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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American Wine Society Convention - November 27, 2005
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A
few weeks ago I attended the AmericanWineSociety National
Convention in LasVegas, the first time it had been held
west of the Mississippi. It was not an organization I had
interacted before. It was an interesting mix of home winemakers,
wine judges, and wine afficianados, with the seminar subjects
reflecting that fact. The bulk of the attendees appeared
to be from the Eastern Seaboard. I found the seminars, at
least the ones I attended, a bit of a mixed bag. Some were
highly informative; some were more like marketing types
there to shill their wines. The more razzle-dazzle the PowerPoint
presentation, the more shilling that was going on.
The
seminars I attended:
-
Central Coast Zinfandels by Doug Beckett. Knowing the area
fairly well, not a whole lot I learned from it. Mostly it
spoke to the Peachy Canyon Paso Zins and their vnyds, with
nothing about the rest of the CentralCoast, nor much about
the Paso geography and terroir. The Zins were pleasant enough,
but just that.
-
Lake County Syrah by Quincy Steele, son of Jed Steele. This
was one of the most bizarre wine seminars I've ever attended.
Actually, not being that familar w/ Lake County, I learned
quite a bit from it. But with some of his slides and some
if comments, I'd just shake my head in puzzlement and ask
my neighbor "What'd he just say??". Some of the
comments simply made no sense at all. Sort of like a presentation
of some technical subject to high-level management types,
where it'd been dumbed down so much as to lose any content.
The point of the seminar was to highlight to major role
LakeCnty would be playing in the future in the Calif Syrah
game. Well...maybe. Quincy presented 5 single-vnyd Syrahs
that they'd made from the '04 and '03 vintages. Alas, all
of these Syrahs are blended together to make the Steele
LakeCnty Syrah. And the total seems very much less than
the sum of the parts. The Syrahs were all quite distinctive
(that terroir thing I guess) and several of them I liked
quite a lot, one maybe the best LakeCnty red wine I've ever
had. But they did not make the case for LakeCnty, or, at
least, Steele Wines being a major player in the Syrah
field.
- Extreme
Elevation Grape Growing in NewMexico by Henry Street. Mostly
the story of Henry & Mary's development of PonderosaVnyds
in the Jemez Mtns about 40 miles SW of LosAlamos, high up
in the mtns relative to most vnyds. Henry did talk quite
a bit about other growing areas and the seminar was fairly
interesting, though much of his history I knew already.
-
Edmeades MendocinoCnty Zinfandel by winemaker Van Williamson.
This was one of the best seminars of the bunch. Van detailed
the character of many of the old Mendocino Ridge Zin vnyds
and tasted some 4-5 of the Edmeades Zin. Although not as
good as the old ones Jed Steele once made, they were all
pretty interesting wines. I need to revisit Edmeades Zins.
Van was quite a character and hardly what I envisioned as
a winemaker in the K-J corporate world.
-
Washington State CrossRoads OldWorld/NewWorld by George
Foote. A bit too much focused on the
touting of the wines and too little informational. The wines
were pleasant but underwhelming. Never did figure out what
the OldWorld/NewWorld part of the Seminar was about, despite
my asking that direct question.
- The
Wines of BonnyDoon by Dave Tindall. I thought Dave did a
very good job of relating the flavor of what Randall is
doing, without once using the word "counter-intuitive".
He was not the least bit reluctant to acknowledge the volume
of wine being pumped out at BonnyDoon. More importantly,
he related that Randall and GrahmCrew are thinking/envisioning
the future of BonnyDoon. I pointed out the difficulty of
producing such a large volume of everyday/affordable wines
and still being taken as a "serious" wine producer
of quality wines. I think this was one of the important
issues that brought the Mondavi venture to its knees.
It'll be interesting to see if Randall can suceed at that.
