I have a great chat group of local winemakers (we use WhatsApp) where we can post little things we are doing or ask quick questions. I coined #BLENDSRULE, because of the direction my wine making has taken and whenever a discussion goes down the path of talking about blends, I will throw the #BLENDSRULE out there.
In my first years of wine making I was really strict on keeping all the varietals separate and pure. Then I learned that even commercially, the wine can contain up to 25% of other varieties it can still be called a "Cabernet Sauvignon" or a "Merlot'. A 25% blend can make any varietal almost unrecognizable, so that allowable % seems somewhat excessive. I did however find that the Cab Franc I would make every year benefited from a little (3%-7%) Petit Verdot and/or Petite Sirah. I would also take all my left overs that wouldn't fit into an even barrel/flex/carboy and throw them all together. You guessed it, I often liked the blended wine that was thrown together with little thought more than the individual wines themselves.
Last year, this year and my plan for next year is to make a blend by design. Last year and this year are both from the same grapes (Cab Sauv, Cab Franc, Merlot, Petit Verdot), but in different proportions. The French really got it right with these grapes (still want to find Malbec). As long as the blend doesn't contain too much Petit Verdot, I don't think you can make a bad blend with this combination of grapes. My hope is that these two vintages I made will both be good, but different.
Each of these varieties has a strong suit and when the right combination of these varieties come together, they complement each other and the sum is better than the individual pieces....#BLENDSRULE
The last time I made a Rhone Blend (2016) the blend was 5:1 more popular with Friends and Family than any of the individual wines that was predominately a single varietal. My plan is for a single barrel GSM blend in 2021.
In my first years of wine making I was really strict on keeping all the varietals separate and pure. Then I learned that even commercially, the wine can contain up to 25% of other varieties it can still be called a "Cabernet Sauvignon" or a "Merlot'. A 25% blend can make any varietal almost unrecognizable, so that allowable % seems somewhat excessive. I did however find that the Cab Franc I would make every year benefited from a little (3%-7%) Petit Verdot and/or Petite Sirah. I would also take all my left overs that wouldn't fit into an even barrel/flex/carboy and throw them all together. You guessed it, I often liked the blended wine that was thrown together with little thought more than the individual wines themselves.
Last year, this year and my plan for next year is to make a blend by design. Last year and this year are both from the same grapes (Cab Sauv, Cab Franc, Merlot, Petit Verdot), but in different proportions. The French really got it right with these grapes (still want to find Malbec). As long as the blend doesn't contain too much Petit Verdot, I don't think you can make a bad blend with this combination of grapes. My hope is that these two vintages I made will both be good, but different.
Each of these varieties has a strong suit and when the right combination of these varieties come together, they complement each other and the sum is better than the individual pieces....#BLENDSRULE
The last time I made a Rhone Blend (2016) the blend was 5:1 more popular with Friends and Family than any of the individual wines that was predominately a single varietal. My plan is for a single barrel GSM blend in 2021.