John thanks for asking; we're getting ready for another 1,000 pounds of frozen must, mostly Cab including some Red Mountain fruit, which should arrive in the next couple of months.
We did the main bottling for both wines in Dec 2017, and had a 5gal carboy of each left as unfiltered reserve. We just got around to bottling the reserve two weeks ago. Both wines are very different than the typical Cabernet I'm used to making, more lean fresh and crisp style.
At this point the Pinot really stands out, it has the strawberry, raspberry, and cranberry type of profile that I have not seen in any wine I've made before; however, I've never made a Pinot before so I have nothing to compare. I will be making more of this in the future.
The Sangiovese is still closed at this point, more complex, fine tannins, but less fruit overall than the Pinot, nothing like the ultra ripe 32 Brix Chalk Hill Sangiovese I made back in 2004, that wine was massive fruit from the day it was fermented to the day it went into bottle. I suspect the current Sangiovese has a greater potential to improve in the bottle, unlike the 2004 which never improved though it was always very good (I still have one bottle and one magnum left in the cellar).
When comparing the reserve vs the initial bottling, the flavor profiles are the same, but both wines have a greater CO2 content in the earlier bottling, maybe a little too much, I was a bit overprotective given the sensitive nature of these wines, but that will all be part of the fun in future tastings.
The photos are of the final racking and SO2 adjustment before bottling of the reserve wines. The glass is the reserve Sangiovese, alongside the fumbled Riedel glass (they don't last long in my cellar).