Wednesday 29 November 2017

Wild And Crazy… About Quality (Talking Grignolino And Barbera Co-Ops MyNameIsBarbera.com)

Let’s bid adieu to November, in our hazy, Post-THanksgiving-Holiday trytophanic bliss, by catching up on the happenings over at My Name Is Barbera (for whom I’ve been doing both written and video work helping to promote Barbera – and other – wines from the Monferrato area).

First, there’s a lips-eye-view (yeah, I agree, that phrase was a bad idea) of Monferrato’s vinous equivalent of a Wild and Crazy Guy, Grignolino. I’ve written about this wily, overachieving red grape before, but here’s a chance to get up close and personal with it through a video tasting of Grignolino wine with Paolo Bava, whose passion for these wines will quickly be evident once you start watching.

Next, we get back to our normal programming, which means focusing on Barbera. In an interesting twist, in the next vid we move away from the relatively small production outfits that have been the focus of much of our previous journey through Monferrato’s Barbera producers, and talk with Lorenzo Giordano of Vinchio Vaglio (who just celebrated their 30th anniversary, with an event at which I was supposed to speak, but couldn’t attend because I got wicked sick… and yeah, I’m still a little raw about it, thankyouverymuch…). As you’ll see in the vid below, Girodano oversees a sizeable cooperative operation, and so has a unique, 20,000-foot view of Barbera throughout the region, and through all of its various quality levels.

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wild And Crazy… About Quality (Talking Grignolino And Barbera Co-Ops MyNameIsBarbera.com) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wild-and-crazy-about-quality-talking-girgnolino-and-barbera-co-ops-mynameisbarbera-com/

Monday 27 November 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 27, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 16 Domaine de Cala Coteaux Varois Rose (Provence): You forgot about well-crafted Rose in the Winter time, didn't you? Shame on you… shame, shame shame. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Pacherhof Sylvaner Vigne Vecchie Alte Reben (Alto Adige Valle Isarco): Sometimes, when you add spices to tropical fruit, a little bit of magic actually occurs. $25 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Boutari Moschofilero (Mantinia): Somebody has been working out in the off-season, because there's some punching-above-the-price-weightclass action going on here. $15 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Cortonesi La Manella (Brunello di Montalcino): Whoever told you that big, young Brunello couldn't be bold and generous was… uhm… not correct. $50 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Tasca Tascante Il Tascante Nerello Mascalese (Sicilia): That line between brambly and pure is fine, precise, and in this case, also delicious. $50 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Tasca Tascante Buonora (Etna Bianco): Did you need more Caricante in your life? Damn right you needed more Caricante in your life, fool! $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • NV Ruggeri Argeo Prosecco Brut (Prosecco): Apples, with hints of freshness, crispness, and more than a hint of bubbly aggression. $17 B >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Pfendler Pinot Noir (Sonoma Coast): Sometimes, the Coast is lean & lithe; this really isn't one of those times, like, whatsoever. $45 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Sterling Vineyards Sparkling Rose (California): Warmer, sunny weather has a new BFF, who likes to dress all flashy and stuff. $22 B >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Dutton Goldfield Dutton Ranch Green Valley Vineyard Gewurztraminer (Green Valley): When you want your heady jasmine with a side of heady lychee. $30 B+ >>find this wine<<
Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 27, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-november-27-2017/

Sunday 26 November 2017

Z’ivo 2012 Pinot Noir, Eola Amity Hills (Willamette Valley)

Z'ivo Pinot Noir Eola Amity Hills Willamette Valley 2012

Z’ivo Pinot Noir Eola Amity Hills Willamette Valley 2012

John Zelko is an interesting guy. He earned his MD from the University of Colorado Denver in 1983.  He’s now a practicing surgeon at The Oregon Clinic’s Portland facility, where he’s worked since 2008.

The interesting bit is what John did between 1983 and 2008. He planted a vineyard in Willamette Valley. In 1993, he planted 25 acres of Pinot Noir and a little bit of Pinot Blanc. By 2000, he bottled his first commercial release, which he named Z’IVO.  He may be the only practicing surgeon-slash-fulltime winemaker in the world.

The name Z’IVO can be translated in two ways, both of which harken back to his heritage.   Z’IVO  is both “Z’s Wines” and “Alive” in  Czech.  For the past decade, John has been working with Miguel Lopez as a winemaking consultant. Miguel is a fantastic –if unheralded– winemaker in Oregon. He was the winemaker at Walnut City Wineworks in  McMinnville until 2010,  moved on to Domain Serene, and is now the Assistant Winemaker at Domaine Roy et Fils.  I’ve been waiting for him to take the helm of a project, but his fingerprints are all over this current vintage of Z’IVO.

