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Owen Bargreen

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Here I am pictured with Ian Burch (L) during our very special Archery Summit vertical tasting in 2018.

Here I am pictured with Ian Burch (L) during our very special Archery Summit vertical tasting in 2018.

Archery Summit

August 12, 2020

One of the longstanding Dundee Hills wineries, Archery Summit has sweeping views of the Willamette Valley and is a must visit for those who have never tasted these beautiful wines. Founded by Pine Ridge Winery baron Gary Andrus, Archery Summit sources from a host of vineyards across the valley, as well as estate fruit. The winery itself is stunning and has one of the most beautiful cave settings in the Pacific Northwest. Archery Summit has more recently dialed back their winemaking style gearing less towards new oak and more towards freshness and a prettier style of Oregon Pinot Noir. 

During IPNC I had the chance to taste nearly every vintage of Archery Summit in 2018 and was floored by the cellaring potential of these wines. A few years ago Ian Burch took over as head winemaker. Ian has some seriously good pedigree coming from Evening Land and I absolutely love his new wines across the board. Ian is humble and knowledgable and has crafted a gorgeous new 2017 Chardonnay (WWB, 92) which has great freshness and tension with a good sense of balance. I loved the 2018 Archery Summit ‘Archer’s Edge’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 93) which has great weight and verve from this awesome, warm vintage in the Willamette Valley. Learn more about Archery Summit and their great lineup of wines at http://www.archerysummit.com. Here are the excellent new wines from Archery Summit.

2017 Archery Summit ‘Eola-Amity Hills’ Chardonnay- The nose is highly perfumed with layers of bright Pink Lady apple and nutmeg infused sourdough bread that are woven together with damp earth and wild mushroom tones that all sing in the glass. The palate has great freshness with layers of poached pear and vanilla cream that combine with a wonderful degree of freshness and damp earth tones on the palate. With awesome length, this beautiful wine will cellar well for a decade or more. Drink 2020-2030- 92

2018 Archery Summit ‘Dundee Hills’ Pinot Noir- Really strong bright red fruits with Mandarin orange rind, damp soil and a hint of cola that fall on the nose. The palate is medium bodied with with bright Bing Cherry, strawberry and shades of peat moss on the palate. The balance and richness is gorgeous. Drink 2020-2028- 92

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2017 Archery Summit ‘Red Hills Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- Set on volcanic soils at 360-570 feet elevation, the 23 acre ‘Red Hills Vineyard’ faces south and was first planted back in 1994. The palate is soft, round and generous, with a silky mouthfeel. Bright Bing cherry and citrus rind flavors combine with the teaberry and earthy undertones of the wine. This is simply outstanding by Ian Burch, as the 2017 ‘Red Hills Vineyard’ Pinot Noir will provide drinking enjoyment for at least another decade. Drink 2020-2030- 93

2018 Archery Summit ‘Archer’s Edge Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Archer’s Edge Vineyard’ was planted in 2007 and also has a southern aspect. On the nose a light dusting of damp volcanic rock brilliantly combines with sour red fruits and hints of tobacco leaf on this evocative bouquet. The palate is bright and downright juicy, with a great sense of minerality and weight. Layers of red fruits dance with citrus rind and forest floor tones on the palate, with lighter black truffle undertones. Seriously good in its youth, the 2017 ‘Archer’s Edge’ Pinot Noir will cellar well for a decade or more to come. Drink 2020-2030- 93

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Anna Schafer is the talented winemaker behind the great new lineup of a’Maurice wines.

Anna Schafer is the talented winemaker behind the great new lineup of a’Maurice wines.

a’Maurice Cellars

August 12, 2020

As we continue on this great Washington Wine Month we share one of the jewels of Walla Walla, a’Maurice Cellars. A great, limited production family winery, a’Maurice is a nod to Maurice Schafer who built one of the largest and most successful timber companies in the Pacific Northwest. The Schafers, Tom and Kathleen, created the first registered sustainable vineyard in Washington State as Tom Schafer spent several years surveying the Walla Walla Valley, until he found the perfect land for his vineyard — a south-facing parcel located up Mill Creek. The site is simply magical with sweeping views of the valley.

Anna Schafer crafts some seriously good wines and has gained national recognition for her wines. She has some great pedigree previously working for Viña Cobos in both 2006 and 2007. Her winemaking style is very old world as she creates a beautiful sense of astringency with each wine. Her wines are consistently great across the board. I love the 2019 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Sparrow’ Viognier (WWB, 92) which shows off the great tension and range, with great acidity. Her red wines were just as good and I loved the new Owl and Crown’ Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 94) which is dense and chewy, having some massive cellaring potential. Learn more about this great Walla Walla winery at https://www.amaurice.com Here are the beautiful new wines from a’Maurice Cellars

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2019 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Sparrow’ Viognier- Very pretty honeysuckle and kiwi tones collide with suggestions of Mandarin orange zest on the nose. Soft and bright, with great acidity and length, this offers gratifying Japanese pear, starfruit and lemon rind flavors alongside the great sense of mouthfeel and tension. With gobs of mouth-watering acidity in its youth, enjoy this beautiful new Viognier over the next five years. Drink 2020-2025- 92

2018 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Boushey Vineyard’ Syrah- The 2018 ‘Boushey Vineyard’ Syrah is a beautiful effort by the talented Anna Schaefer from this famed site in the Yakima Valley. Once on the nose you are greeted to smoky tones that are woven together with shades of cardamom and the rich core of red and dark fruits. Lightly tannic, the soft sense of mouthfeel really entices as citrus rind and sour red fruits dance with minerals, smoked meats and dusty terroir. Gorgeous to enjoy in its youth, this beautiful wine has a decade or more ahead of it. Drink 2020-2030- 92

2018 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Fred’ Syrah- Sourced from their estate vineyard in the Walla Walla Valley, the 2018 ‘Fred’ Syrah is an awesome new terroir-driven wine by a’Maurice. Right away you notice the dusting of white pepper falls upon tar, bacon fat and shades of violets on this evocative nose. The Syrah shows great verve and sense of tension as beautiful red and dark fruits march on with chocolate, sagebrush and dried herbs on the palate. Beautifully balanced and showing great texture and poise, the 2018 ‘Fred’ Syrah will enjoy a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2032- 93

2017 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Artist Series’ Red Wine- The 2017 ‘Artist Series’ Red Wine is a blend of mainly Cabernet Sauvignon (45%) and Merlot (38%) with the remainder Cabernet Franc. The herbal tones from the Cabernet Franc seem to be playing first chair, alongside the core of dark fruits and chocolate tones on the nose. The palate is wonderfully balanced with a great sense of texture and tension. Layers of roasted figs, blackberry compote, mocha and tar all come together with the lovely herbal undertones of the wine. Great to savor now at the three year mark, the 2017 ‘Artist Series’ will enjoy another decade or more ahead of it. Drink 2020-2032- 92

2017 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Night Owl’ Red Wine- The a’Maurice 2017 Night Owl is a blend of 56% Merlot with 21% Cabernet Franc, 16% Petit Verdot and a touch of Cabernet Sauvignon. The herbal, red bell pepper and deep, concentrated dark fruits from the Petit Verdot really make this blend work, as softer layers of chocolate and black cherry cordial from the Merlot also add to the enjoyment. These working pieces are moving hand in hand. If enjoying in its youth, give the 2017 ‘Night Owl; a long decant. Drink 2020-2035- 93

2017 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Amparo’ Malbec- Inky and intensely colored once in the glass, the 2017 ‘Amparo’ leads with potpourri, crushed wet stone, blackberry cordial and blueberry compote tones that all take shape in the glass. The palate is soft, round and generous, giving off an err of decadence. Not only showing wonderful weight, the light tannins and great acidity of this wine really hold things together. The brightness and concentration reminds me of a full-throttle Cahors, as the 2017 ‘Amparo’ will enjoy at least another decade of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2032- 93

2017 a’Maurice Cellars ‘Owl and Crown’ Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon- A barrel select wine, the 2017 ‘Owl and Crown’ shows intense creme de cassis and red bell pepper aromatics woven together with crushed mint, coffee grounds and the deep core of dark fruits. The beautiful bouquet brings you back to the glass for more delight. Once on the mouth you are met with a pillowy mouthfeel, as this effortlessly glides across the mid-palate. Layers of blackberry compote, black licorice and dark chocolate shavings collide with minerals and the dusty terroir of the wine. Sensational in its youth, be sure to give this a two hour decant before enjoying. Drink 2020-2038- 94

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Here you can see the stony terroir of Chateau de Saint Louis.

Here you can see the stony terroir of Chateau de Saint Louis.

Château de Saint Louis

August 12, 2020

Today we march on to southern France to share a hidden gem in the Corbiers region. One of the historic sites in the region, Château St. Louis was founded by Martine and Philippe Pasquier-Meunier nearly 30 years ago. Located on the plateau of Boutenac in Corbieres, with 120 hectares of vineyards dating back to the Roman era. Vines are planted in a high density style with little spacing between rows. Château de Saint Louis is set on gravelly soils attract the roots of the old vine plantings of Carignan and Grenache, allowing them to draw minerals and moisture from deep within the earth. This is wonderfully stony terroir that you can really feel in each wine. The low and stony hills are surrounded by pine trees and planted facing south to maximize sun exposure. 

The grapes are harvested, de-stemmed and fermented in stainless steel vats for 6 to 9 days. Malolactic fermentation after racking. Each variety is vinified separately before final assemblage.These are wines that totally over-deliver for the price. I love the 2017 Château Saint Louis ‘A Capella’ Corbieres (WWB, 91) which was sinfully good for the price with its core of dark fruits and great terroir. Even better is the generous 2016 Château Saint Louis ‘Boutenac’ Corbieres (WWB, 92) which has wonderful depth and concentration with a great stony edge. Here are my reviews of this beautiful Corbieres estate.


2019 Château de Saint Louis ‘Prestige’ Corbieres Blanc- The ‘Prestige’ Corbieres Blanc is a blend of 70% Bourboulenc with the remainder Marsanne. The freshness is outstanding with gooseberry and pear tones with a soft texture that entices from the Marsanne. With good length and mouthfeel, this is an awesome new wine that has at least another five to seven years ahead of it. Drink 2020-2027- 91


2018 Château de Saint Louis ‘Prestige’ Corbieres- The ‘Prestige’ is forward and juicy with dark currants and smoky tones that mingle with minerals and a touch of white pepper on the palate. Medium-bodied and showing good terroir and fruits, this classy effort is best enjoyed over the next several years. Drink 2020-2025- 90

2017 Château de Saint Louis ‘A Capella’ Corbieres- The 2017 ‘A Capella’ is a blend of 60% Syrah with the remainder Carignan. Rich, with its creme de cassis, stony minerals and smoked pork shoulder tones, this is utterly fantastic to enjoy now but has a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2027- 91

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2016 Chateau de Saint Louis ‘Boutenac’ Corbieres- I love the 2016 ‘Boutenac’ by Corbieres. Rich, wpndefully stony and full of life, the ‘Boutenac’ has a silky mouthfeel and wonderful complexity and length. Full-bodied and gorgeous in its youth, this outstanding new bottling will cellar well for a decade. Drink 2020-2030- 92

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The talented Chris Williams has crafted a gorgeous new lineup for Brooks.

