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Napa Valley Zinfandel
Lynne Char Bennett
Sunday, July 5, 2009
2006 August Briggs Old Vine Napa Valley Zinfandel
2007 Brown Estate Napa Valley Zinfandel
2006 Downing Family Vineyards Fly by Night Oakville Zinfa...
2006 Green & Red Vineyard Chiles Canyon Vineyards Napa Va... More...
Zinfandel can be grown in many climates, often from warmer regions that produce very ripe, juicy, big wines. Napa Valley - with Zinfandel planted as a very minor player - has mountain vineyards that receive plenty of sun but not as much heat.
Napa Valley winemakers who love this grape set the prices for their Zins according to the Napa Valley reputation, which brings a premium.
Here are a few Napa Zinfandels that should appeal to folks who prefer a more moderate and slightly restrained style.
2006 August Briggs Old Vine Napa Valley Zinfandel ($32).
Winemaker Joe Briggs, who co-owns the winery with his wife, Sally, first produced his own label in 1995. Briggs has made wine for about 25 years, including Pinot Noir at La Crema. This bottling has a lifted nose with aromas and flavors of red and black cherry and plum, and bright acidity with almost Claret-like structure. A great food partner.
2007 Brown Estate Napa Valley Zinfandel ($36).
The Brown family has been a part of the Napa Valley for almost 30 years. Co-owner (with his two sisters) and winemaker Dave Brown - who has been through almost 15 crushes - sourced the fruit for this wine from the Chiles Valley district. Lovely Zin nose and palate with spiced plum, cherry and chocolate hints; ripe and concentrated without being heavy.
2006 Downing Family Vineyards Fly by Night Oakville Zinfandel ($29).
This darkly fruited wine from proprietors John and Tracy Downing and winemaker Randy Mason is for fans of a slightly riper style. This vintage is the second from the certified organic H&H vineyard. Clean and bright with plenty of ripe, but not jammy, fruit, and notes of chocolate.
2006 Green & Red Vineyard Chiles Canyon Vineyards Napa Valley Zinfandel ($21).
Pam and Jay Heminway founded the winery in 1977, naming it for the vineyards' red iron soil accented with green serpentine striations. This bottling - blended from the three mountain vineyards overlooking Chiles Canyon - is a leaner, more restrained style with savory notes underscoring the red plum and berry. Bright acid on the finish.
2006 The Terraces Napa Valley Zinfandel ($28).
>From the Crull family's Quarry Vineyards in Rutherford, which was originally planted to grapes in the late 1800s. Smoky notes, spice, more reddish fruit and structure, with a lengthy finish. Plenty of oak from 18 months in French and American barrels. Could use some time. Includes 8 percent Petite Sirah and 1.5 percent Cabernet Sauvignon.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/07/05/FD1U18FMHR.DTL
This article appeared on page K - 5 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *
July 8, 2009
WINES OF THE TIMES
If It Wasn.t for That Umlaut ...
By ERIC ASIMOV
GRÜER VELTLINER is one of summer.s great, unlikely pleasures.
Why unlikely? Well, it may seem shallow, but Americans have always been riveted by the mellifluous, flowing wine names drawn of the romance languages . the chardonnays, pinot grigios and Sancerres. Germanic terms, with their umlauts and consonant pileups, have historically posed obstacles, whether gewüminer, blaufräisch (its alternate name, lemberger, is no better) or the ever-popular trockenbeerenauslese.
Yet grüeltliner from Austria has not only survived but prospered on restaurant lists across the country. It.s one of those happily inexplicable things. Years ago I never would have guessed that Americans would fall in love with raw fish, but now sushi bars are everywhere.
One possible reason for grüeltliner.s popularity is that, unlike riesling, it does not have to overcome the assumption that it.s sweet. Sure, sweet grüeltliners are produced, very good ones in fact. But they are the exception. Consumers can be confident when they order a bottle that it will be dry.
Another is the wine itself. Grüeltliner can range from crisp and light-bodied to rich and full-bodied, with aromas and flavors of lemon and grapefruit, flowers and herbs. Perhaps its most distinctive feature is a peppery spiciness. Good examples can also have a minerality.
Across the stylistic board, though, a dry grüeltliner should have a refreshing tanginess, borne of good acidity. All told, a good grüeltliner goes wonderfully with many foods.
As for the name, Americans have found several methods of sliding by. Most common is simply truncating the name, calling it grüand softening it to GROO-ner rather than the more correct, diacritical GREWH-ner), and dispensing with the ungainly veltliner (pronounced FEHLT-lee-ner). Some call it simply G.V., and occasionally you.ll find sommeliers and industry people who use the insiderish term gru-ve, pronounced .groovy..
With high expectations of summer meals happily accompanied by glistening bottles of grüeltliner, the wine panel recently sampled 19 bottles from the 2007 vintage, which has the reputation of being good to grüand one from 2008. For the tasting, Florence Fabricant and I were joined by Belinda Chang, wine director at the Modern, and David Lynch, who recently left his position as general manager at the John Dory to take a job as wine director at Quince in San Francisco.