This bottle is a classic example of Willamette Valley Pinot from the Eola Amity Hills. Elegant and composed, the wine offers enticing floral and cherry notes. The structure is sleek with supple tannins that lends this Pinot Noir a glossy sophistication. A very pretty bottle.

 

The post Z’ivo 2012 Pinot Noir, Eola Amity Hills (Willamette Valley) appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/zivo-2012-pinot-noir-eola-amity-hills-willamette-valley/

Wednesday 22 November 2017

Chile’s Finest, Via San Francisco (Wines of Chile Awards 2017 Winners)

AWoCA 2017

[ Editor’s note: Yes, I realize that tomorrow is Thanksgiving in the USA. No, I don’t feel compelled to write about wine pairings for it, because that topic has been covered, and covered, and covered, and covered, and covered already. If you’re really jonesing for Turkey Day wine help, see previous coverage of that here on 1WD, all of which is still relevant. ]

Every once in a while, I get asked to do really cool things, like judge wine competitions alongside bright, interesting, qualified people who, for reasons that I still don’t fully understand, consider me a peer.

Evan Goldstein AWoCA 2017

Evan Goldstein, MS, surveys the room during the AWoCA 2017 judging

Such was the case a couple of months ago, when my friend Evan Goldstein (and his Full Circle Wine Solutions biz) asked if I’d be interested in judging the 2017 incarnation of the Anual Wines of Chile Awards, held this hear in his native San Francisco. I’ve worked with Evan and FCWS a few times before, who are top-notch, and we know that Evan knows his shiz when it comes to South American wines in general, so of course I said Hellz Yeah to that.

The winners of the 2017 AWoCA (now in its 14th incarnation) were recently announced at an event in Washington DC, and so I am now officially able to share highlights of the results with you.

What I found most exciting during the unfolding of the AWoCA competition, even more so than the high quality of Chile’s vinous wares in general, was how well Chile’s much-touted diversity was on full, 4KHD-tuned-to-vibrant-color-settings display in the wines that were entered…

First, here are the top-scorers in what many would now consider the usual suspects categories when it comes to Chilean wine:

Best Sauvignon Blanc: Viña Haras de Pirque, Albaclara Sauvignon Blanc 2017

Best Chardonnay: Luis Felipe Edwards, Marea Valle de Leyda Chardonnay 2016

Best Pinot Noir: San Pedro, 1865 Selected Vineyard Pinot Noir 2016

Best Cabernet Sauvignon under $20: Viña Requingua, Puerto Viejo Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon 2016

AWoCA 2017

Tough day at the office…

Next, a taste of Chile’s more expensive red side of things, which, yeah, technically has been going on for many years, but I think is just recently being accepted into the general social consciousness as being ok, like the way that we all just decided that The Rock was a funny actor:

Best Cabernet Sauvignon $20-$50: Viña Maipo, Protegido Cabernet Sauvignon 2014

Best Cabernet Sauvignon over $50; Best in Show: SANTA EMA, Catalina 2014

Best Carménère $25 and over: San José de Apalta, Carménère Blue Label 2015

Luis Felipe Edwards Chile view

My view from Luis Felipe Edwards, back in 2016

Finally, here are the sides of Chilean that you probably were not expecting. For me, they happen to be the most exciting; not just because I am, admittedly, a geek freak for Cab Franc, but also because these wines are stellar examples of why Chile really is that diverse when it comes to wine. Not just that, but one of the wines helps to bolster my claim that Carignan is the best fine red wine grape being grown in Chile at the moment:

Best Other White: Viña Casas del Bosque, Gran Reserva Late Harvest Riesling 2015  (Right? Right?!?? I’ve had my fair share of underwhelming Chilean Rieslings, and this is definitely not one of those).

Best Sparkling: Viña Undurraga, Undurraga Rosé Royal N/V (Admit it, you didn’t expect bubbles to show up here… Further proof, as if we needed it, that the sea-breeze-infused Leyda Valley is one of Chile’s most dynamic areas).

Best Syrah; Best in Show: Viña Casas Del Bosque, Gran Reserva Syrah 2015 (These guys have been doing some interesting things with Syrah for a long time, actually).

