Pueblo del Sol - Tannat - Uruguay - 2008 - (Classic, Food Wine) - $8 - Now at this price, one expects very little, but this wine over delivers as most good quality Uruguayan Tannats tend to do. If you haven't tried the varietal, you're missing out, and if you have, you know what I'm talking about.
Clear deep ruby with a purple tinge at the rim. The wine offers up scents of lavender, lilacs and red bush fruits as well as an earthy component redolent of cracked limestone. While it has seen no oak (cement tank aged), it has plenty of non fruit aromas and flavors. Staying in the red berry camp are: red cherry, red currant and red plum and peppered apple flavors. A great wine with food, it paired comfortably with Grilled Venison with Grilled Kale and Steamed Rice when most other wines on the table (New and Old World) floundered!
Thank you for exploring my wine list with me. Below you'll find only wines I recommend very highly. I don't use scores, but I do catagorize wines as styles: (Agers, Food Wines, Stand Alones, Celebratory Wines, Showpieces, Classics, Moderns). I also offer food pairings as well as glimpses into what I've enjoyed with what. I hope this helps in some small way to increase your enjoyment of wine and food.
About Me
- Eric C. Maczko
- I've been part of Pine Ridge Winery's Culinary Staff for 7 years. In 2003 I took over the Executive Chef Position and have been pairing food and wine together in a creative environment every day since. I am a Certified Sommelier through The Court of Master Sommeliers and hope to gain my Advanced in the coming year. My love of wine, food and literature are the fuel behind this little site and sharing my experience is my gift. Each year I take a little time to craft my own wine, so as to humble myself. It is a pleasure to sample the hard work and dedication of these so many talented wine professionals.
Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Wines Tasted, May 20, 2010
ForeFront by Pine Ridge - Cabernet Sauvignon - Napa Valley - 2008 - (Modern, Drinker) - $24 - ForeFront is a value priced line of wines from the established Pine Ridge Vineyards in Napa's Stags Leap District. With this vintage of Cabernet they blend in Syrah from outside of Napa sources (9% San Louis Obisbo County and 7% Lake County) to balance an Estate driven base of Bordeaux varietals. The wine has seen the classic Pine Ridge treatment in French bariques for 16 months, which has left the nearly opaque ruby/black wine and its dark ruby rim with a nose of: blackberry, black cherry and black plum fruit as well as coffee bean, light vannillin and dark floral notes. The palate continues with ripe dark fruits and a slightly floral note in the mouth. This 2008 is full bodied, moderately high in tannin and of medium+ length. Drink from early 2011 to 2018.
Wines Tasted, May 20, 2010
Pine Ridge Vineyards - Le Petit Clos - Chardonnay - Stags Leap District - 2008 - (Modern, Balanced) - Yellow with green/gold cheeks. This vintage of Le Petit has a highly intense nose of: green apple, yellow apple, banana peel, white peach fruit with peach and lemon blossoms as well as a mild biscuit/toasted brioche note.
In the mouth, nutty almond paste, creamy lees and banana peel speak of 9 months of partially (25%) new French oak. White florals, peach and orchard fruit plateau through the mid-palate, whilst spice and biscuit notes round out the impressively lengthy finish.
In the mouth, nutty almond paste, creamy lees and banana peel speak of 9 months of partially (25%) new French oak. White florals, peach and orchard fruit plateau through the mid-palate, whilst spice and biscuit notes round out the impressively lengthy finish.
