Is California Grenache on a cusp?
Bokisch Vineyards Garnacha, lit up like Christmas during veraison |
Letting a grape finally sing
Earlier in the month (May 2015), I endeavored to take a
measure of California grown Grenache in a tasting of the very best varietal bottling of said grape.
The tasting was a long time coming – I first thought
about doing it at least five years ago, after tasting a pair of pure Grenache
bottlings produced by Harrison Clark Vineyards, grown on a spectacular chalky hilltop estate in Santa Barbara’s
Ballard Canyon AVA. These sensuous, scintillating,
ultra-spiced red wines were like a proverbial epiphany to me. Never knew a California Grenache can taste so "complete."
Harrison Clarke's calcareous hilltop estate in Santa Barbara's Ballard Canyon AVA |
It took a while to put together something of a definitive tasting, but I’m glad it’s finally done. My thoughts on the matter...
First, over the past four, five years we have been
hearing the rumblings; mostly out of the mouths of wine savvy friends and
colleagues in the wine industry.
“Grenache is now my favorite grape.” “Nothing is better than a good Grenache.” “God, I love Grenache.”
I don’t know how much of this has been genuine, or just
attributable to a coolness factor.
Certainly, we all occasionally do and say things just to be cool or
different (or at least to make ourselves think we’re different). But the point is: I’m not the only one who’s been
harboring a growing fondness for Grenache.
Not, mind you, the usual Grenache based blends with
Syrah, Mourvèdre, Carignan, or other grapes deliberately used to beef up Grenache in some way,
shape or form; based on the seemingly obvious assumption that Grenache makes too simple or feeble a red wine to stand on its own.
Bonny Doon Vineyard, for instance, has been on a tremendous winning
streak with recent vintages of its Grenache driven Clos de Gilroy – buoyant, bosomy, irrepressibly lush and delicious
red wines.
Clos
de Gilroy, however, is rarely more than 65% or 75% Grenache. Grenache, as Randall Grahm contends, is
“really the star” in his blends; but I
still feel like you’re not really getting the taste of the grape in pure,
unadulterated form. What you’re
getting is something of an “improved” Grenache – like the wonderfully improved
versions of Barry Bonds (I was a big fan, and still am) in his latter years.
To appreciate Grenache, I think you need to accept the fact that, ultimately, the grape produces a lighter style of red wine than even the most moderated “GSM.” It’s never going to soar as high as the finest Syrahs, and it’s never going to have the soulful, sonorous meatiness of Mourvèdre. So what?
Grower Phil Abba and winemaker Michael McCay in Abba Vineyards (Lodi's Mokelumne River AVA) |
I submit that the recent surge in interest in 100% pure
Grenache as a varietal red is, more than anything, a sign that a growing
segment of the wine market is finally willing to perceive subtlety as a
quality, as much or even more so than sheer weight or intensity. A wine need no longer be “big”
or “powerful” to be impressive.
It’s a mental thing, as much a shift in taste. It entails dishing out "points" for expressions of less, not more. Pure styles of red Grenache definitely
fall within the softer, gentler, more floral spectrum of red wine styles; more
often than not with its own modest complexity of red berryish fruit (often suggesting
cherry, strawberry, raspberry or pomegranate), tinged with spice (black pepper
or brown kitchen spices). But if
you expect power in the nose, or phenolic muscle in the body, you will usually
be disappointed.
Bottom line – the more you appreciate delicacy in red wine,
the more you appreciate Grenache!
One of our tasters, noted Lodi winemaker Chad Joseph |
McCay Cellars’ Michael McCay has been fond of describing
Grenache as “Lodi’s Pinot Noir.”
McCay is alluding to the Lodi AVA’s Mediterranean climate – which is the
natural environment for Grenache (but not so much for Pinot Noir, which reaches heights in colder climate regions) – as well as to the finely perfumed, mildly
spiced, Pinot Noir-like qualities of the varietal.