Best Carignan/Secano: Luis Felipe Edwards, LFE100 CIEN Carignan 2012

Best Other Red: Viña Valdivieso, Single Vineyard Cabernet Franc 2013

Best Red Blend: Viña Cousiño Macul, Lota 2011

 

JR SF 2017

Obligatory trolley car ride

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Chile’s Finest, Via San Francisco (Wines of Chile Awards 2017 Winners) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/chiles-finest-via-san-francisco-wines-of-chile-awards-2017-winners/

Monday 20 November 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 20, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 15 Donatella Cinelli Colombini Cenerentola (Orcia): Cinderella story in which the oft-overlooked beauty of Foglia Tonda finds a handsome prince in Sangiovese. $45 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Donatella Cinelli Colombini Brunello di Montalcino (Tuscany): A sports car with leather-&-wood interior, dark red paint job, & orange peel air freshener. $60 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Donatella Cinelli Colombini Il Drago e le 8 Colombe (Toscana): Rich, poised, and sinewy Tuscan blend; feed it – & yourself – some beef. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Casarena Naoki's Vineyard Malbec (Agrelo): very, very good things can happen when people are not afraid of Malbec showing off its floral, herbal side. $30 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Reva Barolo Ravera (Barolo): Its floral, spicy, and balanced litheness is, in fact, worth raving about, at least for the time between sips. $50 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Reva Langhe Bianco (Langhe): That time when sage brush met passionfruit, & they lived happily ever after and all of that kind of stuff. $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Montes Outer Limits Zapallar Vineyard Pinot Noir (Aconcagua Valley): There is nothing wrong with your Pinot; do not attempt to adjust its sexiness. $NA B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Cornerstone Cellars Calistoga Cabernet Sauvignon (Napa Valley): Flashy, yes, but adorned with gorgeous subtleties for the detail-oriented among you. $75 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Gary Farrell Russian River Valley Selection Chardonnay (Sonoma County): Finalist in the Best US Domestic Chard for the Cash category that I just made up. $35 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Priest Ranch Grenache Blanc (Napa Valley): Almost too curvaceous for its own dang self. Almost. In this case, Big is certainly still Beautiful. $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 20, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-november-20-2017/

Sunday 19 November 2017

Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc, Stellenbosch

Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc Stellenbosch

Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc Stellenbosch

 

Growing grapes has always been a challenge. In the past three years, the changing conditions in vineyards have made it even more difficult.  Winemakers and vineyard managers the world over are adapting to a dryer and hotter growing season. South Africa’s Simsonsig is an example of taking advantage of the development to make better wine.

This Chenin is one of the more successful I’ve seen from Simonsig in recent years. The drought resulted in less fruit, but the overall higher quality of grapes: the harvest team had to work round the clock to harvest each block of fruit. It was a feat of timing: in the dry heat, they only had a few hours before the brix (sugar levels) jumped too high and the acid levels dipped too low.

This charismatic bottle is pure and deep with tree fruits and melons.  Guava, honeydew, peaches, and pears are present. A bright lemon acidity keeps the slight richness in balance and gives a note of minerality to the charming finish.

 

The post Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc, Stellenbosch appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/simonsig-2016-chenin-blanc-stellenbosch/

Thursday 16 November 2017

Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion (Bordeaux)

Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion

Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion

Françoise Lannoye is one of my favorite unknown Bordeaux winemakers. She makes great wine in unconventional areas and does it without fanfare.  Along with her husband Philippe, she purchased Château Lanbersac (Puisseguin Saint-Emilion) in 2001 then Château Moulin de Clotte in 2002 (Castillon Côtes de Bordeaux).  My first exposure to her wines was a bottle of her old-vine Chateau Lanbersac.  Then there was a beautiful bottle of  Moulin de Clotte .  She now also owns  Château Ambe Tour Pourret (a Saint-Emilion Grand Cru), which she acquired in 2007.

Lanbersac is located in the Puisseguin St Emilion wine region. This bottle is mostly Merlot, with a small amount of Cabernet Franc, which is typical for the area. Many of the so-called satellite regions of St Emilion are often unremarkable, banking on their association with St Emilion to do the hard work for them.  M. Lannoye is not such a winemaker. Year in and year out, her wines are both authentic and aristocratic.

This vintage is very pretty. Rich currant and graphite on the nose. The palate is muscular and angular with a firm mineral edge. This wine is going to need three to five years in the cellar. At this point, the tannins are overpowering the fruit, which offers up rich boysenberry and plum flavors and  a beautiful finish of burnt cedar and allspice.

 

 

The post Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion (Bordeaux) appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/chateau-lanbersac-2014-puisseguin-saint-emilion-bordeaux/

Wednesday 15 November 2017

Rangen Riesling Rocks, Revisited

Remember when I waxed all smitten-like over a tasting of Rangen Alsace Grand Cru Riesling?

Well, I do. Rangen view 2017

I was so smitten, in fact, that I did  something that I’ve only ever done twice in ten years, which was to reach out to the U.S. PR agency dealing with Alsatian wines and ask them to book me on a media jaunt to the area, so that I could get my feet directly on those Rangen rocks. Which, luckily for me, they did.

