2007 Ridge Geyserville
2011 Lange Pinot Noir Willamette Valley
2010 Margarethenhof Ayler Kupp Riesling Spätlese
2011 Loring Pinot Noir Russian River Valley
2008 Big Basin Vineyards Odeon
2007 Novy Family Wines Syrah Garys’ Vineyard
2009 Turley Zinfandel Tofanelli Vineyard
Due to a fast approaching move from Wisconsin to South Carolina, some of the wines have minimal information other than my tasting note.
2007 Ridge Geyserville – $23.74
I always have a hard time choosing a favorite between the Ridge Lytton Springs and the Ridge Geyserville wines. Both are zinfandel based blends but since Zinfandel generally constitutes less than 75% of the blend, they aren’t labeled as a Zinfandel. This vintage is a blend of 58% Zinfandel, 22% Carignane, 18% Petite Sirah, 2% Mataro (Mourvedre). This wine is disappearing from my cellar at a fairly fast rate of speed, of the 15 bottles I originally purchased; I now have less than half remaining.
The alcohol is listed at 14.4% and this uses a natural cork closure.
Winery history
The history of Ridge Vineyards begins in 1885, when Osea Perrone, a doctor who became a prominent member of San Francisco’s Italian community, bought 180 acres near the top of Monte Bello Ridge. He terraced the slopes and planted vineyards; using native limestone, he constructed the Monte Bello Winery, producing the first vintage under that name in 1892. This unique cellar, built into the mountainside on three levels, is Ridge’s production facility. At 2600′, it is surrounded by the “upper vineyard.”
In the 1940s, William Short, a theologian, bought the abandoned winery and vineyard just below the Perrone property; he replanted several parcels to cabernet sauvignon in the late 1940s. From these vines — now the “middle vineyard”— new owners Dave Bennion and his three partners, all Stanford Research Institute engineers, made a quarter-barrel of “estate” cabernet. That Monte Bello Cabernet was among California’s finest wines of the era. Its quality and distinctive character, and the wines produced from these same vines in 1960 and ’61, convinced the partners to re-bond the winery in time for the 1962 vintage.
The first zinfandel was made in 1964, from a small nineteenth-century vineyard farther down the ridge. This was followed in 1966 by the first Geyserville zinfandel. The founding families reclaimed the Monte Bello terraces, increasing vineyard size from fifteen to forty-five acres. Working on weekends, they made wines of regional character and unprecedented intensity. By 1968, production had increased to just under three thousand cases per year, and in 1969, Paul Draper joined the partnership. A Stanford graduate in philosophy—recently returned from setting up a winery in Chile’s coast range—he was a practical winemaker, not an enologist. His knowledge of fine wines and traditional methods complemented the straightforward “hands off” approach pioneered at Ridge. Under his guidance the old Perrone winery (acquired the previous year) was restored, the finest vineyard lands leased or purchased, the consistent quality and international reputation of the wines established. Cabernet and Zinfandel account for most of the production; Syrah, Grenache, Carignane, and Petite Sirah constitute a small percentage. Known primarily for its red wines, Ridge has also made limited amounts of chardonnay since 1962.
Lytton Springs, in Sonoma County, became part of the Ridge estate in 1991. A quarter century’s experience with this vineyard had convinced us that it was an exceptional piece of ground. Forty consecutive vintages of Geyserville attest to yet another stunning combination of location and varietals. Though born in the early sixties to the post-Prohibition world of modern California winemaking, Ridge relies on nature and tradition rather than technology. Our approach is straightforward: find intense, flavorful grapes; intrude upon the process only when necessary; draw the fruit’s distinctive character and richness into the wine.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a deep ruby to maroon color. The very enticing nose has brambly berries, cherry, black pepper, licorice, warm baking spices, charred meat, forest floor, and a touch of vanilla. This has medium body, fairly solid tannins, and very nice acidity. The palate has nice up front fruit and spice with more spice, licorice, and meaty elements coming in on the back end. The finish is long with spice laden fruit slowly giving way to more earthy elements that seem to linger forever. This is in a very nice drinking window and should hold for at least a few more years. (92 pts)
2011 Lange Pinot Noir Willamette Valley – $12.99
In my ongoing quest to build up a stash of under $15 Pinot Noirs for week night dinners, this is my next candidate. It looks like I got a great deal on a couple bottles since the average price on Cellar Tracker is almost $10 a bottle higher. The more I drink Oregon Pinot Noir wines, the more I like them. They are nice alternatives to the riper, rounder California versions that populate my wine cellar.
