FYI on Cab Franc from SFGC
The other Cabernet
Jon BonnéChronicle Wine Editor
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Winemaker Aaron Pott grows Cabernet Franc for Napa Valley... He also uses the grape in
wines for Blackbird and Quintessa. Crocker Starr winemaker Pam Starr makes a smoky
Cabernet ... Cab Franc vineyard at Seven Stones winery, a tiny boutiqu... More...
If Cabernet Franc has a pied piper, it might be Aaron Pott. Over the years, the Napa
Valley winemaker has quietly taken this misunderstood grape with him from project to
project. When Ron and Anita Wornick planted just under 2 acres on their tiny, priceless
jewel of a vineyard in the St. Helena hills above Meadowood, Pott persuaded them to
include about 15 percent Franc. He has the spiel down.
"I kind of say it like this: 'Which would you rather taste - a 1961 Chateau
Mouton (Rothschild) or a 1961 Cheval Blanc?' " Pott says. "The best
expressions of Cabernet Franc are much more interesting than the best expressions of
Cabernet Sauvignon."
That is often the minority view. Says John Skupny of Lang & Reed, probably
California's sole Franc-focused winery: "It is definitely the Rodney Dangerfield
of the varietals." This despite hundreds of years of loyal service in Bordeaux and
the Loire Valley.
Blame the flavors. While Franc offers plenty of fruit - usually lighter and leaning more
toward raspberry and blueberry than Cabernet's dark notes - notoriety lies with its
herbaceous, floral, sometimes peppery side.
When ripe, those notes provide aromatic allure: dried herb, tobacco, graphite and paprika,
not just in red wines but also in fine rosé
But they also can be Franc's weakness - green, underripe, vegetal flavors. These
traits provide fodder for critics who cast Franc as a green-lipped wannabe.
Yet winemakers along the West Coast are finally finding a place in their hearts for Cab
Franc, either on its own or as a portion of their blends, even in California, where it has
remained a perennial problem child. It earns its keep, if nothing else. Statewide, it
averages $1,421 per ton, more than $300 more than Cabernet Sauvignon, according to 2008
data.
The frequent loathing of Franc has given its partisans - me among them - all the more
reason to seek one another out. No secret handshakes, but when a fellow traveler drops the
name of, say, Charles Joguet of Chinon, we take it as a badge of refinement.
"The profile of a Cab Franc drinker? They usually have a great cellar," says Pam
Starr, who makes a smoky, ripe Franc under her Crocker & Starr label. (She's a
Joguet fan.) "They get it that life is full of diversity. They can't have the
plain box of Crayola crayons. They have to have the mega-box of colors."
Grape gets its star moment
Converts typically come to the Franc side once they understand its historic dual role as
both leading man and ensemble member. In the Loire, it is largely responsible for reds
from Chinon, Bourgueil and Saumur-Champigny that can immediately refresh but age for
decades. Farther south, it serves as part of the blend in many of Bordeaux's most
famous wines, notably Chateau Cheval Blanc, which traditionally is about half Cab Franc.
This latter role has swayed many winemakers. Pott learned his lesson as winemaker at
Chateau La Tour Figeac in St. Emilion, where he was captivated by a small plot of
60-year-old Cab Franc vines growing across the street from Cheval Blanc. "That's
what slammed it home for me," he says.
Now he uses it with most clients, including Blackbird and Quintessa, and makes his own,
Pantagruel (an homage to Rabelais, whose beloved Loire reds were presumably Franc).
He's planting 2 acres around his house on Mount Veeder.
The irony is that this supporting role has never elevated Franc's fortunes. La Tour
Figeac, Cheval Blanc and other top St. Emilion chateaux get an aromatic signature from it.
Yet the grape's abilities are typically disregarded, never more so than - sorry to
bring this up - in the movie "Sideways," which did a hatchet job on both Merlot
and Cab Franc. (Merlot is recovering nicely, at least.)
Cabernet Franc's other big claim is as Cabernet Sauvignon's genetic parent. As
Cabernet Sauvignon's star has risen, the elder Cabernet has acquiesced to live in the
shadow of its child's fame.
Winemakers can't seem to agree on how to treat it. The dominant view for a long time
- thanks in part to the success of ripe, overfruited Cabernet - was that Franc was too
much of a wimp to succeed in California. Reality shows otherwise. Look no further than
Dalla Valle's Maya, a blend of the two Cabernets that has ranked among Napa's
highest-scoring wines.
