Red Table Wine

Keith Levenberg

Keith Levenberg
I have repeatedly lamented here my failure to find any wine that comes anywhere near to filling the Clos Roche Blanche Cabernet-shaped hole in my life, and I know I am not alone. To be perfectly honest, even the post-Cabernet Pifs weren't an ideal substitute, but at least they still had the CRB magic. For awhile I thought Fosse-Seche Eolithe might do the job but the more I drank it the more clearly it emerged that it was its own thing, and pretty different besides.

The minimum qualifications to fill this position are:
- Guzzleability. You can throw back a bottle with no effort, and probably not even get drunk.
- Thirstquenchingness. Somewhat related to guzzleability, but connotes not merely an ease of drinking but a juiciness sufficiently refreshing that you can drink it at the beach.
- Luminosity. The fruit tastes vinified from neon and even the hue of it in the glass looks like it would function serviceably as a flashlight if you were unfortunate enough to be trapped in a cave but fortunate enough to have brought wine.
- Bite. My mental image of this is expressed in the image of the Japanese guy who used to kick off each episode of the old Iron Chef show by biting into a raw bell pepper with a wild grin. There is an aspect of this related to spicy flavors teetering on the cutting edge of ripe, and an aspect related to pure structure.

Upon reflection, the fact that the wine was made from cabernet grapes or an area we'd call a cool climate were more incidental to the personality than I assumed. So I wasted more time than necessary looking for something to fill the role in the Loire Valley.

The point of this post, of course, is that I finally did manage to find something that scratches the itch. I had actually reached this conclusion some time ago but did not speak up for reasons somewhat akin to the old chestnut about how extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and the 2 or 3 bottles I had do not an extraordinary volume make. Nonetheless, I learned by way of my inbox that the next vintage of it, the 2018, will be offered next week, so I offer as a public service announcement to those who might be inclined to let it pass by to consider

Sandlands Contra Costa Red Table Wine

My note on the 2017 from last year:

2017 Sandlands Red Table Wine Contra Costa County Red Blend
Options3/23/2019 - I LIKE THIS WINE: 95 points (Edit)
65% carignane and 35% mataro from 1920s vines. This is just about the perfect country wine - in an ideal world, this is what every Cotes du Rhone would taste like. It has a similar heartiness, but so much more clarity. It combines an almost Beaujolais-like energy and wild-berry zing with a darker, denser base of fruit but not so dense as to weigh it down, and a gauze of tannin just rustic enough to give it some chew but not so much as to make it harsh or edgy. The drinkability factor is off the charts; you can absolutely guzzle this. Open it with a crusty baguette, runny cheese, and cured meat and be happy.

Oddly enough a pure carignane from the prior release wasn't nearly as good, although I did adore a cinsault, which had some of the same qualities as this in the guzzleability, bite, and spice department but paler fruit, nothing one would call luminous. I know this is not breaking news to those who have a longer history with this winery than I do, but there is some seriously fun wine coming out from these guys.
 
Thanks for the note, I just got that release email. I've had mixed reactions to their lineup. A recent 2012 Trousseau from them shared with Marc D at an anti-social tasting in May was delicious. I've quite enjoyed the Mataro as well in past vintages.
I haven't found whites to be their strong suit, however, or at least stylistically to my liking. The Chenin especially I have found a bit flabby and overoaked.
I haven't bought for a few releases as I wasn't so sure the wines moved me enough to justify on a limited wine budget, but maybe I'll give them another go.
 
Keith, some of Eric's Cote du Rhones could fill your "minimal qualifications". The Chat Fou and St Julien St Alban, among others, come to mind.

I only wish they could be available locally more than just occasionally.

. . . . . Pete
 
so for the clueless and/or igorant, where does this wine come from? i'm guessing that contra costa should tell me, but it's not on me radar. and if imported, who is the importer?
 