Rangen steps 2017In a classic case of be-careful-what-you-wish-for-vuz-you-just-might-get-it, I then had to scale the greater-than-45-degree slopes of Alsace’s southernmost (and by far its steepest) Grand Cru vineyard site, though the view (and the tastes) about 450 meters up were well worth a little breathlessness (PSA: if you consider yourself not exactly physically fit, you might want to skip a visit to Rangen). Think the Mosel, only steeper (yes, the vineyard workes use ropes to secure themselves from falling to their deaths during harvest), or the Douro (only with less terracing and more danger to life and limb). The only marring comes by way of the factories along the nearby Thur river, a holdover from the `50s. Otherwise, this spot between Thann and Vieux-Thann is thoroughly picturesque.

Rangen has a few other characteristics that distinguish it from the rest of Alsace’s (many) GC sites. It might be one of the oldest of the region’s Grand Crus, with the origin of its name being lost to posterity (the first recorded reference goes back all the way to the Thirteenth Century). The rocky soils are about 330 million years old, the result of older mountain ranges and volcanic extrusions all mixed up together. This makes for a harder-than-average vineyard soil, with dark components that help to retain heat, with a more fragile subsoil that allows deep penetration by the vine roots.

You’d think that, with the steepness, naturally low yields, and the fact that it takes new vines closer to seven years to produce fruit here (versus three years in more forgiving environments), that harvest would be a total bitch. But there’s an even bitchier aspect of the Rangen for those that tend it…

Rangen steps 2 2017

Ok, you probably get the point by now

The yearly maintenance, I was told by those who perform it, is by far the most difficult aspect of farming the Rangen. Dry rock wall terraces don’t fix themselves, after all. That this is more difficult than dealing with the steep terrain is telling; I mean, structures at the base of the Rangen recently had to be evacuated when a truck, stuck on one of the higher-elevation roads, was in danger of tipping over onto the hillside.

Rangen is such a pain in the ass that, despite having about 500 hectares planted back in the Middle Ages, it was all but abandoned in the 1970s in favor of more easily workable sites. In an auspiciously prescient maneuver, Domaine Zind Humbrecht bought up as much of the GC as they could, transforming vineyards that had fallen into disrepair. Rangen now has about 22 hectares planted, but as you’ll see below, the difference in quantity is made up for in longevity and quality…

 

 

2008 Domaine Maurice Schoech Harmonie R Rangen de Thann

sexy2008 Domaine Maurice Schoech Harmonie “R” Rangen de Thann (Alsace Grand Cru, $55)

The harmony in this case is the field-blending of several of Alsace’s noble grape varieties: Riesling, Pinot Gris, and Gewürztraminer. We’re leading with this one because, in theory, the terroir of Rangen is supposed to lend itself to some of the longest-lived and finessed of Alsace’s GC wines, and this beauty does help to prove that point. Floral, heady, toasty, nutty, and intense, you will need to like lemon rind (and a hint of yeasty botrytis, courtesy of Rangen’s proximity to the Thur) or you will need to go home.

2010 Wolfberger Riesling Rangen

2010 Wolfberger Riesling Rangen (Alsace Grand Cru, $NA)

A label that betrays Alsace’s historical German connection, and accurately suggests the power within the bottle. Mandarin, lemon blossom, candied lemon peel, salinity, moving into a wonderful balance of richness and pithy structure, ending with gun-flint and a finish that’s almost as long as the climb up the steep vineyard steps between the vines from whence it came.

1989 Domaine Zind-Humbrecht Riesling Rangen de Thann Clos Saint Urbain

elegant1989 Domaine Zind-Humbrecht Riesling Rangen de Thann Clos Saint Urbain (Alsace Grand Cru, $NA)

This is juuuuuust about perfection.  As toasty and nutty as you’d expect at this age, but there’s no lack of candied citrus peel or dried citrus fruits to counterbalance the astringent, floral edges and hints of earthiness. Stunning, gorgeous, generous, and long. Go ahead, hate me.

2009 Domaine Bruno Hertz Pinot Gris Grand Cru Rangen de Thann

sexy2009 Domaine Bruno Hertz Pinot Gris Grand Cru Rangen de Thann (Alsace Grand Cru, $NA)

By now you are probably understanding why I didn’t subtitle this post as “Recent Releases.” With almost ten years under its belt, this PG is still showing off its heady, floral side, and still has the tropical fruit richness you’d expect in the mouth, just add toast (and a hella-long, dried fruit finish).

Rangen workers 2017

Winemakers and vineyard caretakers showing off Rangen’s sliiiight steepness…

2015 Schoffit Rangen de Thann Clos Saint-Theobald Gewürztraminer (Alsace Grand Cru, $60)

And you’d thought that I’d forgotten about Gewürztraminer, didn’t you? This wine, in particular, is difficult to forget. Roses, (very) ripe stone fruits that are presented in broad, generous palate strokes (see what I did there?); this is a sleeper, I think, in that its aging potential (courtesy of some zesty acidity) will surprise those who hang on long enough to a bottle of this.