As eager as we were to embrace the wines, the tasting was somewhat disquieting. While we very much liked our favorites, we found too many wines that were not up to snuff. Some were ponderous and heavy, too big with not enough zesty acidity. A few of the big ones had detectable sweetness, a style that Belinda called .Alsace grü after the wines from Alsace that can unpredictably have a bit of residual sugar. Others seemed simply wan and lacked snap.
.When a good grüeally delivers, it has depth,. David said. .A lot just lacked acidity..
Belinda wondered whether some of our disappointment was a result of high expectations.
Perhaps so, but the wines we liked best certainly were as good as anticipated. There was no disputing our favorite, the Domä Wachau Federspiel Terrassen, which had all the balance we were hoping to find, along with pure, deep, complex flavors.
As you might guess, Domä Wachau is in the Wachau region of Austria, which produces the country.s richest wines; in the best bottles, though, the richness comes without weight and heft. Wachau alone uses a specific terminology for the ripeness at which the grapes are harvested.
A federspiel wine, like our No. 1, is harvested at the medium ripeness level. The ripest Wachau wines are called smaragd (pronounced shmar-AHGD), and they also tend to be the most expensive. Indeed the two Wachau smaragds in our top 10, the Prager Achleiten and the Alzinger Münt, were by far the most expensive of our favorites. Both had a crystalline purity and a peppery, minerally richness, with underlying citrus, floral and mineral flavors.
The other leading grüeltliner regions are Kamptal and Kremstal, sources of 5 of our top 10 bottles. While these may not have the richness of the Wachau smaragds, they are not necessarily slender wines, though our No. 3 bottle, the Birgit Eichinger Hasel from Kamptal, was beautifully weightless, with refreshing, tangy flavors. But both the Büer Holzgasse from Kremstal and the Hiedler Thal from Kamptal were substantial, balanced, delicious wines.
Some of the best values come from other regions. The Graff Hardegg Veltlinsky, a $14 bottle, had a lovely texture, with flavors of citrus, flowers and minerals. It comes from the Weinviertel region, although the label cannot say so officially because the wine carries a brand name, Veltlinsky. Speaking of values, the liter bottle for $13 from E.&M. Berger is a perennial. It.s not a complex wine, but it is satisfying.
All good, right? Well, let.s not forget those disappointing bottles. Some were rich wines that were also fatiguing, as if some producers were aiming for smaragd-level ripeness without the balance that keeps a big wine refreshing. They were heavy-handed, while a good grüeltliner should have an almost electric jolt of bracing acidity.
I.m hesitant to make this comparison, but the tasting reminded me of what has happened with some New Zealand sauvignon blancs. These wines have achieved tremendous popularity in the last 25 years, but of late I can.t help but sense that some producers are not taking particular care in making their wines. Instead they treat the genre like a cash cow, confident that cachet will triumph over a lack of effort.
I don.t think grüeltliner producers have strayed that far, but compared with previous tastings I do sense a falloff. With a little more attention to balance, perhaps all will be groovy again.
Tasting Report: Grüeltliners, the Quiet Austrians
BEST VALUE
Domä Wachau Grüeltliner $15 ... ½
Federspiel Terrassen 2007
Pure, deep, balanced and refreshing with complex citrus, spice and herbal aromas and flavors. (Importer: Vin DiVino, Chicago)
Prager Wachau Grüeltliner $56 ...
Smaragd Achleiten 2007
Bright and rich with classic peppery minerality. (Vin DiVino)
Birgit Eichinger Kamptal $17 ...
Grüeltliner Hasel 2007
Light-bodied and tangy, with lingering flavors of grapefruit
and white pepper. (Weygandt-Metzler, Unionville, Pa.)
Alzinger Wachau Grüeltliner $45 .. ½
Münt Smaragd 2007
Bold and assertive with rich aromas and flavors of flowers, pepper and lemon. (Terry Theise/Michael Skurnik Wines, Syosset, N.Y.)
Graff Hardegg Grüeltliner $14 .. ½
Veltlinsky 2007
Balanced, with aromas and flavors of grapefruit, flowers and minerals. (Monika Caha Selections/Frederick Wildman & Sons, New York)
Büer Kremstal $17 .. ½ G rüeltliner Holzgasse 2007
Rich and balanced with spicy citrus flavors.(Weygandt-Metzler)
Hiedler Kamptal $20 .. ½ Grüeltliner Thal 2007
Rich and savory with flavors of lemon and white pepper.
(Terry Theise/Michael Skurnik Wines)
E.&M. Berger Kremstal $13 .. Grüeltliner 2008 1 liter
Spicy, with aromas and flavors of flowers, citrus and peach.
(Terry Theise/Michael Skurnik Wines)
Anton Bauer Wagram $19 .. Grüeltliner 2007
Nicely textured with straightforward flavors of citrus and white pepper. (Prescott Wines, New York)
Summerer Kamptal Grüeltliner $24 .. Schenkenbichl 2007
Balanced with aromas of flowers and peaches. (Savio Soares Selections/Willette Wines, New York)
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* Dr. James Ellingson, jellings(a)me.umn.edu *
* University of Minnesota, mobile : 651/645-0753 *
* Great Lakes Brewing News, 1569 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, MN 55104 *