Month: November 2024

2014 Outpost Wine “True Vineyard” Howell Mtn Cabernet Sauvignon (100 pts) and Chateaubriand

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Photo ©Michael Kelly

Background

We were discussing doing a Chateaubriand and having a nice wine this last weekend. Having not prepared it before at home, some research went into the planning. One of the facts while researching is that the dish was named for François-René, vicomte de Chateaubriand (1768-1848). He was a French romantic writer, politician, diplomat and historian who influenced French literature in the nineteenth century. He was nobleman in France, traveled to the US, was exiled from France to England and eventually returned to France. His biography is quite impressive with his writings and travels to Greece, Asia Minor, The Ottoman Empire, Egypt, Tunisia and Spain

First up was selecting from one of dozens of recipes on how to prepare, cook not only the meat, but also the demi-glace and pan sauce. Next was selecting an excellent bottle of Cabernet Sauvignon to enjoy with the meal.

The Winery

Photo credit to Tom Singerline

The Outpost Wines under years of leadership of Frank & Kathy Dotzler was sold July 23, 2018. Located at 2200 foot elevation in Angwin on Howell Mountain (east side of Napa Valley).  The buyer being AXA Millésimes, the wine division of the large French insurance company. They own wineries in Bordeaux, Burgundy, Portugal and Hungary. Those wineries include Château Pichon-Longueville Baron in Bordeaux, Domaine de l’Arlot in Burgundy, Quinta do Noval in Portugal’s Douro Valley and Disznókő in Hungary.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Previously I visited the winery yearly picking up allocations of wine but have not visited since the buyout.

The Winemaker

Photo from Revana Family Vineyard

Thomas Rivers Brown is perhaps one of the most well-known winemakers in Napa Valley. He has produced wine for 45 wineries and has several of his own brands. He is one of the winemakers that we have been following for the last twenty plus years! His influence ranges at Schrader Cellars, GTS, Casa Piena, Kinsella Wines, Maybach Vineyards, Revana Family Vineyard and many others. I have tasted and purchased many of his wines as all are outstanding! He currently has over 30 wines with scores of 100 points, more than anyone in the USA!

The Wine – “Wine is bottled Poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Robert Parker awarded this wine a 100-point score. Only 475 cases of this 100% Cabernet Sauvignon were produced. It was aged in 90% new French oak for 20 months. K & L Wine Merchants listed it on their website as being out of stock with a price of $349/bottle. It is worth every penny!

First for preparation of this exotic elixir, it was double decanted and allowed to air out for 1 ½ hours before tasting. Then on the eyes a deep purple, almost black color like none other with medium-heavy viscosity. On the nose a bouquet of floral aromas wafted into the senses. Once on the palate, blueberries and blackberries were the dominant flavors with a slight sweet vanilla tobacco hiding. The finish was invigorating with what felt like fireworks bursting with flavors on all corners of the palate. It was the quintessential throw back to Napa Valley historical roots of what a Cabernet Sauvignon should taste like. Robert Parker stated “the finish was close to a minute” long. It seemed longer and small sips were taken to savor the experience.

The Food and Wine Pairing – “Food without wine is a corpse; wine without food is a ghost. United and well matched, they are as body and soul: living partners” – Andre Simon

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The Chateaubriand recipe was basically three parts: the cooking of the meat, the demi-glace preparation and the pan sauce. The demi-glace was an hour preparation with bay leaf, thyme sprigs, parsley, whole peppercorns, chopped onions, chopped celery, chopped carrots, flour and beef stock divided. The pan sauce included kosher salt, canola oil, minced shallot, fresh parsley, unsalted butter, fresh sprigs of thyme, dry red wine and the demi-glace. The meat preparation included searing in a skillet, then baking it and then letting it rest covered in aluminum foil. Plated sliced with the sauce drizzled over it with fresh parsley and a spring of Thyme. Accompanied by roasted and quartered small potatoes and sauteed asparagus. The meal was divine, and a few adjustments will be made next time. The food and wine pairing were spectacular with the wine embracing each bit of the Chateaubriand.

Kudos to my wife for an excellent food presentation!

