Home Blog Page 45

Santa Barbara Wine Country 5: Photos from Day 4

Santa Barbara Wine Country

Goodland Wines

Goodland Wines

unreleased Goodland Wines portfolio

Ballard Canyon

looking into Ballard Canyon AVA

Ruben Solorzano

Ruban Solorzano, Vineyard Manager, Goodland Wines partner

Limestone Soils, Harrison Clark Vineyard

Ballard Canyon Limestone Soils

Matt Dees

Matt Dees, Winemaker, Goodland Wines partner

Chris Snowden

Chris Snowden, Goodland Wines partner

Harrison Clark Vineyard

Harrison Clark Vineyard Syrah, Ballard Canyon AVA

Matt, Chris, Ruben, long term friends

Star Lane Vineyards & Wines, and Dierberg Wines

Star Lane Winery

Star Lane Winery, Happy Canyon AVA

1500 ft elevation Cabernet Vineyard, Happy Canyon

Star Lane Vineyard, 1500 ft elevation Cabernet Sauvignon

Andy Alba

Andy Alba, Winemaker Star Lane & Dierberg Winemaker

Star Lane Vineyards, looking into Happy Canyon

Looking over Star Lane Vineyards, the oldest Vineyards in Happy Canyon; Looking into Happy Canyon AVA from 1500 ft

Gravity Feed Winery, Star Lane

 

Star Lane Winery Gravity Flow Winery

Star Lane Wines

Star Lane Wines

Dierberg Wines

Dierberg Wines

Sta Rita Hills Pinot Noir Cluster (full size, not a wing)

Sta Rita Hills high elevation Pinot Noir cluster (photo by Andy Alba): actual cluster size (not a wing)

Rusack Vineyards & Wines

Rusack Vineyard

Rusack Vineyard, Ballard Canyon AVA

Rusack Vineyards, Ballard Canyon

Looking into Ballard Canyon AVA, Rusack Vineyard

Rusack Winery

Rusack Winery

Rusack Wines

Rusack Wines

Rusack Wines, Catalina Vineyard Project

Rusack Wines Santa Catalina Island Vineyard Project

Terroir Selections, and Sandhi Wines

Terroir Selections Wines

Terroir Selections Wines by the glass, The Watering Hole Tasting Room

Sandhi Wines

Sandhi Wines

***

Thank you to Matt Dees, Chris Snowden, and Ruben Solorzano.

Thank you to Andy Alba, Sarah Hunt, and Jim Dierberg.

Thank you to Steve Gerbac.

Thank you to Nat Gunter.

Thank you to Sao Anash, and Lacey Fussel.

opyright 2013 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Santa Barbara Wine Country 4: Photos from Day 3

Santa Barbara Wine Country

Andrew Murray Wines

Andrew Murray Roussane Grenache Blanc

2011 RGB, Roussanne Grenache Blanc

Andrew Murray

Andrew Murray

Andrew Murray Wines, RGB, Syrahs, GSM

Andrew Murray RBG, Syrahs, Esperance GSM blend

Andrew Murray's new label E11even

Andrew Murray’s new label, This is E11EVEN, Unplugged white blend, Pinot Noir, Big Bottom red blend

Andrew Murray

Andrew Murray

Fess Parker Vineyards & Winery, Santa Ynez AVA

Fess Parker Vineyards

Fess Parker Rodney Vineyard

Fess Parker Ranch

Looking out over Fess Parker Ranch from the Mesa

Vino Vaqueros Horses

Fess Parker Ranch’s Vino Vaqueros Equestrian Vineyard Tour Horses

Fess Parker wines

Fess Parker Viognier, Chardonnay, Riesling, Pinot Noir, Syrah, Red blend

Epiphany wines

Epiphany Grenache Blanc, Syrah, Red blend

Riverbench Vineyards, Santa Maria Valley AVA

Riverbench Vineyards

Riverbench Vineyards

Riverbench Old Vines

Old Vines in the midst of replanting at Riverbench Vineyards

Riverbench Winery

Riverbench winery

Santa Maria Valley Round Table Winemaker Tasting, hosted by Riverbench

Jenny, Kevin, and Laura

Jenny Williamson Doré, Kevin Law, and Laura Mohseni

Dieter Cronje, Presqu'ile wines

Dieter Cronje, Presqu’ile Winermaker

Richard Dore, Foxen Wines

Richard Doré, Foxen Vineyards

Kevin Law, Luminesce wines

Kevin Law, Luminesce Winemaker

Jenny Williamson Dore, Foxen wines

Jenny Williamson Doré, Foxen Vineyards

Clarissa Nagy

Clarissa Nagy, Riverbench Winemaker

Riverbench roundtable tasting

Presqu’ile Sauvignon Blanc, Luminesce Pinot Noirs, Riverbench Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, Foxen Chardonnay and Pinot Noir

