wood-family-vineyards
2023 Wood Family Vineyards Chardonnay – Always a Refreshing Treat

Photo ©Michael Kelly
Background
Rhonda Wood has been making award winning Chardonnay for at least 7-8 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 past 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 stuffed 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. This Chardonnay is always a welcome accompaniment.
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 a spring 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 2024 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
The food and wine pairing this evening was a lemon garlic chicken dish. The lemon breast was marinated in lemon and garlic for two hours before cooking in a skillet. Ingredients included fresh lemon juice, extra virgin olive oil, minced garlic, Italian seasoning, red pepper flakes, chopped Italian parsley, kosher salt and black pepper. Accompanied by sauteed broccoli & button mushrooms and risotto. The lemon flavors in the dish paired beautifully with lemon traits in the wine and the brioche mouth filling texture caressed the garlic and red pepper flakes. An excellent food and wine pairing this evening.
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:
Sláinte,
Michael
2022 Wood Family Vineyards Woody’s Cabernet Sauvignon and Chateaubriand Steak

Photo ©Michael Kelly
Background
“Woody’s Cabernet” was originally named “Woody’s Red”. Originally named for Michael Wood’s father which was a fun blend of various red varieties of grapes. Wood Family Vineyards started to produce more Cabernet Sauvignon and needed another Cabernet wine tasting room and one for the retail space. Locally in and around the Livermore & Pleasanton areas this wine can be found at Total Wine, Safeway, Luckys and even Costco.
The Winery
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/2016/02/10/wood-family-vineyards-2/
and
Her awards are extensive and too numerous to list here in this article.
The Wine “Wine is bottled poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly
This wine is 100% Cabernet Sauvignon and comes from three different vineyards: 62% from their estate vineyard, 19% from Smith Ranch and 19% from Dale Vineyard using clone 4 grapes. Only 390 cases were produced and aged in 100% French oak barrels for 18 months.
While ringing in the new year with lots going on, here is a wine worth putting on your list for 2025. An intensive, big & bold wine like some other regions and yet is a smooth and enjoyable Cabernet Sauvignon. First on the eyes a very dark and royal purple coloring with a medium viscosity. On the nose, dark black cherry aromas waft into the senses. On the palate you find caressing black & red cherries and secondary flavor of raspberry. It is a medium dry red wine. On the finish, tannins catapult to the roof of the mouth, with acknowledgement of its pedigree without sharp edges yet grippy and an appropriate amount of oak. Relatively lower in alcohol at 13.8% but still packs a hearty wallop. The wine goes for $36/bottle and the 2022 will be released in January 2025. This will make my annual Best Wines Tasted in 2025 (starts 12/15/24 to 12/15/2025) as it is hard to find a Cabernet Sauvignon at this price point with such robustness.
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 this evening was rather unique. Knowing the quality of this wine, a special meal was prepared. It consisted of a Chateaubriand steak cut into small pieces to use in a Tuscan slow cooked braised beef in wine. Substituting the called for Chuck roast with Chateaubriand (less fat) was absolutely the right call to enhance the dining experience. Ingredients included flour, salt, black pepper, olive oil, yellow onion chopped, chopped carrot, sliced fresh garlic cloves, chopped Italian parsley, dry red wine, beef broth and tomato sauce. The cut meat, having first been browned on the stove, was then placed in the slow cooker on low heat for 10 hours. Will add noodles next time and serve on top of them. Accompanied by roasted and sliced Yukon Gold potatoes and a fresh garden salad with northern Italian dressing.
A solid food and wine paring this evening with both the food and wine complimenting each other.
Sláinte,
Michael
Inaugural 2021 Sparkling Albariño by Wood Family Vineyards Called Hot Lips!

Photo ©Michael Kelly
Albariño or Alvarinho is a variety of white wine grape grown in Galicia, specifically in the Rías Baixas region (northwest Spain) and in Northwest Portugal (Monção and Melgaço).

