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J. Wilkes Wines Central Coast
Gold Wine Club Vol 28i12 P TheMedal WinningWine Wines from California’s Best Family-Ownedress Wineries. J. Wilkes Wines Central Coast Gold Medal Wine Club The Best Wine Club on the Planet. Period. J. Wilkes 2017 “Kent’s Red” Blend Paso Robles Highlands District, California 1,000 Cases Produced The J. Wilkes 2017 “Kent’s Red” is a blend of 90% Barbera and 10% Lagrein from the renowned Paso Robles Highlands District on California’s Central Coast. This District, which is the most southeast sub appellation within the Paso Robles AVA, is an absolutely fantastic place to grow wine grapes, partly due to its average 55 degree temperature swing from day to night (the highest diurnal temperature swing in the United States!), and also in part to its combination of sandy and clay soils that promote very vigorous vines. The high temperature swing, by the way, crafting bold, complex red blends like the J. Wilkes 2017 “Kent’s Red.” This wine opens with incredibly seductive slows the ripening rate of the fruit on the vine and allows flavors to develop, which is especially important when and just the right balance of bright, deep, and elegant nuances. Suggested food pairings for the J. Wilkes 2017 “Kent’saromas Red”of blackberry, include barbecued huckleberry, steak, and pork, freshly or beefberry stew. pie. AgedThe palate in oak. is Enjoy dry, but now very until fruity 2027. with dark berry flavors Gold Medal Special Selection J. Wilkes 2016 Chardonnay Paso Robles Highlands District, California 1,000 Cases Produced J. Wilkes’ 2016 Chardonnay also comes from the esteemed Paso Robles Highlands District, a region that may be dominated by red wine grapes, but the Chardonnay grown here is well-respected and offers some 2016 Chardonnay opens with dominating aromas of ripe pear, green apple and lime zest. -
J. Wilkes Wines Central Coast
GOLD WINE CLUB VOLUME 26 ISSUE 09 P TheMedal WinningWine Wines from California’s Best Family-Ownedress Wineries. J. Wilkes Wines Central Coast GOLD MEDAL WINE CLUB The Best Wine Club on the Planet. Period. 2013 “CHANDRA’S RESERVE’ PINOT NOIR CENTRAL COAST 657 Cases Produced Produced from a selection of top vineyards in the Santa Maria Valley and Monterey AVA’s the J. Wilkes 2013 “Chandra’s Reserve” Pinot Noir beautifully blends the best characteristics of Central Coast Pinot. Medium garnet red in color, the 2013 “Chandra’s Reserve” Pinot Noir opens with amazingly complex aromas of ripe cherry, raspberry, baking spice, earthy leather, and the slightest hint of sage and wet stone. The palate is bright growingand fruity regions. with excellent The J. Wilkes fresh 2013 acidity “Chandra’s and persistent Reserve” flavors Pinot of Noir red is berry a food fruits friendly and winebright as cherry.well, pairing Lively with and delicious from start to finish, this wine exemplifies classic Central Coast character showing the elegance of both mignon. Enjoy now until 2021. everything from white fish, to strong artisanal cheeses, a grilled cheese sandwich and tomato soup, or even filet GOLD MEDAL SPECIAL SELECTION 2013 “CHANDRA’S RESERVE” CHARDONNAY CENTRAL COAST 456 Cases Produced A delicious and special Chardonnay blend from top vineyard sites on California’s Central Coast, the J. Wilkes 2013 “Chandra’s Reserve” Chardonnay might just be your next go-to bottle of white wine. Medium straw- yellow in color with brilliant clarity, this Chardonnay offers hints of chalky minerality on the nose, framed by aromas of green apple, quince, pear, lime blossom, caramel, and tropical fruit. -
Chardonnay Dierberg