Dinner with Casa Dumetz Winemaker, Sonja Magdevski

Sonja Magdevski, Casa Dumetz wines

Sonja Magdevski, Casa Dumetz Winemaker

Casa Dumetz wines

Casa Dumetz Viognier, Grenache, Syrah, Gewurtztraminer

***

Thank you to Andrew Murray and Kristen Murray.

Thank you to Ashley Parker-Snider and David Potter.

Thank you to Clarissa Nagy and Laura Mohseni.

Thank you to Richard Doré, Jenny Williamson Doré, Kevin Law, and Dieter Cronje.

Thank you to Sonja Magdavski.

Thank you to Sao Anash, and Lacey Fussel.

Copyright 2013 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Santa Barbara Wine Country 3: Photos from Day 2

Santa Barbara Wine Country: Photos from Day 2

Pence Ranch, Sta Rita Hills AVA

Blair Pence

Blair Pence, Pence Ranch

View from the top, Pence Ranch

View from the top, Pence Ranch looking out over Sta Rita Hills

Francisco Ramirez

Pence Vineyard manager, Francisco Ramirez, working with the Pence Vineyard crew in freezing temperatures

Pence Ranch Guard Dog

Pence Pinot Noir

Pench Ranch 2010 Pinot Noirs

Presqu’ile Vineyard and Wines, Santa Maria Valley AVA

Santa Maria Valley Succulents

Presqu'ile Wines

Presqu’ile Wines: Pinot Noir Rosé, Chardonnay, Pinot Noirs

Pensqu'ile Vineyards

Presqu’ile Vineyards, Santa Maria Valley

Matt Murphy

Matt Murphy, visiting the new Presqui’ile Winery site

Dieter Cronje

Presqu’ile Winemaker, Dieter Cronje

Bien Nacido Vineyards, Santa Maria Valley AVA

Old vines planted in 1973 on own rootstock, Bien Nacido

original Bien Nacido vines, planted in 1973 on own rootstock

Bien Nacido Vineyards

looking into Santa Maria Valley, from Bien Nacido Vineyards

Chris Hammell

Bien Nacido Vineyard manager Chris Hammell

Bien Nacido and Solomon Hills Wines

Bien Nacido and Solomon Hills Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Syrah

Nicholas Miller

Nicholas Miller, Bien Nacido and Solomon Hills Winemaker

Evening Wine Tasting

J. Wilkes Chardonnay and Pinot Noir

J. Wilkes Chardonnay and Pinot Noir

Nagy Wines

Nagy Pinot Blanc and Pinot Noir

Byron Wines

Byron Chardonnay and Pinot Noirs

La Fenetre Wines

La Fenetre Chardonnay and Pinot Noirs

Qupe Wines

Qupe Roussanne and X-Block SyrahAu Bon Climat Wines

Au Bon Climat 30th-Anniversary Chardonnay and Pinot Noir

***

More notes, photos, and write-ups to follow.

Thank you to Blair Pence, and Francisco Ramirez.

Thank you to Matt Murphy and Dieter Cronje.

Thank you to Chris Hammell, Nicholas Miller, and the whole Miller family.

Thank you to Vidal Perez, Johnathan Nagy, Clarissa Nagy and Josh Klapper,.

Thank you to Sao Anash, and Lacey Fussel.

Copyright 2013 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Santa Barbara Wine Country 2: Melville Vineyards & Winery, and Greg Brewer

Visiting Melville Vineyards & Winery

Melville Winery

Melville Winery, Sta Rita Hills AVA

Sta Rita Hills appellation starts at the opening of a valley running East from the coast. The point of the landmass at which the valley begins marks the Southern reach of an Alaskan current ushering cool water temperatures from the North. Moving East, the inland reach of the mountains’ opening absorbs warmer temperatures. Between the cool Pacific side of the valley and the inland point of it, then, a kind of breathing effect occurs. The fog air off the ocean is pulled from the Sta Rita Hills across the Santa Ynez Valley during the night, with the warmer temperatures pulled West through the day. The result is a generally reliable temperature band through the course of a day during a long growing season. In the 2012 vintage, Melville harvest began September 1 and finished December 1. It is also not unusual for budbreak to occur on Valentine’s Day.

