Suggestions for wineries to visit in Sonoma/Mendocino counties?

SteveTimko

Steve Timko
Trying to plan a trip. Handley and Navarro are two that come to mind in Mendocino. Except I can taste both at Family Winemakers
Same problem with wineries in Sonoma County.
Anyone got suggestions?
Not a Napa-type-of-wine dude, by the way.
 
Steve,
Give me a call and maybe I can arrange a meet with Morgan Peterson (Joel's son).
His label is Bedrock, its in my area and its worth doing a tasting there as I think he is someone who will make news in the future.
BTW, I also recommend Cowan Cellars.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Steve,
Give me a call and maybe I can arrange a meet with Morgan Peterson (Joel's son).
His label is Bedrock, its in my area and its worth doing a tasting there as I think he is someone who will make news in the future.
BTW, I also recommend Cowan Cellars.
Best, Jim

Except those Cowan Cellars folks are dicks about allocations and force hostage wines on you...
 
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Steve,
Give me a call and maybe I can arrange a meet with Morgan Peterson (Joel's son).
His label is Bedrock, its in my area and its worth doing a tasting there as I think he is someone who will make news in the future.
BTW, I also recommend Cowan Cellars.
Best, Jim

Except those Cowan Cellars folks are dicks about allocations and force hostage wines on you...

Only on you, monkey boy; only on you.
Best, Jim
 
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Steve,
Give me a call and maybe I can arrange a meet with Morgan Peterson (Joel's son).
His label is Bedrock, its in my area and its worth doing a tasting there as I think he is someone who will make news in the future.
BTW, I also recommend Cowan Cellars.
Best, Jim
Hey, I'm expecting VIP treatment from Cowan Cellars.

Thanks Larry for mentioning Unti. I love their wines and I see they're not on the list.
Thanks also for the recommendations for Porter Creek. I hadn't heard of them, at least that I remember, but they definitely look to be in my groove.
 
Some of each. I liked his 00s and 01s. I liked some 02s and none of the 03s. Around then I started to taste more oak in the wines and the Cal-Itals were getting too ripe. But I also see that I haven't bought any recent wine, so, perhaps I should check in.

Despite his being in Zin country I preferred his syrah and grenache. I have one bottle of his 2002 Benchland Syrah left in storage.
 
I like Duxoup a lot. Very nice and quirky couple making everything themselves. And cool wines (apart from Syrah they make Charbono and Sangiovese and more recently Gamay and Dolcetto which I have not tried yet).

Officially one cannot visit but I have been there twice and called ahead and each time one of the owners spent several hours with me/us.

 
Native yeasts. One of the owners is a Fetzer and I'll bet it's that Fetzer.

At Saracina, our winemaking emphasizes a respect for tradition and for hand-crafted techniques, including the use of indigenous yeast and bacteria, minimal intervention and no filtration of the wines. For our white wines, we hand-pick and whole cluster press the grapes, use indigenous yeast fermentation and extended aging on the lees in both neutral oak barrels and small stainless steel barrels. Both the cooperage and lees contact help to express the minerality and nuance of the white grapes and lend a complexity and depth to the mouth-feel. For our red wines, we use a moderately cool soak pre-fermentation, followed by an indigenous yeast fermentation with aerative pumpovers, and finish with an extended maceration with heat. Malolactic fermentation takes place in French oak barrels, one third of which are new. The blends are assembled in the summer after the prior year's harvest and bottled the following winter without filtration. These protocols, pioneered by Saracina's winemaking consultant, David Ramey, produce stylistically unique wines with lush fruit and silky, soft tannins. Our labor-intensive, artisanal approach to winemaking produces wines which are true to their varietal character and evoke an honest sense of place.
 
Bucklin - Sonoma Valley

Old Hill Ranch vineyard, one of the oldest in the state, is a very interesting heirloom site. Intense and distinctive Zinfandel based wine.

Dashe - Dry Creek Valley

Zinfandel is the primary focus
 
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