The talented Chris Williams has crafted a gorgeous new lineup for Brooks.

Brooks Winery

August 10, 2020

One of the finest producers of Riesling in Oregon, Brooks was founded by Jimi Brooks, a Portland native who came to wine through his passion for history and philosophy. Jimi previously worked in Beaujolais, and eventually returned to Oregon to focus on crafting great Riesling and Pinot Noir. Brooks farms twenty acres in the Eola-Amity Hills, a sub-region of the Willamette Valley characterized by higher altitudes and the ocean winds that blow through the Van Duzer Corridor. Head winemaker Chris Williams has previous stops at Maysara and WillaKenzie prior to becoming Brooks head winemaker in 2005. He has crafted a gorgeous range of Riesling wines.

Chris has a deft touch on white wines and his 2019 Brooks ‘Looson Ridge’ Pinot Gris (WWB, 92) which has a great freshnesss and mouthfeel. has just a touch of sweetness and shows really bright acidity. While his overall lineup of Rieslings were stellar across the board, I was particularly blown away with the 2017 Brooks ‘Bois Joli’ Riesling (WWB, 93) which is one of the great. Willamette Valley Rieslings I have had over the past year. This wine shows incredible terroir and a gorgeous sense of minerality. Learn more about these beautiful wines at https://www.brookswine.com/ Here are the outstanding new wines by Brooks. 

2019 Brooks Rose- Made from Pinot Noir grapes, the 2019 Brooks Rose shows a lively core of bright red fruits with shades of wild mushroom on the palate. Juicy and packed with aciidity, enjoy this over the next few years. Drink 2020-2024- 90

2019 Brooks Picpoul Blanc- the vibrant sense of acidity really impresses here as this outstanding new release shows bright lemon zest and melon tones alongside the great sense of minerality. Fresh and full of life, enjoy this over the next several years while the electricity remains. Drink 2020-2025- 91

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2019 Brooks ‘Logsdon Ridge Vineyard’ Pinot Gris- Seriously good stuff, you are immediately intrigued by the shades of cardamom infused Japanese pear and brioche fill the nose. The palate is wonderfully juicy with gobs of mouth-watering acidity and a really good sense of mouthfeel. Nicely textured, the ‘Logsdon Ridge Vineyard' Pinot Gris will cellar well over the next eight years, picking up nutty and earthy tones. Drink 2020-2027- 92

2019 Brooks ‘Amycas’ White Wine- A blend of mostly Pinot Blanc, Riesling and Muscat, the ‘Amycas’ is fresh and energetic with bright acidity and layers of melon and green apple tones with orange blossom and rose water undertones. A delightful pairing for shellfish, enjoy this great wine in its youth while the vibrant acidity remains intact. Drink 2020-2025- 91

2018 Brooks ‘Willamette Valley’ Riesling- A quick whiff of petrol brilliantly combines with the lemon zest and orange blossom tones on the nose. Fresh and clean, with great acidity, texture and length, this is just an awesome value that will cellar well over the next seven years. Drink 2020-2025- 91

2017 Brooks ‘Meyer Vineyard’ Riesling- Sourced from this Dundee Hills AVA site, the 2017 ‘Meyer Vineyard’ Riesling shows a trocken-style tension with great acidity and texture that reminds me of the great GG wines of the Mosel. Brighti green apple and lemon rind flavors mingle with minerals and the light damp earth tones on the palate. Drink 2020-2032- 93

2017 Brooks ‘Hope Well’ Riesling- The 2017 ‘Hope Well' Riesling is another scintillating new release by Brooks. Soft on the mouth, the feeling of weight and tension here is really good. Bright pear and green apple tones combine with shades of white peach and kiwi on the palate. The minerality is truly outstanding as the ‘Hope Well’ will cellar well for at least another decade. Drink 2020-2032- 92

2017 Brooks ‘Ara’ Riesling- The 2017 ‘Ara’ Riesling is another thrilling effort by one of the North America’s Riesling specialists. This Trocken style wine shows great weight and tension under the core of Gravenstein apple, lemon rind and wet stone tones. The degree of mouth-watering acidity is seriously good. With great elegance and verve, the 2017 ‘Ara’ will cellar well for another decade or more. Drink 2020-2032- 93

2017 Brooks ‘Vitae Springs’ Riesling- The ‘Vitae Springs Vineyard’ dates back to 1978 and is set on volcanic basalt-Nekia and Jory soils. The feeling of weight and tension is seriously good mid-palate as gobs of acidity and a silky texture greets you alongside the green apple, kumquat zest and petrol tones. A sensational new wine to savor in its youth, the thrilling 2017 ‘Vitae Springs’ Riesling will enjoy a long life in the cellar. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2017 Brooks ‘Bois Joli’ Riesling- Sourced from this Eola-Amity Hills Vineyard set on marine sedimentary and Wilalkenzie soils, the wine shows vibrant acidity with gobs of tension that mingle with the green apple, petrol, kumquat zest and salty undertones of the wine. Completely gorgeous to enjoy in its youth, the combination of acidity and weight suggests this has a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2032- 93

2017 Brooks ‘Orchard Fold’ Riesling- Medium dry in style, reminiscent of a Kabinett, the brilliant tension and sweetened pear with nectarine and orange blossom tones really entice on the palate. The ‘Orchard Fold’ has an inviting sense of length with a wonderful texture. Outstanding in its youth, this has some really good cellaring potential moving forward. Drink 2020-2032- 92

2017 Brooks ‘Sweet P' Riesling- Moving more into Auslese realm, the 2017 ‘Sweet P’ has a great backing of vibrant acidity that mingles with the sweetened orchid fruits and melon tones on the palate. Drink 2020-2027- 91

2018 Brooks ‘Runaway Red’ Pinot Noir- This red fruit driven 2018 Pinot Noir shows red rose petals wit the bright red fruits on the nose. The palate is forward and delicious with medium-bodied Bing cherry and pomegranate seed accents with raspberry and light earthy tones. Drink 2020-2025- 90

2019 Brooks ‘Willamette Valley’ Pinot Noir- Fresh and forward, this delivers medium-bodied red fruits that dance with light damp earth tones on the palate. Enjoy in its youth while the good sense of freshness remains. Drink 2020-2025- 89

2016 Brooks ‘Janus’ Pinot Noir- The 2016 ‘Janus’ Pinot Noir was largely sourced from the Brooks Estate Vineyard as well as a host of vineyards sprinkled throughout the Willamette Valley. Shades of cola with dark fruits and flinty and earthy undertones fill the nose. The sense of texture is great here as this over-delivers with its richness and smooth mouthfeel. This is simply delicious stuff to enjoy over the next eight to ten years Drink 2020-2028- 91

2017 Brooks ‘Rastaban’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Rastaban’ is entirely sourced from the ‘Brooks Estate Vineyard’ located in the Eola-Amity Hills AVA. While obviously not a big Pinot Noir, the sense of elegance and seamless factor mid-palate is really nice. Bright acidity and a ripe core of red cherry, raspberry and baking spices combine with the lighter earthy tones of the wine. Drink 2020-2030- 91

2016 Brooks ‘Crannell’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Crannell’ Pinot Noir by Brooks is sourced from the ‘Crannell Vineyard’ set in the Eola-Amity Hills and set on various soil types, planted to Pommard, 115, 777 and 667 clones. On the nose the bouquet of damp earth and peat moss combine with the core of red and dark fruits. The palate shows the warmth of the vintage with rich dark fruits with a beautiful sense of length and texture. Drink 2020-2030- 92

2017 Brooks ‘Big Cheese’ Pinot Noir- The 2017 ‘Big Cheese’ is sourced from the Eola-Amity Hills AVA, set on volcanic Basalt-Jory and Nekia soils. Aged for eighteen months in French oak, this shows salty and savory tones on the nose with the core of dark fruits and underbrush tones. The palate has a plush texture delivering gobs of red fruits with good acidity and a soft mouthfeel. Enjoy this great wine over the next ten to fifteen years. Drink 2020-2032- 92

2016 Brooks ‘Old Vine Pommard Clone’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Old Vine Pommard Clone’ Pinot Noir is an earthy masterpiece by Brooks. Aged for eighteen months in French oak this shows lovely black truffle crudo and forest floor tones woven together with wild blackberry and huckleberry tones on the nose. The palate is soft and gratifying, showing gorgeous length and precision, with bright acidity that backs up the earthy tones and citrus rind/red fruit core. I can imagine this cellaring marvelously for fifteen years, picking up more Burgundian tones as it ages Drink 2020-2035- 93

2016 Brooks ‘Temperance Hill Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- One of the famed sites in the Eola-Amity Hills AVA, the ‘Temperance Hill Vineyard’ is a southern facing vineyard set on Basalt-Jory, Nekia and Ritner soils. Peat moss and forest floor tones combine with shades of Mandarin orange zest, pomegranate seed and red cherry candy aromatics that all build in the glass. Soft, round and gererous this has a silky effect mid-palate. Bright red fruits meld with the orange rind and damp earth tones on the palate. Fantastic to savor right now, the 2016 ‘Temperance Hill Vineyard’ Pinot Noir will enjoy a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2035- 93

2016 Brooks ‘Sunny Mountain Vineyard’ Pinot Noir-Planted in 2005 the ‘Sunny Mountain Vineyard’ is set on a range of soils and is planted to clones 23, Pommard and 115. Th3 nose evokes exotic spices alongside the core of red fruits and blood orange zest tones. The soft mouthfeel really entices, as does the sense of mouth-watering acidity that builds mid-palate. The length of the wine and great core of red and dark fruits with its earthy tones really all impress. Gorgeous to savor in its youth, this wine has a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2035- 93

2016 Brooks ‘Toluca Lane’ Pinot Noir- This Eola-Amity Hills bottling was aged for eighteen months in French oak. From this southeast facing vineyard set on volcanic basalt-Nekia soils, the wine opens with baking spices that mingle with a core of red fruits and suggestions of orange zest. The soft sense of texture is nothing short of outstanding as the weight and vibrant acidity alongside the great sense of mouthfeel really make this wine sing. Drink 2020-2035- 93

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Brian Weil crafts some insanely good wines for Alexana.

Brian Weil crafts some insanely good wines for Alexana.

Alexana

August 7, 2020

Today on WWB we share one of the greats of the Willamette Valley, Alexana. I have been consistently mpressed with their lineup over the past five years as they craft an amazing range of wines from mineral-driven Riesling to earthy Pinot Noirs. Over the years I have found that the consistency of these wines have been remarkable. Alexana was founded many years back by Dr. Madaiah Revana, a famed cardiologist. Named after Dr. Revana’s daughter,  Alexana has a stunning setting in the Red Hills AVA. The winery utilizes both gravity flow and Gold LEED certification. Bryan Weil serves as head winemaker and has greatly impressed with his solid range of new wines. Bryan previously worked at Domaine Serene before heading back to Oregon State University, where in 2008 he graduated with a degree in Enology and Viticulture. Bryan then served as assistant winemaker at Hogue Cellars in Prosser, Washington, prior to being named Alexana winemaker in in 2012.

