Jekel 2008 Pinot Noir 01/04/2012
This product of Santa Barbara, CA gets a C- from my tastebuds. It has synthetic cotton candy, playdoh, pot pourri aerosol aromas that are an immediate turn off. The wine is light, drinkable, not sweet or syrupy. But I find it lacking depth or dimension, a touch astringent, and all-in-all I just couldn't get excited by it. Even for a wine with a price tag around $15, I'm going to pass on this. My intrigue with areas in California like Santa Barbara, Santa Ynez Valley, and Paso Robles continues to grow, however, and I plan on sipping more and more domestic wines to see what great wines I can discover. Add Comment 2008 Cupid's Arrow Pinot Noir by Wild Rock 06/18/2010
![]() Well, after a pretty long hiatus of no writing (except for my bimonthly City Living Magazine articles), I've had a realization that I cannot lose sight of the vision... the transformation of an amateur palate into a connoisseur... someday. In the meantime I'm enjoying working as a wine professional, selling, sipping, spitting almost every day. Always learning and always enjoying the fact that I work with a product that I love. Why my words came to such a sudden halt, I don't know, but I hope to be back and as prolific as possible. Okay, to what matters. This bottle of New Zealand Pinot Noir will run you about 20 bucks. Wild Rock is a sustainable winery affiliated with Craggy Range (one of the more prestigious establishments from New Zealand). It hails from the Central Otago region of the North Island (think Lord of the Rings), which has a cooler growing climate. So you get a fresh Pinot with bright acid. You get cherries, a resinous allure, and something slightly floral on the nose. But no umami, i.e., no meaty deli meat aromas. The flavor is lush and fruity with a raisiny, spicy finish. The tannins are light, and the wine is almost see-through clear. Overall, it is a pleasant wine. Good for stirfry, good chilled down just a bit to combat this summer humidity. I give it a B+. Question to anyone who might happen by: Are you drinking more South African wine because of the World Cup? if so, which ones? ![]() Every Saturday there are tastings at Chevy Chase Wine & Spirits from two to five. This is the the easiest way to learn about new wines and put your palate to practice... From right to left (light to bigger) in the picture here are four wines that offer different styles, smells, and flavors: 2008 Ferrari Carano Fumé Blanc: This is 100% Sauvignon Blanc, full of zestiness, with key flavors like lemon and grapefruit. About 1/3 of the wine was put into barrels to age, to soften some of the acidic sharpness, then blended back with the rest that stayed in stainless tanks. The end result is a fresh Sauvignon Blanc that still has good acidity, yet comes at the palate in a more mellow way. This normally costs $17, but was on sale for just under $13. 2006 Merryvale Starmont Chardonnay: Chardonnay is a grape that can be vinified in a number of ways, a fact which splits Chardonnay drinkers into two schools: those that dig oak, and those that don't. This bottle delivers a blend of half barrel-fermented and half stainless-steel-ferments grapes, resulting in a wine that still has nice body and a beautiful golden color, but is smells more of fresh fruit than it does of butter and barrels. There are some lovely citrus, pear, apple, and even pineapple aromas here. For someone like me (I tend to steer clear of California Chardonnay) this is a nice medium between the two ends of the Chardonnay spectrum. 2007 Erath Pinot Noir: For those that haven't tried Oregon Pinot Noir, you are missing out. This wine shows just a glimpse of the whole world of Pinot that is growing continually in Oregon's Willamette Valley. This wine is light in body, and color. It has earthy, leathery smells that meld well with a soft cherry aroma. The wine is silky smooth in your mouth and, though its finish isn't big, it leaves a spicy aftertaste. For pairing wine with Thai food or salmon, this would be perfect. 2007 Planeta Segreta: A Sicilian blend consisting of mainly Nero d'Avola, this wine has body, lush fruit aromas, crisp acidity, and great overall balance. There is Syrah, Merlot, and a touch of Cab. Franc in the blend. The pruney, blackberry aromas are strong on the nose, with undertones of cranberry and rocks. The minerality makes a huge play once the wine coats your mouth; it has substance, an almost chalky viscosity that makes you take this wine seriously. This bottle could compliment so many types of food, from cheese to chicken, pizza to prime rib. Question for today: Do you go out to shop where you know you can taste wines? If not, you're neglecting your palate-maintenance. If so, where do you go, and why? Smoking Loon 2007 Pinot Noir 11/18/2009