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

http://www.outpostwines.com/

2022 Cuda Ridge Wines Carménère With BBQ’ed Tri Tip Steak

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Photo ©Michael Kelly

History of Carménère

The history of the Carménère varietal is as fascinating as it is happenstance! It was once one of the grapes in the Médoc region of Bordeaux, one of the original historical seven grapes of Bordeaux. It originally served a similar purpose as Petit Verdot, producing a deep red ink on wines. Carménère originates from the French word for crimson (carmin) which refers to the crimson color of the autumn foliage.

Photo from Wikipedia

When the Phylloxera plague hit in 1867 destroying most of the vineyards in Europe, many thought the Carménère grape was extinct. It wasn’t until 150 years later that it was discovered that Chile had preserved the Carménère grape thinking it was Merlot (from clippings planted from France). DNA confirmed that it was the missing 6th varietal of Bordeaux.

Carménère Today

Carménère grows mainly in Chile, specifically the Colchagua Valley, Rapel Valley and in the Maipo Province. It is also grown in the Veneto region of Italy, and recently several wineries in Mendocino, Livermore, Lodi, Napa and Calaveras are producing it, albeit in small quantities. The 2023 USDA Statistical Service showed only 78 acres planted of the 284,341 in the state of California or .00027%. Oregon and Washington also have some root stock growing in Carménère, but their summary of red wine grapes planted does not even breakout Carménère!

Uniqueness of Carménère

As a varietal, it has the deep ruby coloring and aromas of red fruits. Tannins are softer and milder than Cabernet Sauvignon, thus its use in blending to soften a strong Cabernet. The use is similar to Merlot in formulating an enjoyable blend. Chile produces a 100% Carménère which has a cherry and fruity flavor with traces of smoke and earthy notes combined with inky coloration.

The Winery

Photo ©Michael Kelly

This is one of my favorite pictures of Larry at a recent tasting this year. Lots of captions can be used to describe this picture. For this story, I will forego the story about the big fish that got away and state Larry was describing the spectrum and enormity of flavors in his Carménère!

Photo ©Michael Kelly

There is a lot to be said about Cuda Ridge Wines in Livermore, California with Larry Dino as the winemaker and his wife Margie as chief wine taster. They produce Bordeaux style wines. The Cuda Ridge Wines tasting room is located at 2400 Arroyo Road in Livermore, California. The picture above and below are just a portion of the tasting room and they have a large outdoor seating area. Cuda Ridge Wines current production is approximately 2100 cases. They produce the following Bordeaux varietals: Semillon, Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec, Petit Verdot and most recently their addition of Carménère. Always experimenting, Larry Dino also has produced non-Bordeaux style wines which are designated under their Black label, these wines include Sangiovese, New-World style Cabernet Sauvignon and others. Each varietal produced are small lots ranging from 100 – 450 cases. Cuda Ridge does extensive blending of the varietals and strives for lower alcohol wines with intense complexity and character, traditional of the Bordeaux style wines.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The Wine – “Wine is bottled Poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The 2022 Cuda Ridge Insel Vineyard Carménère wine lived up to and exceeded all the key characteristics of Carménère.  The Insel Vineyard is located in Pleasanton still within the Livermore AVA. Only 49 cases were produced and since being released in September 2024, the wine has not been submitted for ratings or competitions. Previous vintages have received high scores from Wine Enthusiast. Barrel treatment was 50% new French oak and 50% once used French oak and aged for 19 months. The wine sells for $50/bottle.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

On the eyes, a medium-heavy viscosity wine with a unique inviting deep color combination of maroon and ruby red. On the nose, fresh Bing cherries greeted the senses with a hint of green pepper.  The palate is where the wine exceeded prior expectations. Bright cherry taste was intense and concentrated. Plums and dark fruits then came forth with a hint of soft and wet earthen tones (minerality and forest floor) with black tea in the background. On the finish tannins were noted as being “rounded and soft” yet with enough to be mildly grippy. The finish was long lasting with mocha and pepper finishing off the enjoyment with a tinge of vanilla. The wine immediately made my annual “Best Wines” tasted in 2024 which is published in December.