Bryan has crafted a killer new lineup of wines. Look to his  2017 Alexana ‘Signature’ Chardonnay (WWB, 93) which has awesome poise and motuhfeel, showing some great aging potential. I was blown away with the outstanding 2017 Alexana ‘Signature’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 93) which has gorgeous dark fruits and great tension. One of the outstanding efforts I have tried this year, the 2018 Alexana ‘Revana Vineyard’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 95) is sinfully good, showing opulence and incredible aromatic and flavor range. This is one for any serious collector of Oregon wines. Learn more about this outstanding Oregon winery at http://www.alexanawinery.com Here are the great new release wines by Alexana. 

2019 Alexana ‘Terroir Series’ Pinot Gris- Right away the racy sense of minerality greets you, as layers of Meyer lemon zest, wet stone, Pink grapefruit blossom and unripe cantaloupe all collide on the palate. Fresh and vibrant with a light dusting of salinity, this beautiful wine will be best enjoyed over the next several years. Drink 2020-2024- 91

2017 Alexana ‘Signature’ Chardonnay- The 2017 ‘Signature’ Chardonnay is another outstanding release by Brian Weil. Golden in color once in the glass, the Chardonnay shows shades of marzipan woven together with lychee, smoky minerals and bright Pazzaz apple tones on the nose. The palate shows a silky texture with an opulent sense of mouthfeel. Layers of Meyer lemon cream and cantaloupe connect momentum with copious minerals and shades of wild mushroom on the palate. Complex and simply delicious in its youth, this outstanding new wine will cellar well for at least another decade. Drink 2020-2032- 93

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2017 Alexana ‘Signature’ Pinot Noir- The 2017 ‘Signature’ Pinot Noir is another sensational new release by Alexana. Once on the nose, alluring red rose petals with peat moss and forest floor tones combine with the good core of sour red fruits. The combination of tension and texture here really works, as layers of red currants, pomegranate seed and blood orange zest meld with the earthy undertones of the wine. Medium bodied, and showing great poise and length, this outstanding new Pinot Noir will enjoy at least another decade of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2018 Alexana ‘East Blocks Volcanic Soils’ Pinot Noir- Sourced from the Dundee Hills AVA, the ‘East Blocks Volcanic Soils’ shows a light dusting of volcanic terroir with shades of wild blackberry and peat moss that mingle in the glass. The palate is dense, with great freshness and texture. The light salinity and damp stone character really entices as the core of blackberry compote and pine needle tones connect with shades of Satsuma orange rind on this complex and delicious palate. The depth and concentration is awesome, as is the great tension of the wine, leading to an exceedingly long finish. Gorgeous and deep in its youth, this outstanding new wine will enjoy a long road ahead of it. Drink 2020-2036- 94

2018 Alexana ‘West Blocks Sedimentary Soils’ Pinot Noir- The ‘West Blocks Sedimentary Soils’ Pinot Noir has an err of salty terroir once on the bouquet with shades of kirsch and blood orange that connect with the earthy aromatics of the wine. The palate is dense and wonderfully salty from the quite obvious terroir — so much so that your mouth continues to water throughout the drinking experience. Wild blackberry and cran-pomegrantae flavors connect with the forest floor and wild mushroom tones of the wine. Complete and having great length, this beautiful wine is only an infant and has many years of drinking enjoyment ahead of it. Drink 2020-2036- 94

2018 Alexana ‘Revana Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- The famed ‘Revana Vineyard’ is located in the Northwestern corner of the Dundee Hills AVA. Amazingly this site has 18 different soil types as well as ten different clones of Pinot Noir. Needing a two hour decant to be fully aroused, the wine leads with a massive core of dark fruits with shades of Earl Grey tea, Asian spices, orange zest and peat moss tones that round out this exotic bouquet. The palate is dense and chewy with a vibrant sense of minerality. The weight of the wine almost takes you to Sonoma with its dark kirsch tones and lighter cola and damp earth accents. A light salinity mingles with the deep fruits and the long finish entices. Truly gratifying in all of its rich splendor, this warm vintage Pinot Noir is utterly sensational to savor right now and will provide drinking enjoyment for two decades. Drink 2020-2038- 95

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The Mueller family run Virtue Cellars, based in Shoreline, Washington.

The Mueller family run Virtue Cellars, based in Shoreline, Washington.

Virtue Cellars

August 6, 2020

In the spirt of Washington Wine Month we bring you a new winery out of Shoreline, Washington. I love discovering new winery projects and it is my great pleasure to introduce this limited production winery that was founded in 2013 by Kevin and Kathryn Mueller.  stablished in 2013, our mission is simple: produce world-class wines. They source from some great sites in Eastern Washington and produce roughly 1,000 cases of Bordeaux and Rhone style wines each year. The wines are very reasonably priced when you consider what is in the bottle.

I have never tried these wines and was really excited about what they did in the warm 2018 vintage. Look to the 2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Sincerity’ Syrah (WWB, 91) which is plush and dense with delicious dark fruit and smoky tones. Just as good was the 2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Fortitude’ Red Wine (WWB, 91) which has a good veil of tension and excellent length. Learn more about these wines at https://www.virtuecellars.com Here are the great new releases by Virtue Cellars.


2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Unity’ Red Wine- A blend of 48% Syrah and 32% Mourvedre, with the remainder Grenache, the ‘Unity’ has a good sense of softness, as round, rather forward red fruits collide with minerals and smoky undertones. Enjoy this over the next five to seven years. Drink 2020-2025- 90

2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Sincerity’ Syrah- Sourced from the Wallula Gap Vineyard, this shows good ripeness and acidity with layers of boysenberry cordial and mocha tones that combine with baking spices and smoked meats on the palate. Well-balanced and showing a good sense of mouthfeel, this downright delicious new Syrah will cellar well over the next seven to ten years. Drink 2020-2027- 91

2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Charisma’ Cabernet Sauvignon- Sourced from the Olsen and Solaksen Vineyards, the ‘Charisma’ shows nice smoky and sagebrush tones with blackberry compote on the nose. The palate has good freshness with medium to full-bodied dark fruit, chocolate and pipe tobacco flavors, with light tannins rounding things out. Drink 2020-2027- 90

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2018 Virtue Cellars ‘Fortitude’ Red Wine- A blend of mostly Merlot (48%) with smaller portions Malbec, and Cabernet Sauvignon, this shows chocolate covered cherry and espresso bean flavors with a good acidity and long finish. I can see this providing drinking enjoyment for another decade. Drink 2020-2028- 91


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Paul and Kendall de Lancellotti have another gorgeous set of new wines from the 2018 vintage.

Paul and Kendall de Lancellotti have another gorgeous set of new wines from the 2018 vintage.

de Lancellotti

August 6, 2020

I love boutique Oregon wineries that focus on great Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. Founded by  Paul and Kendall de Lancellotti, who were both early partners of Bergstrom Wines in 1999, they chose to plant their own vineyard in 2001 which was 16 acre Chehalem Mountain parcel focusing on Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. Flash forward several years, de Lancellotti Family Vineyards was founded in 2005 focusing on producing high quality Pinot Noir that showcases specific terroir and vineyards. 

Legendary Oregon winemaker Robert Brittan continues to serve as consulting winemaker as he does for many other producers throughout the Willamette Valley. De Lancellotti continue to be well-served with his expertise as the wines show good aging potential and finesse which was at times challenging in 2018 — a vintage that saw massive heat spikes during the summner. I really enjoyed the new 2018 de Lancellotti releases. Look to the outstanding 2018 de Lancellotti ‘Le Mie Figlie’ Chardonnay (WWB, 91) which shows the good ripeness of the vintage with a nice veil of tension. I loved the 2018 de Lancellotti ‘Famiglia’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 92) which has awesome volcanic terroir and a great core of red fruits with good acidity. Learn more about these great wines at http://www.delancellottifamilyvineyards.com/ Here are the great new wines by de Lancellotti.

2018 de Lancellotti ‘La Sorella’ Chardonnay- Sourced from a host of Willamette Valley vineyards, the ‘La Sorella’ Chardonnay has kiwi and wild mushroom tones alongside the core of baked apple and pear tones. The palate has a soft texture as this shows nice length with a light dusting of salinity across starfruit, poached pear and Challah bread flavors. Drink 2020-2027- 90

2018 de Lancellotti ‘La Mie Figlie’ Chardonnay- This wine is a tribute to de Lancellotti daughters. Layers of melon, baking spices and toasty oak collide on the nose. The palate is soft and generous with a great sense of mouthfeel. Vanilla cream flavors mingle with minerals, ripe banana, kiwi and shades of nectarine on the palate. With good length, this beautiful wine will cellar well over the next decade. Drink 2020-2030- 91

2018 de Lancellotti ‘La Sorella’ Pinot Noir- The 2018 ‘La Sorella’ sourced from three separate vineyards from Calkins Lane in Newberg, Oregon. Sour red fruits take the lead with shades of cinnamon and cloves on the palate, as earthy undertones also mingle. Enjoy this solid effort in the short-term. Drink 2020-2025- 90

2018 de Lancellotti ‘Famiglia’ Pinot Noir- The 2018 ‘Famiglia’ Pinot Noir is entirely sourced from the Chelahem Mountains AVA and is a blend of Pommard, 828, 777 and 115 clonal selections. Cran-ornage and shades of pomegranate seed with dusty terroir all fill the nose. The palate is smooth with a great sense of mouthfeel and light dusting of salinity. Layers of bright and sour red fruits collide with Mandarin orange zest and shades of peat moss on the palate. Delightful to enjoy in its youth, this outstanding wine will cellar well over the next decade. Drink 2020-2030- 92

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2018 de Lancellotti ‘Arlyn Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- Located in the Chehalem Mountains AVA, the ‘Arlyn Vineyard’ utilizes Mount Eden, and Dijon 667 clones. The mouthfeel is fantastic as this shows great weight and freshness. Very pretty red fruits and rose water tones dance with blood orange, damp earth and shades of cloves on the palate. Generous and round, the 2018 ‘Arlyn Vineyard’ Pinot Noir will enjoy another fifteen years of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2018 de Lancellotti ‘La Corsia’ Pinot Noir- The ‘La Corsia’ s a barrel select wine from the Arlyan and Lachini Vineyards in the Chehalem Mountains AVA. A light dusting off salinity falls on the core of bright red fruits with pomegranate seed and baking spices on the palate. The peat moss undertones also round out this complex wine that shows off a downright sexy mouthfeel. Finishing strong with good length, the delicious ‘La Corsia’ will cellar well over the next ten to fifteen years. Drink 2020-2033- 92

2018 de Lancellotti ‘Ornelia’ Pinot Noir- The 2018 de Lancellotti ‘Ornelia’ Pinot Noir was sourced from the Dundee Hills AVA. Ripe red currants and wild blackberry tones dance with exotic spices, and forest floor tones on the nose. The feeling of tension and mouthfeel is really great as a light salinity melds into the core of red and dark fruits, with shades of wild mushroom and peat moss on the palate. WIth great length, the 2018 ‘Ornelia’ will cellar well over the next ten to fifteen years. Drink 2020-2033- 92


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I wanted to share my thoughts on how I review wines.

I wanted to share my thoughts on how I review wines.