DIERBERG HARDONNAY Jim and Mary Dierberg are no newcomers to wine. Since 1974, C they've owned one of America's oldest wineries, Hermannhof, located in their home state of Missouri. Developing an initial passion for wine during their early trips to Germany during the 1960s, the couple discovered that an old winery in Hermann, Missouri - founded in 1852 - was for sale, and they bought it. Varietal/Blend: 100% Chardonnay Farming: sustainable: Soil: alluvial deposits, Sandy Loam Vine Age: 20 years Harvest Technique: fruit is harvested by soil type, across several different blocks, rather than by discreet clonal selections Fermentation: in a mix of new and used French oak Malolactic: less than 10 percent of the wine goes through The wines at Hermannhof are good, but the Missouri climate is not secondary (malolactic) fermentation conducive to growing the European varietals that have made Aging: 33% new French oak for 16 months / aged in larger, 400 France and California famous, and so, it was only a matter of time liter barrels that impart less oak influence than typical barrels before the couple sought a new winemaking perspective. In 1996, Alcohol: 14.5% they purchased Star Lane. After consultation with renowned Yeast: selected Central Coast grower Dale Hampton and soil scientist Paul Fined: none Skinner, the Dierbergs realized that the land was best suited to Filtered: light growing Cabernet and its related varietals. Production #s: Starting with 100 acres in 1996, they later bought a cooler Dierberg Vineyard is situated atop a sandy loam mesa above the South Bank vineyard site better suited to Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, a bit of the Santa Maria River. -
2014 Estate Pinot Noir San Ta C R U Z Mounta Ins
Few wine regions on earth can match Santa Cruz Mountains’ climates, soils and vertigo inspiring views. Set high in the mountains overlooking California’s Silicon Valley, the Thomas Fogarty Winery has been making single-vineyard Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Merlot and Cabernet from the SCM appellation since 1981. Fogarty’s two estates are divided into micro-vineyards, ranging from .25 to 5.25 acres, based on soil and topography. All are maritime (10-18 miles to Pacific), cool-climate (Regions I and II), high-elevation (1600-2300 feet), low yielding (1-3 tons per acre) and mountainous. The winery was founded by Dr. Thomas Fogarty, a Stanford cardiovascular surgeon and world-renowned inventor. 2014 ESTATE PINOT NOIR SAN TA C R U Z MOUNTA INS VINEYARD TECHNICAL DATA Our Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot Noir is sourced from vineyards from APPELLATION four distinct regions within the Santa Cruz Mountains AVA: the fractured 100% Santa Cruz Mountains shales of our Estate Vineyards high upon Skyline Blvd, coastal W INEGRO WER Corralitos, the cool coastal La Honda region and the Summit Rd area, Nathan Kandler which has the highest elevations in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Each vineyard is vinified to highlight it's own signature identity; this blend VINE YARD S harmonizes and intensifies the regional Santa Cruz Mountain character. 26% La Vida Bella (Corralitos), 24% Mindego Ridge (La Honda), 15% Muns (Summit), VINTAGE 13% Will's Cabin (Skyline), 8% Roberta's Vineyard (Summit), 2014 was the second consecutive drought vintage and featured the 4% Kent Berry (Summit) earliest harvesting in our 30+ year history. -
MODEST REVOLUTIONARIES Experimental Winemakers Duncan Meyers and Nathan Roberts Have Been Friends Since Childhood
ARNOT-ROBERTS MODEST REVOLUTIONARIES Experimental winemakers Duncan Meyers and Nathan Roberts have been friends since childhood. Adam Lechmere went to California to find out why they’re rapidly garnering a reputation as two of the state’s most exciting winemakers onversations with winemakers often turn to the conundrum of intervention and non-intervention. The American philosopher-turned-winemaker Abe Schoener of the Scholium Project has some interesting things to say on the subject. His basic C premise (he was a teacher and knows how to put ideas across) is that deciding to do nothing is just as much a decision as deciding to do something. When he leaves a barrel of Chardonnay fermenting in the sun for two years, then that is a form of intervention. The wine is always under his control. The same goes for vineyards. Any good modern winemaker will spend many hours, at all seasons, kicking dirt, talking trellising and cover crops with the vineyard manager. “To make good wine, you need good soils, a good grower, and good weather,” Nathan Roberts told me on a fine spring morning in Sonoma. Roberts and Duncan Meyers have been friends ever since fifth grade, ten or eleven years old, and have been making wine together for the best part of 15 years. Arnot-Roberts has had a slow gestation:“We had seven years with no pay,” Meyers says. They kept their day jobs for those years: Meyers—whose grandfather was an RAF man from Fife in Scotland—working for John Kongsgaard and then at Pax Wine Cellars; and Roberts—a grandson of Robert Mondavi’s widow Margrit— following his father into the family cooperage. -