The Food and Wine Pairing – “Food without wine is a corpse; wine without food is a ghost. United and well matched, they are as body and soul: living partners” – Andre Simon

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Paired this evening with a 24-hour marinated prime tri tip steak in Chaka sauce. Seared at 1500 degrees and served medium rare. Accompanied by an oil rubbed Russet baked potato with sea salt and sauteed asparagus and button mushrooms. The wine possessed enough tannins to work with the meat and the refreshing fruit of the Carmenere provided a smoothness to the seared steak. A wonderful food and wine pairing.

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://www.CudaRidgeWines.com

2023 Wood Family Vineyards Chardonnay with “Spinach Salad” Chicken Bake

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Photo ©Michael Kelly

Background

Rhonda Wood has been making award winning Chardonnay for at least 7 years in a row and before. I personally have enjoyed this wine extensively for the same amount of time. It has also won my Best Wines tasted over the years for the same amount of time. Over the last 7 years, as a testimony of her quality of Chardonnay, I have purchased 8-14 cases a year. What I also find interesting is that while a thread of flavors is evident year to year, the nuances of the wine do change with the “terroir” of the year.

When one is consistent in a sport, they are called All Star, consistent in horse racing they are known as a thoroughbred, consistent in car racing they are called a champion, etc. All those accolades and more are indeed worthy of Rhonda’s Chardonnay and several of her other wines.

I have called the past Wood Family Vineyards Chardonnay the “Utility Player of White Wines” as it goes so well with so many dishes. I have written about the Chardonnay food pairing dishes that include Asian chicken wraps, swordfish, seared Ahi tuna, baked stuff chicken, stir fried chicken with Bok Choy, baked butterflied chicken with Swiss cheese, blackened Mahi Mahi, Tempura chicken with noodles, shrimp Pad Thai, Firecracker chicken, seared scallops and many more dishes.

The Wine – “Wine is bottled Poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly

First on the eyes a bright and deep golden color. Swirling the wine in the glass, you immediately see the thick and rich texture of this wine. On the nose when cold, a slight lime note wafted in the senses, but as it warmed up, green apple and a tinge of green tea was present. On the palate most notable was the weightiness of the wine in the mouth. Honeydew melon was the dominant flavor with both a buttery brioche dough and soft lemon zest and almond coming to the party. Also, on the finish a fresh star fruit quality was present. This year the butter scotch finish was not present, yet the wine encapsulated the mouth with freshness.

The 2023 comes from two vineyards with 70% being Wisner and 30% being from Kalthoff Common area. These are on opposite sides of Livermore. Barrel treatment was 100% French oak with 32.5% being new 30% being once used and the balance being neutral. The wine was aged 9 months, and 900 cases were produced. The lees were stirred once every two weeks for five months. It was released in August at $36/bottle and comes in just slightly higher alcohol than the 2022 at 14.6%.

The 2022 Wood Family Vineyards Chardonnay won Double Gold at the San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition and fully expect the 2023 to do the same!

The Food and Wine Pairing – “Food without wine is a corpse; wine without food is a ghost. United and well matched, they are as body and soul: living partners” – Andre Simon

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Paired this evening with a new dish called “Spinach Salad” Chicken Bake. The recipe combines the elements of a spinach salad with chicken to make a delicious dish. Other ingredients were included Swiss cheese, mustard dressing, white wine, black pepper, bacon, olive oil, butter, shallots, minced garlic and spinach leaves. Accompanied by jasmine rice and a warm wilted spinach salad. The dish was extremely delicious and will be added to our normal rotation of meals! The warm wilted spinach salad which was delicious but did take away from the wine because of the red wine vinegar in the dressing recipe. Still a great food and wine pairing.