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Wines Tasted - March 1, 2010
Lucien Albrecht - Alsace- Gewurztraminer - Reserve - 2008 - (Classic, Food Wine) - $20 - Bright green straw, with some density visable. A classic nose of jasmine, honeysuckey and lavander with pear and apricot stewed in cardamom and chamomile. Alcohol was moderate+ (13%), and an off dry finish made for a ripe, rich glass of pure Alsace.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Wines Tasted - February 26, 2010
Rivers-Marie - Sonoma Coast - Pinot Noir - 2008 -$24 - (Food Wine, Classic) - Clear garnet with a purple/red rim, moderate concentration and viscosity. Aromas are lifted and rich with woodsmoke, boiled beef, clove and fresh blackberry. Fruit seems secondary in the nose but entry on the palette shows off more tangerine rind, ripe smoky red cherry and red apple skin as well as bracing acidity, which bodes well for pairing with a broad range of higher acid foods. The body is medium, tannins are moderate-, and alcohol at 14.1% keeps the wine balanced for the new world wine drinker. Since the wine has yet to fully evolve, I'd recommend consumption from Summer 2010 to 2017. This wine is all acid, citrus and smoky red berry now thus a pairing with: Seared Ono with Lemon Aioli and Brown Rice and Broccoli fared nicely.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Wines Tasted Blind in Group - Monday, January 4, 2010
2oo8 - Schloss Gobelsburger - Kamptal - Trocken - Riesling - $18 - (Classic, Mineral Wine, Food Wine, Ager) - Well, if you love riesling and you love heavily mineral-laced wines, then pick up a few of these. A pale straw/green wine with suspended gas and a low viscosity, yet with a slightly reserved but potentially intense nose of liquid white-rock, mineral and peach-pear-lime fruit as well as a faint hint of green herb and petrol. On the palette is all acid, lime, tinned peach and that resounding wet mineral loop. This doesn't compare to the layerd fruit of a Mosel, but no one would make such a mistake in blind tasting. So if German Riesling is, "too sweet or too fruity", steer the glass in this direction, because it is in every way a, Classic Dry Austrian Riesling, just waiting for a Sausage sandwich with kraut, grilled onions and pungent mustard!
http://www.gobelsburg.com/index.html
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Pine Ridge Vineyards Staff Tasting - January 23, 2009

Staff Tasting Recap – Jan. 2009
By: Eric C. Maczko
On January 28th I led the first tasting of 2009: the Line up of All Current Release Wines
We had 18 attendees. Most were able to stay the duration. We even had a top referrer join us.
I began the tasting with a comparison of 2007 & 2008 Chenin Blanc Viogniers.
I followed those with a flight of Chardonnays: 2006 & 2007 Dijon Clones and 2006 Le Petit Clos.
The first two reds were: 2005 Carneros Merlot & 2006 Crimson Creek.
Then we covered the Cabernets two by two: 2005 Cabernet Franc & 2005 Onyx;
2006 Napa Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Oakville Cabernet Sauvignon;
2005 Stags Leap District Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Epitome Cabernet Sauvignon;
2005 Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Andrus Reserve;
2004 Fortis & 2005 Fortis were the concluding wines.
In revere, I found that both vintages of Chenin Blanc/Viogniers tasted great, but different due to acid/fruit profiles. But, one could conclude that the wine will age for 3 – 4 years successfully. I also noted that the Dijon Clones wines were remarkably similar, even now. That did surprise me. I found the 2006 Crimson Creek to be “early” in its bottle development, while the 2005 Carnereos Merlot was excellent, if a bit bulky, now.
The 2005 Cabernet Franc was less expressive than previous vintages as far as raspberry fruit, but more expressive in the bittersweet chocolate, cocoa and black cherry/dry sage arenas. The 2005 Onyx impressed upon me a solid, Rioja Reserva character, now that is a positive despite some people’s reactions to my observation. It was hearty, toasty, cedary and full of Zino Platinum Cigar qualities. Spice led fruit in the general state of affairs in the Onyx, and that’s why I feel it is always a cigar lover’s style or a Syrah lover’s style.
The 2006 Napa Cabernet was showing its Malbec component up front, while expressing firm wood based tannins through the finish. The fruit layers were evident as well as being pleasant. The 2005 Oakville was tight and firm with classic Napa character: black and red cherry, cedary toast, rigid tannins and ‘peppery’ spice-box. The 2005 Stags Leap District Cabernet was by-and-long the most fruit driven of the line-up, pumping out ripe black cherry, plum, cassis, and bursting blueberry character astride with fresh tobacco leaf, tannins were caressing yet firm. While it’s “brother”, the 2005 Epitome SLD Cabernet, was atomic with crushed red currant, fresh brewed mocha latte’ and green peppercorns: this is easily my crush for the vintage. The 2005 Howell Mountain Cabernet was a full bodied, massively structured wine laden with black cherry, grilled blueberry, beef carpaccio, coffee grounds, and minerality only Howell Mountain’s Volcanics can deliver. The 2005 Andrus Reserve was so quaffable I had to repour myself! A Rutherford based wine from the vineyard of the same name, it showed elegance in place of power. The red berry mix was both ripe and balanced here. The 2004 Fortis was showing well. The full bodied, layered cuvee was all about cherry pie filling, spice and chocolate, while the highly anticipated 2005 Fortis was more about black cherry and plum with coffee grounds. Both versions of the Flagship Fortis were highly extracted, full bodied, and balanced while drifting slightly to the ultra modern.