The Owen Bargreen Way of Reviewing Wines

August 5, 2020

I am often asked how I review wines and why I publish stories on wines that inspire me. The truth is that I try so many wines each year that I am not physically able to write on every wine or every producer. My blog highlights the special wines and wineries that I have recently tasted. Many of my reviews are posted to my website but I do not post reviews on every wine that I try. I am not interested in posting negative reviews on wines. On my 2020 Pacific Northwest Rose Report, I only posted on roughly one half of all of the wines that I tried. This is because I want to share the wines that I feel stand out either as the top wines or the top value Pacific Northwest Rose wines.

All the wines that I try are judged using indoor tasting conditions and proper varietal stemware. Whether it is Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Noir or Chardonnay, I always use proper stemware regardless of varietal because I know that wines that are not reviewed using proper varietal stemware will not show the same or as well. If a wine is muted or not showing well, I always come back to it. If needed, I ask for instructions from wineries about their wines. I will decant wines that I feel need more air, as some wines needed several hours in the decanter to reach their full potential. I ask for tech sheets for each of the wines that I try and also research the wines that I try, even if I am familiar with the wine or brand. I take my time with each wine and do not do 30 second tastings as I feel that does not give wines the amount of attention that they deserve. Wines can be truly part of a winemaker’s soul and I want to ensure that the wine is showing at its best when I sit down to write my reviews.

Why I Do Not Post Negative Reviews

It may seem to some that my reviews are overly positive and that I only post positive reviews on wines. As a clinical psychologist, I know the effects that negative feedback can have on a product that someone has potentially put their heart and soul into. Therefore, unless I am asked very specifically, I do not provide feedback to those reviews that I do not post or the wines that I did not judge favorably. 

When I evaluate personality in my clinical practice, it is admittedly a very sensitive practice to share with a patient when the data reveals that there is something wrong with someone’s personality. You do not openly publish this information, because sharing this data involves so much emotional connection for the patient and can evoke sadness, grief, anger and a host of emotions. The same can be true with sharing a negative review on a wine that the person most likely spent a very personal connection with. From my perspective, posting an openly negatively review about a wine is something that can be quite shaming to someone, just as sharing a personality problem would be. I am not interested in shaming an individual or winery but I am very open to having an individual conversation with a winery owner or winemaker about a wine. If a wine did not show well according to my palate, I am not interested in sharing that publicly.  

I realize although I am an expert in Washington, Oregon and California wines, I am only one palate. That does not mean that I am necessarily right in my critiques of wines, it means only that I am an expert in my field based on the massive amount of wines that I have tried from these regions since I began seriously reviewing wines in 2011. My reviews do not fit everyone’s perspective or palate.

I am Committed to Promoting Wines From Washington, Oregon and California

Just as I am not interested in posting negative information or negative reviews on wineries, my posts focus on promoting these glorious wine regions. I post varying articles from Walla Walla, the Willamette Valley, Sonoma, Napa, Paso Robles and many more. I hope that you enjoy having a breath of content. When I try a wine that is truly special then I will post on it, as I regularly post about special Champagnes and wines of Sauternes. I have been reviewing wines from Champagne, Sauternes and Spain now for more than five years not only for Washington Wine Blog but International Wine Report. This is a glorious opportunity to keep abreast of these regions as well. I am now writing for Decanter Magazine as well, which will help them keep updated with wines of the Pacific Northwest in particular. 

I continue to use not only my website but Facebook and Instagram to promote these three regions. I feel that my coverage interviewing winemakers and winery owners on Instagram Live has been unprecedented in our field and I will continue to use this outlet to share more content that I find to be unique and interesting. Covid-19 conditions permitting, I will continue to host what I consider to be the premier tasting event in Washington State, and a special thanks to all of you who attended WWB 2020, it was a sensational event to remember back in February.

Thank You Readers and Wineries

Finally, I want to personally thank all of you for reading Washington Wine Blog and helping my vision of creating content that shares the stories of the top wineries of Washington, Oregon and California in particular. I cannot share this information without your support and the help of these illustrious wineries. I am very indebted to all of you, from near and far, that read my features and take interest in this fascinating world of wine. I will continue to work hard to create content that I hope you find as interesting as I do. 

Cheers,

Owen Bargreen

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Donn Chappellet is a Napa icon who was one of the first to grow Bordeaux varietals on Pritchard Hill.

Donn Chappellet is a Napa icon who was one of the first to grow Bordeaux varietals on Pritchard Hill.

Chappellet

August 3, 2020

Today we share one of the famed houses in the Napa Valley founded by pioneer Donn Chappellet. Donn began his wine education by collecting Bordeaux wines while in college, and later ran Interstate United Corporation, a coffee-vending distributorship he co-founded in the mid-1950s, which he helped turn into the third-largest such business in the United States, with more than 7,000 employees and a listing on the New York Stock Exchange.

In 1966 he sold his shares in Interstate United and guided by the legendary winemaker Andre Tchelistcheff of Beaulieu Vineyards bought 320 acres of rocky mountain terrain at the eastern edge of the Napa Valley. Donn saw this terroir as one which would connect with the great wines of Bordeaux. He saw the potential for Pritchard Hill and initially planted Chenin Blanc and Cabernet Sauvignon which was met with great critical acclaim. Sadly passing in 2016, Donn became a legend of this great site in the Napa Valley.

Winemaker Phillip Corallo-Titus has been at Chappellet remarkably since 1990. A graduate of UC Davis, Phillip spent time traveling to both Bordeaux and Burgundy to learn about these esteemed regions. In 1981, Phillip joined the Chappellet team as assistant winemaker, and then in1990, Donn Chappellet invited Phillip to return to the winery as Chappellet’s winemaker, a position he has held ever since. Phillip’s wines were simply outstanding across the board. I absolutely adored his new 2018 Chappellet ‘Dutton Ranch’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 93) showing great verve and elegance from this famous Sonoma outpost. I adored the new 2017 Chappellet ‘Napa Valley’ Cabernet Franc (WWB, 94) which is dense, showing a wonderful veil of tension and mouthfeel. This beautiful wine has another twenty years ahead of it. Learn more about this famed Napa estate at chappellet.com Here are the beautiful new wines by Chappellet. 

2019 Chappellet ‘Signature’ Chenin Blanc- Sourced from Pritchard Hill, the ‘Signature’ Chenin Blanc shows a lovely mouthfeel and inviting texture. Bright melon tones mingle with citrus rind, kiwi and gooseberry on the palate. Enjoy in the short-term while the minerality stays intact. Drink 2020-2025- 90

2018 Chappellet ‘Dutton Ranch’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Dutton Ranch’ has been one of the great spots in Sonoma for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay for several decades now. Salted red fruits mingle with minerals and shades of cola on the nose. The palate has bright acidity with a great sense of mouthfeel. Layers of black cherry and cola meld with damp earth and orange rind tones on the palate. Soft and elegant, with a silky mouthfeel, the 2018 ‘Dutton Ranch’ Pinot Noir by Chappellet will enjoy a long life in the cellar. Drink 2020-2033- 93

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2017 Chappallet ‘Signature’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘Signature’ Cabernet Sauvignon by Chappellet is a great blend of 82% Cabernet Sauvignon 10% Petit Verdot and 8% Malbec that was entirely sourced from their vineyards on Pritchard Hill.. Needing an hour in the decanter to fully evolve, the Cabernet Sauvignon slowly begins to unveil layers of tar, scorched earth and rich dark fruits that meld with tobacco leaf tones on the nose. The palate shows a great core of tension that collides with the dark currants, cigar box and mocha tones on the palate. Well-balanced and having a great sense of place, the 2017 Chappellet ‘Signature’ Cabernet Sauvignon will cellar well for decades to come. Drink 2020-2033- 92

2017 Chappellet ‘Napa Valley’ Cabernet Franc- The 2017 Chappellet ‘Napa Valley’ Cabernet Franc is a gorgeous effort from this vintage. Light herbal tones connect with milk chocolate, tobacco leaf and blackberry compote on this evocative nose. The palate is wonderfully plush, with layers of rich dark fruits and very light red bell pepper tones, with chocolate covered espresso bean marking its territory. This has great tension and length, as this beautiful Cabernet Franc wine will cellar well for decades to come. Drink 2020-2038- 94

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Great photo here of Frank Family Vineyards founders Rich and Leslie Frank.

Great photo here of Frank Family Vineyards founders Rich and Leslie Frank.

Frank Family Vineyards

August 3, 2020

Founded in 1992 by Rich and Leslie Frank, Frank Family Vineyards is one of the jewels of Napa Valley. As the former President of Disney Studios, Rich Frank traveled extensively across the globe, trying the great wines of the world. Over time he knew that Napa Valley was the perfect setting to start a winery. Rich had an incredibly successful career and under his leadership, television and movie properties such as Cheers, Entertainment Tonight, Golden Girls, Ellen, Dead Poet’s Society, Pretty Woman, Aladdin, and The Lion King achieved worldwide acclaim. Rich also is the longest serving President of The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (Emmys). 

Leslie also had an incredibly successful career, spending more than 25 years covering news stories, and the last nine years of her TV news career reporting and anchoring at the number-one-rated station, KABC in Los Angeles. Prior to Los Angeles, Leslie was the main anchor at KCPQ, the FOX affiliate in Seattle, where she helped launch its 10 pm newscast, taking it to number one in its time slot and receiving an Emmy for Outstanding News Anchor. Rich and Leslie are fully invested in Frank Family Vineyards' as they manage everything from vineyard purchases, to sales and marketing. 

Superstar winemaker Todd Graff first stated with Frank Family in 2003. I loved his wines across the board as he has really earned a fantastic reputation for his Chardonnay wines over the years. I was totally blown away with their 2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Chardonnay (WWB, 95) which is a glorious, seamless wine that is not only beautifully textured but has insanely good elegtnance and poise. Even better was the sinfully good 2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Patriarch’ Red Wine (WWB, 96) which shows great poise, richness and concentration as this powerful wine will cellar well for decades to come. Learn more about these outstanding wines at frankfamilyvineyards.com Here are the outstanding wines by Frank Family Vineyards.