This has 13.2% alcohol by volume and the bottle is sealed with a twist off cap.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a light ruby red color. The mysterious nose has black cherries, smoke, minerals, earthy underbrush, warm baking spices, dried flowers and just a touch of nice funk. This is barely medium body with silky tannins and good acidity. On the palate the spices and cherries jump out first with minerals, smoke and some earthiness coming in on the back end. The finish has decent length with cherries and spice carrying the load. This isn’t the most complex Pinot out there but is a winner for under $15. (89 pts)
2010 Margarethenhof Ayler Kupp Riesling Spätlese – $10.44
This wine has 8% alcohol by volume and the bottle is sealed with a synthetic nomacorc.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a bright golden yellow color. The very satisfying nose has apples, honey, petrol, orange blossoms, orange zest and crushed stone minerals. This has medium body with crisp acidity and good residual sweetness. On the palate honey dipped apples jump out immediately with orange zest and minerals coming in on the back end. The finish have good length and shows great balance between the acidity and sweetness. There’s no hurry to drink this one, it can last in the cellar for a decade, maybe longer. (91 pts)
2011 Loring Pinot Noir Russian River Valley – $24.92
This wine has 14.8% alcohol by volume and the bottle is sealed with a twist off closure.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a deep ruby to maroon color. The appealing nose has black cherries, raspberries, dusty minerals, baking spices, vanilla, wildflowers and subtle underbrush. This has medium to full body with soft tannins and good acidity. Rich, spicy fruit engulfs the palate with minerals and a nice floral note coming in on the back end. The finish has nice length with a bit of earthiness and vanilla joining the sweet fruit. This is very easy to drink. (89 pts)
2008 Big Basin Vineyards Odeon – $40.00
This is a blend of 57% Santa Cruz County Syrah and 43% Monterey County Cabernet Sauvignon.
This wine has 15.5% alcohol by volume and the bottle is sealed with a natural cork. There were 7 barrels of this wine produced.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a deep maroon color. The deep and dark nose has blackberries, cassis, vanilla, dried herbs, stony minerals, dark bittersweet chocolate, cracked black peppercorns and dried violets. The wine has a full body with moderate to solid tannins and nice acidity. Big fruit and minerals jump out first on the palate with dried herbs and vanilla coming in later. The full flavored finish adds some dark chocolate and black pepper. This is a beast but the tannins and acidity keep it in check, at least for now. (93 pts)
2007 Novy Family Wines Syrah Garys’ Vineyard – $29.99
This was a very easy wine to buy in bulk, one of my favorite wineries, one of my favorite grapes and one of my favorite vineyards.
This wine has 14.2% alcohol by volume and the bottle is sealed with a natural cork.
Winery history
Our winemaking goal is to produce wines that best capture the distinct flavor and character of a given vineyard site. To that end, we focus on sites that provide us with exceptional fruit. We are fanatical in our protection of the vineyard flavor and are determined not to let any overt winemaking components mute the personality of an individual site.
In the cellar, we vinifiy each wine separately by block, clone and barrel type in order to maximize the individual components and provide greater complexity to the final blend. This approach also provides us with much more flexibility in crafting a wine using only the best and most harmonious lots.
Given that the majority of our wines are single vineyard offerings, it is critical for us to maintain the site’s individual character in order to provide you with a truly diverse offering of wines. To that end:
- We believe in minimal intervention, “gentle” winemaking. In other words, we let the wine make itself. We do not want to do anything to the wine that isn’t absolutely necessary.
- We believe in bottling our wines unfiltered and unfined whenever possible, convinced as we are that fining and filtering strip wines of flavor and character.
- We believe that the best wines express their origins. Our goal is not to produce the world’s best Syrah or Zinfandel but rather to produce the very best wine from a given site.
Much more information on Novy and the wines they produce is available on their website by clicking here.
My Tasting Note
The wine is a deep, dark ruby to purple color. The very enticing nose has blackberries, licorice, smoked meat, pepper, baking spices, blueberry, dried herbs, minerals and dark chocolate. This has medium to full body with solid tannins and very nice acidity. Spicy fruit with a nice meaty presence grabs hold of your palate with pepper and some earthiness coming in later. This has a nice lingering finish which again highlights the meaty elements with chocolate and fruit in the background providing nice sweetness. This is very nice with impressive balance. (93 pts)
2009 Turley Zinfandel Tofanelli Vineyard – $34.00
My Tasting Note
The wine is a deep maroon color. The alluring nose has brambly berries, black cherries, crushed stones, vanilla, dried herbs, black pepper, dark chocolate and dried flowers. This has a full body with moderate tannins and good acidity. On the palate berries, cherries, spice and dark chocolate jump out first with pepper and vanilla coming in on the back end. The finish has nice length with dried herbs and a dried floral note entering the picture. This is drinking very nicely today but should hold for a couple more years. (91 pts)
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Notes – I use the “official” Cellar Tracker name for the wines. I use Cellar Tracker to help manage and organize my cellar. I highly recommend checking it out at www.cellartracker.com. Loading you existing cellar is a lot less intimidating than it would first appear. There is a good chance 99% of your wine is already in the system, so you generally only need to enter part of the wine’s name and the system will find it for you.
Prices noted are the prices I paid at the time of purchase. I don’t shop around to find the best prices, but my local store is usually VERY competitive. I generally get case discounts, and since I work there part time, I get a 5% discount. Wines purchased direct from a winery do not include any shipping charges. None of the prices include the sales tax.
All wines that were sent to me free of charge to sample will be noted and I will show suggested prices when available.
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The Week in Zinfandel (11/17/14) | Zinfandel Chronicles November 24th, 2014 at 08:01
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