By: Eric C. Maczko
On January 28th I led the first tasting of 2009: the Line up of All Current Release Wines
We had 18 attendees. Most were able to stay the duration. We even had a top referrer join us.
I began the tasting with a comparison of 2007 & 2008 Chenin Blanc Viogniers.
I followed those with a flight of Chardonnays: 2006 & 2007 Dijon Clones and 2006 Le Petit Clos.
The first two reds were: 2005 Carneros Merlot & 2006 Crimson Creek.
Then we covered the Cabernets two by two: 2005 Cabernet Franc & 2005 Onyx;
2006 Napa Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Oakville Cabernet Sauvignon;
2005 Stags Leap District Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Epitome Cabernet Sauvignon;
2005 Howell Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon & 2005 Andrus Reserve;
2004 Fortis & 2005 Fortis were the concluding wines.
In revere, I found that both vintages of Chenin Blanc/Viogniers tasted great, but different due to acid/fruit profiles. But, one could conclude that the wine will age for 3 – 4 years successfully. I also noted that the Dijon Clones wines were remarkably similar, even now. That did surprise me. I found the 2006 Crimson Creek to be “early” in its bottle development, while the 2005 Carnereos Merlot was excellent, if a bit bulky, now.
The 2005 Cabernet Franc was less expressive than previous vintages as far as raspberry fruit, but more expressive in the bittersweet chocolate, cocoa and black cherry/dry sage arenas. The 2005 Onyx impressed upon me a solid, Rioja Reserva character, now that is a positive despite some people’s reactions to my observation. It was hearty, toasty, cedary and full of Zino Platinum Cigar qualities. Spice led fruit in the general state of affairs in the Onyx, and that’s why I feel it is always a cigar lover’s style or a Syrah lover’s style.
The 2006 Napa Cabernet was showing its Malbec component up front, while expressing firm wood based tannins through the finish. The fruit layers were evident as well as being pleasant. The 2005 Oakville was tight and firm with classic Napa character: black and red cherry, cedary toast, rigid tannins and ‘peppery’ spice-box. The 2005 Stags Leap District Cabernet was by-and-long the most fruit driven of the line-up, pumping out ripe black cherry, plum, cassis, and bursting blueberry character astride with fresh tobacco leaf, tannins were caressing yet firm. While it’s “brother”, the 2005 Epitome SLD Cabernet, was atomic with crushed red currant, fresh brewed mocha latte’ and green peppercorns: this is easily my crush for the vintage. The 2005 Howell Mountain Cabernet was a full bodied, massively structured wine laden with black cherry, grilled blueberry, beef carpaccio, coffee grounds, and minerality only Howell Mountain’s Volcanics can deliver. The 2005 Andrus Reserve was so quaffable I had to repour myself! A Rutherford based wine from the vineyard of the same name, it showed elegance in place of power. The red berry mix was both ripe and balanced here. The 2004 Fortis was showing well. The full bodied, layered cuvee was all about cherry pie filling, spice and chocolate, while the highly anticipated 2005 Fortis was more about black cherry and plum with coffee grounds. Both versions of the Flagship Fortis were highly extracted, full bodied, and balanced while drifting slightly to the ultra modern.
Labels:
2004,
2005,
2006,
2007,
2008,
Andrus,
Chardonnay,
Chenin Blanc,
Epitome,
Fortis,
Howell Mtn.,
Napa Cab,
Oakville,
Pine Ridge,
Rutherford,
Stags Leap,
Viognier
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