user 38734
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Greetings!
Made the rounds yesterday to some local vineyards in Edna Valley (SLO), Templeton and West Paso, talked to some vineyard managers, and swung by Tin City in Paso to talk to a few wine makers and taste their work. Since each post is limited to 10 pictures I’ll do these in two posts.
Although SLO and Paso are barely 30 minutes apart, the temperature difference can easily reach 20 degrees F.
You’ll notice a few pictures of old school bush vines, which are not uncommon around here. Most are dry farmed Grenache or Zin.
In the Central Coast there are hundreds of these commercial vineyards and what seems like the same amount of private vanity vineyards, so these pictures don’t even scratch the surface. As for wineries , again, hundreds – many grow their own grapes and many buy them under contract and on the open market.
Regarding home wine making here – as someone who moved here from NorCal where we have long-time friends and access to much of the best fruit, there are some things that are surprising about the Central Coast. There is only one home wine makers club, and to be kind it is sub optimal. The membership are all old dudes (no offense as I am one) who only took up wine making post-retirement and who all use the exact same widely published methods and products. There’s no interest in deviating from The Book, in fact deviations are mocked, ridiculed and feared. “Too risky”, “playing with fire” – really? This is a beverage we’re talking about, right? But here’s the kicker - the grapes that they source and offer to their members are from a very low-quality (relatively speaking) vineyard in Santa Maria. Compared to what is grown here, they might as well be from the Central Valley. It’d be like living in Belgium and making beer from a Bud Light recipe. Thankfully, some very high quality vineyard owners or managers here are kind enough to sell sub ton lots to pesky home gamers as long we pick it ourselves or arrive at exactly the right time. As a result, the grapes we can get our hands on here are really quite outstanding. With access to fruit of this quality, why would you NOT push the envelope.
While not directly related to wine making technique, I have always been interested in and made contacts with the local growing / making community. If anyone has any pictures of their local situations, I would be interested in seeing and learning about that. Finger Lakes? Pacific Northwest? Arizona / NM? Idaho? Colorado? Just about every region in the country / world has their own specialty or uniqueness.
Made the rounds yesterday to some local vineyards in Edna Valley (SLO), Templeton and West Paso, talked to some vineyard managers, and swung by Tin City in Paso to talk to a few wine makers and taste their work. Since each post is limited to 10 pictures I’ll do these in two posts.
Although SLO and Paso are barely 30 minutes apart, the temperature difference can easily reach 20 degrees F.
You’ll notice a few pictures of old school bush vines, which are not uncommon around here. Most are dry farmed Grenache or Zin.
In the Central Coast there are hundreds of these commercial vineyards and what seems like the same amount of private vanity vineyards, so these pictures don’t even scratch the surface. As for wineries , again, hundreds – many grow their own grapes and many buy them under contract and on the open market.
Regarding home wine making here – as someone who moved here from NorCal where we have long-time friends and access to much of the best fruit, there are some things that are surprising about the Central Coast. There is only one home wine makers club, and to be kind it is sub optimal. The membership are all old dudes (no offense as I am one) who only took up wine making post-retirement and who all use the exact same widely published methods and products. There’s no interest in deviating from The Book, in fact deviations are mocked, ridiculed and feared. “Too risky”, “playing with fire” – really? This is a beverage we’re talking about, right? But here’s the kicker - the grapes that they source and offer to their members are from a very low-quality (relatively speaking) vineyard in Santa Maria. Compared to what is grown here, they might as well be from the Central Valley. It’d be like living in Belgium and making beer from a Bud Light recipe. Thankfully, some very high quality vineyard owners or managers here are kind enough to sell sub ton lots to pesky home gamers as long we pick it ourselves or arrive at exactly the right time. As a result, the grapes we can get our hands on here are really quite outstanding. With access to fruit of this quality, why would you NOT push the envelope.
While not directly related to wine making technique, I have always been interested in and made contacts with the local growing / making community. If anyone has any pictures of their local situations, I would be interested in seeing and learning about that. Finger Lakes? Pacific Northwest? Arizona / NM? Idaho? Colorado? Just about every region in the country / world has their own specialty or uniqueness.
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