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Gold Medal!
Super happy that our 2021 Pinot Noir from the Santa Cruz Mountains won a Gold medal at the 2024 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition, the largest competition of North American wines.
2021 was a great year. We picked the grapes on September 25, which is late for the Santa Cruz Mountains. However, the extra hang time allowed the grapes to develop fully and reach optimal phenolic ripeness. We fermented the wine at 25-27C for about ten days and left it on the skins for another seven days before pressing. We pressed the wine of the skins and transferred it to new American oak barrels (228L), where it was left for 14 months before we bottled it.
The taste is true to the Santa Cruz Mountains terroir with high acidity, balanced by the rich red fruit and silky, smooth tannins. It has a pronounced red cherry flavor that I absolutely love, with notes of herbs and spices. The oak is well integrated, creating an elegant wine with intensity.
Harvest 2022
Another fun week making wine in the Santa Cruz Mountains. The yield was down about 1/3 compared to last year due to heavy spring rain that damaged the flowering (we call it “shatter” when a grapevine’s delicate flowers don’t pollinate and develop into grapes). The Chardonnay grapes suffered from excessive powdery mildew also due to the early rain, so we got a limited crop this year. However, the fruit we did harvest was outstanding and of high quality.
This year, we decided to focus on making sparkling wine, rosé, and Port-style wines. We have so much Pinot Noir red wine in the cellar, and it’s always fun to focus on other wine styles. We pressed the Pinot Noir grapes whole-bunch (no destemming) in our new horizontal press, and the juice was rich in sugar, acidity, and flavors (yummy). We let the juice settle overnight and then made a 100% Pinot Noir sparkling base wine (Blanc de Noirs) and a 100% Pinot Noir rosé. The acidity was higher than last year, so we expect both wines to have a fresh fruit profile with a crisp and zappy edge.
We dried about ½ ton of Pinot Noir grapes on our drying racks in a cold space to further concentrate the sugar, flavors, and acidity. This is a similar technique to how you make Amarone wines (known as Appassimento), and I learned to use it for Port-style wines when I failed to make an Amarone-style red wine five years ago, as the grapes got so concentrated I couldn’t ferment the juice. The fermentation is still going and will probably take another 30 days before it reaches the right alcohol/sugar level. More to come!