The Winery

Photo from Wood Family Vineyards website

Wood Family Vineyards, located in eastern Livermore Valley with Rhonda Wood owner & winemaker, has been producing award winning wines for over two decades. You can read more on her background from airline pilot to award winning winemaker at:

https://californiawinesandwineries.com/2022/11/24/2020-wood-family-vineyards-the-captain-a-red-wine-blend

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://woodfamilyvineyards.com/

2023 Cellar 13 Chardonnay – Award Winning Chardonnay With A Heritage

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Photo courtesy of Cellar 13

The Winery

Cellar 13 is owned by Darin Winton and “13” is Darin’s lucky number and thus the name of the winery. Also, Darin’s heritage is Cherokee Indian and many of the wine names reflect the native language. Even before retiring from a local municipality, Darin got his start doing volunteer work at 3 Steves Winery in Livermore on his vacation, since he enjoyed their wines and even volunteered for two weeks in Chile during harvest. There he learned “old world” techniques in winemaking, especially for Carménère. The fascination of harvesting by hand and using gravity to move wine around aroused his curiosity. In 2017, this winery where he was doing his training, allowed him to make a few small batches of wine with Livermore Valley fruit. He is indebted to 3 Steves Winery for allowing him to experience winemaking from the ground up and their subtle oversight and tutelage. Pictured below is Darin and Gail Henderson, his fiancée who assists in the marketing and sales for Cellar 13.

Photo from Cellar 13

Just two years later in 2019, his 2017 Chardonnay won Double Gold at the San Francisco Wine Competition – a real accomplishment and validation for his new venture. So now in 2023 he has won the following awards for his Chardonnay:


* 2017 Chardonnay – Double Gold – 2019 SF Chronicle Wine Competition
* 2018 Chardonnay – Gold Medal Winner 94 points – 2023 Sunset International Wine Competition
* 2019 Chardonnay – Best in Class Winner – 2021 Livermore Valley Uncorked Wine Competition (Best Chardonnay in Livermore), Gold Medal Winner – 2021 SF Chronicle Wine Competition

Recently he won the following awards/score from Sunset International Wine Competition:

Photo from Cellar 13

In 2017 Darin produced 180 cases and in 2019 production increased to 475 cases. Beyond 2020, Darin has created a wine club and in 2023 produced about 800 cases. He has introduced many new wines into his portfolio (Albariño, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and both white and red blends. All his wines are winning awards from various organizations! He is a man on mission to bring some extraordinary wines to market in a very short time!

The Wine – “Wine is bottled Poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly

This is the 4th vintage of Cellar 13’s award winning Chardonnay. It was aged 8 months in 20% new French oak, 60% in neutral oak and 20% in stainless steel. The wine provided a good acidity and balance with the fruit. The grapes came from the Kalthoff Common vineyard in Livermore AVA.

First, on the eyes a medium tone of gold glistened in the glass for the fresh and clean Chardonnay. The wine had a medium viscosity with a slight bent towards medium-heavy. On the nose unmistakenly green apples rose to meet the imbiber. On the palate the same green apples were the dominant taste in the mouth. Secondary flavors were debated during the meal as being similar to a faint Sauvignon Blanc with lemon and even lime being present in restrained quantities. On the finish only a hint of oak with an earthy and stone fruit providing a complete finish.

The wine is 13.9% alcohol and sells for $33/bottle.

The Food and Wine Pairing – “Food without wine is a corpse; wine without food is a ghost. United and well matched, they are as body and soul: living partners” – Andre Simon

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The food pairing was a lemon chicken dish with lemon juice, lemon zest, olive oil, white wine and butter. Accompanied by long and short grain rice and sautéed snap peas. The wine paired extremely well with the lemon chicken and the fresh zesty Chardonnay for a very nice meal.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

That said, I was really looking forward to dessert! A freshly made pineapple upside down cake made the meal complete! Note: the wine was not paired with the cake!

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://www.cellar13winery.com/

2021 Smith-Madrone Cabernet Sauvignon – A Dichotomy?

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Photo ©Michael Kelly

A dichotomy as defined by Cambridge Dictionary is “a difference between two completely opposite ideas or things”. This was the case with this Smith-Madrone Cabernet Sauvignon, fragrant, fruit forward and soft going into the palate, yet once there, burst forth with intense flavor and brute strength and enjoyable tannins a wonderful surprise.

The Winery

Photo from vineyards looking east with Napa Valley below and Howell Mtn across the valley. Photo ©Michael Kelly

Smith-Madrone Vineyards is located on 200 acres on top of Spring Mountain west of St. Helena with 38 acres planted in vineyards. The vineyard elevation ranges from 1,300 to 2,000 feet.