Melville Pinot Noir Vines

Established in 1997, Melville Vineyards and Winery sit within the cool Sta Rita Hills AVA. The wines are made with entirely Estate fruit, growing primarily Pinot Noir, then Chardonnay, with some Syrah, and a touch of Viognier. With very little rainfall, fruit grows in incredibly dry conditions. Melville Vineyards choose to plant restorative cover crops during the winter months to help enrich the nutriets of the soil.

Pinot Noir Planted in Sand

In Sta Rita Hills much of the ground is sand, with a high plankton and seabed concentration, and clay in very low concentration only in certain areas. On Melville’s Estate, the Syrah is planted entirely in sand, the Pinot grows in primarily sand with some clay showing in a few blocks. Through the appellation, testing has shown sand as much as 20-feet deep in some locations.

Through the growing season irrigation is required, with amounts determined block by block by weather, depending on both the varieties planted, their age, and the particular soil variation of the exact site. As explained by Greg Brewer, without rainfall or irrigation there is not adequate water to support vine health. He explains, even older established vines in the region do not survive on dry farming.

Greg Brewer

On a rather cold late afternoon, winemaker Greg Brewer showed me the Melville Vineyards and Winery. Brewer has worked with Melville as winemaker since its inception, helping too to design the winery and its location. His work over his career has also included scouting both new and established vineyard sites. Over time, Brewer has come to realize he prefers what he describes as protected vineyards in extreme conditions, like “being in the bosom of something.” On a cold day, what is huddled against the chest is kept warm. The combination for vines encourages reduced crops that grow without excessive struggle. The resulting fruit brings a concentration of flavor in a focused structure.

The Wind Effect in Front of Melville Winery

The West-to-East angle of the Valley leads to high winds. Here, the trees growing in front of the winery show the steady tilt of the air currents. The winds keep the Valley’s fog from holding humidity against the grapes, thus also preventing issues with mildew. The Melville Library

The Melville Winery includes a library room with complete verticals of the wine reaching back to the first 1999 vintage.

Melville Chardonnay and Pinot, 2011, 2010, 2004

Greg Brewer tasted me on 6 Melville wines–the 2011 Inox Clone 76 Chardonnay, 2011 Estate Chardonnay, 2004 Estate Chardonnay, the 2010 Estate Pinot Noir, 2011 Estate Block M Pinot Noir, and the 2004 Estate Pinot Noir.

Brewer explains he likes to pick ripe to allow for the richness of flavor offered. Though Sta Rita Hills has its growing challenges, compared to a much cooler and more changing climate like Champagne, Burgundy, or Willamette Valley, Brewer sees his AVA as more reliable and warm. With the less challenging climate of his region, then, he sees his job as winemaker as offering a kind of restriction in the final wine. Such constraint is found in the winemaking itself. As an example, Melville has always been minimal with its use of new oak (using only 10-15% in previous vintages), but since 2009 the winery uses only neutral oak with many of its barrels still from the original 1999 vintage. In this way, Brewer’s goals in winemaking, then, rest in the idea of presenting a stripped down style–wine “with fewer components.”

Discussion of riper fruit would at first appear to counter the current trend common to geekier wine speak that claims ripeness is overdone, and higher alcohol levels cannot generate balance. Brewer’s wines, however, have proven both finesse, and the ability to age well.

Brewer’s balance is found in what he calls creating tension between the architecture and flavor, found even with riper vintages or higher alcohol. Examining Brewer’s wines suggests our ideas of balance in wine do not depend on numbers (such as ‘only alcohol below 14%’) as many in the wine world currently claim, but instead on overall style.

To generate tension in whites, Brewer relies on Malic acid, intentionally stopping malolactic (ML) fermentation in the Inox Chardonnay. The Estate Chardonnays, he explains, he does not stop ML but the wines rarely go very far through it because of the conditions of the area. In reds, he uses stems to generate architecture, using between 25% and 50% whole cluster depending on vintage for Melville Pinot Noir.

Brewer his wines in relation to what it takes for a stereo system to play with excellence. As he puts it, “you need enough treble to balance the base. It’s about both.”