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2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Carneros’ Chardonnay- Over the past decade or so, Frank Family Vineyards has crafted a really good Chardonnay for the price. This edition scores with its pretty bouquet with tropical and orchard fruits with toasty oak. The palate is soft and seamless with layers of banana, vanilla creme brûlée and butterscotch with toasted Brioche tones and shades of Meyer lemon. The long finish lingers. Seriously good in its youth, this beautiful new Chardonnay will enjoy at least a decade of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2030- 93

2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Chardonnay- Not for the weary, the 2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Chardonnay is a stunning new bottling that is flat out sensational to enjoy even at this stage in its development. Once on the nose the toasty tones artfully combine with ripe pineapple, kumquat zest and vanilla cream that all mingle together in the glass. The palate has a great veil of tension, with beautiful minerality and length. Layers of buttercream, bananas foster and Meyer lemon curd combine with the minerals and great texture of the wine. A total heavyhitter, the 2018 ‘Reserve’ Chardonnay by Frank Family Vineyards will be exceedingly long lived. Drink 2020-2035- 95

2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Carneros’ Pinot Noir- Light and delicate in color, this 2017 Pinot Noir leads with medium bodied red cherry cola flavors that mingle with minerals, orange rind and damp earth tones on the palate. With good length this great new bottling will cellar well for the next decade. Drink 2020-2030- 91

2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Pinot Noir- Every bit outstanding, the 2018 ‘Reserve’ Pinot Noir is a glorious new wine by Todd Graff. Once on the nose tones of red rose petal and red raspberry are woven together with smoke, cran-pomegrante and shades of dusty terroir. The palate is rich and viscous, with a great veil of tension. Ripe Yakima cherry flavors combine with baking spices, minerals and cran-orange flavors with light damp earthy tones. This finishes very long. Great to savor in its bright phase now, the 2018 ‘Reserve’ Pinot Noir will be long-lived. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2018 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve' Sangiovese- Rarely planted in the Napa Valley, the 2018 ‘Reserve’ is entirely sourced from the ‘Winston Hill Vineyard’ in the Rutherford AVA. This rendition is ripe and simply fabulous with fine grained tannins that line the core of ripe red raspberry, pomegranate seed, leather and menthol tones on the palate. The long, gratifying finish really impresses. Very full-bodied for Sangiovese, this has both the poise and weight to cellar well for at least another decade. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2017 Frank Family Vineyards Zinfandel- Frank Family Vineyards have created a fantastic new Zinfandel is one that sees good richness and poise from this warm vintage in the Napa Valley. The palate has a great sense of mouthfeel and texture, with good poise and richness delivering pretty black plum, exotic spice and red cherry candy flavors. With good length this downright delicious new wine will cellar well for the next decade. Drink 2020-2030- 91

2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Zinfandel- The 2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Zinfandel is nothing short of a stunning bottling that is nearly impossible to resist in its youth. On the nose shades of dill and bright Bing cherry with baking spices and Hoisin sauce all take the lead. The palate has a seamless texture and remarkable sense of mouthfeel and tension. Well-balanced, slightly sweet red fruits dance with minerals, citrus rind and cigar box flavors, with remarkable poise and precision. The seamless texture really entices as the glorious length of the wine provides the resounding crescendo. Stunning in its youth, this beautiful Zinfandel is one for the cellar, providing drinking enjoyment for more than a decade to come. Drink 2020-2033- 94

2017 Frank Family Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon- Sourced from vineyards throughout the Napa Valley, the 2017 Frank Family Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon is a terrific new effort from this storied estate and winemaker Todd Graff. Tobacco leaf and red bell pepper tones combine with the core of dark fruits on the nose. The palate is downright delicious as layers of black raspberry and mocha mingle with minerals and light herbal undertones no the palate. Showing good length and balance, this outstanding new Cabernet Sauvignon will cellar well for the next fifteen years. Drink 2020-2035- 92

2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘RHF’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘RHF’ Cabernet Sauvignon is named after owner and founder Richard Harvey Frank. Sourced from their estate ‘Benjamin Vineyard’ on the valley floor, the wine shows gorgeous violet tones with creme de cassis, anise, Turkish coffee and dark chocolate shavings on the palate. Elegant, this has really good weight and length, with a light dusting of loamy terroir. Full-bodied yet wonderfully balanced, this beautiful wine is just starting to show its potential at the three year mark and has decades of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2035- 93

2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Reserve’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘Reserve’ Cabernet Sauvignon is a gorgeous, dense effort from Frank Family Vineyards. Once on the nose sandalwood tones combine with creme de cassis, Turkish coffee and shades of sweet pipe tobacco with loamy terroir. The palate is gorgeous, showing great balance and poise. Layers of menthol and mocha mingle with damp earth, graphite and cassis. With great elegance and length, this beautiful wine will cellar well for the next fifteen to twenty years. Drink 2020-2035- 93

2017 Winston Hill ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 Winston HIll ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon is a dense, massive wine that has a long life ahead of it. On the nose, expressions of tobacco leaf, coupled by mocha, tar and sweetened anise with creme de cassis all enter the fray. Viscous, with a great degree of tension, layers of dark fruits parade with light tannins and a core of chocolate cake and espresso bean flavors. Gorgeous and full of life in its youth, the 2017 Winston Hill ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon will cellar well for decades to come. Drink 2022-2040- 94

2017 Frank Family Vineyards ‘Patriarch’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The ‘Patriarch’ is an ode to Fly Frank’s 99th year of life. Sourced from the ‘Winston Hill Vineyard’ this was aged in 21 months in 75% new French oak barrels before bottling. Mocha, tar and shades of creme de cassis all mingle together on the nose. The palate has great viscosity and tension with layers of mocha, anise, creme de cassis and exotic spices. Dense, chewy and round, with firm tannins and good grip, the 2017 ‘Patriarch’ Cabernet Sauvignon is utterly sensational at this stage in its development and will provide drinking enjoyment for many decades. If enjoying in its youth, be sure to give this at least a three hour decant. Drink 2020-2045- 96

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Great photo here of legendary founder of Cayuse Vineyards, Christophe Baron

Great photo here of legendary founder of Cayuse Vineyards, Christophe Baron

Instagram Live with Vigneron Christophe Baron

August 3, 2020

Friends,

Please join me Friday August 14th, 4:00 Pacific for a very exclusive Instagram Live, an intimate conversation with wine icon Christophe Baron of Cayuse Vineyards 🍷🔥 @thebionicfrog

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Lou Kapcsandy is a remarkable story of living the American dream.

Lou Kapcsandy is a remarkable story of living the American dream.

Kapcsandy Family Winery

July 31, 2020

A remarkable story about a man pursuing his American dream, Lou Kapcsándy came to the U.S. from his native Hungary in 1956, pursuing a successful career in chemical engineering and manufacturing in the Bay Area and Seattle. Over time he began sourcing some of the great French wines and was able to know some of the icons of the Washington State wine industry. Following a visit to Chat4au Leoville-Las Cases, Lou came to fall in love with the Napa Valley for producing Bordeaux varietals and he discovered a 20-acre parcel in Yountville, its vineyard ripped out after the pest Phylloxera had destroyed it the year before. In May 2000, they closed escrow on the historic Beringer Estate State Lane vineyard that had been the home base of that company’s Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon program. I have long admired these wines from the 1990s, as the terroir from this site is truly incredible. 

The Kapcsándys then replanted their vineyard to 15 specific blocks, primarily Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot. Within three days of harvest 2005, construction on a state-of-the-art winery was complete. Waling the rows with Lou several years back he talked about his passion for Cabernet Franc and Merlot, rather than Cabernet Sauvignon. I have found the Kapcsandy Cabernet Franc and Merlot to be some of the finest in North America. The lineup is one that shows restraint but also precision and power. These are wines that will cellar well for decades. I was completely blown away with the 2017 Kapcsandy ‘Rapszodia’ Cabernet Franc (WWB, 97) which is the best Cabernet Franc bottling I have tried over the past year. The elegance and sense of place is second to none. Just as good was the sensational 2017 Kapcsandy ‘Grand Vin’ Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 97) which is dense, massive and nowhere near ready. The wine is a head-turning wine that is highly nuanced and will be ready to consume after about four to six years in the bottle. Learn more about this famed Napa valley estate at https://www.kapcsandywines.com Here are the gorgeous new rele4ases by Kapcsandy.

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2017 Kapcsandy ‘Estate Cuvee’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The ‘Estate Cuvee’ is largely Cabernet Sauvignon based with a touch of Merlot added, as the wine was aged in primarily new French oak barrels, with some Hungarian and second use oak prior to bottling. Right away the combination of red and dark fruits captivate the senses aromatically, as anise and creme de cassis, tar an shades of wild blackberry pie all come into play on the nose. The palate has exquisite balance with a great sense of weight but also a seamless effect mid-palate. Layers of dark fruits are woven together with shades of milk chooclate, sweet pipe tobacco, leather and creme de cassis on the palate. The combination of length, weight and acidity is seriously profound. A true heavyhitter, the 2017 ‘Estate Cuvee’ is remarkable in its youth and will provide drinking enjoyment for many years to come. Drink 2021-2040- 95

2017 Kapcsandy ‘Rapszodia’ Caberent Franc- ‘Rhapszodia’ is Hungarian for a great musical composition as this magical Cabernet Franc wine is truly a masterpiece in a bottle. The 2017 ‘Rapszodia’ shows incredible aromatics of red bell pepper, cassis, anise, dark cherry compote and shades of damp earth that all take shape in the glass. The palate is remarkably elegant with its silky texture as the wine effortlessly glides across the mid-palate. Layers of red and dark fruits with a light dusting of of cocoa powder, anise and black currant jelly all marvelously combine on the palate. The combination of acidity and gorgeous weight really make this sing. Get ready for the exceedingly long finish that drives home like a 50 yard field goal. If enjoying in its youth, be sure to give this at least a two hour decant. Drink 2022-2045- 97

2017 Kapcscandy ‘Roberta’s Reserve’ Merlot- I am comp[etely blown away with the 2017 ‘Roberta’s Reserve’ Merlot. Sourced from the famed ‘State Lane Vineyard’ the 2017 ‘Roberta’s Reserve’ Merlot is a scintillating new release by Kapcsandy. Weighing in at near 15% alcohol, the Merlot was aged in 70% new French oak and 30% second-fill French oak before bottling. The nose shows serious range from red bell pepper to shades of red cherry with sandalwood and dark currants that all meld in the glass. The silky mouthfeel provides an incredible feel of elegance to the wine. Milk chocolate covered cherry with cigar box, anise and suggestions of graphite all come together seamlessly on the palate. The length of the wine truly excites, as this glorious new Merlot will have an exceedingly long life ahead of it. Try to resist this glorious new release for at least a few more years. Drink 2022-2045- 97

2017 Kapcsandy ‘Grand Vin’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘Grand Vin’ Cabernet Sauvignon is one of the great wines that I have sampled over the past year. Sultry, elegant and showing incredible poise, the 2017 ‘Grand Vin’ gorgeous Cabernet Sauvignon has layers of dark currants and tobacco leaf with shades of clove and mocha, with tar and Asian spice accents the all knee in the glass. The palate is not only rich and decadent but has a seamless effect that is very hard to describe on paper. Rich and layered, while possessing a vibrant core of acidity, the wine unveils ripe dark currant and graphite tones that mingle with sandalwood, black currant cordial, Turkisich coffee and shades of creosote that all come together marvelously on the palate. Wait for the exceedingly long finish. Everything is magically put together right now as the stunning 2017 ‘Grand Vin’ will enjoy an exceedingly long life ahead of it. Drink 2023-2050- 97


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David Phinney is the mastermind behind his Orin Swift wines.

David Phinney is the mastermind behind his Orin Swift wines.

Orin Swift

July 31, 2020

A Napa house known for their intense and full-throttle approach to winemaking, Orin Swift has a great lineup of wines that are not for the weary. Orin Swift Cellars was started in 1995 when on a lark, David Swift Phinney took a friend up on an offer and went to Florence, Italy to spend a semester “studying”. During that time, he was introduced to wine, and he later landed a job at Robert Mondavi Winery in 1997 as a temporary harvest worker. In 1998 he founded Orin Swift Cellars; Orin is his father’s middle name and Swift is his mother’s maiden name. Starting with two tons of Zinfandel and not much else, David spent the next decade making wine for others as well as himself and grew the company into a multinational brand. The winery also has a great tasting room in downtown Napa where you can try his brilliant range of wines.