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Jayson, some of Eric's Cote du Rhones could fill your "minimal qualifications". The Chat Fou and St Julien St Alban, among others, come to mind.

I only wish they could be available locally more than just occasionally.

. . . . . Pete

Jayson and Keith are different people.
 
originally posted by robert ames:
so for the clueless and/or igorant, where does this wine come from? i'm guessing that contra costa should tell me, but it's not on me radar. and if imported, who is the importer?

Contra Costa is a county in the Bay Area of CA.
 
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Jayson, some of Eric's Cote du Rhones could fill your "minimal qualifications". The Chat Fou and St Julien St Alban, among others, come to mind.

I only wish they could be available locally more than just occasionally.

. . . . . Pete

Jayson and Keith are different people.

We are!

We are?

Hmmmm. Both litigators. Both wine geeks and acid freaks. Both annoying. Both of the Tribe. I don’t know Oswaldo. Maybe I will defer to the notion that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and leave it at that.
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Jayson, some of Eric's Cote du Rhones could fill your "minimal qualifications". The Chat Fou and St Julien St Alban, among others, come to mind.

I only wish they could be available locally more than just occasionally.

. . . . . Pete

Jayson and Keith are different people.

We are!

We are?

Hmmmm. Both litigators. Both wine geeks and acid freaks. Both annoying. Both of the Tribe. I don’t know Oswaldo. Maybe I will defer to the notion that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and leave it at that.

Sure they're not clonal?
 
originally posted by robert ames:
so for the clueless and/or igorant, where does this wine come from? i'm guessing that contra costa should tell me, but it's not on me radar. and if imported, who is the importer?

All the Contra Costa vineyards are in the San Joaquin delta area. Immigrants planted Mataro and Carignan there in the early 20th C. Pretty cool climate from the influence of the bay, but flat as a pancake alluvial soils. Sandlands is Tegan Passalacqua’s operation, no?

Mark Lipton
(ex-Contra Costa county resident)
 
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by robert ames:
so for the clueless and/or igorant, where does this wine come from? i'm guessing that contra costa should tell me, but it's not on me radar. and if imported, who is the importer?

All the Contra Costa vineyards are in the San Joaquin delta area. Immigrants planted Mataro and Carignan there in the early 20th C. Pretty cool climate from the influence of the bay, but flat as a pancake alluvial soils. Sandlands is Tegan Passalacqua’s operation, no?

Mark Lipton
(ex-Contra Costa county resident)

It's actually quite hot there, Mark. Mourvedre picks there in late August or early September most years, whereas, in Napa, Sonoma, or Placerville it's usually October by the time it's picked.
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Jayson, some of Eric's Cote du Rhones could fill your "minimal qualifications". The Chat Fou and St Julien St Alban, among others, come to mind.

I only wish they could be available locally more than just occasionally.

. . . . . Pete

Jayson and Keith are different people.

We are!

We are?

Hmmmm. Both litigators. Both wine geeks and acid freaks. Both annoying. Both of the Tribe. I don’t know Oswaldo. Maybe I will defer to the notion that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence and leave it at that.

An excellent closing argument.
 
originally posted by Brad Kane:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Brad Kane:
Gee-zus. A $50 "guzzler?" Puh-leeze!
$28

Not online at retail, it ain't.
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by Keith Levenberg:
originally posted by Brad Kane:
Gee-zus. A $50 "guzzler?" Puh-leeze!
$28
Not on Wine-Searcher.
As I said up top, the whole reason I brought this up was that it's being offered by the winery next week.
 
originally posted by Steve Edmunds:

It's actually quite hot there, Mark. Mourvedre picks there in late August or early September most years, whereas, in Napa, Sonoma, or Placerville it's usually October by the time it's picked.

Fair enough, Steve. I guess I was thinking too much of Crockett and Vallejo*. Those vineyards are more like Central Valley.

Mark Lipton

* Yeah, not CC but Solano. So shoot me!
 
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