Sunday, February 21, 2010

Wine Musings Vol#94


Had the pleasure of spending the day visiting Sojourn Cellars, Audelssa Vineyards and Pott Wines while on a one day scamper up to the sonoma/napa valleys.

Our first stop was Sojourn Cellars and a visit with Craig Haserot. It is clear that Craig is passionate about wine and wine making and his product reflects his choice to make his avocation into his vocation. I found the current pinots and cabernets delicious. They offer a nice balance between some of the leaner, "more natural", lower abv wines being produced out there and the more full throttle, cherry vanilla milkshake, high abv, high extract versions. It seems like a very conscious effort to find the middle ground. I guess if I had to use one word to describe Sojourn Cellars I would use the word polished. Enticing to soaring aromatics, welcoming mouth feel gliding to a long, fine finish these are delicious wines that will appeal to wine geeks and casual wine drinkers alike.

Craig kindly poured his whole line up:

***Sojourn Cellars, Sonoma County, pinot noir, 2008: Ripe, though not overly so, with lovely sonoma nuances of cherry cola and mulling spices. Palate coating and generous with a long, spicy finish. Gorgeous.

***+Sojourn Cellars, Rogers Creek vineyard, pinot noir, 2008: Perhaps the most interesting of the pinots. Nuanced, green elements, earthy truffle and a slightly more pronounced tannic profile. May benefit from some laying down. Delicious.

***Sojourn Cellars, Gaps Crown vineyard, pinot noir, 2008: Racy and fun. Red fruits, currants, malabar pepper. Maybe sorting itself out still a touch, but very promising and undoubtedly a good food wine.

***++Sojourn Cellars, Sangiacomo vineyard, pinot noir, 2008: The pride of the litter. Full, creamy but still deep and showing good concentration, this wine seems the most complete to me. Very worthy.

***+Sojourn Cellars, Mountain Terraces, cabernet sauvignon, 2006: Mountain Fruit from Sonoma. The best sonoma cabs are from the mountains and this one show many of those most desired qualities. Nicoise olive, earth, red fruit, bramble. Full and coating. Long, fine finish. Great.

***Sojourn Cellars, Sonoma Valley, cabernet sauvignon, 2006: A great buy at $39. Delicious, forward, oak, chocolate, a touch of bell pepper, plum, pipe tobacco. Full and coating. Yum!

Toward the end of the tasting Craig was kind enough to bring out two yet to be released samples: The first was the 2007 Sojourn Cellars Spring Mountain cabernet (***+). I found it surprisingly supple and integrated (but still showing that deep mountain fruit concentration) for a wine from a growing area that I most often associate with big, tannic, monster cabs. Another taster suggested to Craig that he had "tamed the monster" on this one and I have to agree. An excellent effort. The other wine was the 2008 Sojourn Cellars George III cabernet (***++). A cut above. Deeper, more interesting and nuanced, it is showing its pedigree even in these early, primary stages. A wine to watch out for. I was very impressed with these and all of the Sojourn Cellars wines.

Lunch at the EDK (truffled fries!) and then...

Off to Audelssa Vineyards , which was a new winery for me. The views from the top of Mt. Veeder are breathtaking and the folks there could not be nicer or more passionate about their estate grown wines. Of special note were the 2006 Summit cabernet blend*** and the 2006/2007 reserves***+. I believe the Sojourn Cellars Mountain Terraces is from this very same vineyard (of course they share winemakers so it would make sense). Mountain grown, black cherry and mocha driven wines with nice complementary notes of earth and smoke. Firm and full on the palate with a pronounced and very enjoyable mineral presence and very firm, tannic finish. My impression is that the reserves are made with 100% estate merlot/cab franc fruit while the Summit blend is an estate/alder springs Bordeaux blend. In many ways this estate reminds me of Jocelyn Lonen - the views, the nice people the fruited wines...lovely! Audelssa sells two crowd pleaser wines, the Zephyr GSM*** (does this also get a bit of co-fermented estate viognier? The aromatics are certainly pumped up)and theTephra**++ (a kitchen sink mix including zinfandel, syrah, cab, merlot and maybe others). Both of these less expensive wines were approachable, yummy and eminently drinkable. A strong line up. Thank you for the visit. A picture from the vineyard with the clouds parting is my new computer wallpaper. Breathtaking.

Wines of Merit: Lastly we made the hike to visit with Aaron Pott. Aaron was kind enough to share 4 of his cuvees with us, as well as a bottle of the 2007 Seven Stones, which I had tried from barrel in October. It is hard to know where to start with Aaron's wines. I find them magical. If the word of the day for Sojourn is polished, the word for Pott Wines is complete. To my palate they lack nothing. Each wine is individual, interesting, deep, complex and fulfilling in its own way. I will briefly mention that his 2007 Pantagruel**** cab franc had wonderful, Chinon like complexities that I have personally never found in a new world cab franc, though I have had quite a few (Favia, Detert, Viader, Verite, etc...). I thought it exquisite, as I found all of his wines. Amazing also were the White Cottage cab St. Ralph the Liar****, deep, concentrated HM cab bursting with fruit (I happen to love Dennis John's version as well), Kalihomanok**** from Spring Mtn (where the monster was not tamed but befriended) and the beguiling, black-as-night, Oakville grown Neruda****. Quite the tour de force.
The 2007 Seven Stones (****++) was, as it was out of barrel, otherworldly. Among the best Napa cabs I have had from any vintage - it reminded me very much of the 1994 Harlan cabs that I drank way too young. I realize that some recent comments made by the owner have made this wine controversial, but I will continue to buy all they will sell me at the asking price and consider myself lucky. A great effort.Once again, thanks to all for the visit and the hospitality. A real treat.

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