Franc certainly can be persnickety in its flavors. But it has also been a victim of
circumstance - planted on soils that were too wet or too dry, grown too ripe or beaten up
in the cellar. Subpar locations can amplify its green side.
Still, exceptional Franc has emerged as winemakers figure out where to plant it. The best
examples seem to require well-drained, shallow soils, not the clay that can boost Merlot.
(Some California Franc was long mistaken for Merlot, worsening the problem.)
Mineral content is key. In Chinon, simpler wines hail from sandy sites near the river; top
bottlings come from chalkier, higher-up vineyards. Pott favors the high iron content -
similar to Bordeaux's right bank - in the volcanic Aiken soils that wind through
Oakville to the top of Atlas Peak.
The biggest problem may be that Franc's history has led vintners to treat it as
second-rate Cabernet. But Franc has a sensitive side. In the Loire, vintners take a
delicate approach closer to Burgundy - little new oak and less time in barrel, with wines
often in bottle by the summer after harvest.
Cab Franc's sensitive side
A more useful comparison might be to Pinot Noir - especially with its bright red fruit,
earthy overtones and softer tannins. Skupny realized this when he was fine-tuning his
basic North Coast bottling, an homage to Loire bistro wines. "I realized I was
beating everything up too much," he says. Now, he uses only old barrels; the
wine's in bottle after about nine months. "I really had to go to my Pinot Noir
brethren for advice on how to treat it more delicately."
That delicate nature is also swaying devotees of the Bordeaux model. Chris Camarda of
Washington state's Andrew Will Winery was so drawn to "a complexing
quality" in the grape that he now uses up to 50 percent Franc in some of his
single-vineyard blends.
Camarda and a handful of others are establishing Franc's new frontier up north. If
California can be hostile territory, Washington has given Franc an excellent adopted home.
Credit a mix of hot days, cold nights and higher latitude (around 46 degrees, similar to
the central Loire, hence more summer daylight). The western Yakima Valley hosts excellent
sites: the much-used Champoux vineyard, or Camarda's own Two Blondes vineyard outside
Zillah, with its intense aromatic fruit.
To the east is Red Mountain, with nonstop sun and stiff winds. Ben Smith of Seattle's
Cadence Winery was so bullish on Franc that when he planted his Cara Mia vineyard there he
dedicated a full 40 percent to it. The 2007 vintage of his Bel Canto blend is more than 60
percent Franc.
"It has a texture, a mouthfeel, a silkiness that Cabernet Sauvignon doesn't
have, period. And it has a complexity that you don't get in Cabernet Sauvignon,"
Smith says. "And when it's ripe you don't get those veggies, and on Red
Mountain it has structure. So what am I losing?"
Taste their wines and the Franc is detectable in a pleasing way, providing a dose of
curiosity. This was evident to Camarda in 1996 when he first sampled some from Red
Mountain's Ciel du Cheval vineyard. "It tasted great on its own," he
recalls, "but what really made the wine for me was its ability to make the Merlot
more than what it was."
Curiously, Franc thrives in places where Cabernet Sauvignon struggles, perhaps because its
presence in the Loire proved that it could ripen in regions too cold for Cab. Very good
examples have emerged from New York's Long Island, and even from Ohio, North Carolina
and Ontario. It can be found in Italy's Friuli, on the edge of the Alps.
A variety for cooler climates
But resistance remains. When Camarda asked the owners of Red Mountain's noted Klipsun
Vineyard to plant Franc, they refused.
"I almost came unglued out of my shoes and bit my tongue," Camarda recalls.
"You could point out to them that Cheval Blanc, s- wine that it is, can be up to 80
percent Cabernet Franc."
Fear of the green also hampers acceptance. Just ask Robert Foley, who first worked with it
at Markham Vineyards in the early 1980s. As a nonbeliever, Foley has made his peace with
the grape - growing it as ripe as possible, to at least 25 Brix (a measure of sugar), to
get the seeds fully dark and lose any vegetal hints.
"Maybe just a hint of green tea, but you're out of the woods on cat piss and out
of the woods on geraniums and all those wonky flavors," he says.
Foley can't seem to escape the grape; for years he made a benchmark version for Pride
Mountain Vineyards. Though Foley doesn't use Franc in his own Claret, he still makes
one - not entirely voluntarily - for Jeff Smith's Hourglass label.
"I've been Franc'd," he says.
Is that supposed to be a bad thing?