***

More notes on the Melville wines tasted, and on meeting with Greg Brewer in a future post.

We were also able to taste Greg Brewer’s Diatom, a Chardonnay that is genuinely exciting to drink. I will post about Diatom separately.

***

To read more on my visit with Greg Brewer:
http://wakawakawinereviews.com/2013/02/07/escaping-convention-calibrating-to-stark-conditions-a-conversation-with-greg-brewer/

Thank you to Greg Brewer for taking time to meet with me.

Thank you to Sao Anash, and Lacey Fussel.

Copyright 2013 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Visiting Santa Barbara Wine Country: Getting Ready

Santa Barbara Wine

This summer included several days of a quick tour of Santa Barbara wine country. Katherine and I started on the coast of the city, and drove north through wine in Lompoc, Los Olivos and Los Alamos, Happy Canyon, all the way up towards Arroyo Grande. This week I return for a week visiting some of the wineries and winemakers Katherine and I weren’t able to meet.

Santa Barbara wine country takes its fame originally from rich, while focused Chardonnay, and Pinot Noir, but it has also succeeded at delivering strength in Rhone wines, and more recently started to show good quality Bordeaux varieties as well. This week I’ll be able to taste from each of these.

photos from this summer’s visit with Katherine

Coastal Succulents

Succulents along the coast in Santa Barbara itself

The region of Santa Barbara celebrates proximity to the coast, a unique East-West Valley orientation, significant elevation, coastal fog, and warmer inland temperatures, resulting in a variety of wine growing conditions. As a result, the area registers a handful of AVAs, with new ones still developing. Already established are: Central Coast, Santa Ynez Valley, Santa Maria Valley, Sta Rita Hills and Happy Canyon AVAs. Currently in application are Los Olivos and Ballard Canyon AVAs.

Venturing into the hills of Los Alamos

Heading into the hills near Los Alamos

The area also stretches at least fifty miles from North to South, demanding ample driving time between wineries or tasting rooms, though several areas host a nice cluster of tasting venues for easier access to particular styles.

Santa Maria Valley AVA

The first officially recognized AVA in the Santa Barbara region, Santa Maria Valley pushes from the coast as an open funnel shaped valley heading directly East, pulling the ocean fog inland along the valley floor. Valley floor vineyards begin at 300 feet in elevation, with plantings reaching up the slopes to around 800 feet. The combination of warm day time temperatures, with cooling fog, and little rainfall offer long slow growing conditions for fruit, leading to an easy complexity in the grapes.

Los Alamos Valley Region (not an official AVA)

Sandwiched between Santa Maria Valley AVA to the North, and Santa Ynez Valley AVA to the South, Los Alamos Valley offers a big temperature swing between warm days and cooler nights. Still, the overall heat range falls between the two with Santa Ynez generally considered around 10 degrees warmer, and Santa Maria 10 degrees cooler than the middlin Los Alamos Valley. The soils through the zone are generally well drained, but with a lot of variation in its geography, Los Alamos Valley shows genuine range in the varieties it can grow. This valley currently plants primarily Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, but there are numerous smaller crops of Italian varieties dotted throughout the area.

POST EDIT: Word on the street here in Santa Ynez is that the Los Alamos AVA application has actually been approved but not announced yet!

Looking out over Los Olamos

The hills of Los Olivos

Los Olivos and Ballard Canyon proposed AVAs

With the diversity of conditions through the Santa Barbara region, new AVAs continue to be developed. Currently Los Olivos AVA and Ballard Canyon AVA are undergoing the application process to be recognized for their unique growing qualities. Part of Los Olivos application showcases the subzone’s ability to grow Bordeaux and Rhone varieties in particular, with a moderate temperature range, and good drainage supporting vine health. Ballard Canyon AVA carries a similar focus as the Los Olivos district, with the argument of differing quality and soil types. Ballard Canyon has recently been described as showing a comparable potential as the Southern Rhone regions of Chateauneuf du Pape or Gigondas.

Visiting Coastal Tasting Rooms

Flowers growing in the cooler, moister Western reach

Sta Rita Hills AVA

Part of the larger Santa Ynez Valley AVA, Sta Rita Hills AVA features a cool micro-climate created from the rush of ocean fog cupped by surrounding hills holding the fog close against the plants. With its orientation towards the ocean, the AVA also receives ocean breezes bringing a mix of cool air, a steady drying of the fruit mixed with a sense of humidity that keeps the plants from burning in sun. The AVA is known, then, for its cooler variety success.