But red Grenache, of course, is not Pinot Noir; nor is it
Carignan, Sangiovese, or any other variety with propensity towards red fruit
fragrances and softer tannin structures.
It comes in its own package of attractive attributes; fairly defined only
on its own terms.
Last year the San Francisco Chronicle headlined
a story on Grenache’s recent “star turn,” describing the varietal as “the
perfect Mediterranean grape” while proclaiming, “Now is the moment to embrace
one of California wine's great successes.” 20 years ago, there was no way anyone would use words like
“star” or “great” in the same sentence as Grenache. There seems to be, borrowing Star Wars lingo, a “strong
disturbance in the Force” – or rather, among those with say in the wine world.
Bokisch Vineyards' Markus Bokisch |
Four of us, tasting from paper bags
For our blind tasting, I gathered 15 examples by
producers who I believe are producing the finest pure styles of California
Grenache today. Oh, I may have
left out another two, three, or even four, five other producers of merit. But you have to start somewhere, and I
choose to start from my own tasting experiences (never believing what I’m told
or what’s being written).
Since it was easier to do this tasting in my own home in
Lodi, I invited three of Lodi’s most respected vintners to help evaluate the
wines along with me: Markus
Bokisch of Bokisch Vineyards, Chad Joseph of Harney Lane Winery and Oak FarmVineyards (plus three more Lodi based wineries), and Michael McCay of McCay
Cellars.
Among the line-up, as it were, were the 2012 Bokisch Terra
Alta Vineyard Clements Hills-Lodi Garnacha (Bokisch grows a clonal variant of
the Grenache grape from Rioja Baja in Spain) and the 2012 McCay Cellars Lodi
Grenache. The various other
Grenaches represented growths in Sonoma Valley, Inland Mendocino, Paso Robles, Santa Clara, Santa Barbara, Amador County and El Dorado.
McCay's 2014 Mokelumne River-Lodi Grenache harvest |
Lest you think otherwise, none of our Lodi winemakers
ended up recognizing their own wines in this blind tasting – not an uncommon
occurrence in my experience, tasting with even the sharpest winemakers. This means our Lodi guys were not
predisposed towards Lodi grown wines while proffering their opinions and, in
the end, picking out their favorite wines in the tasting.
Not only were none
of us able identify the Lodi Grenaches among the others, following our discussion
and voting of our favorite wines, we were actually shocked to discover that the
Grenache everyone lauded as being the most intense in terms of spiciness, earthiness and perfume was, in fact, the 2012 McCay Cellars Grenache grown in Lodi. Of course, we did not all agree that more was better, but c’est
la vie.
Our "top 3" Grenache reds
Between the four of us, we came up with a total of 7 wines singled out as our three “favorites.” We didn't "rate" the wines - all of them were damned good - but we jotted down our personal preferences, mostly for the sake of discussion.
Our "top 3" Grenache reds
Between the four of us, we came up with a total of 7 wines singled out as our three “favorites.” We didn't "rate" the wines - all of them were damned good - but we jotted down our personal preferences, mostly for the sake of discussion.
Winemaker Jordan Fiorentini in Epoch's calcareous Paderewski Vineyard (Paso Robles Willow Creek District) |
Full disclosure:
I picked the Lodi grown McCay and Bokisch Grenaches #1 and #2 – under
the mistaken notion that these wines were more likely from Santa Barbara. The wines I thought were from Lodi actually ended up being from Testa Ranch in Mendocino and the Santa Barbara Highlands Vineyard. If I’ve
grown a “Lodi palate,” evidently it’s been by accident.
In any case, my #3 choice was Epoch Wines' Sensibility, grown in the steep, white,
calcareous shale slopes (+1,200-ft. elevation) of Paso Robles’ newly
recognized Paso Robles Willow Creek District AVA. Aside from the Baiocchi (Fair Play/El Dorado) and Neyers
(Sonoma Valley), the Epoch was just about the most aggressive, full and densely
structured Grenache in the bunch, exuding a pervasive, ringing peppery spice. Mr. Joseph, on the other hand, found
the Epoch to be a shade “clunky.” A
well-made wine is like a mountain – everyone looks at its features from slightly
different angles.