Map courtesy of Wine Scholar Guild
In Portugal it is known as Alvarinho, and sometimes as Cainho Branco. Around 93% of the world’s Albariño vines are planted in Spain and Portugal. In California only 610 acres are planted and bearing Albariño grapes. Key areas are San Louis Obispo with 12 acres, Monterey with 9, El Dorado with 8 and San Joaquin with 7. The balance of the vineyards, 33% are scattered about California.
Typical flavors of Albariño are lemon zest, grapefruit, honeydew, nectarines and a tinge of salinity and often finish with a slight bitter note or minerality note. I have noticed that American Albariño is crisp and with strong aromatic notes of stone fruits and honeysuckle.
What is a Sparkling Albariño?
This wine is made using the Mèthode Champenoise, the traditional method used for making sparkling wines. After the initial fermentation, the wine is bottled, and new yeast is added to start the secondary fermentation. This creates CO2 and gives the wine its signature bubbles.

Photo from Wood Family Vineyards
Each bottle then spends several months to up to six years aging upside down and rotated a quarter of a turn on a precise schedule. The angle is also steepened to allow the yeast/lees to collect at the neck of the bottle called riddling. Afterward, the wine is disgorged. It may be topped, then corked and labeled.
To help give a perspective on sugar levels for Champagne or Sparkling wines, here are the basic categories, going from sweet to dry based on dosage of sugar added:
• Doux: 50 or more grams of sugar added per liter. Outrageously sweet.
• Demi-Sec: 32 to 50 grams of sugar. Still sweet but showing some traction in the market.
• Sec: “Sec” in French means dry. But dry here indicates a medium sweet sparking of 17 to 32 grams of sugar per liter.
• Extra Sec: Meaning “Extra Dry” which is less sweet than Sec wine with 12 to 17 grams of sugar per liter.
• Brut: Up to 12 grams of sugar added. This leads to a balance of flavor and acidity. A bit more rounded than Extra Brut. This is one of the more popular levels of Champagne for consumers.
• Extra Brut: With fewer than 6 grams of sugar, this will produce higher acid and accentuate the carbonation.
• Brut Nature: With no sugar added (less than 3 grams), not common but a way for the winemaker to allow the quintessential nature of the Sparkling wine. This will provide strong minerality and high acidity.

Photo ©Michael Kelly
Do you know what the metal cage on sparkling wine is called and why it is used? A muselet (French: [myz. le]) is a wire cage that fits over the cork of a bottle of champagne, sparkling wine or beer to prevent the cork from emerging under the pressure of the carbonated contents. The pressure inside a bottle of bubbly is typically somewhere between 70 and 90 pounds per square inch or twice the pressure of a typical car tire! The muselet is an added method of security to keep the cork in place. Another fun fact is that in a flute of sparkling wine there are approximately one million bubbles.
The Wine – “Wine is bottled poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly
This sparkling wine spent about eighteen months on the lees compared to Champagne which spends a minimum of one year and often many more. This produces a light and refreshing sparkling wine. Admittedly I have a disposition to Albariño since I enjoy seafood and shellfish. This inaugural wine on the eyes possessed a clear and radiant straw coloring. On the nose, floral notes of grapefruit and Meyer lemon. On the palate, green apple and slight tastes of kumquat and grapefruit. A tinge of brioche completed the tasting along with stone fruit. Typical on the finish was a slight salinity, crispness and minerality. Beautifully constructed Albariño with the bonus of bubbles!
This inaugural release goes for $48/bottle and is 12% alcohol. The grapes come from the Kalthoff Common in Livermore.
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 shrimp pasta dish called One-Pot Lemon Garlic Shrimp Pasta. The ingredients call for fettuccine pasta, olive oil, unsalted butter, minced garlic, crushed red peppers, large shrimp (U12-14), salt & pepper to taste, oregano, baby spinach, Parmesan cheese, parsley, lemon juice and lemon zest. Accompanied by a fresh garden salad which included baby tomatoes, green onions, pepitas and bacon.
The refreshing sparkling Albariño was perfectly matched with the large shrimp and pasta dish.
This will make the annual list of Best Wines Tasted in 2024.
Other items to pair with Albariño are paella, sushi, fish tacos, shellfish and seafoods.
Sláinte,
Michael
2022 CULMINATION Cabernet Franc – A New Wine

