Westcoast ramblings

Florida Jim

Florida Jim
Ten days in California is always dynamic: from the weather (clear and cold, then rainy, then beautiful) to the dining (from very fancy to the Taco truck) to business (some set-backs, some gains), all in a compressed period. Makes coming home a welcome respite.

Along the way, some very nice wines included the 1985 Giacosa, Barbaresco San Stefano Res. which started off a bit tight, loosened nicely with air and then faded slightly; a lovely bottle. A 1999, Jamet, Cte Rtie was in good form with plenty of complexity and good structure but this wine has often concerned me for what I discern as a hole in the middle and here it was again. Maybe the red wine of the trip was the 2000 Edmunds St. John, Syrah Wylie-Fanaughty with its immense complexity even while being fully integrated. And the more air it got, the better it got a remarkable wine just coming into its own. A 1996 dAngerville, Volnay Premier Cru was decanted prior to dinner and, over the span of the meal, became a quintessential expression of Volnay. Likewise, a 1998 Chevillon, Nuits-St.-Georges La Perrires showed its gamey, mineral-based personality after a about an hour open. And a 1996 Taluau, St.-Nicolas-de-Bourgueil VV was sublime once it blew off the expected initial herbaceousness.
The 2001 Hirtzberger, Riesling Singerriedel is rich and powerful, loaded both aromatically and in the mouth and quite long but Im betting cellar time will make it even more attractive. We also tasted the 2008 Bedrock, Cuve Caritas that was a compelling new find. This is semillon/ sauvignon and so well balanced and together that it is cause to explore this new winery further (details below).
There were more than a few others; I didnt take notes, just tried to remember a few impressions.

But a couple of wines/wineries need additional comment:

First, the initial vintage of Westerhold Family Vineyards, Syrah was just bottled and I had a chance to taste it. I have been very excited about this project from Bennett Valley its all a single estate site, all the Alban 1 clone of syrah and the barrel program appears to be fairly constant. Winemaker is Russell Bevan and the farming here is meticulous. The wine is, as you might expect, still closed but there is an underlying saline quality that I think reflects both the clone and the place. It is balanced despite big alcohol and does not feel overdone in any way. The oak is already well on its way to integrating and I expect this will be really stunning in a year or two. Special wine.

Second, Morgan Twain-Peterson (Joel Petersons son) has started Bedrock Wine Co. I tasted with Morgan while I was in town and bought some of his wines immediately. As mentioned above, the Cuve Caritas is a remarkable Bordeaux blanc blend that is fresh and so perfectly balanced that I was immediately charmed. There are also a couple syrahs, two field blends, a cabernet sauvignon, a pinot and a ros for sale now. All are worth trying and I found Morgan to be very knowledgeable and obliging. I expect big things in the next several years from this young man.

Last, but certainly not least, I got to taste, on several occasions, the wines from Bevan Cellars. As most of you know, Russell Bevan is a dear friend and my mentor in this business. Russells style is different from mine; he loves big, yummy, full blown wines with new oak. Yet his wines are not the monsters that I would expect for instance, his 2007 syrah is less alcoholic than mine and mine is 13.9%. In any event, Russells wines are not for the faint of heart but they are not misshapen or incoherent and they have so much concentration and intensity of fruit that I think anyone that likes the CA style will love is syrah and cabernet sauvignon. And I hear hell be making a sauvignon blanc under his own label next year after his efforts with Dry Stack/Grey Stack sauvignon in the past, I look forward to his own bottling.

So much more to tell but this should do it for now. Thanks to all who made this trip a success and a lot of fun. See you in a couple months back on the leftcoast.

Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Steve Edmunds:
Happy homecomingsorry I missed you out here!

Steve,
Me, too.
Diane and I had one afternoon off - I almost called but I took a nap, instead.
'Sorry about that but I'm guessing you understand.
Best, Jim
 
BTW, I just tasted the 2008 Bedrock, Rose Ode de Lulu, and it is also a winner. From very old mouvedre vines in Sonoma this is a ringer for good Bandol rose but probably needs 6 months in the cellar to be at peak. Still, today it was bone dry, flavorful and quite mineral driven; another fine wine from this new producer.
Best, Jim
 
Nice to spend an evening with you and Diane. It seems like the food was decent but the wine & COMPANY were better. Bree and I even forgive both of you for spending that much time to the west of us in that other county. I'm trying to remember its name?
 
While you were out there, did you hear anything about the Cowan Cellars wine. I think I'm on their mailing list but haven't had an update in a while.
bill
 
Bill,
We actually tried some.
A friend once told me that I had made "the Beaujolais of syrah." Right about now, I think he nailed it.
Still jumping through the regulatory hoops in an effort to get to the point where we can release. But honestly, at this point, I don't even care if we get the approval. If we don't, I'll keep a bunch and give the rest away - I love the wine. And 20 cases doesn't go very far.
The 2008 vintage will be entirely different; we are in good shape to release that at a reasonable time. And their will be enough to go around.
BTW, we'll be back out in Sonoma sometime in July with intent to stay through November. Maybe you and SueSue should consider a leftcoast trip?
Best, Jim
 
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