Wine-Book-210709.Pdf
02 04 08 09 21 52 53 54 02 04 08 09 21 52 53 54 2 SPARKLING Brut, Naveran — Cava (Penedès), 2018 .............................................................................................................. 8 Brut Rosé, Michel Briday – Bourgogne, NV......................................................................................................... 12 Brut, Taittinger — Champagne, NV.................................................................................................................... 18 ROSÉ Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah Peyrassol — Mediterranee 2020 ............................................................................ 10 Touriga Nacional, Maçanita - Douro 2019 ......................................................................................................... 14 WHITE Melon de Bourgogne, Eric Chevalier — Muscadet Côtes de Grand Lieu 2018 ................................................... 10 Sauvignon Blanc, Vincent Delaporte — Sancerre 2019 ..................................................................................... 16 Sauvignon Blanc, Spy Valley — Marlborough 2020............................................................................................ 11 Pinot Grigio, Jermann — Fruili-Venezia Giulia 2019 ........................................................................................... 14 Albariño, Fillaboa — Rias Baixas 2018 ................................................................................................................ 11 Grüner Veltliner, “Crazy Creatures,” Malat — -
Bien Nacido.Pub
BIEN NACIDO VINEYARDS SANTA MARIA VALLEY, CALIFORNIA Bien Nacido Vineyards has become an iconic American vineyard. Located in the Santa Maria Valley, this historic vineyard has a colorful and storied past. In 1837 a Spanish land grant of some two square leagues was made to Tomas Olivera. This grant covered nearly 9,000 acres ranging upward to the San Rafael Mountains from the Santa Maria Mesa, which bordered the Sisquoc and Cuyama Rivers. Thomas Olivera sold Rancho Tepusquet in 1855 to his son-in-law and daughter, who started construction on an adobe in 1856 and moved to the ranch the following year. In 1969, the Millers, a fifth generation California farming family, purchased part of this property. They also purchased an adjacent parcel which had been part of the original land grant, and reunited the two as Rancho Tepusquet, now comprising over two thousand acres. The original adobe remains as one of the few privately maintained adobes in California. In the early 1970's, it became clear to the Millers that the soils and climate were ideal for growing grapes. Bien Nacido Vineyards is planted primarily to Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, and Syrah. The original plantings came from stock grown by the University of California at Davis and grown on their own rootstock. Bien Nacido also has the distinction of being the first vineyard in California to grow cool climate Syrah. Santa Maria Valley is an American Viticultural Area located in Northern Santa Barbara County and San Luis Obispo County, California. This appellation is the oldest in this portion of California. -
Wine List Table of Contents
