White wine blends

2024 Starfield Vineyards “Hope Rising” a White Wine Blend Alternative to Chardonnay

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 Photo ©Michael Kelly

Background on Marsanne & Roussanne Grapes

This has long been one of my favorite white wine blends. When given a chance to review this wine, I was excited to taste it. Marsanne originated in the northern Rhône Valley of France, likely named after the village of Marsanne. Thomas Jefferson called it “the first wine in the world” when blended with Roussanne.

Roussanne came also from the Rhône Valley of France, likely between Lyon and Valence, and was first documented in 1781. Roussanne besides being blended with Marsanne, is one of the six white grapes allowed to be used in Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Roussanne was reintroduced to California in the 1980’s after many early plantings were lost to phylloxera and Prohibition period.

In the final 2025 Grape Crush Report for California by the USDA, it shows 37% of the white wine grapes crushed being Chardonnay. Roussanne represented only .0004% of the total tonnage crushed and Marsanne being at .0002%. The actual tonnage for Roussanne and Marsanne were 587 and 315 tons respectively. This was a dramatic shift for Marsanne being reduced from 2024 to 1234 tons down to 315 or 75% decrease. Whereas Roussanne decreased about 6% on par with overall white wine grapes being reduced by 5% year to year by tonnage.

One other note while sharing this wine with two others (daughter & a good friend from Colorado), was that neither recognized Marsanne and Roussanne as grape varietals which prompted a story on alternative white wines for summer. They both enjoyed this wine and its distinct aromatics and taste.

https://californiawinesandwineries.com/2026/06/23/summertime-alternative-white-wines-with-food-pairings-step-out-and-explore/

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

Photo ©Michael Kelly

The wine being a blend highlighted the key characteristics of both wines. The classic blend has a complex flavor with stone fruit (peach & apricot), floral hints and a spicy nutty quality. They are generally dry and have a full-bodied texture, often referred to as having a waxy trait. The blend is 45% Marsanne, 45% Roussanne and with 10% being Viognier. Viognier in small doses is added to enhance the aromatics (floral characteristics) and provides a richer, silkier texture and full body to the blend.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

This wine presented on the eyes a light straw coloring which was just one of two surprises this evening for this wine. Visually seeing this pale coloring and then being “blow away” with the perfume or aromatics of honeysuckle was a nice surprise. The second surprise was on the viscosity of the wine being medium whereas many wines of similar blends were more on the medium-heavy side. Once on the palate the stone fruits specifically peach, tangerine and honeydew provided a large mouth filling and heavier weighted sipping experience. The finish was bright, soft and embracing with smoothness and gentle with a faint hint of the “waxy characteristic”. The other note on the finish was the “Sierra Spice” which Starfield Vineyards describes as being its sense of place amongst the trees on the property of “Ponderosa Pine, Cedar, Douglas Fir and combined with the mountain air of resin, bark and needles” from the trees. They had sent me a test tube to inhale the aromatics which are remarkable.

Photo ©Michael Kelly

Hope Rising is named after a gold mine near the Starfield Vineyards. This is their new label capturing the Sierra Spice with the trees and the beauty of the night sky from the vineyard. The wine is $36/bottle and comes in at 13.4% alcohol with only 181 cases being produced.

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 chicken & spinach skillet pasta with lemon and Parmesan. A nice summer meal consisting of whole wheat pasta, olive oil, salt, ground pepper, minced garlic, white wine, lemon zest, lemon juice, unsalted butter, grated Parmesan cheese and chopped fresh spinach.

The wine worked wonderfully with its bright and savory flavors and the light meal. The meal only enhanced the flavory nuances of the wine.

A very good food and wine pairing.

The Winery

Photo from Starfield Vineyards

The winery was founded in 2012 by Tom and Rob Sinton with plantings of 31 acres on the hillsides east of Placerville, California in El Dorado County. They are located at 2759 Jacquier Road.

Map courtesy of https://uscountymaps.com/el-dorado-county-map-california/

The names of the wines, especially their new labels starting with the 2023 vintages, highlight the history of the region from the Gold Rush with wine names as Miner’s Inch and Rising Hope. These two are for a nearby mine.

The winery produces 17 varieties of wines comprising of mostly Rhone varieties (66%) and Italian (30%) and a few Spanish varieties. The vineyards have been farmed using sustainable and fish-friendly farming since their inception.

Photo from Starfield Vineyards

The wineries name Starfield refers to “Star Fields”, sites where in their words “fruit develops the optimal balance of aroma, flavor and texture”. They also consider what they refer to as Sierra Spice, the aroma and taste characteristics that come from the western facing forests surrounding the vineyards. The local trees are Ponderosa Pines, Cedars and Douglas Firs and their oils provide earthy and woodsy forest aromatics from their oils.

Sláinte,

Michael Kelly

https://californiawinesandwineries.com

https://www.starfieldvineyards.com/