Stuart on the left and Charles on the right                Photo ©Michael Kelly

The founder, managing partner and enologist is Stuart Smith, Charles Smith is the winemaker, and the associate winemaker is François Bugué. Truly a family affair! All the wines are estate and dry-farmed on top of the mountain. Currently their production is approximately 6,000 cases a year. They produce Chardonnay, Riesling, Cabernet Sauvignon and their iconic Cooks Flat (blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc).

For detailed information on the winery and unique trellis system, you can read the story from a previous visit at:

https://californiawinesandwineries.com/2024/08/14/smith-madrone-vineyards-paradise-found/

The Wine – “Wine is bottled poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly

This wine is the first Cabernet Sauvignon vintage since the Glass Fire in 2020 during which they produced no Cabernet Sauvignon. On the eyes a deep penetrating purple and crimson coloring. In the glass medium to medium heavy viscosity. Then on the nose fresh red cherries burst in the olfactory senses with a bramble scent. Once on the palate, luscious and impactful red berries filled the mouth with a soft caressing flavor with a secondary note of blueberries and light vanilla pipe tobacco. Expecting a soft and abbreviated finish, this is where the dichotomy came forth. Strong bold tannins showed the pedigree of this vineyard with their jagged tannins. This is why I believe this youthful wine will appreciate and improve with aging over the next 10 years.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The wine is a blend of 81.9% Cabernet Sauvignon, 17.7% Cabernet Franc and .4% Petit Verdot. It was barrel aged 18 months in 65% new French oak. 1,652 cases were produced, and the retail price is $65/bottle. For a Spring Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon this is perhaps one of the best bargains in Napa Valley!

The Food and Wine Pairing – “Food without wine is a corpse; wine without food is a ghost. United and well matched, they are as body and soul: living partners” – Andre Simon

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Paired this evening with a ribeye steak seared on the BBQ at 1500 degrees and served medium to medium rare. Accompanied by roasted quartered and seasoned potatoes and steamed broccoli.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Also a wonderful baby spinach salad was prepared with Bartlett pear slices, bacon and Point Reyes crumbled blue cheese. A homemade balsamic dressing was drizzled on the salad.

Here is where the Smith-Madrone shined with its fruit forwardness making it a wonderful flavor to the BBQ steak and yet strong and bold enough with tannins to “cut through” the meat to make it a delightful meal.

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://www.smithmadrone.com

Two Carménère Wines: Cuda Ridge Livermore Valley and Spangler Vineyards Oregon

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Photo ©Michael Kelly

History of Carménère

The history of the Carménère varietal is as fascinating as it is happenstance! It was once one of the grapes in the Médoc region of Bordeaux, one of the original historical seven grapes of Bordeaux. It originally served a similar purpose as Petit Verdot, producing a deep red ink on wines. Carménère originates from the French word for crimson (carmin) which refers to the crimson color of the autumn foliage.

When the Phylloxera plague hit in 1867 destroying most of the vineyards in Europe, many thought the Carménère grape was extinct. It wasn’t until 150 years later that it was discovered that Chile had preserved the Carménère grape thinking it was Merlot (from clippings planted from France). DNA confirmed that it was the missing 6th varietal of Bordeaux.

Carménère Today

Carménère grows mainly in Chile, specifically the Colchagua Valley, Rapel Valley and in the Maipo Province. It is also grown in the Veneto region of Italy, and recently several wineries in Mendocino, Livermore, Lodi, Napa and Calaveras are producing it, albeit in small quantities. The 2023 USDA Statistical Service showed only 78 acres planted of the 284,341 in the state of California or .00027%. Oregon and Washington also have some root stock growing inCarménère, but their summary of red wine grapes planted does not even breakout Carménère!