Vineyards of Santa Ynez Valley

Vineyards in Santa Ynez Valley, Happy Canyon

Santa Ynez Valley AVA

Santa Ynez Valley AVA nestles in the inland section of Santa Barbara wine region, also part of the Central Coast AVA. Santa Ynez Valley carries the highest concentration of wineries for the region, as well as a great variation of grape varieties planted. To the West (the Sta Rita Hills overlap) the region is known for Chardonnay, but as it moves East the climate warms allowing for a higher proportion of Rhone varieties, and other warmer temperature grapes.

Happy Canyon AVA

Happy Canyon AVA is one of the newer subzones of Santa Ynez Valley. The region has shown wonderful conditions for Bordeaux varieties, and is also known for producing elegant Grenache. It offers hotter temperatures than other areas of Santa Ynez valley, as well as more protection from the ocean influence, and the soil of the Canyon is considered a unique mineral effect on the wines grown in the still small subzone.

Vineyard Flowers in Northern Santa Barbara County

Vineyard flowers in Northern Santa Barbara County

I’ll be posting photos and sharing tasting notes from visits throughout this week. My itinerary will be busy, with a collection of 12 hour days visiting wineries and winemakers. Tuesday I get to wake up to an ATV vineyard tour.

ATV

Commercial fishing in Naknek, Alaska, Summer 2001–from left: cousin Ceara, me, Jr age 18 months, niece Melissa

Having growing up racing around the rock beaches of Naknek, Alaska on 4-wheeler I can’t tell you how thrilled I am to jump back on a little tractor for a quick jaunt through vines and farmland. Cheers!

Copyright 2013 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Alaska Holiday 5: Photos of Juneau

2

The southeast portion of Alaska rises as a host of islands from the Gulf. In the midst of these rests the state capitol, Juneau, a town that booms in the summer with tourism, and in the winter with politics. The settlement wraps about the base of mountains diving into the surrounding bays and channels. It crosses too over Gastineau Channel onto the neighboring island of Douglas. My sister Melanie and her family live on the Juneau side.

In the course of our few days it has rained, but even so we have watched whales breaching, porpoises swimming in massive pods, both sealions and seals, and a few eagles too–there is an eagle nest in my sister’s front yard. Here are some photos, sea life not included.

The city of Juneau

The city of Juneau

The city of Juneau from Douglas Island

Looking across Auke Bay from St Terese Chapel

Auke Bay

Looking across Auke Bay from the North side of Juneau Island

Looking across Auke Bay from the Douglas side

Looking towards the island of Juneau from the island of Douglas

Looking across Auke Bay from the North end of Douglas Island, towards St Terese Chapel on the island of Juneau

Mendenhall Glacier

Looking up Mendenhall Valley and Glacier (on Juneau Island) from Douglas Island

The backside of Eagle Crest

the backside of Eagle Crest

Happy New Year, everyone!

Copyright 2012 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Giving Thanks for the Closing Year: Favorite Moments of 2012

Opening to Receive by Giving Thanks

A friend told me recently that she believes the best way to prepare one self for receiving good is to reflect on all the good you’ve received before. What a lovely idea. Here are some of my grateful moments from 2012. There are so many more I could just keep posting.

A trip to LA and Malibu included a wealth of incredible wine

In the early part of the year I was lucky enough to spend time with friends drinking utterly incredible wines, a lot of them favorites from older vintages. In Malibu a friend and I got to open this 1996 Bea. It was in the midst of a 1995 Chinon, a 1975 Pepe (both remarkable wines), Selosse Brut (so brilliant), and others, but the Bea took my heart and never gave it back. His wines are brilliant aged. What a treasure.

In Fall 2012 I closed my teaching career in philosophy

Fall 2011 became my last semester teaching philosophy in Arizona. I resigned in October 2011, but the last day of my contract was January 6, 2012. I stepped into the new year, then, finishing my teaching obligations, turning towards a whole new path. As grateful as I am for my time there, I am also grateful to be done. The biggest blessing came in my classes that final term being among the best I ever facilitated. The two sections of Intro to Ethics both had excellent students that helped me learn the material at a deeper level. What a gift. In Sci-Fi and Society (the other class I taught that term) we were all required to show up dressed as ourselves in alternate universe and then to remain in character through the entire class. I arrived as a Sci-Fi Writer’s Muse, a presence that helped inspire parts of the noble series Dr. Who.

