...because you get to observe how a wine changes over time, even before it's released to the market.
The Syrah in this wine came from the Graves Vineyard, which is the southern-most in the state of Washington (Dallesport WA), near the Columbia River, and it's also one of the oldest. Planted by Mr. Graves, a BPA employee, a very long time ago (1970s?) and now tended by his son. The Malbec came from Noble Wolf Vineyard east of Lyle WA. Both grapes were fully ripe and in excellent shape; I picked them up in early morning and by noon was processing them on the Epona crush pad. Super-fresh treatment with high-touch winemaking all the way.
1. Youth: I'm learning why Syrahs (and Malbecs, too) need years of aging before they show their best. Some Syrahs don't come to market until they are 6-7 years old! This wine, upon opening is mostly shut down. The nose is faint and the palate is clunky, showing some nice red/blue fruits but with a sense of disjointedness and a bitter finish note. An hour later, the nose is showing now--complex and awakening: Red/blue/purple/black fruits (yes-all of those, and I dare you to disagree), and herbs, and medicinals, in that order. On the palate, the wine is thick (good body) and acidic (good for food), with purple fruits and a coffee finish.
2. Then I put the leftover half-bottle of the wine into the fridge for four days. Sounds too long, right? But I suspected the wine was very, very early in its development, and 4 days on air provided a good test for what it might become.
3. Then, the wine was really good: The nose predicts ripe red/purple/black fruits with bolstering acidity and matching fairly high alcohol, and you can even smell the thick body too. In the mouth, it's very nice: rich, thick, but acidic too, with wonderful complex fruit and herb notes, and a nice finish.
I will definitely submit this one in competition, but not for another couple of years. Big hopes for this one! But patience is required. I plan to offer it next week, in order to get the hivemind's comments, and then either sell the rest, or hang onto it, as appropriate. One great thing about having a SUPERB wine buying club, is that you can access a wealth of great wine palates, in order to get the correct skinny on a wine and what to plan re that wine...
Showing posts with label tasting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tasting. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Monday, August 13, 2018
Maryhill Winery to build a wine tasting room on the Vancouver waterfront!
This is good news. That development is exciting--close to our Vancouver house. It will continue to drive Vancouver forward economically.
I view Maryhill as a sound winery in a great location and with a great business plan. Their "Reserve" wines can be very good.
I view Maryhill as a sound winery in a great location and with a great business plan. Their "Reserve" wines can be very good.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Finding wines that you will probably like: a step in the right direction
A company has created software which aggregates your and other wine tasters' scores on a wine, and uses the data to predict whether you will like certain other wines.
That is a step in the right direction, but a better predictive product would merely use our personal preferences for the following spectrums:
Fruit Ripeness: from banana/green/peppery through red fruits, through purple fruits, through black fruits, to raisins and tar.
Body: from thin to rich/fat
Residual Sugar: from bone dry to super-sweet
Acid (quantity of acid): from flabby to sharp
pH (strength of acid): from weak to strong
Complexity: from simple to layered
Aromatics: from none to faint to lush olfaction
Finish: from none to long
Tannins: from young and sharp to aged and subtle
These would be adjusted differenly for white and red wines, of course. And some of those spectra are matters of personal preference, whereas others are more clearly "good" or "not as good," but you usually can't find a long finish in a super-cheap wine. At any rate, once we knew our own preferences on those spectrums, then if each wine label were labeled to show those spectrums with that wine's marker in each category, we would have a good chance of knowing if we would like that wine. We will always know the price, of course, so we can compare price to the various qualitative data points, and voila! we are out of the wine woods and we are an educated wine consumer (as to that wine).
Compare this pipe dream to today's wine label, which often tells us almost nothing about the above criteria. The winemaker knows all that info; why not share it with us?
You can read the article here.
That is a step in the right direction, but a better predictive product would merely use our personal preferences for the following spectrums:
Fruit Ripeness: from banana/green/peppery through red fruits, through purple fruits, through black fruits, to raisins and tar.
Body: from thin to rich/fat
Residual Sugar: from bone dry to super-sweet
Acid (quantity of acid): from flabby to sharp
pH (strength of acid): from weak to strong
Complexity: from simple to layered
Aromatics: from none to faint to lush olfaction
Finish: from none to long
Tannins: from young and sharp to aged and subtle
These would be adjusted differenly for white and red wines, of course. And some of those spectra are matters of personal preference, whereas others are more clearly "good" or "not as good," but you usually can't find a long finish in a super-cheap wine. At any rate, once we knew our own preferences on those spectrums, then if each wine label were labeled to show those spectrums with that wine's marker in each category, we would have a good chance of knowing if we would like that wine. We will always know the price, of course, so we can compare price to the various qualitative data points, and voila! we are out of the wine woods and we are an educated wine consumer (as to that wine).
Compare this pipe dream to today's wine label, which often tells us almost nothing about the above criteria. The winemaker knows all that info; why not share it with us?
You can read the article here.
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