![]() I popped the cork out of this bottle on a Wednesday night, and after trying it I felt that everything was in its right place. This is a Wednesday night wine: nothing costly or crazy. It is a medium bodied, lightly colored, fruit foward Pinot that will please most of the crowd. But for me it's still in the low B range as far as quality is concerned. The alcohol content in this wine is 13.5%, so while it makes you yell woo-hoo a lot faster, the nostril stinging sensation robs the spotlight from some very nice flower petal, cherry and strawberry aroma. Personally, I prefer a Pinot with some resious, smokey bacon odors coming off of it, and that this wine was so fruity was a let down. I did enjoy some leathery cherry components to the smell, and the wine had surprisingly firm tannins for how light it seems at first. I would drink this bottle again, and would recommend it to others. But I can't see myself purchasing this Pinot Noir any time soon. I'd rather spend $4 more and get a bottle of Yealands Pinot Noir from Marlborough, New Zealand. In fact, I need to go get some of that wine to review. All in do time. Question of the day: If you could take some wine and some friends and go anywhere in the world, where would you go? And what wine would you bring along? One love. Wine love. A Night in New Zealand 11/08/2009
Technically speaking, last night I really was in New Zealand, attending a charity wine auction sponsored by the Washington D.C. Rotary Club. There was plenty of good food and wine to choose from, but only two wines stood out to me as being noteworthy: The Lil' Rippa Pinot Noir and the Lil' Rippa Sauvignon blanc. The latter, a crisp Sauv. blanc loaded with crisp zestiness, was the perfect glass to kick off my evening of meeting a few of the members of the club. The pinot noir was a wine I returned to after some eating and bidding on silent auction items, but it startled me with how dank and deep the aromas were. Bacon fat and musty basement smells mingled with some fresh red berry... a for-sure A wine in my book. Now I just need to find out where I can find it aroud here...shouldn't be too hard The Day of the Dead came one day early... 11/01/2009
Before I began my journey into a bottle of Jameson last night, I did some drinking that involved a certain amount of reflection and sensory conciousness. As I began preparing dinner I uncorked a beautifully ornate bottle of Italian Pinot Noir made by Candoni Wines. A 2007, this young wine exudes a berry freshness. I normally prefer a little more meat and earth aroma from Pinot, but the crisp Goji berry, raisiny smells pulled me in all the same. This wine has low alcohol and high acid. It brings a tart berry flavor at the front end, then pulls a La Bruja move and, poof, it's gone. After a pause the tart finish comes on strong and leaves a pleasant long-lasting semi-pucker that reminds me of Sour Skittles. This get a B letter grade even though the structure and balance were a little off. The wine won me over with its eternal finish. Then I had to open a Chardonnay for the chicken I was making, so I got a $7 bottle of Barefoot Chardonnay. It's a little buttery, but has a good amount of acid to keep it in balace. For the money, it's a decent bottle; a B wine. With dinner, my aunt and uncle blind tasted me on a Merlot that was so light and acidic that I was guessing it was Italian. Not the case. The 2006 (I was able to guess the vintage), Estancia Merlot from the Central Coast of CA is not the cocoa nib and prune kind of Merlot that I love. But it is a solid 86 point, B wine for me. Light berry aromas, some stoney minerality, and a solid overall balance... for $12 it's definitely a bottle I'd bring to a dinner party or wine tasting. A couple curveballs in this round of tasting, which I love because it reflects the variability and versatility of vitis vinifera. An then, the pitch came in tight and hit me(Why does Jameson have to be so smooth?!). I'm walking it off today. Tomorrow there will be wine to drink. | AuthorWith a little traveling, a bit of time, and an infinite amount of curiosity, I will explore the countless flavors life has to offer. ArchivesJanuary 2012 CategoriesAll |