Showing posts with label Orin Swift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orin Swift. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Wine Musings #34

Wine of Merit: ***++Demeter Zoltan, Tokaji Furmint, 2001: Zoltan Demeter is considered something of a young gun in Tokaj – he accepts no foreign investment and makes wine as he feels it should be made. If this wine is any indication, he has it figured out. This is a late harvest, sauterne styled wine, with wonderful purity, depth and focus. Bright apricot, Lichee nut, honey, mandarin orange…the flavors are focused, crisp vibrant and wonderfully integrated across a lively palate. Really super and a great find. While I do not profess great knowledge of Hungarian wines, this is clearly a winner and bodes well for further exploration!

***+Kalin DD Sonoma pinot noir, 1997: I have tasted this wine before and found it tired. Not so today. Delicious, sophisticated, wonderful varietal notes. The bottle age adds some nuance of a floral tisane to the nose, tree bark, along with pretty, delicate red fruit and spice. The body of the wine is still very much firm and intact and, at least today, this wine is presenting at its peak. Really wonderful and another example of why Kalin makes just superb wines (try their Semillion too – it is unique and wonderful).

***Brogan Cellars Russian River Valley, pinot noir, 2005: Made by Burt Williams daughter Margi. These wines lack the finesse and balance of the WS wines but are delicious none the less. Deep, deep dark, chocolate covered black cherry notes, cola, peppermint…this wine is aggressively fruit forward and extracted for maximum affect. Fat on the palate with a nice round mouth feel and style-y, spicy finish, I would recommend this wine for the shorter to mid term. Nice!

***Alloro Vineyard, Estate, Willamette Valley, pinot noir, 2004: Wow. This is a serious, old school rustic pinot. After so many cherry fruit, cola driven wines this is a stand out for its willingness to be different. More Pommard than RRV, this Willamette wine offers loamy top soil, bay leaf, green olive, tar and grilled meats and lavender along with powerful red fruit notes. Full but maybe a smidge racy on the palate, the finish is firm and has some pucker to it. Huh. A wine to be admired and probably laid done for a bit.

***Orin Swift, The Prisoner, Napa Valley, 2004: This is a wine that makes no bones about what it is up to: This is about fun – a zin cab syrah mix that tastes great. Brambly, black berry fruit. Toned down a bit since release, adding a bit more sophistication and nuance – you can now pick out the minerals, autumn leaves and mint – it is still exuberant and showy. Yummy in the short term – better than I remember it.

**La Jota, Howell Mountain cabernet sauvignon, 1991: Many folks consider La Jota to be kind of a poor man’s Dunn. I have never thought so. While it does often possess that austere structure and black, brambly mountain fruit, I have never found it to have the balance and integration, let alone the depth, of Randy Dunn’s wine. And structure with a lack of balance is a hollow promise. Case in point this 1991. It has aged itself into a crotchety, lean mountain cab. The fruit has matured and developed more redness. The aromas have mellowed, adding some green olive and rosemary notes. The palate has thinned, still showing bramble, pine and chalk in reserve and the finish can still take the enamel off of your teeth. A slightly better than average wine which has matured to just average, even from this excellent vintage.

***++Silver Oak, Alexander Valley cabernet sauvignon, 2000: It has become fashionable to make fun of Silver Oak over recent years, mostly because of the lavish amounts of NAO that it uses and its recipe driven wine making style. Net/net is that this is a delicious wine from an otherwise difficult vintage. Fresh, lively fruit driven style offering excellent concentration and depth with cigar box and toasty vanilla. Not as much of the signature Alexander green olive element that frankly I think makes this wine more interesting than the Napa. More jammy, berry fruit on the palate with some smoke and minerals and yes, lots of mocha / café latte from the new oak. Finish is deep and long. Dynamite wine. I was glad to enjoy it!

***+Molly Dooker, Enchanted Path, Shiraz Cabernet, McLaren Vale, 2005: Made by the folks who until recently brought you Marquis Phillips wines from down under. This is one of those full throttle, high extract wines that Robert Parker gives ridiculous scores to (and wins the all world label contest - great stuff, right?). I cracked it open just to see what the hype was about. All in all, not bad, though not my cup of tea – or should I say prune juice. In fact, the wine has almost a prune juice color – deep, dark and brooding. Super fat and heady (16% alcohol) this wine has aromas of candied black cherry, crème de cassis and yes prune Danish. On the palate there is an even greater sense of baked, candied fruit, almost like a panforte or a shoefly pie kinda thing, though it is remarkably lively for the weight. The finish is strong but fine and sweet as well. Fun wine, not a wine I will be buying by the case.