Our sweet Briland opened my heart far more than I ever expected

Rachel, aka. Jr., asked for a hamster in 2011. I was resistant to the idea not wanting another live-thing to take care of. But Rachel was brilliant at helping Briland, her hamster, get comfortable so that he spent lots of time out of his cage playing, and eating treats beside both of us. He softened my heart in a way I didn’t realize it could. Dear Briland spawned a whole comic series, became the mascot of the local veterinary hospital, and made me appreciate the importance of life, no matter how small, in a way I never imagined until I met him. He died in the middle of 2012. I still miss him everyday.

The Rapuzzi family shared an incredible lunch with us

April 2012 included an 8 day tour of Colli Orientali del Friuli. The Rapuzzi family had our COF2012 group for lunch, sharing an incredible selection of their older wines. Thanks to them the world still has Schioppettino–Dina and Paolo Rapuzzi had a big hand in helping to preserve many of the varieties indigenous to Friuli and are credited with rediscovering and then saving Schioppettino.

We spent the first week of April in Friuli

A vineyard in Friuli

Serena and Cristian poured their first Schioppetino vertical for us

Serena and Cristian of Ronco del Gnemiz had us for a vertical tasting of their Schioppettino, explaining it was the first time they’d done so. They’re best known for their white wines, but their Schioppettino is some of my favorite. I am so grateful for our time with them.

Angela and Jason Osborne poured her first full vertical of Grace

In June, I met Steven Morgan of Tribeca Grill during a visit to New York City. He toured me through the impressive cellars of the restaurant and then opened a Schioppettino for us to share while we talked. After conversation about education, comics, superheroes, wine, friendship, and travel, he suggested I reach out to Angela Osborne of A Tribute to Grace, saying he thought I’d like her and her wine. That very night I emailed her. A week later she had my friend Katherine and I over for dinner with Angela, her lovely husband Jason, and the first full vertical tasting of Grace they’d hosted. We stayed for hours. Steven was right. I loved her, and her wine.

I returned to Naknek after a decade away

At the end of June, after a decade away, I returned to the waters of Naknek, Alaska where I grew up commercial fishing with my family–the area of Bristol Bay hosts the largest wild salmon run in the world, and one of the most bio-diverse ecosystems in the world. As Rachel does every year, she spent her summer there visiting cousins, her Grammie and Bobba, and her Aunties and Uncles. This photo shows five cousins–Oliver, Mari, and Rachel on the shore, Ecola and Ceara, my Auntee’s daughters in the water.

I didn't die eating oysters with Stephan Vivier

A couple of years ago I discovered a shellfish allergy by having a bad reaction to prawns. I didn’t know what other seafood I was allergic to, however, and so dealt with it by avoiding shellfish entirely. The reaction was too uncomfortable to risk it. In July, I met with Stephane Vivier to taste his Pinot Noir wines. We had a lovely time visiting. I loved his rose’ and Pinot, and thoroughly enjoyed our time. When he asked if we should have lunch and start with oysters I decided to risk it. My thought was–this entire experience is so lovely, if I do die by shellfish, I’d be quite sorry for Stephane, but such a happy time would be the perfect way to go. And if I don’t, it couldn’t be a better time to find out I can still eat oysters. It turns out I can still eat oysters. Vivier wine, then, restored one of my favorite foods to me. The experience has inspired me to go on since and test other shellfish too–it turns out I can eat crab (thank god!), and also scallops (thank god again!).

I spent my summer visiting some of the people I admire

I count myself deeply lucky. I have gotten to spend my time with some of the people I admire most in wine. Here from left: me, holding Ryan and Megan Glaab’s baby boy, Randall Grahm, George Vare, Abe Schoener

I lived for a month below the oldest vines in Willamette Valley

In July, I traveled to Willamette Valley, Oregon and was lucky enough to live for a month at the base of the oldest vines growing in the Willamette–Eyrie Vineyards South Block.

My sister charmed Jacques Lardiere

My sister traveled south to attend IPNC too and while there charmed Jacques Lardiere, the just-retired winemaker of Jadot. What a treat to meet him, and to concentrate hard enough to understand his talk on biodynamics.

My sister and I spent time tasting with Maggie Harrison

With Melanie flying from Alaska to attend IPNC I did what I could to schedule time after for us to also meet two of her favorite winemakers. We were able to have time with Maggie Harrison, of Antica Terra, and also Jason Lett, of Eyrie. Melanie told me after those two are like rock stars for her. I agree.