I
was invited to present two Seminars at the Convention by
Al Guber, Jr&Sr, and Andy Ashbaugh. I had met them thru
mutual friends back in Feb when I was there for Duel in
the Desert and we got together to share some wine. Then
found out I had a casual interest in the Rhone varieties
movement in the USofA and asked if I'd do one seminar of
Rhone varietals for free (to the participants, covered in
the registration fee) and one with a budget ($40 in this
case) to cover some high-end/non-donated wines. I chose
the free one to focus on non-Syrah varieties, pimping (Casey's
term, not mine) some of my Rhone producer friends for 5
btls of a wine. The $40 fee tasting focused on Syrahs.
The wines in the non-Syrah Seminar were:
-
EdmundsStJohn Shell&Bone/RozetVnyd (Roussanne/Viognier
blend) 2004: My intent with this wine
was to demonstrate the minerality Steve seems to get in
his whites. It showed lots of floral/fragrant character
but an austerity on the palate that makes it very food-friendly.
Most comments were quite favorable and acknowledged it as
not the typical Calif white.
-
SierraVista ElDoradoCnty Viognier 2004: I wanted to illustrate
the ElDorado "terroir" with this and show that
all Calif Viogniers are not DollyParton in style. A very
attractive/fragrant pear/Viognier w/ that ElDorado earthiness.
-
BonnyDoon Calif GrenacheBlanc 2004: I wanted to demonstrate
a little know varietal and this showed pretty typical GrenacheBlanc;
lots of floral character but a softness/fatness on the palate.
-
Jaffurs SantaBarbaraCnty Roussanne 2004: I regard the Jaffurs
Roussanne as one of the best such wines made in Calif. It
seemed to be a big hit for its richness and aromatics.
-
Garretson LimoidCoir PasoRobles Roussanne 2004: Here is
DollyParton in all her glory; big/jiggly/silicone-laden,
but that very intriguing limey quality that this wine shows.
-
EaglePointRanch MendocinoCnty Grenache 2004: This I wanted
to show what a bright/zippy character that some Grenaches
from Calif show, plus a good example of what modern Mendocino
is turning out. Loads of bright/strawberry fruit; good-drinking/knock-it-back
Grenache.
-
BonnyDoon Clos Du Gilroy Grenache 2004: This was designed
to show what some of the bigger/richer Calif Grenaches show.
Bigger/deeper strawberry/blackberry almost Oz-like fruit.
-
BonnyDoon OldTelegram ContraCosta Mourvedre 2003: Wanted
to show what ContraCosta produces
in the way of ripe/plummy slightly earthy/mushroomy Mourvedre.
All
in all, the wines showed pretty much what I expected and,
hopefully, made the point I was attempting to make. Mostly
the folks had not seen these wines except the last two BonnyDoons.
I intentionally did not show any of the red Rhone/blends
nor any PetiteSirahs. Another seminar.
A very special thanks to those donating wine for this Seminar:
Dave Tindall/BonnyDoonVnyds
Mat Garretson/Garretson WC
Steve Edmunds/Edmunds St John Wnry
Michelle & Vince Sfara/SierraVistaWnry
Craig Jaffurs & Dave Yates/Jaffurs Winery
Casey Hartlip/EaglePoint Ranch
The
wines in the Syrah tasting were:
-
Christom WillametteVlly Syrah 2003: Here I wanted to demonstrate
what killer Syrahs are coming out of the NorthWest. This
has more of a NorthernRhone character to it, but a few were
off-put by the searing acidity this has on the palate. I
think this wine is going to be a killer at 10 yrs of age
because of the acidity.
- HugCllrs
SanLuisObispoCnty BassettiVnyd Syrah 2003: I wanted to demonstrate
what a great/cold-
climate Syrah is like. It failed that, as it didn't have
the intensity of cracked white pepper it's shown in the
past. Slightly peppery, but huge/intense/ripe/boysenberry/Syrah
fruit. A killer Syrah.
-
Qupe BienNacido SantaBarbaraCnty Syrah 2001: This was the
one disappointment in the Syrah
tableu. A slightly pungent/smokey fairly blackberry/Syrah
character but not quite the intensity or complexity I expected.