1998 Schoffit Riesling Rangen Clos Saint-Theobald Selection de Grains Nobles

1998 Schoffit Riesling Rangen Clos Saint-Theobald Selection de Grains Nobles (Alsace Grand Cru, $NA)

Not made often (they need about 80% botrytis to pull it off), and probably not at all inexpensive, this is absolutely stunning in just about any way that you can evaluate it. The color of orange hard candy. Aromas of quince, dried lemon, oranges, marmalade, sultana, flint, sweet tea, and petrol. Flavors of ripe, fresh citrus fruits. Despite the nearly 160 g/l of sugar, there’s low abv and high acidity, so the whole thing comes off as impeccably balanced (though one sip will tell you that this is clearly very drinkable dessert wine territory). It finishes with multiple levels of sweet dried fruits. As if you didn’t have enough reason to hate me already, right?

Cheers!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Rangen Riesling Rocks, Revisited from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/rangen-riesling-rocks-2/

Monday 13 November 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 13, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 11 Domaine Bruno Hertz Riesling Rangen de Thann Hospices de Strasbourg (Alsace): Turpentine & flint that are magically drinkable. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Domaine Maurice Schoech Harmonie R Rangen de Thann (Alsace Grand Cru): The color of lemon rind, the headiness of lemon blossoms. $52 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Gundlach Bundschu Vintage Reserve (Sonoma Valley): A little Cab Franc – & a lot of opulent cocoa – can go a loooooong way, folks. $125 A >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Cadaretta Southwind Cabernet Sauvignon (Walla Walla): Bring a high tolerance for wood spice, & lots of patience. But worth it. $75 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Rain Dance Vineyards Nicholas Vineyard Estate Riesling (Chehalem Mountains): The apple-limes answer to your Thai dinner question. $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • Domaine Papagiannakos Skin Contact Savatiano Vareli (Markopoulo): Probably how all Retsina-bound grapes really ought to be made. $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Olianas Vermentino (Sardegna): Enough hint of a sea breeze to make you contemplate moving permanently to a Mediterranean island. $22 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 11 Vivanco Seleccion de Familia Reserva (Rioja): Aptly named, as there's a lot of life left to live here; the familia has good taste. $33 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Neyen Espiritu de Apalta (Apalta Valley): Soft, silky, and smooth almost to a hedonistic fault; the operative word being Almost. $60 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Ritual Sauvignon Blanc (Casablanca Valley): This one is punching above the welterweight class with complexity & balance 1-2 combo. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 13, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-november-13-2017/

Sunday 12 November 2017

Shannon Ridge 2016 “High Elevation Collection” Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California)

Shannon Ridge 2016 "High Elevation Collection" Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California)

Shannon Ridge 2016 “High Elevation Collection” Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California)

Shannon Ridge is located in California’s Lake County, which is a hard place to make wine. Not because great wine can’t be made, but because it’s always in the (metaphorical) shadow of its closest neighbor: Napa Valley. In the past decade, I’ve reviewed two other Shannon Ridge wines: their Single Vineyard Tempranillo and the Wrangler Red,  both were rated in the low 90’s.

This is the style of Sauvignon Blanc that only a Cali winemaker can accomplish. Stylistically, it’s somewhere between a  high-end Bordeaux Blanc and a New Zealander.  On the nose, there is quince, buttered herbs, and spring flowers. The palate is texturally rich and slightly decadent, although the fresh acidity opens up in the mid-palate. The finish hints at tomato leaf and bay leaf and progresses into zesty grapefruit.

The post Shannon Ridge 2016 “High Elevation Collection” Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California) appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/shannon-ridge-2016-high-elevation-collection-sauvignon-blanc-lake-county-california/

Thursday 9 November 2017

November Newsletter

Wine School Newsletter for November 2017

Wine School Newsletter for November 2017

 

Our Little Secret

In our 18 years of operation, we’ve learned a thing or two about teaching wine classes.   I love my job, but it’s the caliber of our students that really makes it worthwhile. I am deeply grateful that so many of you are willing to register for classes months ahead of schedule.

But  I also know that is deeply aggravating for many of you, as well. Not everyone can organize their schedule months in advance.  I’m the same: I can barely make a restaurant reservation a week in advance.  Sure, if you want to come to one of our super-popular classes like Champagne, Exotic Wines, Wine 101, or  Boutique Napa Valley you are going to have to sign up ASAP. But there are other classes that are designed just for you, our core friends and students.