Wine List Table of Contents Wines, by the Glass 2 Rare & Premium Glass Pours by Coravin® 3 Specialty Cocktails 4 Beer 5 What We’re Drinking (Favorite Picks of NINE-TEN Staff) 6 Sommelier Suggestions 7 Half Bottles (375mls) 8 Sparkling Wines 9 Sauvignon Blanc / Chenin Blanc / Pinot Grigio 10 Riesling / Gruner Veltliner / Intriguing Whites 11 “Rhone” Whites / “Italian” Whites 12 “Spanish” Whites / Rosé 13 Chardonnay - USA 14 Chardonnay - International 15 Pinot Noir - USA 16 Pinot Noir - International 17 Syrah & Shiraz / Zinfandel 18 Grenache & Grenache Blends / Spanish Reds 19 “Italian” Reds 20 Intriguing Reds 21 “Bordeaux Styled” Blends 22 Bordeaux 23 Merlot / Malbec / Cabernet Franc 24 Cabernet Sauvignon 25 Glossary of Wine Terms 26 & 27 Wines by the Glass Sparkling Prosecco, Tasi, Extra Dry Prosecco DOC, Veneto, Italy NV 14 Rosé of Cabernet Franc, Bouvet, “Rosé Excellence,” Brut Loire Valley, France NV 15 Champagne, Taittinger, “La Française,” Brut Champagne AOP, France NV 21 White Lighter Bodied Sauvignon Blanc, Lucien Crochet Sancerre AOP, Loire Valley, France 2019 16 Sauvignon Blanc, Noria, Bevill Family Vnyd Russian River AVA, Sonoma County, CA 2018 15 Gruner Veltliner, Weingut Frank Wienvertal DAC, Neiderosterreich, Austria 2018 14 Riesling, Schloss Lieser, Kabinett {off-dry} Mosel, Germany 2015 15 Medium Bodied Pinot Grigio, Ronco delle Betulle Friuli Colli’ Orientali DOC, Italy 2018 14 Viognier, Christophe Pichon Colline Rhodaniennes IGP, Rhone Vly, FR 2018 15 Albariño, Hill Family Estate, Stewart Ranch Vynd Carneros AVA, Napa -
To Go Wine List Buy All of Our Wines at Discounted Retail Pricing to Go and Get 10% Off Any 12 Bottle Mixed Cases
To go Wine List Buy all of our wines at discounted retail pricing to go and get 10% off any 12 bottle mixed cases. 450+ wines, so little time… Our wine list has received an award from Wine Spectator magazine every year since 2002 and the 2nd level “Best of Award” since 2016, one of only select restaurants in Ohio to receive the award. Let us find a great wine for you! White Chardonnay 76 Galaxy Chardonnay $12 California 87 Toasted Head Chardonnay $14 2017 California 269 Debonne Reserve Chardonnay $15 2017 Grand River Valley, Ohio 279 Kendall Jackson Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay $15 2018 California 126 Alexander Valley Vineyards Chardonnay $15 2018 Alexander Valley AVA,California 88 Wente Morning Fog Chardonnay $16 2017 Livermore Valley AVA, California 242 La Crema Chardonnay $20 2018 Sonoma Coast AVA, California 241 Lioco Sonoma County Chardonnay $23 2015 Sonoma County AVA, California 247 Sonoma-Cutrer Russian River Ranches Chardonnay $26 2016 Sonoma Coast AVA, California (WS:87 - Drink now) 259 Kokomo Chardonnay $28 2016 Russian River AVA, California (WS:90 - Drink now) 234 Beringer Luminus Chardonnay $30 2016 Napa Valley AVA, California (WS:91 - Best from 2017-2020) 237 Ferrari-Carano Napa Valley Carneros Reserve Chardonnay $30 2015 Napa Valley AVA, California (WS:90 - Best from 2017-2020) 228 The Snitch Chardonnay by Prisoner $35 2016 Napa Valley AVA, California (WS:86 - Drink now) 222 Failla Sonoma Coast Chardonnay $37 2013 Sonoma Coast AVA, California 272 Stonestreet Estate Chardonnay $40 2016 Alexander Valley AVA, CA (WS:92 - Best -
History in the Vines: Fremont's Wine Legacy
History in the Vines: Fremont’s Wine Legacy “There is no more important vineyard district in California, all things considered, than that which lies around the old Mission San Jose. …The best wine vineyards are around the Mission and Warm Springs, and on the roads to Irvington and Niles -in other words -on the spurs of the great mountain that rises above the district.” –Charles Howard Shinn, 1889 By Ralph de Unamuno After having lived in Los Angeles for nearly a decade, I returned to the Bay Area to teach Chicano Studies & History at local community colleges. My commute took me past the Gallegos-Palmdale Winery ruins. My curiosity as a historian led me to research the past of the ruins I had once explored as a young boy growing up in Fremont. I soon uncovered an amazing story about the Gallegos- Palmdale winery in particular, and that Fremont had a remarkable viticultural and enological past in general. From the Spanish-Mission era up to Prohibition, south Fremont (then called the Washington Township), had once been one of the first and most productive wine regions in California. While the Gallegos-Palmdale Winery was not the first or the last winery in Fremont, it is a symbol of a bygone era of Fremont’s historic agricultural past. A past that is all but forgotten but much deserving of acknowledgment to the history of California viticulture and enology. Figure 1 Ruins of the Palmdale Winery. Photo Credit: The Wine Institute The origins of the Golden State’s wine industry has its roots in the Spanish colonial era. -