****Aubert, Ritchie Vineyard chardonnay, RRV, 2004: I have posted on this wine before, but it was drinking so well tonight I thought it deserved the bump. Wonderful intensity and nuanced aromas of buttered popcorn, linseed oil and pineapple. Great complexity on the palate with liquid minerals and marzipan accompanying the fruit and lemon zest. While in the past I would give the nod to the Ramey effort form this vineyard, tonight this wine nudges ahead. If you have it in the cellar, stand it up (it is very cloudy) and then giver ‘er a pour. Good stuff.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

Wine Musings Vol#4

From notes taken November, 2005:
Wine of Merit: ****+Brewer Clifton blanc de blanc, 1993: Rocked my world. I am something of a champagne snob too, so I was ready to be unimpressed with a sparkler from Santa Maria. Late disgorged (2000) this wine is mature in color, with hugely expressive notes of lemon custard, marzipan, bread pudding, anise and great citrus zest. Amazingly deep and balanced all the way to the citrus, hazelnut finish. Pound the table good. The kicker – about $25 a bottle if you can find it. I would happily trade some Winston Churchill or Palmes D’Or for this any day. Make it your holy grail and go get some now. Only problem – a silly bottle which makes cellaring a bitch.


***Kim Crawford, Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc, 2004: I am not a big NZ sauv blanc guy. This is delicious, screw top and all. Great citrus and some grassiness but well integrated with apple and pear notes. A smoothness that makes me think it spent some time in oak. At $10.97 (that’s right $10 buck chuck!) you cannot beat this with a stick. Best QPR wine, along with the Buehler RRV, I think I have ever had.

???Bedford Road Sauvignon Blanc 2005: Maybe just too young. Secondary fermentation in the bottle, confused flavors of citrus melon and peach, no finish. I’ll let the rest of the case sit until summer.

**+Orin Swift “The Prisoner”, 2004: Quickly becoming a cult wine in Napa – small production though not impossible to find (Park Ave. in the city has it). $35-ish. Cool label and name. The wine makes you think of those crazy, over the top Clarendon Hills Grenache wines or a Colgin Cabernet. Huge, syrupy blackberry and blueberry fruit. Mocha. Intense candied violets. Velvety, full mouth-feel with coating, furry tannins on the finish. Fat (15%+ alch). Drink-up, it won’t last in the cellar, IMHO. I can see why people dig it. Not really my style. Parker will give it a Turley-like 96, his palate is so dead that these are the only kind of wines that break through for him.

**+Orin Swift Sauvignon Blanc, 2004: From the Tofanelli vineyard. Nice enough. Bright, melon, white peach, grassy, wet boxwood, citrus. Very varietal. New Zealand Sauv Blanc from Cali. Drink Cloudy Bay or Goldwater Dog Point from NZ and get the same glass of wine. I’ll stick with Rochioli, Araujo, Long or a decent Cotat Sancerre. Buy More? No.

***+Failla Keefer Vineyard Pinot Noir, 2003. Are you kidding? Fantastic! Color is bright ruby, clarity suggests unfined / unfiltered. Blind I would have said Williams Selyem Allen Vineyard. Laser bright cherry/raspberry, green tea, cinnamon stick, lavender, sage, coffee bean. Perfect integration and great balance which suggests complexity with aging. . EB: “Easy to drink” Ditto! I am told this is a $30 bottle of wine. It is worth $60+. Robert Parker AND Steve Tanzer gave this an 88, insuring that you will find it at a decent price. Everyone who stopped by rated it number one. Buy more? Absolutely.

**++Whetstone Hirsch Vineyard Pinot Noir, 2003. Very typical Hirsch. Darker in color, black cherry/plum, cola, sandalwood incense, more complex, a bit thin on the mid palate, which does not bode well for the long term. Nice, but at close to $50 a pop I pass on more.