Photo ©Michael Kelly
Background
The word culmination is defined by the “end point or final stage of something you’ve been working toward or something that’s been building up”. Synonyms are apex, climax, peak, pinnacle, summit or zenith. Wood Family Vineyards, having made dozens upon dozens of award-winning wines, decided to launch a second label. The second label is the culmination of intense understanding of the vineyard management, grape harvesting, production techniques, barrel choices and wines their customers desired. Simply stated the culmination of decades of intense knowledge and experience was more than appropriate to call the new label CULMINATION!
So why this new label? Often a second label is the function of selecting grapes from a particular row in the vineyard, special barrels, pricing profiling or ageing considerations. From conversations with Harrison Wood VP and Rhonda Wood the winemaker, the second label is much more than augmenting their current production. The CULMINATION label is reserved for a completely different selection and techniques producing some of the same varieties they produce at Wood Family Vineyards. For example, their Wood Family Vineyards award-winning Cabernet Franc (Gold Medal, Double Gold Medals, etc.) come 100% from the One Oak Vineyard. The CULMINATION Cabernet Franc comes from two vineyards, White Cat and Sachau. The combination of the two, plus different barrel and longer aging provided a unique and new tasting experience. Their intention is to introduce an elevated experience beyond their current offering and tasting room enjoyment. The CULMINATION wines will be targeted at wine connoisseurs and those wanting a more intimate experience with possible food pairings. Many new and exciting announcements will be forthcoming over the next few months including a CULMINATION EXPERIENCE.
The first two wines being offered in December will be the CULMINATION Cabernet Franc and CULMINATION Red Blend, a proprietary and changing blend. This story is about their new label CULMINATION, specifically the 2022 Cabernet Franc and the Red Blend will be forthcoming soon. More wine varietals to be considered are on the drawing board.

Photo ©Michael Kelly
The Wine – “Wine is bottled Poetry” – Robert Louis Stevenson

Photo ©Michael Kelly
As mentioned earlier this wine is from two vineyards in Livermore. White Cat Vineyards from Crane Ridge contributed 42% and the remaining 58% from the Sauchau Vineyard. This Cabernet Franc provides a truly remarkable flavor profile of Old-World verses California Cabernet Franc meeting. Many California Cabernet Franc wines are dark, robust, bold and earthy. French Cabernet Franc wines are typically elegant with softer silker tannins. CULMINATION Cabernet Franc pulls these two contrasting flavor profiles and presents them united in the same bottle. A great analogy for this wine is a gymnast on a balance beam requiring both grace and strength in a routine.
On the eyes the core center of the glass being an enticing dark color, yet at the rim is showing a lighter purple ring. On the nose, violets and dark fruits waft into the senses. I did notice that having left it open for an hour, more aromas were present. On the palate, here the gymnast analogy comes into play with not brutish force stating “take notice of me” but underlying structure and finesse coming into play. Dark fruit of raspberries and blackberries with a tinge of blueberries developed a full and complete play in the mouth. The finish was intriguing with initially soft and rounded tannins then developing into robust tannins- the combination of Old-World and California styles coexisting simultaneously. The wine can be sipped alone with its mellowness and yet bold enough to enjoy with a meal. This wine is for serious and discerning imbibers of Cabernet Franc.
For the 2022 Culmination Cabernet Franc only 150 cases were produced. It will be released in December 2024 at $80/bottle and at 13.7% alcohol. The barrel treatment was 36% new French oak and most of the balance used French oak with small quantity being neutral American oak. It was aged in barrels for 18 months. One of the unique characteristics of this wine will be its ability to be aged 10-15 years in my opinion.
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 lightly tenderized and marinated flank steak. It was marinated for four hours in 50% Chaka marinade and 50% Black Pepper marinade. Sprinkled with a Black Pepper Rub and stir fried in hot oil. Ingredients include garlic, snow peas and white mushrooms being added towards the end of the stir fry. Served and topped with bits of green onions. Accompanied by long grain and wild rice and a fresh garden salad. The salad included baby tomatoes, green onions, pepitas and bacon.
The food and wine pairing were spot on with the full dark fruit of the wine contrasting with the peppery meat, it was like a volleyball match with flavors traversing across the mouth rather than a net! The surprisingly strong tannins enveloped the meat, and the mushrooms provided the earthiness normally found in California Cabernet Franc.
I look forward to tasting it again in December when it is released.
Sláinte,
Michael
2023 Wood Family Vineyards Chardonnay with “Spinach Salad” Chicken Bake

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:
Sláinte,
Michael
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