When you see a class like our upcoming Israeli Wine, though, you really should take a moment to reflect about why we are offering it.  The average Joe isn’t going to come to that class. That’s by design. We offer it every year, and it’s one of my favorite classes we run.  You should come. Keep in mind that I always sneak in classes like this. For instance, I have also listed a class on Portuguese wine as well as one on the wines of Santa Barbara.

Thank you for your support over the years!

Cheers,

Keith

PS, We are running the Luxury Wine Scholar™ Certification program in January.

luxury wine scholar

The Luxury Wine Scholar™ Program from the National Wine School

 

Wine Reviews by Keith Wallace

Wine Reviews by Keith Wallace

Latoque 2015 Reserve

Latoque 2015 Reserve

 

Primarily Cabernet Sauvignon with a bit of Syrah and Malbec. It’s also quite delicious and drinks above its mysterious lineage. Melted chocolate and blackberry and licorice on the nose. A bit of forest floor (sous bois) on the palate backed up with lush full-bodied tannins. The finish edges into bay leaves and black fruit. Very nice indeed.

$10.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

89 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc Stellenbosch

Simonsig 2016 Chenin Blanc Stellenbosch

This Chenin is one of the more successful I’ve seen from Simonsig in recent years. This charismatic bottle is pure and deep with tree fruits and melons. Guava, honeydew, peaches, and pears are present. A bright lemon acidity keeps the slight richness in balance and gives a note of minerality to the charming finish.

$8.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

89 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

Shannon Ridge 2016 "High Elevation Collection" Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California)

Shannon Ridge 2016 “High Elevation Collection” Sauvignon Blanc Lake County (California)

 

This is the style of Sauvignon Blanc that only a Cali winemaker can accomplish. Stylistically, it’s somewhere between a  high-end Bordeaux Blanc and a New Zealander.  On the nose, there is quince, buttered herbs, and spring flowers. The palate is texturally rich and slightly decadent, although the fresh acidity opens up in the mid-palate. The finish hints at tomato leaf and bay leaf and progresses into zesty grapefruit.

$10.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

90 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

 

Bersano 2011 Generala Barbera d' Asti Superiore Nizza

Bersano 2011 Generala Barbera d’ Asti Superiore Nizza

 

The Generala is Bersano’s luxury-level Barbera, sourced from the Generala vineyard in Nizza,  which was originally planted in the 1950s. This is an atypical Barbera, with dense aromas of persimmon and fenugreek, followed by a full-bodied expression of toasted oak, mocha, and smoked vanilla.  The finish opens into wildflowers and blackberry. There have been at least 6 of their wines that have shown up in our stores, including their excellent 2010 Barolo I reviewed a few months ago.

$14.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

91 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

 

Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion

Chateau Lanbersac 2014 Puisseguin Saint Emilion

Françoise Lannoye is one of my favorite unknown Bordeaux winemakers. Year in and year out, her wines are both authentic and aristocratic. My first exposure to her wines was a bottle of her old-vine Chateau Lanbersac.  Then there was a beautiful bottle of  Moulin de Clotte.  Year in and year out, her wines are both authentic and aristocratic.

This vintage is very pretty. Rich currant and graphite on the nose. The palate is muscular and angular with a firm mineral edge. This wine is going to need three to five years in the cellar. At this point, the tannins are overpowering the fruit, which offers up rich boysenberry and plum flavors and a beautiful finish of burnt cedar and allspice.

$14.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

91 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

 

Z'ivo Pinot Noir Eola Amity Hills Willamette Valley 2012

Z’ivo 2012 Pinot Noir Eola Amity Hills (Willamette Valley)

 

This bottle is a classic example of Willamette Valley Pinot from the Eola Amity Hills. Elegant and composed, the wine offers enticing floral and cherry notes. The structure is sleek with supple tannins that lend this Pinot Noir a glossy sophistication. A very pretty bottle, and a great value for Pinot.

$19.99  | A Chairman’s Selection from the Wine & Spirits Stores in Pennsylvania

90 Points | Wine Report by Keith Wallace

The post November Newsletter appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/november-newsletter/

Bersano 2011 “Generala” Barbera d’ Asti Superiore Nizza (Piedmont)

Bersano 2011 Generala Barbera d' Asti Superiore Nizza

Bersano 2011 Generala Barbera d’ Asti Superiore Nizza

If you were buying Barolo back in the 80’s, Bersano was a brand you’d seek out. Located in Nizza, the winery offered up classic Piedmontese wines. Their 1982 Barolo Riserva was sublime (and you can still buy a bottle for $80, but you’ll have to travel to travel to Berlin’s Cave du Connaisseur to get it).

It was one of the largest wineries in the Piedmont, with over 500 acres of vines. They were producing some great bottles. Sadly, the Bersano family sold the winery in the late 80’s, and quality levels plummetted. By the 1990’s the winery all but disappeared from wine racks across the US.  In the late 90’s another Italian winemaking family (the Massimellis) purchased Bersano and started rebuilding its tarnished reputation.