Mr. Joseph, as it turned out, really loved the two Ballard Canyon/Santa Barbara bottlings from
Harrison Clarke Vineyards, picking them as his #1 and #2. All I can say is, he has very good
taste. His #3 choice, for the
record, was the Lodi grown McCay.
Unbeknownst to each other, Mr. McCay and Mr. Bokisch
ended up picking the exact same wines as their 1, 2, and 3: first, the full bodied (by Grenache
standards), fleshy, richly layered Baiocchi from El Dorado’s Fair Play AVA;
followed by the more feminine, flowery, silky A Tribute to Grace from Santa Barbara Highlands Vineyard, and the 2011 Harrison Clarke (the slightly leaner, yet
somewhat brasher, of the two vintages of Harrison Clarke in the tasting).
A Tribute to Grace winemaker/owner Angela Osborne in Amador County's Shake Ridge Ranch |
In alphabetical order, more detailed notes on the seven
wines that ended up among our “top 3”:
2013
A Tribute to Grace, Santa Barbara Highlands Vineyard Grenache (about
$50) – From a remote, high elevation (3,500-ft.) vineyard located in an even
warmer site than anywhere in Lodi; furnishing more than enough proof that
perfectly refined, feminine, silky yet zesty, upbeat Grenache can be grown in a
place that is the opposite of “cold climate” (and is also why, when the French
and Spanish talk about Grenache, they gleefully proclaim the merits of “hot
climate” viticulture). McCay
described the finely wrought elegance of this bottling as “Sinatra-like,” and
Mr. Bokisch loved the way its low-key cedarbox-spice/oak melded with its
fragrant raspberry/cherryish fruit.
2012
Baiocchi Wines, Sharon’s Vineyard Fair Play (El Dorado) Grenache ($39)
– Focused strawberry/plummy aroma backed by a faint note of minerality,
mingling with a scrubby spice; firm, fairly full bodied style (relative to the
rest of the Grenaches, which were by and large moderate in weight), with
attractively round, fleshy, balanced qualities to the mineral-tinged fruit
intensity.
Bokisch Vineyards' Rioja Baja Garnacha clonal selection |
2012
Bokisch Vineyards, Terra Alta Vineyard Clements Hills-Lodi Garnacha ($23)
– This planting – grown on the rocky, clay loam soils of Lodi’s Clements Hills
AVA – comes across as notably svelte, refined, yet zesty. The varietal qualities are properly
soft and strawberryish – described as “bright” and “lifted” by Chad Joseph –
augmented by a whiffs of leafy-greenery which added (for me) a nice complexity;
the medium-weight, fruit-focused sensations coming across as gentle yet
exuberant, stretching gracefully across the palate.
2012
Epoch Estate Wines, Paso Robles Sensibility (about
$50) – Although in the past this winery has blended small proportions of Syrah
in their Sensibility bottlings, their
2012 is 100% Grenache; evoking ultra-intense, almost heady strawberry/raspberry
fruit with a cracked peppercorn spiciness, leaping from the glass; with a
notably thick, full, bold yet typically soft (for the varietal), silken
textured feel on the palate.
Harrison Clarke co-owner/winemaker Hilarie Clarke |
2010
Harrison Clarke Vineyards, Ballard
Canyon-Santa Ynez Valley (Santa Barbara) Grenache ($32) – This estate planting – on
a dusty-white, calcareous limestone-replete hilltop in Santa Barbara’s Ballard
Canyon AVA (a sub-appellation of Santa Ynez Valley) – remains one of my
all-time favorite sources of Grenache.
The wines are unfailingly spicy and mobilized by zesty, fresh fruit
acidity (high pH soils being more favorable to lower pH wines). In this bottling, a fragrant,
flowery red berry perfume is infused with an aromatic minty/sweet herb
spiciness; tied together on the palate with still-youthful tannin, filling out
a firm, medium sized body.