History of the grape
Cabernet Franc's American history dates back to the early 20th century, but only in
the late 1970s and early '80s did it begin to take on a notable presence, both as
part of the rise of the Meritage movement and, less so, as a varietal.
It has always been a bit polarizing. Veteran winemaker Bob Foley recalls Andre
Tchelistcheff advising him to use Franc - very sparingly - as a blending component in the
mid-'80s. Yet Lang & Reed's John Skupny points to a 1983 Cabernet Franc
bottled under Francis Ford Coppola's label that was a runaway hit.
By the early 1990s, Franc had caught attention in Washington state, even in New York and
even Ontario, where resistance to cold made it more appealing than Cabernet Sauvignon.
Unlike its Cabernet sibling, only a handful of clones for Franc are in major use, although
UC Davis' Foundation Plant Services currently lists 14. One of the most popular is
214, interestingly based on a Loire Valley cultivar but frequently used in Bordeaux-style
wines.
Several so-called suitcase clones also exist. Foley recalls dealing with cuttings from St.
Emilion during his time at Markham in the late 1970s; cuttings from Cheval Blanc and Vieux
Chateau Certan have apparently been planted as well.
From the notebook
This sampling of Cabernet Franc varietal and blends from California and Washington mostly
reflects a Bordeaux style, which helps explain the higher prices. Though available in
limited quantities outside the state, Washington has several other standout Cabernet
Francs from such labels as Barrister, Chinook and Owen Roe. Increasingly, wineries are
also making a roséemulating the popular Chinon Rosé
2006 Andrew Will Two Blondes Vineyard Yakima Valley Red Wine ($52) The young vines in
Chris Camarda's estate vineyard yield racy, aromatic wines. This new vintage, 43
percent Cabernet Franc plus Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon, is no different. Distinct Franc
presence on the nose: Tea, leather, ancho chile and flower-tinged berries play the high
notes, subtle oak and cassis play the low. Bright, focused and spicy.
2006 Cadence Bel Canto Cara Mia Vineyard Red Mountain Red Wine ($55) From Cadence's
estate vineyard in eastern Washington, this is Ben Smith's Cheval Blanc homage, with
52 percent Cabernet Franc and 48 Merlot. Generous, with an almost romantic nose - dry
loam, black tea, chamomile, bright huckleberry. Very plush with sweet primary fruit.
Fine-grained tannins make for a nuanced structure.
2006 Crocker & Starr St. Helena Napa Valley Cabernet Franc ($58) No green meanies
here. A hulking, extracted profile, with gobs of flavor - smoke, coffee, tangy raspberry
atop black-fruit undertones, with a slightly aggressive kick at the finish. Plenty of
sultry appeal (Starr calls the style "powerful, sexy, sappy") though its Franc
roots aren't immediately apparent.
2006 Hourglass Blueline Vineyard Napa Valley Cabernet Franc ($135) From Jeff Smith's
new vineyard near Calistoga. Starts with a smoky whiff, plus cassia and lighter floral
notes - high-toned blueberry and a plummy bass line. Broad shouldered, but a supple
profile and fine, ripe tannins lift it above a forceful 15.1 percent frame. Bob Foley may
be a Franc skeptic, but he can still apply his cult-wine talents to it.
2007 Lang & Reed North Coast Cabernet Franc ($22) A Chinon-style bottling sourced
mostly from higher-elevation vineyards in Lake County that allow for slower ripening. The
rare example below 14 percent alcohol (13.5). It's right on point, with scents of
tobacco, mistletoe and sweet blueberry. Juicy and refreshing, with slightly blocky tannins
to finish.
2006 Palazzo Napa Valley Red Wine ($60) Scott Palazzo and his winemaker Peter Franus have
caught the attention of places like the French Laundry with their restrained approach.
This deeply fruited mix of Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon puts forward
cocoa and roast cherry, and then Franc-like notes appear with a subtle floral lift. Keep
an eye out for Palazzo's rare but very good varietal 2006 Cabernet Franc, sourced
from Carneros' Truchard Vineyards.
Franc in France
The Loire Valley's Franc-based wines have long had a California fan base, perhaps in
part due to importer Kermit Lynch's advocacy. Some good names include:
Bernard Baudry (Chinon)
Domaine de Beausejour (Chinon)
Catherine and Pierre Breton (Bourgeuil, Chinon)
Charles Joguet (Chinon)
Jean-Maurice Raffault (Chinon)
Olga Raffault (Chinon)
E-mail Jon Bonnét jbonne(a)sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/03/29/FD7816JHKV.DTL
This article appeared on page E - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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