Uniqueness of Carménère

As a varietal, it has the deep ruby coloring and aromas of red fruits. Tannins are softer and milder than Cabernet Sauvignon, thus its use in blending to soften a strong Cabernet. The use is like the use of Merlot in formulating an enjoyable blend. Chile produces a 100% Carménère which has a cherry and fruity flavor but has traces of smoke and earthy notes with the inky coloration

The Background for this story

With its limited quantities being produced I am always interested in finding this wine to taste and how it is produced. Larry Dino, the owner and winemaker of Cuda Ridges Wines in Livermore produces two Carménère wines. Pat Spangler in Oregon produces one Carménère wine. Both wineries offer different vintages of each. So last night decided to compare and contrast the two.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Had both wines side by side last evening with a 24-hour tenderized and marinated flank steak. It was seared on the BBQ at 1500 degrees. The marinade included fresh cilantro leaves, olive oil, orange juice, lime juice, minced garlic, several minced jalapeno with seeds, ground cumin, black pepper and kosher salt. It was served with fresh lime wedges squeezed onto the meat. Accompanied by roasted Brussel sprouts, mashed potatoes with blue cheese and garlic French bread.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Cuda Ridge Wines 2022 Carménère is from the Casa de Vinas vineyard. This wine lived up to and exceeded most of the key characteristics of Carménère.  On the eyes, a medium-heavy viscosity wine with a unique inviting deep purple coloration. On the nose, ripe Bing cherries greeted the senses along with violet fragrance.  The palate is where this wine excelled. First the bright cherry taste was intense and concentrated. Plums and dark fruits then came forth with a hint of soft dry and with a tinge of earthen tones (minerality and forest floor) with black tea in the background. The earthen notes are generally found in Chilean Carménère but not found too often in California. The finish was long lasting with mocha and pepper finishing off the enjoyment with vanilla and soft tannins making it a round and enjoyable wine. It is 100% Carménère grapes and comes in at 13.5% alcohol. It was released in September and sells for $50/bottle. Only 49 cases were produced. Barrel treatment was 19 months in 50% new French oak and 50% in once used American oak. It has not been submitted yet into competitions.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Spangler Vineyards was a 2020 Carménère from southern Oregon vineyard called Crater View. The color was again a dark and enticing coloration. On the nose, aromas of cherry and mocha dominate. On the palate, this was a strong and bold Carménère more reminiscent of a Chilean Carménère. On the palate, this was gritty and bold demanding your attention to its pedigree. Key was a “wet forest floor” quality that was tantalizing and delicious. Red plum and green peppercorns, while different flavors, danced in rhythm in the mouth. At the conclusion a chewy and hearty wine, with leather and the concentrated fruits of plum and cherries provided a long finish. The tannins were structured and present and spicy. The wine sells for $39/bottle and comes in at 14.4% alcohol. Only 142 cases were produced. Barrel treatment was 18 months in 1/3 new, 1/3 one year old and 1/3 two-year-old. The barrels were 50% American and 50% French. This wine has won 95 points & Double Gold from Oregon Wine Award competition and 93 points from Cascadia International.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

While trying simply to comprehend each on its own merits and uniqueness, both were truly appreciated at dinner with the meat. After dinner both were also enjoyed alone themselves. Cuda Ridge Carménère was a tad softer and milder with less tannins. Spangler Vineyards possessed less vanilla (in a conversation with Pat) and spicier with red roasted peppers and peppers and black ground pepper purposely and more like a Chilean Carménère. Cuda Ridge was more aromatic with violets wafting into the senses. The coloring was almost identical with Spangler having just a slightly lighter crimson ring in the glass.

Discerning wine aficionados will be happily content with both Carménère wines!

I know I definitely was enthralled by both, and they will make my annual Best Wines of the Year that were tasted in 2024. That list is reserved for 1-2% of the 1600 to 1800 wines tasted during the year.

Sláinte,

Michael

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://www.CudaRidgeWines.com

https://www.spanglervineyards.com/

6th Annual International Cabernet Franc Wine Competition & Celebration Press Release – Early Bird Registration

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A few of the bottles from last year’s event

Who is this event for? For the 6th Annual Cabernet Franc Celebration, the event is opened for both domestic and international producers of Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Franc Blends (a minimum of 50% Cabernet Franc grapes). We have had fourteen states and five countries participating previously in the event representing over 90 wines. The Best of Class awards will be for the following categories:

Specialty Division – PetNat, Sparkling, Blanc, etc.