2011
Harrison Clarke Vineyards, Ballard Canyon-Santa Ynez Valley (Santa Barbara) Grenache ($32)
– This vintage produced a slightly leaner prickly, layered, silken Grenache;
with a brazen, generous fruit dimension verging on blackcurrant-like berryishness, tinged with
fresh Bing cherry and mildly sweet oak flourishes; finishing fresh, sleek,
lissome, lively.
2012
McCay Cellars, Lodi Grenache ($28) – From trellised vines in
Phil Abba’s meticulously farmed Abba Vineyard, located on the east side of
Lodi’s Mokelumne River AVA. Notably
the most pungent, perfumed, sweet black peppercorn spiced, veering on
peppermint, Grenache in this tasting, with Old Worldish whiffs of organic
loaminess (also the earthiest wine in this tasting). The feel is soft, round, fairly fleshy, with mouth-watering
zip. Mr. Bokisch described its
nose as “Santa Rosa plum and strawberry,” while Mr. Joseph singled out its
“mineral texture” and “rich strawberry jam” qualities.
Baiocchi Vineyards owner/grower/winemaker Greg Baiocchi |
The others – a litany of Grenache “stars”
I have done tastings, even entire judgings, where none
of entries are “second-rate” – every wine a winner in any given wine aficonado's book. This was one of those tastings, in spades. We truly felt that the quality of each
of the following wines was first-rate – indicative of the high standard of red
varietal Grenache reached in California today.
In alphabetical order:
2013
A Tribute to Grace, Shake Ridge Ranch Amador County Grenache (about
$50) – With the huge respect we all have for grower Ann Kraemer’s amazing work
at Shake Ridge Ranch, the combination with A Tribute to Grace’s Angela Osborne’s customary minimalist winemaking regime – strictly native yeast, partial (50% to 70%) foot
treading of whole clusters, neutral wood, et al. – seems like a hand-in-glove
fit. In this bottling, Osborne
achieves an epitome of the varietal’s gentle, fragrant, medium bodied charms;
the strawberry/cherry fruit spruced up by a cocoa-ish, baking spice complexity;
some youthful tannins tightening the finish, which still projects a fine,
almost ethereal texturing.
Shake Ridge Ranch, Amador County |
2013
A Tribute to Grace, Besson Vineyard Santa Clara Grenache (about
$50) – Ms. Osborne informs us that this is sourced from ancient vines, planted
in 1910. In comparison to her other
two cuvées
submitted in the tasting, this prettily scented wine seemed to register a
slightly lower key expression of the cherry/strawberry varietal perfume, while
remaining true to the pliant, feminine personality of the varietal; the nose exuding
a flowery note, transitioning into a soft, almost airy, yet appealingly
bright, snappy McIntosh apple-like crackle and pop on the palate.
2013
Beckmen Vineyards, Purisima Mountain Vineyard-Block Eight Ballard Canyon-Santa Ynez Valley (Santa
Barbara) Grenache ($52) – Few vignerons
lavish as much attention on Grenache as Steve Beckmen, and it shows in this
bottling from a Biodynamic® farmed block of own-rooted, head
trained vines, planted on a sparse calcareous slope. Vividly rich and compact cherry/strawberryish varietal aroma
touched up by a mild herbiness; fairly full, soft and fleshy, but seemingly
held back a little by a young, linear, tight tannin component.
Neyers Vineyards winemaker Tadeo Borchardt in Sonoma Valley's Rossi Ranch |
2012
Big Basin Vineyards, Coastview Vineyard Monterey County Grenache ($44)
– Coastview is as the name implies – a 2,200-ft. elevation planting located in
the Gabilan Mountains, overlooking Monterey Bay and Salinas Valley. This was also the only Grenache in
our tasting blended with a small dose of Syrah (5%). Nonetheless, the impression is very much, and thrillingly,
“Grenache” – juicy, bouncy, strawberry fruit qualities in the nose and mouth,
zipped up by notably bright acidity, a mild tug of tannin and just a smidgen of
leafy green herbiness.