Fulgencio was generous enough to tell me his story

Someone asked me to pick the single most important event I lived this last year. That sort of question is a kind of metaphysical quandry I find almost impossible to answer. That said, the most moving experience I had was meeting Fulgencio, a vineyard worker in Oregon and then to have him trust me enough to share part of his life story with me. The experience was overwhelming. Then, as if listening to him hadn’t been moving enough, at the end he thanked me it, explaining it healed him to be able to share his story. To share in that kind of intimacy with someone, and to have it marked as life changing by both people… I can only explain the importance of such an experience by saying plainly it’s why I believe any of us are here. Such connections, in my experience, are the meaning of human life.

I spent the year following Ribolla from Friuli through California

One of the lucky projects of 2012 turned out to be following RIbolla Gialla from Friuli all the way back to California, its unlikely North American home. I love this grape. Following its story has also introduced me to a wealth of incredible people–George Vare, Dan Petroski, Steve Matthiasson, Ryan Glaab, Abe Schoener, Matthew Rorick, Robbie Meyers, Nathan Roberts, Chris Bowland, and others. Here the Vare Vineyard is being harvested by a crew directed by Steve Matthiasson.

Paul Draper took time to meet with me

Somehow this year included a wealth of visits with icons of wine, including a number of people that truly helped make American wine what it is today. Among them is Paul Draper. In September, Paul took the time to share several hours with me talking through his history and views of wine, as well as tasting the current wines for Ridge. I often joke that my parents are such intimidating people I am rarely intimidated. Paul Draper stands as such an important presence in the history of California wine, I have to admit I was utterly intimidated to go meet with him. That said, he is known for being down to earth, and quite generous in his willingness to share information and insight with people.

His dog is adorable

And he has an adorable dog.

Scientist Legend Carole Meredith, and her equally brilliant husband Stephen Lagier met with me

My final wine interview of 2012 was with two people I hold deep respect for. Carole Meredith is a genuine legend of science. Thanks to her we know the parent grapes of Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Gamay, and many others. She helped find the origin and originary plant of Zinfandel and Primitivo, thus also helping to boost the local economy of Croatia due to their increase in tourism since (I kid you not–Zinfandel originates from Croatia). Stephen Lagier, her husband, is equally brilliant with a history of having researched chemical changes in vines due to vineyard practices, then going on to a long career in winemaking. Together they now live on Mt Veeder where they grow and make their Lagier-Meredith wines.

I spent the holidays with family

Jr and I closed the year in Alaska. We were able to spend the Christmas holiday in Anchorage, where my parents, and the families of all three of their girls were together at Christmas for the first time since 2006. Christmas Eve we spent with our closest family friends, the Meyers. Here from left: me, my sister Paula, my sister Melanie, and Robyn Meyer–she grew up with us like a sister. Jr and I now spend the New Year holiday in Juneau with Melanie’s family.

Lots of love to everyone! I am so grateful for all that 2012 brought (including all the stuff that felt like total bullshit–hardships hold sometimes the deepest blessings), and more grateful we can now turn in to 2013. May we all be blessed. Amen.

Copyright 2012 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Alaska Holiday 4: Family Photos

0

Most of my family lives in Alaska. My daughter Rachel and I are the only two that live ‘outside,’ as Alaskans call the rest of the United States. My sister Melanie though resides now in Juneau, in Southeast Alaska, with her family. With Alaska being a fifth of the size of the continental U.S., or, the same size as the province of Quebec (where Jr and I also lived for a time), travel from Anchorage to Juneau is significant. Most of the state is inaccessible by car. The point is, having all of us together–Mom and Dad, plus all three of their girls and their girls’ families, isn’t necessarily common. As a result, my mom makes sure we get family photos each time it happens, though she likes the photos taken as family sets. Here are ours from this year.

My dad is 71, and my mom 68. This year they will have been married 50 years. Over Christmas dinner my dad told us about how they spent their first Christmas dating apart and realized they missed each other. My parents had met at University in the center of the state, Fairbanks, but returned to their different family towns on the Western coast for the holidays. Fifty years ago remote Alaska didn’t easily celebrate phone technology. Most homes didn’t have one and villages might share one phone for all the residents. After the New Year they, as he put it, proposed to each other. My parents have been together since. It’s remarkable to think how much they’ve lived in those fifty years together. To talk to each other once during that first holiday apart my mom had to walk across the tundra to the one phone in her small town. Now they’ve raised a family that travels the world, returning regularly to all be together in the far North. Remarkable.