-
JCCllrs MontereyCnty VentanaVnyd Syrah 2003: Here I was
looking for that somewhat herbal character you find in Monterey/SantaLuciaHighlands
Syrahs. It was there in all its glory at a level that was
not overbearing; plus huge blackberry fruit and a solid
hit of charred French oak.
-
EdmundsStJohn EldoradoCnty Wylie-FenaughtyVnyd Syrah 2001:
My intent here was to show the
Rhonish and unique style of SteveEdmunds Syrahs, plus some
of that ElDorado terroir/earthiness. Wonderful aromatics
and easily the most Rhonish & complex of these Syrahs.
-
Alban CentralCoast Syrah 2003: Here I was looking for a
bit of the Alban style. This is not the usual Alban/Estate
acidity, lots of soft/fat character on the palate; but fair
amount of tannins/structure and that usual Alban pungent/smokey/charred/FrOak
nose.
-
Garretson Luscain RozetVnyd Syrah 2003: Was wanting here
to show Mat's Syrah style plus a wine typical of PasoRobles/WestSide.
Huge/intense ripe/blackberry/boysenberry/Syrah fruit and
a nice touch of toasty oak.
- Lagier-Meredith
NapaVlly/MtVeeder Syrah 2002: I had dissed, in general,
Napa Syrahs in my handout as too often being characterized
as Cabernet wanna-be's and wanted to show that not all are
of that genre. Big/intense/spicy blackberry fruit, slight
amount of oak, slightly peppery/spicy character, and the
tannins/structure to carry it for many yrs.
-
Carlisle RussianRiverVlly Syrah 2003: Here I wanted to showcase
a favorite producer that nearly no one had heard of. Typical
Carlisle Syrah; huge/extracted/blackberry/Syrah fruit, amazing
balance, especially for the alcohol it carries, and a structure
that'll carry it way out in time. A killer Syrah.
-
Jaffurs LarnerVnyd SantaYnezVlly Syrah 2003: Here I was
looking for a pretty classic Santa Barbara Syrah from one
of my favorite producers. It showed intense blackberry/Syrah
fruit, a modicum of FrenchOak, great structure for aging,
a bit of chocolaty/peppery character. All these wines drew
a lot of ohhhs & ahhhhhhs and I think the folks, mostly
who appeared not too familar w/ Calif Syrahs, were, by and
large, impressed w/ what an exceptional tableau of Syrahs
these were. I think I made a few believers out of them.
And
also a special thanks for arranging to get these wines to:
Mike & Kendall Officer/ CarlisleWnry
CaroleMeredith & SteveLagier/Lagier-MeredithWnry
Dave McDonald & Chris Meeske & Natasha of Mission
Wines/SouthPasadena
One
of the Seminars I was interested in was "History of
Zinfandel" by Dave Crippen. Probably
a good thing I didn't get into this one. He's the marketing
guy for Renwood and it was a typical
shill of Renwood wines and the glorification of the "huge"
contributions Smerling has made to
the AmadorCounty wine scene. Some of the half-truths were
relayed to me and I doubt if I would have
been able to bite my tongue and resist public comment.
I very much enjoyed getting to see some old...errr... long
time friends at the Convention;
Kent&Kathy Rosenblum, Gary Hogue, Henry&Mary Street,
Jim Cross, Mike&Debbie Payne, SadaamHussein.
I also got to meet some long-time friends from LongIsland
who were/are tasting partners of one
of my group, David Trovillion and Robert Rutmayer. And the
chance to meet LI CyberFriend, Vincent
Petilli. And also met Jackie Rogers, head of the LongIsland
Winegrowers Assoc, who hopefully will
set me up with a few visits when I'm out there after Christmas.
All in all, it was a great experience. Lots of great wine,
some pretty good food at Rosemary's,
and the most special of company. Now how bad can that be!!!
Tom
This
is the handout I passed out at my two seminars:
______________________________________________________________________________________
American
Wine Society National Convention: Rhone Wines of the
USofA
The Varietals:
Counoise: Mostly blending grape,
wines have a lovely bright/cherry aroma but tend to
be lean/hard/acidic/bit tannic on palate; makes nice
roses
Carignane: A red varietal that often
shows attractive black cherry/earthy aromatics, but
tends to be rough/coarse/rustic/tannic on the palate.
