Showing posts with label 2000. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2000. Show all posts

Friday, March 12, 2010

Wines Tasted - March 12, 2010



Pine Ridge Vineyards – Cabernet Sauvignon - Rutherford – Napa Valley - 2000 – (Modern, Drink Now) – Threw minor sediment.  Clear ruby with a slightly burnished rim.  Red cherries, red currants, baked red plums, cassis, cedar shakes, blonde caramel, tea leaves and light bourbon vanilla fill the nose.  It was dry, medium bodied, with medium tannins and a chalky/loamy texture.  Baked cherry, cedar and red plum round out the palette which has medium acid and a moderate length to the finish. 


Pine Ridge Vineyards – Cabernet Sauvignon – Stags Leap District – Napa Valley - 2000 – (Modern, Drink Now) – Bright medium ruby with a pale ruby rim.  A very enticing nose of black plum, black cherry, deep cassis, cocoa, black pepper, pipe tobacco and creamy vanilla.  Upon the entry the texture was incredibly soft, but built weight through the length of the long finish.  The tannins were sweet and ripe; the mid-palette was chocolaty and rich with black fruits.

Pine Ridge Vineyards – Andrus Reserve – Napa Valley - 2000 – (Modern, Drink Now) – A medium ruby core and a pale ruby rim are the segway to a developing wine with mature aromatics of red and Bing cherry, dried red currant and dried plums over coffee grounds, turned loam and cedary notes.  A medium bodied cabernet based claret with medium length, and medium tannins. 

Pine Ridge Vineyards – Andrus Reserve – Napa Valley - 2001 – (Modern) – Medium ruby/purple core leads to a slightly pale red/ruby rim.  This vintage offers up a nose of sweet black cherry, red plums and baked red currants surrounded by cocoa, baking spice, fresh roasted coffee beans, and sweet molasses laced with vanilla.  While the tannins were fine and loamy, the acidity was medium and alcohol balanced at 14.2%, all helping to stretch the finish to medium plus in length.

Pine Ridge Vineyards – Epitome – Stags Leap District - Napa Valley - 2000 – (Modern, Ager) – This wine was unfined and unfiltered and thus threw a tremendous amount of sediment; decant prior to service.
A clear medium plus ruby/black with a ruby rim.  A nose of ripe red cherry, red plum and cassis laced heavily with mocha and sweet spruce/vanilin note.  The entry was dry but the fruits were sweet and ripe with all above fruits and non-fruits confirmed.  The tannins were medium plus and rigid, as we’d expect from such a steep Hillside site with an ideal southern exposure.  A full bodied cabernet with a long finish.  I expect this wine to continue to mature for 5-7 more years, at least.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Wines Tasted - February 26, 2010

Pine Ridge Vineyards - Cabernet Franc - Trois Cuvee - Napa - 2001 - (Classically Styled) - $36 - A transparent ruby wine fading to a pink rim with a clear miniscus. Aromas of leather, tobacco, spice box and green peppercorns bolster black cherry, currant and plum fruits. The palette is dry and medium bodied with fleshy/dried fruits as well as a dustyness and earthyness redolent of Bordeaux or Rioja. For the old world wine drinker looking for virtues in a new world wine. Drink now thru 2012.
Pine Ridge Vineyards - Cabernet Franc - Trois Cuvee - Napa - 2002 - (Modern) - $36 - Quite a difference a year makes! Clear deep ruby with a thick pink rim. Obviously higher alcohol than the 2001(14.7% vs. 14.1%). and more complexity with: brown butter, fresh toffee and molasses notes supporting floral black cherry and black plum. The mouth is expansive and lush. Filled with butter toffee and plum skin as well as an afirmation of red flowers and blackstrap molasses. Medium-full bodied, moderate+ tannin and long in the finish. Drink now or keep until 2015! A big wine still.

Enjoyed these with: Braised Beef Brisket and Tomato/Chile Mole.

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Food and Wine Pairings for Vintage Pine Ridge Cabernets - 1995 - 2000


Food and Wine Pairings for Vintage Pine Ridge Cabernets - 

For the 1995 and 1996 Rutherford Cabernets, I’d take the maturity of the wines in mind when considering a food pairing.  Paramount in a pairing are body/structure acessments, and fruit/acid acessments.  In these two vintages, I see wines that display a structure more in tune with Rioja Crianza than with lets say, Bordeaux (not a bad thing!).  The wine has lost its grip on oak and is still delivering its primary fruits, but has gathered in bunches, its secondary and tertiary aromatics.  Dried flowers, sherry, almond and walnut all lay side by side with red berry and currant.  This takes me to a few potential places in the market: 1.) Poultry Counter: Roast or grilled whole or half chicken (even beer-can chicken!), Duck or Chicken Sausage, Rotesserie of Pheasant, or even Chicken Satay for an appetizer (with peanut sauce perhaps).  2.) The Nut Bins or “Area”:  Here we can incorporate Marcona Almonds, Cashews, Pistaccios or Pine Nuts in our dish to compliment or bird as well as add additional protein.  3.) Cheese Counter:  Here we can find great nutty, tangy,  Sheep’s milk cheese to incorporate into our meal with these wines.  Abbaye de Belloc, Petite Basque, Petite Agour, Ossau Iraty or Sao George all come to mind as great options.

As we get into the 1997, 1999 and 2000 vintages, we see wines with more varietal freshness, as well as more observable oak.  These wines express more flesh as well as “sweetness” of fruit.  They also keep me safely in the: Season-it, Grill-it, Eat-it camp.  All I want with a Cab of this caliber is a well seasoned piece of steak on my new Webber!  I’d not think twice about grilling up some sliced eggplant, zucchini and summer squash, then tossing them with fresh thyme and basil and wrapping them up to rest and keep warm on the top shelf of my grill, while I prepared the, “feast of beast”: a NY Striploin or Rib-Eye of beef generously salted and peppered, rubbed with a little oil and grilled to medium-rare.  Have a little coarse sea-salt on hand to sprinkle about as needed and you’ve hit a Major League Home Run!  If we have some wine left for a little cheese course, I’d feel like harder is better (it’s hot outside and soft cheese tends to run quickly); 3 Year Aged Gouda, Aged Pecorino; or Pitxun are all hard cheeses with more to offer with big Cabernet with plush texture.  Good luck and enjoy your 4th of July Holiday!