
A colleague and friend sent me the link to an excellent article by Clark Smith on Appellation America about Santa Cruz Pinot Noir. This is one of the best articles I’ve seen so far to delineate and describe what can be a somewhat vague term — Santa Cruz Pinot Noir — to most people (one of whom was myself, certainly for a long time), and if you are at all interested in Pinot Noir in general, I highly suggest you read it. There are so many microclimates and different soil types in those mountains that a profound diversity of Pinot abounds, and he explained that diversity very well. There is a section of the article where he describes clonal characteristics. I have worked with all of the clones he describes and he’s pretty much got it nailed. He also writes a commentary regarding the judgement of Pinot by those self-proclaimed critics out there. We all tend to walk around with a certain idea of what Pinot should be — but thankfully, because of Pinot’s unique inclination to mirror the characteristics of the site on which it is grown and how it is handled in the winery, I believe there is a Pinot to fit anyone’s ideal, and he does, too. Hopefully in the future, as Mr. Smith suggests in his article, wine criticism will change from final judgement in the black and white halls of criticism to a more responsible mindset of offering descriptions of wines and essentially flinging the doors of the court open and leaving the ultimate judgement to the consumer, for that afterall is the most important judgement that I know of in this business!
*******
We had a great time on Sunday at our “Port”, aka non-vintage “Dessert Wine” release party at our tasting room in Carmel. Yes, this is a port-like wine that we cannot call Port out of all due respect to the Portugese and their centuries-old port industry. Anyway, we had many wines and food to go with it and it was a great time! This wine is available only at our tasting and comes in 750mL bottles for $35.00/bottle. The other thing I couldn’t mention on the label (the government says that to state on the label that the wine is blended with spirits is to imply that consuming the product might make a person intoxicated…go figure) is that I blended the base with with a very nice brandy I procured from Germain Robin Distillery, and ended up making a nice fortified wine that one wine club member said was “not too sweet, not too alcoholic, and unusually complex and spicy”. There you have it….might make a great holiday gift!