Mostly best as a blending grape.
Grenache Noir: Runs the gamut in
style from light/pretty/fragrant/strawberry/aromatic
to dark/extracted/boysenberry/blackberry structured
wines. Lots of problems in the vineyard.
Grenache Blanc: Has lush/floral/Viognier-like/peach
aromatics but tends to be soft/fat lacking in structure
on the palate.
Rolle (Vermentino): Seldom seen as
a single varietal. Usually shy on aromatics with an
earthy/stony aroma and tart/lean/stony on the palate.
Marsanne: The workhouse white grape
variety. Usually rather simple/appley in its youth.
With age, it develops a slightly oxidized/hazelnutty/waxy
character and an incredible complexity.
Mourvedre (Mataro): Mostly from ContraCosta
old-vines, where it shows a plummy/earthy/
mushroomy character. As it's planted in better/cooler
areas; it's starting to make some very interesting
wines w/ structure and rich/plummy/sauvage aromatics.
Petite Sirah (Duriff): Tends to make
chunky/blocky/rough/tannic black-colored wines lacking
in aromatics. But sometimes ages into very interesting
wines.
Viognier: A varietal w/ powerful/blossomy/peach/pear
aromatics but often soft and lacking in structure.
US versions seldom show the amazing minerality of
French Condrieu.
Roussanne: A varietal that has beautiful/floral/honeysuckle
aromatics and typical more structured/ acidity than
Viognier. Most age very well, developingthat oxidized/hazelnutty/honeyed
character.
Syrah: Probably the king of the Rhone
varietals. Does well in very hot to very cold climes.
Most show powerful blackberry/boysenberry aromas but
only occasionally that roasted/espressy/smoky character
of Northern Rhone. Folklore was that it was a warm-climate
grape, but recent experience indicate
it can make spectacular wines in cold climates, if
you can ripen it.
Muscat a Petits Grains: Nearly always,
in its Rhone rendition, made as a slightly sweet to
very sweet dessert wine.
Picpoul/Bourboulenc: Whites seldom
seen as varietals
Cinsault: Red seldom seen as a varietal.
These
two seminars will gloss over both PetiteSirah and
the Rhone blends and mostly focus
on the remaining varietals.
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___________________________________________________________________________
The
Regions:
Santa Barbara County: quite varied
in climate but mostly cool
Santa Maria Hills: very cool climate,
gravelly/sandy soils
Santa Ynez Valley: mostly much warmer
in eastern end, to very cool/cold on
the western SantaRitaHills. Mourvedre/Viognier/Roussanne/Grenache
in addition to Syrah.
Santa Rita Hills: very cool western
end of SantaYnezVlly
Ventura County: Ojai/RollRanch is
about all there is
Paso Robles: tends to make ripe/jammy/lush
wines
Eastside: tends to be somewhat/much
warner w/ sandy soil
Westside: tends toward cooler climate
w/ more limestone soil
YorkMountain: ShadowCanyon/Gary Gibson
Edna Valley: very cool rather acidic
wines: John Alban
Monterey: thankfully the days of
vegetal reds are long gone, the reds often have a
somewhat herbal character, SanBernabe reds tend to
be soft&fat
ChaloneBenchland: rather chalky/limestone
soil tends to produce minerality
Santa Lucia Highlands: typically
rather ripe w/ slight herbaceousness
Sonoma County:
Russian River Valley: fairly cool
and tends to have a more earthy/peppery character
Sonoma Coast: some very cool vnyds
produce peppery/minerally wines
Dry Creek Valley: often show that
spicy/raspberry character much like Zin
Rockpile Road: very rocky/arid growing
area above LakeSonoma that may produce some
spectacular wines.
Napa Valley: Some very excellent
wines from MtVeeder area and Carneros. An underachiever
in
the Syrah field as they tend to be made more in the
style of Napa Cab w/ much oak.