Only very recently (in 2012) did their wines finally return to  American shores. That was thanks to Vin Divino, a Chicago-based wine importer.  Then the importer was purchased by the Spanish company González Byass in 2013. The new Spanish-led company dropped Bersano from its portfolio, which was picked up by a much smaller company based in California, 8Vini, in 2015.

Here’s why this matters to you: there has been a slow trickle of Bersano wine into the PLCB Chairman Selection program. The new importer is liquidating old vintages from their California warehouse, and the wines are ending up in PA at deep discounts. There have been at least 6 of their wines that have shown up in our stores, including their excellent 2010 Barolo I reviewed a few months ago.

The Generala is Bersano’s luxury-level Barbera, sourced from the Generala vineyard in Nizza,  which was originally planted in the 1950s. This is an atypical Barbera, with dense aromas of persimmon and fenugreek, followed by a full-bodied expression of toasted oak, mocha, and smoked vanilla.  The finish opens into wildflowers and blackberry.

 

The post Bersano 2011 “Generala” Barbera d’ Asti Superiore Nizza (Piedmont) appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/bersano-2011-generala-barbera-d-asti-superiore-nizza-piedmont/

Wednesday 8 November 2017

All Reference Books, Great And Small (November 2017 Wine Product Roundup)

Hugh Johnson's Pocket Wine 2018

image: amazon.com

This month’s wine product review roundup requires you to get your reading glasses, as we’re taking a look at two upcoming wine reference book releases, one of them tiny (and insanely useful), the other heavy and large (and maybe a lot less useful).

First up is the venerable Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Wine, 2018 edition (Mitchell Beazley, 336 pages, about $17). This tiny marvel is updated annually, and at this point I struggle to say anything about it that I’ve not already said in my usual yearly boot-lickingly obnoxious recommendation of this mighty mini-tome. No wine reference book series even comes close to packing as much utility into such a small package, and doing it so consistently. That I know so may of the contributors probably only makes my endorsement seem even more boot-lickingly boot-licking, but that won’t stop me from highly recommending it. Again.

In the interests of offering a balanced appraisal, I will say that the supplemental material in last year’s 2017 40th Anniversary edition is, in my view, superior to this most recent release; so if you own that one already, you may want to skip this one and see what the 2018 edition has to offer.

Next up is a new edition of the much larger, heavier, and visually impressive Larousse Wine (Hamlyn, 656 pages, about $60). Headed by technical consultant Master Sommelier Georges Lepré, with a team of contributors that are primarily French-based or French-wine-focused, you’d think that a book with 800 photographs and 37 maps would be insanely useful. And you’d be half right…

Larousse Wine

image courtesy of Hamlyn

Nearly half of Larousse Wine is a gorgeously illustrated and well-designed multi-chapter treatise on the core aspects of wine in general, including its history, how it is made, how it can best be enjoyed, and why we have so many misconceptions about it. This portion of the book almost justifies its coffee-table style size and price. The second half of the book is a review of the world’s major wine regions, with producer highlights, but is dominated to an almost shocking degree by France. So much dead tree real-estate is dedicated to French wine here that the USA and Canada get only about 16 pages in total. Chile gets only about 4 pages… and you get the picture. This seriously reduces the utility of the second half of Larousse Wine for all but the most ardent Francophiles, and undermines its subtitle claim of being “the definitive reference for wine lovers” (just put the word “French” in there before “wine” and you’re welcome, guys, I just fixed it for you).

What is potentially more interesting than these reference releases (to me, anyway) is the fact that they are being released in hardcover, printed format in the first place. Why do we still have major paper-based updated editions to them in a nigh-always-connected world? I don’t have an answer to that, but I find it increasingly more old-fashioned, like making voice calls, using Quicken, or having landline phone  service. I mean, I like to page through a wine tome as much as anyone, but I recognize that at 45 years old, I’m just waxing nostalgic at this point…

Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at All Reference Books, Great And Small (November 2017 Wine Product Roundup) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/all-reference-books-great-and-small-november-2017-wine-product-roundup/

Monday 6 November 2017

Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 6, 2017

So, like, what is this stuff, anyway?
I taste a bunch-o-wine (technical term for more than most people). So each week, I share some of my wine reviews (mostly from samples) and tasting notes with you via twitter (limited to 140 characters). They are meant to be quirky, fun, and easily-digestible reviews of currently available wines. Below is a wrap-up of those twitter wine reviews from the past week (click here for the skinny on how to read them), along with links to help you find these wines, so that you can try them for yourself. Cheers!

