!
Even my beloved Ridge made a few pretty decent Barberas.
Easily the best I've had were those early Renwood's that
Scott Harvey used to make from the Linsteadt Vineyard.
Stunning wines. The early Montevinas were also exceptional.
Although Jeff Meyers at Montevina is (embarrassingly) labeled
"The Baron of Barbera", the current Montevina versions are
a bit too ordinary and lacking extraction for my taste;
nice drinking, but just that. The whole thing about Barbera
is its acidity. It can often have, especially in the Piemonte,
a bone-jarring, teeth-scouring acidity to it. They term
it "solato" (sp?) because the acidity is so high it tastes
salty. But I like high acid wines and those are often the
ones that age well.
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Gallo Barbera: I understand this to be a very small-production
item from their Barrelli Creek vnyd and primarily given
to a few distributors only as sort of a reward for their
Gallo promotions. Corti Bros. is the only place I recall
seeing the wine at retail, but they may have expanded production
and that has changed, I don't know. A nicely done Barbera...
just that, though.
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SixHandsWinery: www.sixhandswinery.com is their WebSite.
I'd never heard of this winery until Darrell urged
that I should try a btl. Although most preferred the Rosenblum,
I thought this PS was a real sleeper and much better
than most gave it credit for. It's a big & rough PS,
but has a certain balance and polish to it that I rather
liked. I'll have to try more of their wines.
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RockPileRoad Vineyard: This area high above Lake Sonoma
just received it AVA designation a few weeks ago. Young
vnyds up there and pretty atypical of DryCreek Valley. Kent
makes Zin and PS from this vnyd which are both pretty terrific
wines. I can hardly wait 'till the Syrah up there is producing;
it's gonna/gotta be great.
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Putting On Weight: I've been noticing this in a number of
the wines I follow....some even from the very start.
The Qupe Central Coast is, upon release in Sept, a pretty
light/ simple unthrilling wine. But, over the next 6 months
to a year, always seems to put on some weight and develops
more intensity. This '99 LyttonStation was very light and
underwhelming a yr ago, but has really put on some weight
and is a very good restaurant wine now. I think it's something
more than just bottle shock. Wisht I could understand this
wine stuff better.
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MonteRosso Vineyard: This is, of course, the old Louis
Martini vnyd located above the town of Sonoma. It is an
impeccably-maintained highly-regarded vnyd that a number
of primo Zin producers get grapes from. It's a very perplexing
vnyd to me and I'm not convinced that MonteRosso is a GREAT
Zin vnyd. Most of the Zins seem to have a lean/hard/acidic
mean streak running thru them; much like Chet Eschen's Fiddletown
vnyd. They never seem to have a certain lushness that
I would like in them. It almost seems like Kent's 2000 version
was allowed to get very ripe, perhaps to tame that acidic/lean
streak. Instead, it comes out quite a bit on the overripe
side. Just for once, I'd like to have a really GREAT MonteRosso
Zin.
TomHill
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