Sierra Foothills
ElDorado County: often rather terroir-driven
w/ a mushroomy/earthy character
Shenandoah Valley/Fiddletown: tend
to be rather ripe w/ the blackberry/jammy/briary
character typical of their Zins.
Mendocino County: an area that has
enormous potential for great wines
Anderson Valley: very cool climate
and not a lot in Rhone varietals
Ukiah/RedwoodVlly: EaglepointRanch
and McDowell vnyds are the standouts here, much
potential
Alder Springs: tiny vnyd up in the
heavy forests/mountains NW of RedwoodVlly: Novy, Pax
Santa Cruz Mountains: the few Syrahs
tend to be big/rustic/earthy reds w/ intensity
Gilroy/San Benito County: lots of
old-vine Grenache. Wines tend to be lush/jammy.
Contra Coast County: Mostly old-vine
Mourvedre. Wines tend soft/plummy/mushroomy.
Lodi/San Joaquin Valley: Both Viognier
and Syrah make amazingly good and reasonably priced
wines. Some terrific old-vine PetiteSirahs. Wines
tend to be on the soft/fat side.
Washington
State:
WallaWalla Vlly, Yakima Vlly, ColumbiaVlly, RedMountain
Regional characteristics not yet clear. The WashState
Syrahs tend to be very
terroir-driven with a minerally/roasted/tarry/earthy/licorice
character and often show
great NorthernRhone character. The whites tend to
be steely/austere somewhat minerally
w/o that much fragrance. The growth here has been
explosive and some of the USofA's
greatest Rhone reds are coming from WashState.
Oregon:
Wilammette Valley: very cool Pinot-area,
very little Rhones thus far.
Rogue Valley: much warmer area to
the south. DelRioVnyd the biggie.
Virginia:
OrangeCounty: HortonVnyds Viognier, though
some newer producers are outstanding,
if difficult to find.
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___________________________________________________________________________
The
Great California Vineyards (and some of their producers):
BassettiVnyd/PasoRobles: Ellis&Susan Bassetti: EdmundsStJohn,
HugCllrs, Garretson
HudsonVnyd/Carneros: Lee Hudson: Neyers, JadeMtn, Konsgaard,
Havens
QueSyrahVnyd/SonomaCoast: Al Rago: formerly Failla-Jordan,
now only Al Rago
ThompsonVnyd/SantaBarbaraCnty: DaveThompson: Ojai, Qupe,
Jaffurs
AlbanVnyd/EdnaVlly: AlbanVnyds, Qupe, EdmundsStJohn, SineQuaNon
__________________
BienNacidoVnyd/SantaMariaHills:
Ojai, Qupe, Jaffurs
MelvilleVnyd/SantaRitaHills: Ojai
MelvilleVnyd/SantaBarbaraCnty: Jaffurs, Qupe, Melville
JamesBerryVnyd/PasoRobles: Saxum, Garretson
TablasCreekVnyd/PasoRobles: TablasCreek, EdmundsStJohn
LarnerVnyd/SantaYnezVlly: Jaffurs
PurismaMountainVnyd/SantaYnezVlly: BeckmanVnyds, Jaffurs
StolpmanVnyd/SantaYnezVlly: Stolpman, Ojai, Jaffurs
Smoot-HawleyVnyd/Napa: Turley
HayneVnyd/NapaVlly: Turley, Elyse
RossiVnyd/NapaVlly: SeanThackerey
ParasVnyd/MtVeeder: JadeMtn
RollRanchVnyd/Ojai: Ojai
ShadowCanyonVnyd/YorkMtn: ShadowCanyonWnry, SineQuaNon
Garys'Vnyd/SantaLuciaHighlands: Novy, Arcadian
SentinelOakVnyd/ShenandoahVlly: TerreRouge
RedWillowVnyd/YakimaVlly: Columbia
Ciel du Cheval/RedMtn: McCrea
Parmalee-Hill/Sonoma: EdmundsStJohn
Mt.Harlan/SanBenitoCnty: Calera
___________________________________________________________________________
Rhone
Organizations: Viognier Guild (MatGarretson), Hospices du
Rhone, Rhone Rangers
___________________________________________________________________________
RhoneBlends:
Typically the GSM (Grenache/Syrah/Mourvedre) for reds with
a few Syrah/Zin and
Syrah/Cab, even Syrah/Pinot blends.
