2007 PINOT NOIR BIEN
NACIDO
Santa Maria Valley
I drink a fair amount of red Burgundy, and maybe it is my coarse
palate, but I often taste wines that are so delicate and nuanced
that I wonder if there is really anything there. The question
arises: are these the emperor's new clothes? In the back of my
mind when talking about subtlety lies the question of whether
a wine is actually over-cropped and insipid.
This 2007 Bien Nacido pinot
noir does have a certain delicacy, but in contrast to some too
delicate Burgundies, it displays an enormous personality-this
wine is fully clothed. The aroma just knocks me out; flowers,
sappy tart pie cherries, loamy earth-so much character! The flavor
profile is terrific, full of savory and briny notes, cranberry
fruit and suave fine tannins. It may be a little shocking for
those who have been nursed only on huge sweet California pinots,
but for me it expresses the power one can get out of carefully
farmed, perfectly ripe grapes picked at just the right moment.
TWO CONTRASTING PINOTS
The next two wines are an excellent illustration of issues that
concern us here at The Ojai Vineyard. We think of it as pretty
arcane stuff, but the question of the alcohol content of new world
wines is a lightening rod for controversy. A couple of retailers
and restaurateurs are actually refusing to carry wines higher
than 14% because they think anything above that is inherently
unbalanced, and therefore useless as an accompaniment with food.
As you've read, we obsess over capturing grapes from a vineyard
at the ideal moment to make the best possible wine, hence the
quandary. Here are two pinot noirs that show how nebulous and
unclear that ideal can be when faced with the uncertainties of
nature. In 2007 at Bien Nacido we were able to pick exactly when
we wanted and are thrilled by the results-atypical for California,
but in my mind difficult for the thoughtful taster to dismiss.
Despite what it says on the label, our laboratory tells us it
is 13.6% alcohol. The actual number does not concern me too much,
but I generally find that pinots lower than the mid-14s are gentler
and express their personalities in a more accurate way. With the
second wine, Clos Pepe, we felt we missed our ideal moment by
a couple of days. Here in Southern California, we can go from
heavy fog to extremely dry conditions in a matter of hours and
in two days the potential alcohol of grapes can skyrocket. Regardless
of our best intentions Mother Nature gave us a wine of 15.3% alcohol.
Is that bad? You decide. Harvesting two days later has given us
a wine that still possesses the aromas and flavors of that vineyard
site, only in a plusher kind of way. This wine might not fit the
ideal I have in my head, but it is delicious and generous and
enjoyable to drink--plenty of people will prefer it over the more
subtle Bien Nacido. I guess what I am trying to say is that I'm
not an absolutist, an extremist. I like what natural processes
bring, and am reluctant to synthetically modify what nature has
given.