David’s labels are highly evocative and show his brilliant marketing ability. But what inside the bottle is what impresses across the board. The new wines were really outstanding across the board. The 2018 Orin Swift ‘Eight Years in the Desert’ Red Wine (WWB, 93) is a Zinfandel based blend that shows a beautiful texture, lovely mouthfeel and compelling complexity. A true heavyhitter, the 2017 Orin Swift ‘Mercury Head’ Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 95) is beautifully textured but also shows great poise. I love this wine, as it has some massive cellaring potential. Learn more about Orin Swift’s strong lineup at http://www.orinswift.com. Here are some of the gorgeous release wines by Orin Swift.

2018 Orin Swift ‘Blank Stare’ Sauvignon Blanc- The 2018 ‘Blank Stare’ is a gorgeous new effort by Orin Swift entrely sourced from the Russian River Valley AVA. Ripe peach and honeysuckle tones fill the nose with shades of nutmeg. The palate shows plenty of baking spice flavors alongside gorgeous gooseberry, kiwi, and lemon zest infused sourdough bread. With great length and weight, this outstanding new wine will enjoy a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2027- 91

2018 Orin Swift ‘Mannequin’ Chardonnay- This California Chardonnay shows plenty of toasty oak on the nose with Golden Delicious apple and freshly baked French bread tones rounding out the nose. The palate is soft, with a smooth sense of texture. The length really impresses here, as does the great sense of viscosity that comes off delightfully unctuous. Really good right now, the 2018 ‘Mannequin’ will cellar well for a decade to come. Drink 2020-2028- 91

2018 Orin Swift ‘Slander’ Pinot Noir-  Aged for ten months in 42% new French oak, this outstanding new Pinot Noir was sourced from the Sta. Rita Hills AVA as well as from Annapolis, Olson Ranch, Sleepy Hollow and MacMurray vineyards. Cola and cran-orange tones combine with shades of ripe guava and sassafras on the nose. The palate has good weight and balance with layers of red fruits with citrus rind, and cola tones. The weight here really delights. Drink 2020-2028- 91

2018 Orin Swift ‘Eight Years In The Desert’ Red Wine- The ‘Eight Years In The Desert’ is a Zinfandel based proprietary blend that was aged for 8 months in French and American Oak (37% New). The nose takes the lead with red currants that meld with shades of ripe plum and savory tones that all take shape in the glass. The palate is round and generous with a good acid backbone. Layers of red and dark fruits combine with salted chocolate malt balls, with tar and leather mingling together on the palate. Not for the weary, this delicious and generous wine will cellar well over the next eight to ten years. Drink 2020-2028- 93

2017 Orin Swift ‘Abstract’ Red Wine- Consistently one of the great values in California wine, the 2017 ‘Abstract’ is a proprietary blend of Grenache, Petite Sirah and Syrah that was aged for only eight months in mostly used oak before bottling. The nose smells like Grenache and Petite Sirah with its high tones (red rose petals, red cherry candy and guava) from the Grenache and the deep, brooding blueberry and tar tones from the Petite Sirah. The palate is plush with a great sense of decadence and mouthfeel. Layers of blueberry compote, mocha, tar and kirsch cordial all collude with minerals and a great acid backbone. With light tannins and good length, this gorgeous, generous wine will provide drinking enjoyment for more than a decade. Drink 2020-2033- 94

2017 Orin Swift ‘Pappillon’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘Pappilon’ is a great Bordeaux stye wine made of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Malbec and Merlot that was aged for 15 months in 43% new French oak prior to bottling. Creme de cassis aromatics artfully combine with tar, and suggestions of Black Forest cake on this gorgeous nose. The palate is fresh, dense and downright gorgeous. Layers of kirsch cordial, cassis, mocha and creosote combine with the great sense of minerality and good tension and length. Gorgeous to enjoy in its youth, this beautiful new Cabernet Sauvignon wine will cellar well for a decade or more. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2017 Orin Swift ‘Palermo’ Red Wine- The ‘Palermo’ is 100% Cabernet Sauvignon that was aged for eight months in 38% new French oak prior to bottling. Mocha, tar and anise tones are woven together with shades of allspice and red bell pepper on the nose. The palate is plush, delivering dense anise, blackberry compote and creme de cassis flavors with minerals and a strong tannic backbone. The weight and acidity here is really good Gorgeous to enjoy in its youth, the beautiful 2017 ‘Palermo’ will cellar well for a decade or more. Drink 2020-2032- 92

Orin Swift 2017 Mercury Head.jpg

2017 Orin Swift ‘Mercury Head’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 Orin Swift ‘Mercury Head’ Cabernet Sauvignon is a sensational new release by this Napa winery. On the nose there are beautiful red rose petal tones that are woven together with mocha, anise, creme de cassis and shades of blueberry compote. The palate is dense and decadent with a great acid backbone. The freshness and elegance of the wine really shines, as ripe Hoisin sauce and baking spices collide with rose water, blackberry cordial, Turkish coffee and shades of dark licorice. A complete wine, showing a hedonistic bent yet possessing great freshness, the 2017 ‘Mercury Head’ will enjoy a very long road ahead of it. Drink 2020-2040- 95

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Superstar winemaker Todd Alexander has crafted a beautiful range of wines from the 2018 vintage in Oregon.

Superstar winemaker Todd Alexander has crafted a beautiful range of wines from the 2018 vintage in Oregon.

Holocene

July 30, 2020

One of the outstanding producers of Oregon wine, Holocene is the brainchild of superstar winemaker Todd Alexander. While In Napa Todd focused on producing world class Cabernet Sauvignon and moving to Washington he continued that voyage by partnering with Force Majeure Vineyards. But he had a yearning to do something very different and produce Oregon Pinot Noir from diverse sites in the Willamette Valley. This winery was launched in 2015 and the new releases are from the 2018 vintage.

I haven’t had a chance to review these wines for several years but the most recent releases were truly beautiful and very different. Todd sourced from the ‘Monksgate Vineyard’ and the ‘Antiquam Farm Vineyard’ which are completely different sites with very different soil types. Several ,months back I had the chance to taste with Todd and talk about his special Oregon project. The wines come from the warm 2018 vintage which was a challenge for some producers to maintain a high degree of tension in Pinot Noir. The Holocene wines from this vintage have a really nice veil of acidity alongside the ripe core of red and dark fruits. The terroir expressed in each wine were really divergent and nothing short of awesome. I found both wines to be equally good in my mind, as I rated both of these wines 94 points — truly some of the great Oregon Pinot Noirs that I have tasted over the past year. For serious collectors of Oregon Pinot Noir, these are a must purchase. Learn more about this awesome Oregon outpost at http://holocenewines.com Here are the beautiful new release wines by Holocene. 

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2018 Holocene ‘Memorialis’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Memorialis’ was 100% whole cluster fermentated sourced from the Monksgate Vineyard which is set on WillaKenzie soils. The wine was nearly entirely aged in natural oak prior to bottling. The wine is high-toned with pretty red raspberry and rose petal tones that all come together. Thew freshness and trdxtrure of the wine is truly outstanding. Layers of bright red fruits with red cherry candy, pomegranate seed and first floor tones that all come together beautifully. This has a great sense of mouthfeel, salinity and texture. Gorgeous now in its youth, this beautiful wine will enjoy a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2034- 94

2018 Holocene ‘Apocryptha’ Pinot Noir- Sourced from the ‘Antiquam Farm Vineyard,’the wine is a blend of 113 and 115 Dijon clones. Sour kirsch with shades of Mandarin orange rind and a dusting of volcanic earth all come together on the nose. The mouthfeel and texture of the wine are both really wonderful. Layers of wild blackberry and rose water combine with shades of blood orange zest and Umami flavors which all meld together. The length of the wine beautifully accentuates this gorgeous wine. Drink 2020-2035- 94

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Theresa Heredia has been winemaker at Gary Farrell since 2012.

Theresa Heredia has been winemaker at Gary Farrell since 2012.

Gary Farrell

July 29, 2020

One of the storied properties in the Russian River Valley. Gary Farrell focuses on high quality Chardonnay and Pinot Noir by sourcing from some of the region’s great vineyards. Founder of his namesake winery, Gary Farrell made his first wine under the Gary Farrell label in 1982 and was one of the first highly successful wineries to settle in the Russian River Valley. Building a state of the art facility in 2000, Gary eventually sold his winery in 2004 following a series of highly successful vintages and wines. Currently at the helm is Theresa Heredia who has a long winemaking history, and has previously had stints at Napa’s Joseph Phelps Vineyards and Freestone Vineyards on the Sonoma Coast. She even worked for Domaine de Montille in Burgundy learning the art of crafting Pinot Noir and has been winemaker at Gary Farrell since 2012. 

A former UC Davis PhD candidate in Chemistry, Theresa has crafted some beautiful new wines for Gary Farrell. Look to her 2017 Gary Farrrell ‘Hallberg Vineyard’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 92) which has great poise and range. I loved the 2017 Gary Farrrell ‘Toboni Vineyard’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 92) which his dense, and has great freshness and texture. Learn more about these great wines at https://www.garyfarrellwinery.com Here are the great new wines by Gary Farrell. 

2017 Gary Farrell ‘Hallberg Vineyard Dijon Clones’ Pinot Noir- This unique bottling is sourced from the Hallberg Vineyard in the Russian River Valley AVA and owned by Brice Jones. Lovely damp earth tones combine with wild blackberry cobbler and hints of blood orange rind on the nose. The palate has good freshness and shows round red fruits that mingle with minerals, Mandarin orange zest and shades of wild mushroom. The length and texture is really good, as this beautiful wine has a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 92

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2017 Gary Farrell ‘Hallberg Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- The Hallberg Vineyard is a dry-farmed site ocated in the Russian River Valley AVA. Layers of kumquat zest and red currants are woven together with earthy undertones on the bouquet. The sense of mouthfeel is really nice, as bright orange zest and pomegranate seed flavors combine with minerals and peat moss tones on the palate. The length and richness of the wine really impress, as this excellent effort has at least another decade ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 92

2017 Gary Farrell ‘Toboni Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Toboni Vineyard’ is located in the Russian River AVA and has a strong maritime influence, as the site was planted in 2001 to clones 115, 667, 777 and Pommard, all on 101-14 rootstock. The freshness and texture is great, as cola, Satsuma orange rind and cranberry flavors are woven together with sassafras and baking spices. With great length and mouthfeel, this outstanding Pinot Noir will cellar well for the next ten to fifteen years. Drink 2020-2033- 92

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Heidi von der Mehden has crafted some gorgeous new wines for Merry Edwards (photo by Matt Morris).

Heidi von der Mehden has crafted some gorgeous new wines for Merry Edwards (photo by Matt Morris).

Merry Edwards

July 28, 2020

We all sat and listened, mouths wide open as Merry spoke. This was a very special occasion taking in Merry’s account of her storied wine journey during her wine dinner in Naples, Florida. It was an absolute joy to hear her story roughly one year ago, as she is truly one of the iconic women in world wine. Nobody makes Sauvignon Blanc just like her and her winemaking style has landed her several times on the Wine Spectator Top 100 list. 

