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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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Slow Food Event - May 1, 2004
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Darrell
Corti came to SantaFe for a SlowFood event "Stalking The Wild
asparagus". We had a dinner for Darrell on Fri night, the asparagus
event Sat afternoon, and a tasting/ evaluation of NewMexico
wines for Darrell's benefit Sunday afternoon. Some of the more
interesting wines:
- Kalin
Cellars Livermore Valley Semillon (12.8%) 1991: Light
gold color; slight herbal strong stony/olive/figgy slight
earthy some toasty/oak nose; tart/lean/hard olive/figgy/herbal/
stony slight metallic young/primary flavor; long figgy/olive/stony
tart/hard finish; very much in the Oz-style of Semillon;
hard & lean and probably needs much age yet.
- McWilliams
Mt.Pleasant Sauternes Hunter Valley Semillon 1981: Dark
gold color; rather oxidized/sherry nose at first but has
it warms becomes very intense/grapey/orangy very caramel/butterscotchy/old
cream sherry slight oxidized very exotic very complex fragrant/perfumed
nose; fairly sweet strong caramel/butterscotchy/toasty very
ripe/ grapey/orangey some oaked slight oxidized exotic very
complex flavor; very long/ lingering sweet caramel/butterscotchy
grapey/figgy/orangy finish; made in a slightly oxidized
style but incredible exotic complex character; amazing wine
of a genre no longer made in Oz or Calif.
- Montevina
Ruby Cabernet (14 1/2%) 1978: Very dark color; strong
green olive bit herbal rather pungent/smokey fairly complex
nose; bit hard/tannic green olive/herbal/Cabernet fairly
pungent/smokey/charred/licorice/tarry/asphalt bit dried-out/astringent
flavor; long bit hard/dried out strong tarry/licorice/green
olive/herbal finish; very interesting tarry/herbal/Cab nose
but a bit dried out on the palate.
- Montevina
Ruby Cabernet 1977: Dark color; strong charred/burnt/oak
bit tarry rather briary/blackberry/Amador/dusty/licorice
little Cab nose; soft/round/smooth briary/ bramble/licorice/AmadorZin
some charred/burnt/oak flavor; long soft/lush/smooth briary/Zin/blackberry
rather charred/burnt/oak finish w/ light tannins; much less
Cab character and less interesting but very attractive on
the palate.
- Heitz
Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon Martha's Vnyd 1975: Dark
color; somewhat musty/funky/ adhesive bandage bit minty/eucalyptus
nose that clears somewhat to a mostly minty/ eucalyptus
slight blackcurranty/Cab complex nose; bit hard/tannic/dried-out
rather minty/eucalyptus bit earthy/musty flavor; long rather
hard/tannic somewhat eucalyptus/ minty finish; bit too funky
& musty for my tastes & lots of eucalyptus character.
- Torre
Muga Rioja 1998: Dark color; strong Am.oaked/lush/spicy
very forward/grapey/ strawberry/cherry classic/new style
nose; soft/lush strong Am.oaked/vanilla rather grapey/strawberry/cherry
flavor; long very lush/soft loads of oak rather lush/cherry/
strawberry flavor w/ light tannins; attractive/lush Spanish
red but bit too much oak.
- Villa
Ilie Garassino Barbera d'Alba (13%) 1998: Med.dark color;
very dusty strong spicy/Italian sausage/Barbera fragrant
nose; tart/lean very spicy/Barbera rather dusty/ earthy
some oaked flavor; med.long quite spicy/Barbera tart/hard
fairly oaked finish w/ some tannins; bit international in
style but lots of spicy/Barbera character.
- Shenandoah
Vnyds Mission del Sol AmadorCounty/EschenVnyd (16.2%) 1977:
Med.dark brown color; interesting very grapey/fragrant some
toasty/oak/toasted coconut little oxidized nose; soft/flat
rather grapey/simple/sweet slight toasty/coconutty flavor;
med.short quite grapey/simple finish; lots of simple grapey
character w/ little oxidation but not much development or
complexity; bit on the dull side.
- Calif
Shenandoah Vnyds Calif Old Cream Muscat (15%) NV: Med.dark
more browning color; somewhat oxidized/sherry/madeira bit
more complex somewhat alcoholic little Muscat nose; sweeter
some coconutty/oak soft rather Madeira-like/oxidized rather
alcoholic some complex flavor; med.long Madeira/oxidized
slightly sweet bit complex finish; some nice Madeira character
to this wine.