DSC_0062

from left: Dad, Melanie’s girl Mari, Rachel (aka. Jr.), Paula’s girl Melissa, Melanie’s son Oliver, Mom, Paula’s girl Emily

Mom and Dad with their Girls

from left: Melanie, Me, Dad, Mom, Paula

Paula's family

Paula is the oldest of three girls. Her family: Melissa, now a student at NYU, Emily, age 8, Paula, husband Kevin

Melanie's family

Melanie is the middle of three girls. Her family: husband Tim, Oliver is 5, Mari is 11, Melanie

My family

Rachel Marie and I. I am the youngest.

Happy New Year, everyone! Rachel and I have flown from Anchorage to Juneau now to spend the New Year with Melanie’s family on this mountainous island that hosts the state capitol. It’s all mountains and water here. There is a lot of rain today but I’ll try to get photos while we’re here. Like most of the state, it’s a region of vast and dramatic, gorgeous landscape.

Lots of love to all of you. I’m spending the day today reflecting on what I’m grateful for from this last year. There is so much.

Copyright 2012 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Alaska Holiday 3: Drive up the Inlet, A look at the Mountains

5

I developed a yen for long drives from living so remotely here in Alaska, I believe. My best friend in high school lived in Girdwood, a town 30 miles South of Anchorage. The area was so tiny the high schoolers bussed in everyday to attend the same school I went to for 9-12 grade. It’s how she and I met. My senior year, when I had my own truck (real girls drive trucks growing up) I’d drive her home after running or ski practice and we’d hang out.

The year after I graduated, unfortunately, turned out hard as two different friends died in horrible ways–one from hypothermia after missing for 6 weeks, the other killed by the cops after a psychotic break. In the first case, I was away when told the news. In the second, I was at someone’s home for dinner and found out the tragedy by watching my friend get shot on the evening news. (Not my best friend, another friend.) It was unbearable. The long drive out of town towards Girdwood, with such massive mountains–so much bigger than me, so much older than me–turned into my respite when I needed the space to deal with grief. I’d set off in silence heading South and drive along the Turnagain Arm till my feelings had adjusted enough to turn around and head back home. Sometimes it was a long long drive before I hit that point.

Now, decades later, there is still a comfort for me in the shape of these mountains. They still look the same. I recognize the peaks, the saddle between two mountaintops, the slopes along the roadway. And the water, exactly how it looks when it is rushing in versus moving out. Whenever possible I make a point of driving out the Turnagain Arm at least once on a visit back to Anchorage.

These photos might show you why. Taken from multiple points on the drive towards Girdwood.

Looking up the Turnagain Arm

Looking at the Kenai Peninsula

View from Beluga Point

Danger Point

Love this view

The frozen Turnagain Arm

Looking up Bird Ridge

Copyright 2012 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.

Alaska Holiday 2: Family Photos, Visiting my Uncle and Auntee

1

My father’s family is Inupiat from the Norton Sound area of Alaska on the Western Coast, just below where the nose of the state, the Seward Peninsula, stretches out towards Siberia. My Uncle and Auntee come down from Unalakleet in the winters now to spend the cold months with their granddaughter outside Wasilla. We were able to drive out this past week to visit, and left with beluga muktuk, and hard-smoke salmon. What a treat!

I’m the youngest of three girls. My father is the youngest of three boys. My birthday is the same as my cousins, but I was born the year after he died in an accident. As a result, my Uncle and Auntee have always called me “Baby girl” in honor of the day I share with their late son.

Here are photos of our family. My Auntee is Athabascan from Interior Alaska. She is about to turn 82!

Two brothers

two brothers–my dad is on the left

Auntee Mary and me

Auntee Mary and I

Auntee Mary and Jr

Auntee Mary and Jr

Jr and Uncle Leonard

Jr and Uncle Leonard

Uncle Leonard and me

Uncle Leonard and I

Two Brothers

my Dad and Uncle Leonard

All of us

from left: Jr and I, Mom and Dad (in the back), Auntee Mary, Uncle Leonard, niece Mari, and sister Melanie

Uncle Leonard

Dad

Happy Holidays!

Copyright 2012 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com.