2014
Neyers Vineyards, Rossi Ranch Sonoma Valley Grenache ($35)
– This was the only barrel sample included in this tasting (owner Bruce Neyers
explaining that a bottle of their sold-out 2013 bottling was simply
unavailable). But I was determined
to have some kind representation from Neyers; whose formidably talented winemaker, Tadeo Borchardt, has had phenomenal success
with fruit from the Biodynamic® farmed Rossi Ranch, tucked away on
hillsides not far from Jack London State Historic Park in Sonoma Valley. This came across as the Grenache with
the most intense expression of black-oriented fruit (plum, blackberry); and
also as the one wine that could most accurately be described as “opulent,” or
voluminous – zesty yet round, fleshy, layered sensations; tightly wound and
compact with unresolved tannin, while finishing with a surprisingly sleek sense
of grace and texturing.
2012
Skinner Vineyards, Estate Grown El Dorado Grenache (about
$30) – The Skinner estate plantings sit on a sandy loam saddle, some 2,700-ft.
high in El Dorado’s Fair Play AVA.
This wine is effusive with bright, high-toned strawberry perfumes,
complimented by the slightest herbal underpinnings; its medium body buoyed by
fresh acidity, lending mouth-watering sensations.
2013
Skinner Vineyards, El Dorado Grenache ($26) – In this blend of estate
and non-estate plantings, the nose projects more forward strawberryish
qualities with scrubby, sage-like earth notes; and on the palate, the softness
of the varietal, sweetened by restrained French oak, finishing soft, easy, ingratiatingly
fresh and savory.
2012 Testa Ranch, Mendocino County Grenache ($30) – Grower/winemaker Maria Martison tends to this hidden treasure of a vineyard that has been in her family since 1912. Employing straightforward, small batch, hand punched macro-bin fermentation, she exacts classically fragrant, flowery red berry/cherry, almost pomegranate-like perfumes and flavors in her Grenache; wrapped in a soft, elongated, easy-going medium body that seem to caress the palate. Everything that we crave in pure (at long last) Grenache!
2012 Testa Ranch, Mendocino County Grenache ($30) – Grower/winemaker Maria Martison tends to this hidden treasure of a vineyard that has been in her family since 1912. Employing straightforward, small batch, hand punched macro-bin fermentation, she exacts classically fragrant, flowery red berry/cherry, almost pomegranate-like perfumes and flavors in her Grenache; wrapped in a soft, elongated, easy-going medium body that seem to caress the palate. Everything that we crave in pure (at long last) Grenache!
Testa Ranch owner/winemaker Maria Martison |
Can we talk more?
By and large, all of these Grenache bottlings were sourced
from vines growing in moderately warm Mediterranean climates. Do not pay attention to yabberings
about necessity of “cold climate.” Grenache
loves sun, while basking in a fairly wide range of topographies.
Where the wines in our tasting differed was in elevation
(the Skinner, Baiocchi, Big Basin, Epoch, and A Tribute to Grace's Shake Ridge Ranch and Santa Barbara
Highlands Vineyard planted on the highest elevation sites), and soil (higher
pH/calcareous soils in the Epoch, Beckmen, Harrison Clarke and Big Basin
plantings). These were nice, but
wines grown in less alkaline soil on sub-400-ft. sites (i.e. McCay, Bokisch, Testa, Neyers' Rossi Ranch, and A Tribute to Grace's Besson Vineyard) seemed no less
complex and attractive.
If anything, factors such as winemaking and picking
decisions were also significant.