- Shenandoah
Vnyds Amador County Black Muscat (18%) NV: Med.dark
bit browning color; quite alcoholic slight Muscatty/perfumed/grapey
little oxidation bit complex nose; off-dry slight Muscatty/grapey/perfumed
rather hot/alcoholic flavor; med.long fairly hot/ alcoholic
light muscatty/perfumed/floral bit complex finish; little
signs of oxidation and light muscatty character.
- Quady
Elysium Calif Black Muscat (15%) 1983: Med. some browning
color; very strong grapey/Muscat/violets bit Kansas/new-mown
hay/Kansas feed-store little complex nose; quite sweet floral/violets/light
muscatty slight Kansas feed-store quite grapey flavor; very
long very grapey/light muscatty/floral/violets finish; quite
sweet & primary.
- Corti
Bros. Red Table Wine (12%) 1974: Dark bit browning color;
slight cedary/pencilly/ oldCab slight herbal rather old/tired
nose w/ little complexity; soft rather pencilly/ cedary
some dried-out/astringent/tired no fruit slight herbal flavor;
med. tired/dried- out/no fruit some cedary/pencily/oak fairly
astringent finish; some interesting oldCab character but
pretty much on its last legs.
- Montevina
Special Select Amador County Zin (16%) 1975: Very dark
color w/ sloght browning; attractive/strong cedary/charred/oak/pungent
somewhat licorice/tarry bit complex nose; off-dry bit dried-out/astringent
tarry/charred/burnt/oak slight brambly/briary/blackberry/
licorice bit raisened/alcoholic flavor; med.long interesting
tarry/charred/burnt/oak slight blackberry/briary finish
w/ ample tannins; interesting tarry/licorice nose but rather
dried-out/astringent on the palate; pretty shakey condition.
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And
some thoughts from the Bloody Pulpit:
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Montevina Ruby Cabernet: When Cary Gott started up Montevina
Wnry in the early '70's, he planted a number of varieties
other than the traditional Zinfandel. This included Nebbiolo,
CabernetSauvignon, Ruby Cabernet, SauvBlanc, Barbera, and
a few others. The Montevina CabSauv was never a particularly
good wine. He resembled ShenandoahValley Zin more than anything
w/ it's briary/bramble character, but harder & leaner
& w/o the lushness of his Zin. I actively disliked his
RubyCabernet as being rather herbal/ vegetal and pretty
tannic & hard, atypical for Amador. So these shunned
btls were buried in the dark parts of my cellar, awaiting
the proper time to unload them. Since I was showing Darrell
some of my relics from his store, this seemed like the right
time to unload them. Surprise, surprise....they were in
remarkably good condition and had blossomed into amazingly
good old/mature wines. The '78 showed much more Cabernet
character than the Montevina Cabs ever did, with a terrific
tarry nose but a bit dried out on the palate. The '77, which
I expected to be the better of the two, was more akin to
an old Montevina Zin w/ much less Cabernet character. But
it was round & smooth and much more attractive a wine
on the palate than the '78. RubyCabernet was, of course,
an Olmo cross betwixt Cabernet and Carignan that was developed
to produce "quality" Cabernet-like wines from hot climes
like the SanJoaquin Valley. So not surprising that it did
well like this in Amador. Probably the best of the Calif
Ruby Cabs is Bill Dickerson's ones made under his label.
Darrell related that Dinny Webb's widow has a complete set
of RubyCabs that Justin Meyer made for him from Dinny's
backyard RubeCab vnyd, going back to the '50's. Darrell's
hoping to put together a complete tasting of these wines
sometime down the road, along w/ those of Bill Dickerson's.
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Corked: The Heitz Cabernet had a distinct musty/damp earth/Kansas
root cellar smell when it was first poured, leading to immediate
pronouncements that it was corked. Yet I thought the mustiness
was a bit different from the TCA-wet cardboard character
I mostly find in corked wines. And it seemed to disappate
w/ time in the glass, unlike TCA-infected wines. Darrell
pointed out that in older times this was exactly the type
of mustiness in corked wines for which they started using
chlorine bleach in the cork production treatments to remove.
The chlorine led to the onset of TCA-smells in corked wine
that we've, alas, become all too familar with. Thus, we
were probably smelling, Darrell speculated, old-time corkiness,
rather than TCA-type corkiness of this modern/ improved
day.
