Sharon Bowman
Sharon Bowman
Imagine the thrill to receive an email from esteemed wine shop Flatiron Wines that Napa Valley winemaker Cathy Corison is coming to town, that there will be a tasting with her of back vintages at wine distributor Skurnik's offices for a small group of people—and that we could reply and be part of this wondrous event. I did, by return mail (well, email; we don't all have footmen, as Kirk Wallace does).
I was invited to join.
Yesterday at 6:30pm some eighteen people or so met around a large rectangular table in a room with large windows in the Flatiron district of Manhattan, and Cathy Corison was there seated on a side of the rectangle, and glasses of her wines were before us. (And a sideboard with saucisson sec and cheese and such, which one and all were welcomed to taste, but I didn't sample, so cannot opine.)
We all talked for a hair shy of two hours, and it was most illuminating. As were the wines. Well, luminous, too.
Corison got her start and made wine at Chappellet through the '80s where, in her description, she sought a balance between power and elegance.* Later, she branched out on her own. Her soil of predilection was Benchland, between Rutherford and St. Helena in the Napa Valley, with alluvial soils that were sandy and gravelly but had clay that kept the moisture. This was the hottest part of the valley, but fog came up, and the clay soils were an asset.
I was drawn into her story, to her methods.
I asked many questions, because I haven't delved much (truth: at all) into what is done there, what is Napa. Her answers were illuminating.
She vinifies 100% Cabernet Sauvignon. Why? Because in that part of the world, CS ripens and doesn't need the added fruit of earlier ripening Merlot or the darker tint of Petit Verdot. Other growers/winemakers privilege a Bordeaux blend, but in her view, that wasn't necessary or even desirable in Napa.
Her thought was that when properly ripe, there was an amazing complexity of flavors in the wine from that region, a statement I found borne out in the wines. I was tickled and persuaded by the idea that CS could stand alone.
I have so much more to say, but I will cut the details short and dole them out later—because isn't that how any good serial goes?
We tasted a first series of wines, her Napa cabernets (100% Cabernet Sauvignon) from four vineyards whose grapes she had been purchasing and blending since beginning her winemaking. (The other being Kronos, a separate vineyard and bottling.)
2001
2004
2006
2010
2013
[to be continued]
*See part III, inf., Chappellet.
I was invited to join.
Yesterday at 6:30pm some eighteen people or so met around a large rectangular table in a room with large windows in the Flatiron district of Manhattan, and Cathy Corison was there seated on a side of the rectangle, and glasses of her wines were before us. (And a sideboard with saucisson sec and cheese and such, which one and all were welcomed to taste, but I didn't sample, so cannot opine.)
We all talked for a hair shy of two hours, and it was most illuminating. As were the wines. Well, luminous, too.
Corison got her start and made wine at Chappellet through the '80s where, in her description, she sought a balance between power and elegance.* Later, she branched out on her own. Her soil of predilection was Benchland, between Rutherford and St. Helena in the Napa Valley, with alluvial soils that were sandy and gravelly but had clay that kept the moisture. This was the hottest part of the valley, but fog came up, and the clay soils were an asset.
I was drawn into her story, to her methods.
I asked many questions, because I haven't delved much (truth: at all) into what is done there, what is Napa. Her answers were illuminating.
She vinifies 100% Cabernet Sauvignon. Why? Because in that part of the world, CS ripens and doesn't need the added fruit of earlier ripening Merlot or the darker tint of Petit Verdot. Other growers/winemakers privilege a Bordeaux blend, but in her view, that wasn't necessary or even desirable in Napa.
Her thought was that when properly ripe, there was an amazing complexity of flavors in the wine from that region, a statement I found borne out in the wines. I was tickled and persuaded by the idea that CS could stand alone.
I have so much more to say, but I will cut the details short and dole them out later—because isn't that how any good serial goes?
We tasted a first series of wines, her Napa cabernets (100% Cabernet Sauvignon) from four vineyards whose grapes she had been purchasing and blending since beginning her winemaking. (The other being Kronos, a separate vineyard and bottling.)
2001
2004
2006
2010
2013
[to be continued]
*See part III, inf., Chappellet.