For instance, mildly green notes of pyrazine (which I love) indicative of earlier
picking – presumably to achieve moderated natural alcohol and crisper acidity –
were found in wines as varied as the Bokisch (grown on low-lying hillsides of
rocky sandy clay loam), the Skinners (sandy loams at mountain-high altitude), Big Basin (2,200-ft. hillsides with veins of limestone), the
Beckmen and Harrison Clarke bottlings (sparse, rocky limestone on hillsides
topping out at about 1,200-ft.).
In terms of style, Bokisch, A Tribute to Grace, and Testa
Ranch all seemed to fall into the lighter, reddish berry perfumed spectrum of
the varietal by design – a winemaker’s sense of restraint – despite coming from widely varying regions (Lodi’s Clements Hills, Santa Barbara Highlands, Amador
County, Santa Clara, and Inland Mendocino). Winemaking always has as much impact as terroir on finished product.
Skinner Vineyards in El Dorado's Fair Play AVA, on elevations reaching 2,700-ft. |
It is interesting to note that with the exception of the
Bokisch and Testa, all the wines were crafted by vintners devoted to native
yeast fermentation and other methods associated with minimalist winemaking. This was particularly telling in the
comparison of the two Lodi grown wines – the native yeast fermented McCay
showing rawer earth and spicy notes, and the inoculated Bokisch focusing on a
purer red fruit expression.
Yet the wines falling on the fuller bodied end of the scale
also varied. The Baiocchi came
across as successfully well balanced, while achieving a classic red fruit
varietal fragrance, even in a riper, weightier style (alcohol hitting 14.9%). The Neyers was among the fuller bodied
wines, while hitting darker fruit notes – no doubt reflective of the classic
red volcanic soil of Sonoma Valley.
The Epoch was downright thick, as opulent as the Neyers – you could almost feel the sweet kiss of sun on these shallow, rocky, calcareous slopes – and
even spicier than the Neyers and Baiocchi.
Speaking of which, the spice factor: we found the most intense peppery
qualities in the McCay, Harrison Clarkes and Epoch Grenaches. Again, these spice bombs come from a
wide range of regions: McCay grown
in Lodi’s zero-elevation sandy loam; Harrison Clarke on a gentle slope of
finely ground limestone hovering around 1,000-ft.; the Epoch on a
steeper, mountainous, craggy site climbing above 1,200-ft. What they do have in common is native yeast fermentation and
squarely Mediterranean climate – chew on that.
If you enjoy complexity, Grenache is as much your grape as any other. In the hands of crafty winemakers such as the aforementioned, any wine lover with a penchant for classic qualities like elegance and subtlety is bound to be thrilled. I know I am.
If you enjoy complexity, Grenache is as much your grape as any other. In the hands of crafty winemakers such as the aforementioned, any wine lover with a penchant for classic qualities like elegance and subtlety is bound to be thrilled. I know I am.
Shake Ridge Ranch's owner/grower extraordinaire, Ann Kraemer |
Comments
*It is 100% Grenache
Lisa Mattson
http://www.exesinmyipod.com
As I said on Facebook when I shared this article, it's great to see some love for a variety that I dig so much - and one that I've worked with for quite some time.
I do believe that it can make a great stand alone variety IF the sight provides you wonderful starting materials AND you leave the variety alone - do not bathe in new oak whatsoever; probably have some stem inclusion to accentuate the mid-palate; and, probably most importantly, know when to pick the grapes.
As others have pointed out, and you did as well, the variety can be made in a myriad of styles - from the light touch such as Angela does with her A Tribute to Grace to the bigger, bolder wines such as those made by Beckmen. The grape is also somewhat of a chameleon, as it grows in somewhat cool to even hot climates, and can make interesting wines in each.
To me, though, the grapes tends to strut its stuff in climates that are not too hot, and with soils that do not retain much water. Given the opportunity, the variety will try to throw a huge crop, thus reducing some of the wonderful intensity that the fruit can provide.
I do hope to see more grenache selections out there - and a greater understanding of what the variety can bring to the table - a wonderfully aromatic, structured wine that is wonderful on its own, but one that sings will earthy and rustic foods.
Cheers!