White blends are mostly Roussanne/Viognier or Roussanne/Marsanne
with a few
that have Chard blended in.
___________________________________________________________________________
Cofermentation: The practice, originally used in Cote-Rotie,
of including small amounts
of Viognier in the fermenting vats of Syrah. This, and back-blending
of
Viognier into Syrah, are alledged to give the Syrah an aromatic
lift.
In California, its use is for co-extraction mostly, where
(as Randall would
say:"counter-intuitive") the inclusion of a white
variety actually deepens
the color of the Syrah.
___________________________________________________________________________
A few of my favorite Rhone Producers:
SantaBarbara: Ojai, Jaffurs, Qupe, Beckmen, Foxen, Kunin,
Margerum, Stolpman, Curtis,
Kaena, DrewFamily, McPrice-Meyers, Kenneth-Crawford
EdnaVlly: Alban, Core,
PasoRobles: Bassetti, Hug, Garretson, Saxum, LinneCalodo,
Caernarvon, L'Aventure,
ShadowCanyon, TablasCreek, VillaCreek
SantaCruzMtns: Ridge, BigBasin, BonnyDoon
Napa: Lagier-Meredith, Rocca, Marelle, MillerWineWorks,
Renard, Turley, Viader,
Kongsgaard, G.Graham, Neyers, Failla, Swanson, Behrens&Hitchcock,
Havens
Sonoma: Carlisle, NovyFamily, Copian, Pax, Hamel, Peay,
TinBarn, Radio-Coteau
Mendocino: EaglepointRanch
AmadorCounty: TerreRouge
ElDoradoCounty: SierraVista, Cedarville, Holly'sHill
OtherCalif: Rosenblum, EdmundsStJohn, JCCllrs, SeanThackerey,
SineQuaNon
WashingtonState: Harlequin, Cayuse, McCrea, AndrewRich,
K-Vintners, DeLille
Oregon: Rockblock, Christom
___________________________________________________________________________
Some
of the early movers & shakers:
Syrah: Joseph Phelps (1974), Gary Eberle (1977), the big
three: BobLindquist/Qupe,
AdamTolmach/Ojai, RandallGrahm/BonnyDoon, John McCready/SierraVista
(1982),
Billy Crawford/McDowellFamily, LouPreston/PrestonVnyds,
JedSteele/Kendall-Jackson,
SteveEdmunds, DougMeador/Ventana
Viognier: JohnAlban/AlbanVnyds, JoshJensen/Calera, BobLindquist/Qupe,
BillSmith/LaJota,
CraigWilliams/JosephPhelps, DonMcGrath/VillaHelena, MatGarretson/ViognierGuild,
RandallGrahm/BonnyDoon, GaryEberle/Eberle
Mourvedre: PaulDraper/Ridge, MatCline/ClineVnyds, SteveEdmunds/EdmundsStJohn,
Roussanne: RandallGrahm/BonnyDoon, BobLindquist/Qupe, JohnAlban/AlbanVnyds
Grenache: JohnAlban/AlbanVnyds
GrenacheBlanc: JasonHaas/TablasCreek, ChrisCurran/CurranCllrs
Marsanne: BobLindquist/Qupe
___________________________________________________________________________
Acknowledgments:
Many thanks for contributing wines to:
Dave Tindall/BonnyDoonVnyds
Mat Garretson/Garretson WC
Steve Edmunds/Edmunds St John Wnry
Michelle & Vince Sfara/SierraVistaWnry
Craig Jaffurs & Dave Yates/Jaffurs Winery
Casey Hartlip/EaglePoint Ranch
and
thanks for making arrangements for the remaining wines to:
Mike
& Kendall Officer/ CarlisleWnry
CaroleMeredith & SteveLagier/Lagier-MeredithWnry
Dave McDonald & Chris Meeske & Natasha of Mission
Wines/SouthPasadena
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