No Cline Zinfandel to be found?
You know me too well!
I had a nice experience with St.-Joseph (the wine, not the saint ) years ago. I rarely see it in the US, so I had to nab it at $15 at Carrefour today.
No Cline Zinfandel to be found?
I had a nice experience with St.-Joseph (the wine, not the saint ) years ago. I rarely see it in the US, so I had to nab it at $15 at Carrefour today.
a lesson in unbiased winetastingI opened my next-to-last bottle of FWK Sauvignon Blanc, which is 23 months old. Cooking pork tenderloin tonight, some went into the pan, some went into the bag to marinate the other tenderloin (2/pkg) for tomorrow night's dinner, and the remainder is going into the cook.
Color is way dark for a SB, dark enough to look oxidized.
Nose? Very nice SB character, and with no hint of oxidation. I've had bad experiences with aging whites, but this one is holding well.
Taste? No question it's SB as soon as it goes over the gums. Strong mouthfeel, maybe a bit too heavy, almost overwhelming for the varietal. Yet it's got a crispness I'd expect from an SB. I'm probably being a bit harsh, but I'm rating it 85 on the Spectator scale:
85-89 Very good a wine with special qualities
The heaviness and color detract from what I think of when I think of Sauvignon Blanc. This doesn't mean I don't like the wine; rather I'm comparing it to all the SB I've had, especially my 2020 made from CA juice, and this is where I rank it.
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retaste of Russet 2023:retaste of Russet 2023:
Appearance - this one isn't fizzy at all, golden due to oxidation of russet skin tannins during grinding and pressing, although it doesn't smell oxidized. This is pure homegrown organic russet apple juice chaptalized with cane sugar and fermented with 71B yeast with nutrient. I think that these russets are Belle de Boskop grafted onto a Transparent apple tree. We don't use the transparents for wine. We use them for pastry i.e. crumbles or sauce that we freeze. I'm sure that we could use them for wine but I suspect that they would ooze in the press when ripe like Bartlett pears when ripe. The grinder/press combo work best on crisp apples and pears e.g. apples (Cox, Russet, Spartan, Gravenstein, Granny Smith, Newton) and pears (Anjous best, Bosc 2nd best together with Moonglows). The only apple juice that I would consider adding water to is crab apple.
Smell - fragrant rich Russet apple nose. The Cox apples and Moonglow pears probably helped the Russets.
Tannin - good. Russets are high tannin apples and don't need extra tannin.
Acid - good. Russsets are high in acid.
Flavour - good, rich, tasty, balanced apple wine. This has a bit of homegrown Cox apple and Moonglow pear juice in it. It has a long apple finish i.e. apple wine with body. I'll definitely make it again probably 3 ways 1) just like this 2) blended with 2nd run white wine from Siegerrebe, Ortega, Reichensteiner and Madeleine Angevine grapes to make a Russet Edelzwicker (2nd run premium blend of 1st run skins and sediment soaked for 48 hours with pectic enzyme and no water or sugar and repressed) 3) chaptalized with unpasteurized berry blossom honey (Cranberry, Blueberry, Raspberry or Blackberry) with 2) to make a Cyser Pyment.
Bottom line - If you make apple wine try to avoid adding water to it i.e. find a grinder - we started with a gas engine powered grinder and now use an Italian electric grinder that my son in law purchased. He is a serious winemaker and loves tools to make jobs easier e.g. hydraulic foot powered primary and carboy motorcycle lift.
https://winemakersdepot.com/Zambelli-MuliMAX.aspx
another useful truthful reviewLast nightI opened a bottle of my 2020 Meritage, a blend of 2/3 Merlot and 1/3 Bordeaux Blend (equal parts Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Malbec, and Petit Verdot). The wines were fermented separately and the free run was blended post fermentation. [The pressings were mixed with the 2020 Zinfandel in a 40% Merlot, 40% Zinfandel, 20% Bordeaux Blend to form the Meritage Plus, reviewed a few weeks ago.]
This was my first year using Scottzyme Color Pro, and I overdosed the maceration enzyme (more later). My tasting notes for today:
This one is difficult to judge. The nose is weak I don’t get much from it.The initial taste is fruity Merlot, but it’s quickly overshadowed by darker fruit flavors which fade into an oaky finish. The oak is noticeable in the middle of the tongue, not on the tip, sides, or the gums. It’s just a bit harsh, but not detracting. The wine needs another year in the bottle, possibly two.The color is possibly too dark. I put a knife into the wine and anything under the surface was hidden, completely invisible. I overdosed with Color Pro, and it stains the inside of the bottle. I have to soak the Meritage and Meritage Plus with Oxyclean to get the staining out.This is not a horrible thing, but it’s a lesson for the future.
This one is not a good example of a Meritage / Bordeaux style blend. I like it, but It's too heavy to fit that description.
This was my first year using Color Pro and I went with the maximum dosage. I had just a bit left, so I divided it between the batches. 3.5 years later, it's obvious that was too much. Last fall I used the minimum recommended dosage for the 2023 wines, and will be evaluating them in the late summer.
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Thanks!another useful truthful review
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