  • 15 Vina Cobos Cocodrilo Corte (Lujan de Cuyo/Valle de Uco): Did you know that cloves & dark plums could be sexy? Well, it's true. $29 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Terrazas de los Andes Reserva Malbec (Mendoza): Old vines + know-how + a lot of smoked meat = a can't-go-too-wrong Malbec pick. $20 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Nieto Senetiner Blend Collection Cabernet Franc-Cabernet Sauvignon (Mendoza): Friendly, fruity, fragrant, & f–king quaffable red. $13 B >>find this wine<<
  • 16 Zuccardi Santa Julia Reserva Malbec (Mendoza): Witness your incredibly addictive gateway drug to juicy, spicy Argentine reds. $14 B >>find this wine<<
  • 12 Luigi Bosca Finca Los Nobles Cabernet Bouchet (Las Compuertas): Rustic, funky, eclectic, and, above all else, sternly genuine. $70 A- >>find this wine<<
  • 14 Meyer Fonne Gewurztraminer Grand Cru Sporen Vendange Tardives (Alsace): Death by marmalade might actually be a very good way to go $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 13 Meyer Fonne Pinot Gris Hinterburg de Katzenthal Cuvee Eloi (Alsace): Heady, honeyed, late of harvest, & basically just heavenly. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Meyer-Fonne Riesling Kaefferkopf (Alsace Grand Cru): If lemons went camping & used flint fire to toast their apple-&-pear dinners. $NA A- >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Meyer Fonne Riesling Vignoble de Katzenthal (Alsace): Vines that almost literally storm the castle have gorgeously calm souls. $25 B+ >>find this wine<<
  • 15 Stephane Aviron Morgon Cote du Py Vieilles Vignes (Beaujolais): The only thing old about this lively delight are those vines. $24 B+ >>find this wine<<
Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at Wine Reviews: Weekly Mini Round-Up For November 6, 2017 from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wine-reviews-weekly-mini-round-up-for-november-6-2017/

Sunday 5 November 2017

Latoque 2015 Reserve, Languedoc Roussillon

Latoque 2015 Reserve

Latoque 2015 Reserve

Does this wine exist?  If it wasn’t for the fact that I found a bottle at a wine & spirits store, I would have to say “no”.

I read about the wine while perusing the PLCB’s website. They listed it as having a 90 point score from the Wine Advocate, being produced by the Les Vignobles Foncalieu winery in France, and being priced at under $11.  The website also showed that the wine was for sale all around the Philly region. That is the kind of wine I want to try. It may be good enough for our wine newsletter. However…..

Here are a few of the reasons it shouldn’t exist.:

  1. It’s not listed on the winery’s website.
  2. The  90 point review is not in the Wine Advocate’s database.
  3. It’s not available in any wine shop anywhere (according to wine-searcher.com)

Here’s the mythical review that the PLCB published:

“Ripe, medium- to full-bodied, nicely concentrated and with ripe tannin, it has real Cabernet character, lots of dark fruits, scorched earth and chocolate aromas and flavors, and a good finish. Drink 2016-2022.”  (88-90) Points Wine Advocate

Here’s what we do know: it’s primarily  Cabernet Sauvignon with a bit of Syrah and  Malbec. It’s also quite delicious and drinks above its mysterious lineage.  Melted chocolate and blackberry and licorice on the nose. A bit of forest floor (sous bois) on the palate backed up with lush full-bodied tannins. The finish edges into bay leaves and black fruit. Very nice indeed.

 

The post Latoque 2015 Reserve, Languedoc Roussillon appeared first on Wine School of Philadelphia.



source https://www.vinology.com/latoque-2015-reserve-languedoc-roussillon/

Wednesday 1 November 2017

WOLVERINES! (Talking Albarossa For MyNameIsBarbera.com)

Red Dawn

For my latest installment over at MyNameIsBarbera.com, we go in-depth on Incrocio Dalmasso XV-31, better known as Albarossa… as in Red DawnWOLVERINES!!!

The Albarossa grape has a history that winds almost as much as the roads throughout the Piedmont hillsides, and in its own inimitable, roundabout way ended up achieving what its creator set out to accomplish, though not exactly in the way that he intended. All of which is just so adorably typical of Monferrato.

If you’re interested in learning what this iteration of Red Dawn can do for you, check out the full story via the link below (invasions and grenades not required):

ALBAROSSA! A NEW RED DAWN IN PIEDMONT

Cheers!

Grab The 1WineDude.com Tasting Guide and start getting more out of every glass of wine today!

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Copyright © 2016. Originally at WOLVERINES! (Talking Albarossa For MyNameIsBarbera.com) from 1WineDude.com - for personal, non-commercial use only. Cheers!

source http://www.1winedude.com/wolverines-talking-albarossa-for-mynameisbarbera-com/