Merry began her career in 1973. She sought to plant her own vineyards where she could capture flavors through site-specific viticulture. In 1996, she purchased 24 acres of sloping hillside in the southern hills of Russian River Valley, intent on growing Pinot Noir on this promising site. With her husband, Ken Coopersmith, as her helpmate, Merry planted 20 acres of vineyard at Meredith Estate in 1998 and harvested a small crop in 2000. In 1999 Merry and Ken expanded the brand’s estate program by purchasing 9.5 acres on Laguna Ridge in the heart of Russian River Valley and planted in 2001. The first Coopersmith Pinot Noir released was a 2004 and this esteemed site is where Merry Edwards winery first began. 

It was an honor interviewing her after the dinner, as she talked about how she crafts her wines, sourcing from some of the great sites in Sonoma County. For many years I have enjoyed visiting her winery and tasting some of her new and older vintages. For two years Merry Edwards has had Heidi von der Mehden as winemaker. Heidi trained under Merry and has hit a home run with her new releases. I was blown away with her 2018 Pinot Noir wines and the 2018 Merry Edwards ‘Sonoma Coast’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 93) has awesome poise and salty character from this AVA. Even better was the sinfully good 2018 Merry Edwards ‘Coopersmith’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 94) which its dense and shows exotic tones on the bouquet. One of the great sites for Pinot Noir in California, the 2018 Merry Edwards ‘Klopp Ranch’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 95) is sensational and vibrant, yet shows its earthy, Burgundian elegance. This is truly one for any serious collector of California Pinot Noir.  Learn more about this famed Russian River outpost at merryedwards.com Here are the gorgeous new releases by Merry Edwards. 


2017 Merry Edwards ‘Olivet Lane Vineyard’ Chardonnay- The 2017 ‘Olivet Lane Vineyard’ Chardonnay is an awesome new wine from this storied estate. On the nose this shows toasted hazelnut tones that combine with vanilla cream and shades of Pazzaz apple that all take shape in the glass. The palate is beautifully textured and shows a seamless effect that is highly gratifying. Layers of buttercream combine with Bosc pear and citrus rind accents. A complete wine, the gorgeous 2017 ‘Olivet Lane Vineyard’ Chardonnay will provide drinking enjoyment for another decade. Drink 2020-2030- 93

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2018 Merry Edwards ‘Sonoma Coast’ Pinot Noir- The 2018 ‘Sonoma Coast’ Pinot Noir is sourced from six different vineyard in the AVA. On the nose the saline drenched red fruits entice, with suggestions of charcuterie and damp earth accents. The palate is fresh and vibrant with a great veil of salinity that races through the bright Bing cherry, pomegranate seed, cola and Mandarin orange rind flavors with shades of white truffle. Complex and delicious in its youth, the 2018 ‘Sonoma Coast’ Pinot Noir will provide drinking enjoyment for a decade to come. Drink 2020-2030- 93

2018 Merry Edwards ‘Coopersmith’ Pinot Noir- Merry Edwards and her husband, Ken Coopersmithm, purchased a 9.5-acre apple orchard in 1999 and planted this Russian River Valley location to Pinot Noir. Cran-cherry and cola tones combine with shades of potpourri on this beautiful bouquet. The palate has a marvelous sense of freshness and astringency as layers of bright red fruits dance with Satsuma orange zest, exotic spices and a lovely saline streak. Vibrant and full of life in its youth, the outstanding  2018 Merry Edwards ‘Coopersmith’ Pinot Noir will cellar well for at least another decade. Drink 2020-2033- 94

2018 Merry Edwards ‘Olivet Lane’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Olivet Lane Vineyard’ was first planted nearly forty years ago and it has been several decades since Merry Edwards has been sourcing from this esteemed site in the Russian River Valley. On the nose this takes on tones of cola and cranberry with damp soil and shades of wild mushroom that all meld in the glass. The palate is beutifully textured, creating a seamless effect that catches you off-guard. The length and generous red fruits with damp earth and orange zest tones all sing in harmony. Fantastic and downright captivating to enjoy in its youth, the gorgeous 2018 ‘Olivet Lane’ Pinot Noir will cellar well for decades to come. Drink 2020-2038- 95

2018 Merry Edwards ‘Klopp Ranch’ Pinot Noir- I have long admired wines from this famed site as Merry Edwards seems to have a deft touch on this site the Russian River Valley. Set on sandy loam soils, the 2018 ‘Klopp Ranch’ Pinot Noir shows suggestions of white truffle shavings and cola that meld with Mandarin orange rind and Yakima cherry aromatics. The palate is seamless, showing light tannins that frame a big core of bright red fruits, with cola, damp earth and cardamom tones that sing in unison. The combination of freshness, verve, mouthfeel and weight is seriously good. While enticing to savor now, the 2018 ‘Klopp Ranch’ Pinot Noir will provide drinking enjoyment for at least fifteen years. Drink 2020-2035- 95

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We have this gorgeous new wine, the 2012 Champagne Bollinger ‘La Grande Annee’ Champagne.

We have this gorgeous new wine, the 2012 Champagne Bollinger ‘La Grande Annee’ Champagne.

Champagne Bollinger

July 27, 2020

One of the historic houses in Chamapgne, Bollinger is one with an amazing past. Founded in 1829 in Ay by Hennequin de Villermont, Paul Renaudin and Jacques Bollinger as this house continues to be run by members of the Bollinger family. This house has been particularly popular in Britain as Bollinger Champagnes have been come to be known as “Bolly”. It is quite amazing that Bollinger dates back to 1585 when the Hennequins, one of the Bollinger founding families, owned land nearby. Before the Bollinger house was founded, in the 18th century the Villermont family made wine and then 1750, Villermont settled in the location 16 rue Jules Lobet, which would eventually become the head office for Bollinger.

In 1803 Jacques Joseph Placide Bollinger was born in modern day Germany and after moving to the Champagne region he started work at the Champagne house of Muller Ruinart. He then started the Champagne house Renaudin Bollinger was founded on 6 February 1829 in Aÿ by Hennequin de Villermont, Paul Levieux Renaudin and Jacques Bollinger. The partners agreed that the Villermont name would not be used on the labels, hence the house name Renaudin Bollinger. Starting when Jacques Bollinger married Charlotte de Villermont, the house has been managed by the Bollinger family. Even though Paul Renaudin passed without an heir to his name, the label did not become solely Bollinger until the 1960s. Founder Jacques had two sons Joseph and Georges that were important in expanding the family estate by purchasing vineyards in nearby villages. The sons also developed the image of the brand, such as when Bollinger received a Royal Warrant in 1884 from Queen Victoria which still appears on their label.

Following the death of Jacques Bollinger in 1941, Lily Bollinger took over the brand and expanded production considerably. Since 1994, Ghislain de Mongolfier has managed Bollinger. A great-grandson of the founder, Mongolfier has also served as president of the Association Viticole Champenoise since 2004, after leading the Commission of Champagne for 10 years. Bollinger has had roles in many James Bond films, including the 1973 film Live and Let Die  where Bond asks for a bottle of Bollinger entering his hotel. In the 1985 film A View to a Kill James Bond notes that his champagne is ‘Bollinger 1975.’

Bollinger produces a great range of Champagnes and is probably best known for their ‘Special Cuvee’ Champagne that is Pinot Noir dominant and includes reserve wines that are up to fifteen years of age. I loved the new NV Bollinger ‘Special Cuvee’ Champagne (WWB, 91) which has a great sense of mouthfeel and great musty and biscuit flavors with light citrus components. Bollinger has gained a sterling reputation for their ‘La Grand Annee’ wines and I have certainly enjoyed many of these over the past few decades. Their new release, the 2012 Bollinger ‘La Grande Annee’ Champagne (WWB, 94) is dense and rich, with gorgeous layers of citrus fruits and a soft texture. Learn more about this famed Champagne house at https://www.champagne-bollinger.com Here are the beautiful new releases by Champagne Bollinger.

NV Champagne Bollinger ‘Special Cuvee’ Champagne- The NV ‘Special Cuvee’ by Bollinger starts off with ripe Gala apple and orange blossom tones that combine with biscuit and melon undertones on the nose. The palate has great freshness and a soft texture. Layers of baking spices and sourdough bread collide with minerals and lemon zest flavors. The length and mouthfeel is really great here, as this beautiful wine is best enjoyed over the next seven to ten years. Drink 2020-2028- 91

2012 Champagne Bollinger ‘La Grande Annee’ Champagne- The 2012 ‘La Grand Annee’ is a seriously good wine that has massive cellaring potential. Marzipan with hints of nutmeg and brioche offer their place on the bouquet. The silky mousse really entices as layers of kumquat zest and Challah bread collide with minerals, smoke and lovely green apple tones on the palate. The length and elegance of this wine is really great, as is the lovely sense of texture. Long and generous, this has the richness and laser-like minerality to cellar well for decades to come. Drink 2020-2035- 94

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Bill Stoller is the proprietor at Chehahem Winery.

Bill Stoller is the proprietor at Chehahem Winery.

Chehalem

July 27, 2020

Focused on high quality Pinot Noir and Chardonnay from the Ribbon Ridge AVA in the Willamette Valley, Chehalem is one of the pioneering wineries of Oregon, first planting their Ridgecrest Vineyard in 1980 by Chehalem Founder Harry Peterson-Nedry. March forward a decade later, their first Pinot Noir was created. Three years later Bill Stoller joined Harry in the winery operation and later planted a vineyard on his family farmlands at the southern end of the Dundee Hills. Two years later Chehalem purchased Corral Creek, the vineyard surrounding the winery, in 1995. It became the third estate vineyard sourced for Chehalem wines.

A few years back Bill Stoller purchased Harry’s stake in Chehalem. The new wines by Chehalem had marvelous finesse and tension. One of the top Rose wines out of Oregon, the 2019 Chehalem ‘Three Vineyard’ Rose (WWB, 90) has really good earthy tones and shows really good acidity and range. Even better was the 2017  Chehalem ‘Reserve’ Pinot Noir (WWB, 92) which is dense, chewy and has lovely cellaring potential. Learn more about this historic Oregon winery at chehalemwines.com Here are the great new release wines by Chehalem. 


2019 Chehalem Rose- The 2019 Chehalem Rose shows high-toned red raspberry and Yakima cherry tones alongside damp earthy accents that build in the glass. The palate is well-balanced with a good degree of acidity alongside lighter red fruit flavors, with damp earthy tones. Enjoy this in its youth. Drink 2020-2024- 90


2018 Chehalem ‘Inox’ Chardonnay- This unoaked bottling opens with pretty kiwi and nectarine rind with peat moss tones that round out the nose. The palate has great freshness and verve, with beautiful length. Enjoy this in its youth while the freshness remains. Drink 2020-2025- 91


2018 Chehalem Pinot Noir- The 2018 Chehalem Pinot Noir was sourced from multiple sites throughout the Willamette Valley. On the nose this shows layers of dark and red currants that mingle with suggestions of peat moss and baking spices that all take shape in the glass. The palate is juicy, with gobs of acidity and lovely earthy tones that round out this exceptional entry level bottling. Drink 2020-2027- 91

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2017 Chehalem ‘Reserve’ Pinot Noir- This limited production bottling opens with a perfumed core of dark fruits with damp earth undertones that all take shape on the nose. The palate has a great texture with underbrush and forest floor undertones that combine with the wild blackberry and huckleberry flavors. Really good right now, this has some great cellaring potential ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 92

2018 Chehalem ‘Corral Creek Vineyard’ Pinot Noir- The ‘Corral Creek Vineyard’ is located in the Chehalem Mountains AVA and was first planted in 1983. Pretty rose petal and blackberry pie aromas combine with the earthy undertones on the nose. The freshness and weight of the wine is fantastic, as layers of black fruits combine with a light dusting of salinity and peat moss tones on the palate. Enjoy this expressive wine over the next decade. Drink 2020-2033- 92

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Chris Gorman has crafted a brilliant new set of wines from the 2018 vintage.