Blend Division – A minimum of 50% Cabernet Franc grapes

Eastern Division – All states along the east coast (NY, North Carolina, Virginia, etc.)

Central Division – Michigan, Ohio, etc.

Northwest Division – Oregon, Washington and Idaho

Southwest Division – Arizona, New Mexico and Texas

California Division – Broken down in various price points

International Division – All other countries besides USA

Early Bird Registration opens November 1st and closes November 30th. Regular registration will continue until February 1st, 2025. 

Why hold this event? It is to show the uniqueness and versatility of Cabernet Franc and to celebrate the wine as so much more than a blending grape. Jancis Mary Robinson the well know British wine critic, journalist and wine writer quote of Cabernet Franc sums up her feelings “I’m not a huge enthusiast of the sexual stereotyping of wines but even I can see that Cabernet Franc might be described as the feminine side of Cabernet Sauvignon. It is subtly fragrant and gently flirtatious rather than massively muscular and tough in youth. Because Cabernet Sauvignon has so much more of everything – body, tannin, alcohol, color – it is often supposed to be necessarily superior, but I have a very soft spot indeed for its more charming and more aromatic relative, Cabernet Franc.”. Cabernet Franc has adapted and transformed its personality from Chile, France, Canada, the east coast of the US, the Michigan peninsula, the Midwest and the west coast of the US.

How will the competition be judged? The event will be a blind tasting using the “Danish System”, sometimes called the group method. Unique to this event, two separate judging stations will be set up. The first will comprise of Professional Judges and the second being the People’s Choice Judges (serious consumers). Each set of Judges will award medals and award Best of Show based on geographic regions and categories. Additionally, each set of judges will select a Grand Sweepstakes winner from taste off of all the Division & Category winners.

Who are the judges? Tom Bender has agreed once again to head up the Professional Judging Panel(s). Tom has headed the California Sierra Foothill Competition for over 35 years, served on California State Fair Judges, is a well-known writer for various wine magazines and teaches at a local college. Other judges slated include Mike Dunne retired food editor, wine columnist for the Sacramento Bee, distinguished judge at San Francisco Chronicle and other events, Fran Cunniffe a DipWSET and certified Sommelier, Tana Cole winemaker from Sonoma Valley, Napa, Lodi  and Calaveras AVA’s, Dr. Elizabeth Smith award-winning wine writer, a judge at various judging events and Winelovers Wine Awards in Budapest and the 2023 Open Balkan Wine Trophy in Belgrade and others with WSET I, II and III qualifications. People Choice Judges are astute individuals with years of experience. All judges are prepared with extensive documentation and profiles on Cabernet Franc’s characteristics from various geographic areas in advance. Each wine is judged on its own terroir characteristics within their respective category.

Benefits for wineries participating? National exposure from California Wines and Wineries website which will run a full feature article on those receiving Best of Show (domestic and international) per each category. The story will also be sent to eighty blogs for reposting and all social media for a readership reach of over 600,000. Additionally, it will be submitted to two magazines with a reach of an additional 500,000 readership if reprinted. The two Grand Sweepstakes winners will also be featured on a podcast by Exploring the Wine Glass in a joint session. And California Wines and Wineries will do a feature article on each Grand Sweepstakes winner. Last year we had two newspapers (both hard copy and electronically) cover the event. 

Where is the event being held? It will be in Copperopolis, California (Sierra foothills) March 5th, 2025.

2025 registration can be found at https://californiawinesandwineries.com at the top of the page by clicking on 2025 Cabernet Franc Celebration, Wine Competition Registration. Make sure you select Domestic. If you are an international winery, please contact me directly at mkellywine@gmail.com for a different Registration form to meet all the Federal requirements, COLA Waiver, customs, etc.

Results from the 5th Annual Wine Competition Event can be found at:

https://californiawinesandwineries.com/2024/04/05/results-of-the-worlds-largest-5th-annual-international-cabernet-franc-wine-competition-dedicated-exclusively-to-cabernet-franc-wine/

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