I cannot agree, however, that fine Grenache needs climates that are "not too hot." One of the points I wanted to make in this post is that we shouldn't pay attention to the general conceit that "finer" wines are grown in cooler climates (i.e. equivalents to Region I or II).
The fact that in this particular tasting, wines grown in the warmest sites (A Tribute to Grace's Amador and Santa Barbara Highland Vineyard bottling, Biocchi and Skinners in El Dorado, Testa in Mendocino, and Bokisch and McCay in Lodi) compared quite favorably is sufficient proof of that. Epoch's Paso Robles bottlings was also extremely interesting, and we all know that there's a heckuva lot sun and heat in the Willow Creek area of Paso Robles. Needless to say, many of the best sites in Southern France and Spain are usually described as "hot climate" regions.
Thanks again, all!
We are actually on the same page when it comes to heat - I was not implying that you needed to be in a Region 1 or 2 to achieve 'greatness' in Grenache - in fact, I think the opposite is true. I've had too many grenaches from cooler climate sites where the fruit simply did not ripen enough - and I was left with hoping for more.
That said, I do believe that there is a limit to how much heat the fruit can see during the growing season - and if it is too hot, you are left with a greater potential for a more one-dimensional wine. Yep, I know it is hot where some of your favorite wines came from, and yep, I know it is hot where some of the best examples from Spain come from.
The question is - is it Central Valley hot?
And when you take Mikael's invitation and make it down here to try his 12 different vintages from Tierra Alta Vyd in the Ballard Canyon area, nearly adjacent to Harrison Clarke, hit me up to try my 7 vintages from the Larner Vineyard, on the Southern edge of this same AVA but planted in 100% sand, or my 8 from the Watch Hill Vineyard up in the Los Alamos area . . .
Cheers!
I do hope that you gave each of these wines plenty of air and time to open up. I find that one of the beauties of grenache can be its 'shyness' - and that you need to coax it to come out of its shell slowly, over a period of time. It may show some of itself with a pop and pour, but the nuances take time to develop - and patience is required.
Cheers!
I do want to add, though, that the reason I'm harping on the point that it is easy to over-emphasize climate in discussions of grapes like Grenache is because consumers, and much of the media, are easily misled. They think warm or even "hot" climate (i.e. in a sense that Ballard Canyon and the Sierra Foothills are relatively "hot" compared to, say, Burgundy and much of Sonoma Coast) is a negative. Now we are reading in the New York Times about how much of California's grapes are grown in the "wrong" places, because everyone knows that the best wines are grown in cooler climates and that the "best" wines are always below 13% alcohol.
What does that make places like Ballard Canyon, Happy Canyon, the Sierra Foothills, Lodi, Paso Robles or Inland Mendocino -- chop liver? So what if A Tribute to Grace Grenache hits 14.5% alcohol? -- it's still refined and graceful. These are the kind of errant implications we should avoid perpetuating.
Point being, the climate of the entire West Coast between Mendocino and San Diego is classified as Mediterranean. But Larner, Beckmen, Harrison and Clarke, Skinner, Epoch, et al. did not choose to plant in their particular spots because of climate. They chose their spots because of favorable soil and topography. If anything, that's what makes the difference, not so much climate. Viticultural and winemaking savvy also play a part. You and I know quality winegrowing is a little more complicated than easy climatic classifications.
Thanks again!
Good points indeed. And yes, there need to be plenty of 'counter-arguments' to those who believe any wine over 14% is 'out of balance' and 'an abomination'.
It's quite easy to get dogmatic when discussing wines, but it is, most of the time, wrong to do so. There are so few absolutes in our industry, and those with open minds will continue to see that - and hopefully embrace it as well.
I will say that I would not put Ballard Canyon into the same 'sentence' as Lodi as it applies to climate - just saying . . .
We may very well see extreme coastal places moving towards varieties such as Grenache as global warming continues - but not now. It just doesn't make a pretty enough wine IMHO.
Cheers!