Pinotfile Vol 7 Issue 13
Santa Cruz Mountains Part I Volume 7, Issue 13 February 25, 2009 Rhys Vineyards: Staking Out Terroir in the Santa Cruz Mountains It all started rather innocently for Kevin Harvey. Sampling wine on his honeymoon in France piqued his interest. A 1990 Gary Farrell Russian River Valley Pinot Noir brought him to attention and inspired his exploration of Pinot Noir and its many growing regions. It wasn’t long before he became hopelessly hooked on Pinot Noir and dabbled in both New World Pinot Noir and Burgundy. In 1995, Harvey planted a small Pinot Noir vineyard in the backyard of his home in Woodside, located in the hills above Stanford University. He began crafting small amounts of wine in his garage. Visions of owning a winery in Sonoma County one day occupied his thoughts but the Pinot Noirs from the Santa Cruz Mountains soon began to attract most of his attention. There was something about the earthiness and minerality of Santa Cruz Mountain Pinot Noirs that held a magical appeal for him. Tasting older vintages of Mt. Eden and Santa Cruz Mountains Vineyards Pinot Noir convinced him that it was the earthy minerality and tannin of these wines that led to their age ability. In addition, he found the wines developed more interest over time, becoming “amazing with age.” Harvey confessed, “Many California Pinot Noirs were too sweet for my taste. Minerality and tannins provide a relief to the fruit and a drier finish.” He would go on to conclude, “The Santa Cruz Mountains are the most mineral-driven wines in the New World.” Minerality is a controversial term to say the least. -
The International Wine Review November 2009
The International Wine Review November 2009 Report # 20 The Santa Lucia Highlands: Unique Terroir, Marvelous Wines Introduction The Santa Lucia Highlands is one of California’s premier In this Issue wine regions for the production of top quality Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. While only established as an AVA in 1992, its rapid learning curve as to which varietals excel in its unique Introduction ........................................................ Cover terroir has translated into growing demand, and prices, for its fruit. The terroir—cool climate, morning fogs, strong winds, Acknowledgements.....................................................2 low rainfall, summer sunlight, and excellent drainage—is ideal The Highlands and Monterey: An Historical Note ........2 for growing Pinot Noir and Chardonnay and, increasingly, Northern Rhone style Syrah. Santa Lucia Highlands: The Region .............................4 The Santa Lucia Highlands [SLH] is a grower’s AVA. Not only is Viticulture in the Highlands..........................................6 there high demand from wineries outside the AVA for SLH fruit, The Vineyards of the Highlands ...................................8 but strict environmental regulations, water supply constraints, and the difficulties winemakers face in purchasing property Wines of the Santa Lucia Highlands .............................9 within the AVA serve to limit the number of wineries. There Economics of SLH Wines ...........................................12 are today only twelve growers in the Highlands who also make wine. On the other hand, there are more than thirty winemakers Tasting Notes and Ratings .........................................13 located outside the AVA who make wines carrying the Santa Lucia Highlands name. The fact this is a grower’s AVA puts Annexes: special emphasis on the vineyards, and a number of SLH 1 Selected Vineyard Profiles ................................26 vineyards—Garys’, Rosella’s, Sleepy Hollow, Doctor’s, etc.—are famed for producing high quality fruit.