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Shenandoah Vnyd dessert wines: Lee Sobon has always been
very interested in sweet dessert wines and has been making
them regularly from the very start. I have, of course, followed
them from the very start. However, all of these I'd not
tasted since their release in the early '80's, so I didn't
quite know what to expect. Since they all three were sweet
wines, I had expected them, at 20+ yrs of age, to have turned
into marvelous/complex/old dessert wines. That expected
complexity had not shown up. They wre just sweet wines that
were there and had not seem to have gone anywhere. Probably
I suspect it was their low acids that was the culprit. The
BlackMuscat was easily the most interesting of the three
because of its delicate/floral muscat character. Not bad
wines...but wines that were just... there (unlike Oakland).
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Quady Elysium: Same story here, a 20 yr old dessert wine..that
just had not gone anywhere. The Elysium and Essencia are
made primarily like Angelica/ratafia and have loads of intense
grapey character in their youth. But there seem little point
in aging them as they don't seem to develop any complexity
you'd expect in old dessert wines.
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Corti RTW '74: This btl was the last one out of BlairSwartz's
archives he wanted to share with us. It was, in fact, the
first Montevina CabernetSauvignon produced and Darrell bought
it in its entirity (undoubtedly for a song) and sold it
cheap (about $3.25). It was a pretty tasty/delecious wine
in its youth. It's youth has passed and now it's on its
last legs.
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Darrell had been invited to NewMexico by Bruce&Sue Noel
of LosLucerosWnry there just North of Espanola. The hook
was that Darrell would do a seminar/event for the SantaFe
Convivium of SlowFood on the glories of wild asparagus.
In the apple orchard in from of their winery, the wild asparagus
runs rampant and so this would be a great opportunity to
have wild asparagus in several guises and learn from Darrell.
Has luck would have it, we'd had repeated frosts in the
morning for the last several weeks...so no/little asparagus.
Sue had brewed a wonderful asparagus soup using some of
last yr's frozen aspargus and some fresh she'd harvested.
The SlowFood crowd foraged thru the orchard and did manage
to find some stalks. So these and a batch of boughten (Chile?)
aspargus were boiled until al dente and served w/ a lovely
olive oil and a home-made Aioli. The contrast in flavors
betwixt the two aspargi were striking, the boughten tasting
much more bland (how can asparagus be bland?) than the wild.
As he has been known to do, Darrell gave a highly educational
talk of an hour's length. He could have gone much longer
& not lost his audience, but Darrell was ready to taste
some wine. The talk was much about the ancient history of
asparagus and many of the special ways it has been prepared
over the yrs. Incredibly informative... as I knew it would
be. As noted an authority on almost any subject as Darrell
is, he's always in the learning mode himself, and that was
one of his raison d'etre's for coming to NewMexico, to learn
has much as he could. And learning about NewMexico wines
was one of his goals on this trip. He was probably the first
to sell NM wines in Calif w/ the St.Clair wines from Deming.
He probably had the first Gruet for sale in Calif as well,
and has sold it from the very start. He had the chance to
try their CuveeGilbert (still) PinotNoir and was quite taken
by it. He plans to lean on Laurent to get some for his store
in Sac. So Bruce organized a tasting of NM wines for Darrell's
benefit, soliciting two of each wineries best wines. So
we all (6 in number) sat down this afternoon and tasted
thru 49 on NM's primo wines. Alas, some were not so primo.
I must say, however, that the amateurish/inept/flawed winemaking
you used to find in NM wines some 15-20 yrs ago have pretty
much been eradicated. In fact, my worst wine of the afternoon
was one of the ringers Bruce had put in... the Honig Napa
Valley SauvignonBlanc. I detested it for its diaper pail
nose. Darrell, and most the others, really liked the wine,
however. There were a few surprises. The Syrahs of Herve
Lescombes (Deming) and Tularosa Wnry were actually quite
good. I'll take these to HdR this year I think. But probably
the best wine of the bunch was the St.Clair (sweet) Malvasia
Bianco. Darrell was convinced that it was a NM Gewurztraminer.
In point of fact, he grows a fair amount of GWT and I wouldn't
be surprised if some were therein. But a lovely/delicious
wine it was.
TomHill
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© 1996 - 2006, Tom Hill - All rights reserved
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