Chris Gorman has crafted a brilliant new set of wines from the 2018 vintage.

Gorman Winery

July 27, 2020

A longstanding Woodinville winery, Gorman is founded by Chris Gorman who began his winery shortly after graduating from college in 1991. Before starting he spent 3 years working for a small Italian importer which carefully trained his palate. During that time Chris traveled extensively in the wine areas of Italy, Spain and Germany and finally started his winery in 2002. The winery has been a small operation, crafting consistently good wines from the Columbia Valley. Currently producing roughly 8,000 cases a year Chris focuses on the terroir from Red Mountain and works with great vineyards such as Kiona, Shaw and many others. They also make an excellent Chardonnay called their ‘Big Sissy.’

It has been several years since I had tasted the new Gorman lineup and I was really impressed across the board. The wines came from warm vintages, 2017 and 2018. I love the 2018 Gorman ‘The Devil You Don’t Know’ Red Wine (WWB, 92) which artfully combines Syrah, Grenache and Mourvedre to create a very pretty but full-bodied effort. Even better was the sinfully good 2017 Gorman ‘The Bully’ Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 93) which is seamless, elegant and full of verve. This beautiful effort has a long way to go in the cellar. Learn more about these fantastic new wines at gormanwinery.com. Here are the great new wines by Chris Gorman and his Gorman Winery. 

Gorman 2020 Lineup.jpg

2018 Gorman ‘Zachary’s Ladder’ Red Wine- The 2018 Zachary’s Ladder is a great blend of 80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 13% Syrah, with 7% Petit Verdot. The palate is plush, delivering beautiful black fruits that collide with minerals, tar and shades of milk chocolate covered red cherry. With light sagebrush undertones, this is really nice wine to enjoy over the next five to seven years. Drink 2020-2027- 91

2018 Gorman ‘The Devil You Know’ Red Wine- The 2018 ‘The Devil You Know’ is a proprietary blend of Bordeaux varietals all sourced from the Kiona, Obelisco, Shaw, and Lonesome Spring Vineyards. Dark once in the glass, the gorgeous core of dark fruits arouse the senses aromatically, with thyme and sagebrush accents rounding out the nose. The palate is elegant and well-rounded with medium to full-bodied blackberry, kirsch and sagebrush tones with shades of mocha and tar. This is seriously good for the price. Drink 2020-2028- 92

2018 Gorman ‘The Devil You Don’t Know’ Red Wine- The Gorman ‘The Devil You Don’t Know’ is a gorgeous new wine that blends Syrah, Grenache, and Mourvedre all aged in American oak. The blend works wonders as downright delicious red and dark fruits collide, with shades of coffee grounds, with pipe tobacco and orange rind accents. The combination of acidiity, weight and length all come together beautifully. This is great wine to enjoy now, but has another eight to ten years ahead of it. Drink 2020-2028- 92

2017 Gorman ‘The Bully’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 Gorman ‘The Bully’ Cabernet Sauvignon is an awesome new release comprised of 92% Cabernet Sauvignon with 8% Petit Verdot that aged in 90% new French oak before bottling. The earthy aromatics entice, with blackberry compote, mocha and tar tones all taking shape in the glass. The palate is soft and round, with a seamless texture. Layers of boysenberry cordial, sagebrush and Turkish coffee all meld nicely on the palate. Gorgeous in its youth, this beautiful wine has a long life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2033- 93

2018 Gorman ‘Evil Twin’ Red Wine- The ‘Evil Twin’ is a Provencale style wine comprised of 75% Syrah with the remainder Cabernet Sauvignon all sourced from the Red Mountain AVA. Fresh blueberry and thyme aromas combine with black tea and black licorice tones on the nose. The palate is plush and seriously good, as bright, lip-smacking acidity greets you. A light dusting of salinity falls upon the core of dark fruits and tobacco leaf tones on the palate. Gorgeous now, the ‘Evil Twin’ will enjoy at least another decade of life ahead of it. Drink 2020-2020- 92

2017 Gorman ‘The Pixie’ Syrah- The 2017 ‘The Pixie’ Syrah is sourced from the Kiona, End of the Road Ranch, and Klipsun Vineyards. Shades of venison and bulls blood combine with the core of red fruits, smoke and citrus rind accents on this beautiful bouquet. The palate is plush, giving off a soft texture. Layers of red and dark fruits mingle with coffee grounds, kumquat zest and smoky tones on the palate. With great length and elegance, this beautiful wine will cellar well for a decade or more. Drink 2020-2030- 92

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Beaulieu Vineyard winemaker Trevor Durling has crafted a gorgeous range of wines.

Beaulieu Vineyard winemaker Trevor Durling has crafted a gorgeous range of wines.

Beaulieu Vineyard

July 24, 2020

A historic Napa estate, Beaulieu Vineyard dates back to 1900, when Georges de Latour's wife, Fernande, first laid eyes on the land that would become their original Rutherford vineyard, she named it "beau lieu," or "beautiful place." De Latour saw the potential of the land and sold his thriving cream of tartar business, purchasing the four-acre ranch and later founding Beaulieu Vineyard.  I have long enjoyed visiting the BV Reserve Room — one of the great locations to try some of the best wines in Napa. I’ve admired these wines back to the early and mid-1990s as I’ve found them to age remarkably well. Particularly the 1995 and 1996 ‘Georges de Latour’ are iconic, age worthy Napa wines.  At the helm is Trevor Durling, who took over a few years back for legendary winemaker Jeffrey Stambor. Originally from Sonoma County, Trevor has a degree in viticulture and enology from the esteemed University of California, Davis.

An outstanding value, the 2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 91) has great richness and tension with good cellaring potential. This is a seriously good wine at a great price. Do not miss out on the gorgeous 2016 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Georges de Latour’ Cabernet Sauvignon (WWB, 96) which has massive cellaring potential and will reward for many decades to come. Elegant and rich, this is nothing short of a sensational new release. Learn more about these beautiful new wines at https://www.bvwines.com Here are the new releases by BV.

2018 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Napa Valley’ Chardonnay- Layers of orchard fruits collide with toasty oak and minerals on the palate. Enjoy this lighter style of Chardonnay in the near future. Drink 2020-2024- 89

2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Napa Valley’ Merlot- The 2017 Beaulieu Vineyard Merlot takes the lad with anise and ripe red cherry  that are woven together with baking spices on the nose. The palate is soft and elegant with a generous mouthfeel. Layers of chocolate covered red cherry, cigar box and anise flavors combine with the dusty terroir tones on the palate. Showing good length, this beautiful new Merlot will cellar well over the next decade. Drink 2020-2028- 90

2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Napa Valley’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Napa Valley’ Cabernet Sauvignon shows rich mocha and anise aromatic tones that mingle with suggestions of spicebox and shades of violets that take shape in the glass. The palate shows great freshness and tension with layers of dark fruits and mocha tones that combine with coffee grounds and a good vein of tension. Layered and showing good length, this great value new wine will cellar well for the next decade or more. Drink 2020-2030- 90

2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The 2017 ‘Rutherford’ Cabernet Sauvignon is a gorgeous new wine by Beaulieu Vineyard and the talented Trevor Durling. Anise and loamy terroir combine with shades of mocha and tar on this evocative nose. The palate shows good weight and texture as layers of dark fruits meld with anise, tar and Turkish coffee. Fresh and showing a nice sense of depth, this great new Cabernet Sauvignon will cellar well for the next decade. Drink 2020-2030- 91

2017 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Tapestry’ Red Wine- The 2017 ‘Tapestry’ by Beaulieu Vineyard is a sensational blend that artfully captures each working part. A blend of mostly Cabernet Sauvignon with small portions Merlot, Malbec, Petit Verdot and Cabernet Franc, this opens with bright red fruit aromas that meld with suggestions of baking spices, red bell pepper and chocolate that all mingle in the glass. The palate is beautifully textured with layers of loganberry preserves, chocolate, sagebrush and herbal undertones. Sensational to enjoy in its youth, the 2017 ‘Tapestry’ will enjoy a long life ahead of him. Drink 2020-2038- 93

BV 2016 Georges de Latour.jpg

2016 Beaulieu Vineyard ‘Georges de Latour’ Cabernet Sauvignon- The downright thrilling new 2016 ‘Georges de Latour’ is nothing short of a masterpiece by superstar winemaker Trevor Durling. Needing a two hour decant to fully evolve, this beautiful wine slowly begins to unveil black tea and Asian spices that meld with rich dark currants, cigar ash and dusty terroir that show their appeal. The palate is plush, wonderfully dense, as the strong vein of tension races through the core of chocolate covered dark cherry, mocha and creme de cassis flavors, with graphite and earthy undertones also brilliantly singing in unison. A complete wine, and showing a fantastic sense of freshness, weight and elegance, this gorgeous effort will enjoy an exceedingly long life ahead of it. Drink 2022-2040- 96

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Aug 6, 2025
Lange
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Vina Bujanda
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Alto Moncayo
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Koehler Family Wines
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 6, 2025
Aug 5, 2025
AniChe Cellars
Aug 5, 2025
Aug 5, 2025
Aug 4, 2025
Aperture Cellars
Aug 4, 2025
Aug 4, 2025
Aug 4, 2025
Gramercy Cellars
Aug 4, 2025
Aug 4, 2025
Jul 31, 2025
St. Innocent
Jul 31, 2025
Jul 31, 2025
Jul 31, 2025
Passing Time
Jul 31, 2025
Jul 31, 2025
Jul 30, 2025
Alain Chavy
Jul 30, 2025
Jul 30, 2025
Jul 30, 2025
Echolands
Jul 30, 2025
Jul 30, 2025
Jul 28, 2025
Single Barrel
Jul 28, 2025
Jul 28, 2025
Jul 24, 2025
Chateau Batailley
Jul 24, 2025
Jul 24, 2025
Jul 22, 2025
Interview with Kate Payne Brown, Argyle Winemaker
Jul 22, 2025
Jul 22, 2025
Jul 22, 2025
Champagne Billecart-Salmon
Jul 22, 2025
Jul 22, 2025
Jul 19, 2025
Diamond Creek
Jul 19, 2025
Jul 19, 2025
Jul 18, 2025
DeLille Cellars
Jul 18, 2025
Jul 18, 2025
Jul 16, 2025
L'Ecole No. 41
Jul 16, 2025
Jul 16, 2025