Home Blog Page 66

Syrah in the Southern Hemisphere and Wine Review: Luca 2008 Laborde Double Select Syrah

Though Syrah began its life in the Northern Hemisphere, and is widely grown through Europe, and the United States, it actually has higher production volume in the Southern Hemisphere. There is also a lot of export from some of these Southern Hemisphere wine makers so that by now the world is familiar with the idea, at least, of either Australian, or South American wines, for example.

The differing growing climates of various regions, plus the differing production techniques of wine makers combine to create utterly unique renditions of what would otherwise be called the same grape. It can be remarkable to taste the contrast between a varietal wine from one area, and that of another, especially when history connects the vines back to the same place of origin.

As the story goes, Syrah originated (or was developed into what we know today, at least) in the Rhone region of France. As colonial practices took people from Europe all over the world, other cultural practices spread with them. Wine is no exception to this.

In the late 1800’s Syrah vines were brought from France to Argentina and planted in the high elevations of the region’s mountains. In fact, it is in Argentina that Syrah is grown at the highest elevations in the world. To add layer to the story, within a decade of Syrah being brought to Argentina, the phylloxera blite hit Europe, almost fully devasting the vineyards of that continent.

Overtime it has been discovered that with persistence Syrah does well in the high altitude region (though the warmer parts of it) of Argentina. The elevation allows a slower ripening for grapes generally, which is thought by some to offer a differing complexity in the flavors. Interestingly though, in many cases Syrah in Argentina ripens faster than other grapes, demanding harvest earlier in the growing season than some of the grape varieties. As a result, many wine growers strive to slow the ripening process of Syrah in this region by placing trellises with live foliage through it above the vines. This covering allows a softening of the solar effect, and thus a slowing too of the grapes’ maturation, hopefully, with an enlivened complexity of flavors as well. The geography of the place, then, demands harvest techniques, and wine making practices that differ from other areas of the world.

click on comic to enlarge

Luca wines are led by Laura Catena with wine maker Luis Reginato, a man raised and trained in Argentina itself. Luca wines commitment is to small production wines made from old growth vineyards of Argentina. As such, Catena purchased vineyards with a story behind them. Her labels tend to honor the history behind it by naming the person that started the vineyard the Luca wine is now made from.

The Laborde Double Select Syrah includes, then, the story of Laborde, the man that first planted this particular vineyard site. As it goes, he wanted to try growing Syrah in Argentina, so he visited the vineyards of the Rhone and selected what he thought were the best, strongest example of Rhone Syrah. He then planted them in Argentina, and after allowing the vines to take hold and develop he inspected them all and selected only the best of those to keep–Laborde’s Double Selection, only the best of the best will do.

The result of Laborde’s early efforts, and Luca’s continued focus is a surprising, and concentrated Syrah that manages to strike a balance with sophisticated scents and flavors in a very full body. Luca has performed some kind of magic, mathematics, or sub-particle physics here (more likely all three) by offering in this 2008 Syrah what feels like drinking two glasses of the varietal simultaneously–there’s a whole lotta wine in that glass! And yet, having said that, the wine is well-balanced, pleasant to drink, with lots of pleasant fruit accented by some pepper bite, hints of coffee, and a wonderful mouth feel. When approaching this wine you’d better be ready for its intensity, but expect it to make you comfortable with what it has to offer at the same time. This wine is perfect for grilled meats (and beets!), and will be enjoyable to drink on its own as well.

Each wine producing area is thought to have its own character. Argentinian wines, with their higher elevation growing conditions, are often thought to show more concentrated fruits. Historically commercial wine making in Argentina had a strong focus on quantity, seeking high volume production. In some ways this weakened the International reputation of Argentinian wine’s quality. Wine makers in the last few decades, and in some areas throughout Argentinian wine making history, have worked to change this practice and this reputation.

Luca Wine is just such a company keeping its focused on older, well-established vineyards, and small production with close, hand’s on attention being their focus. By working with Reginato, Catena is further relying on his expertise of the local industry and geography to develop the label’s quality. Luca is a wine company to keep an eye on. They are thought to already offer a celebration of what Argentinian wine can show. I’m interested in seeing both how their particular vintages develop with time–this 2008 Syrah is certainly drinkable now but will be tasty, and even more subtle and complex in a few years too–and also what Luca will continue to do with their wines in general.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

The Washington Wine Industry, and Wine Review: Stone Cap Columbia Valley, Washington, Syrah

With the international reputation of Syrah, to spend a week focusing on it demands investigating the qualities of this grape in various growing areas.

Incredibly, Washington State offers the second largest wine growing industry in the United States–second only to California. It is understood that wines were introduced to the Washington area early in the 1800s with a small focus on Italian grapes beginning the tradition. At that time, and for more than a century, production of the beverage was low with a focus on only local enjoyment. Further, in the 1900s prohibition hit what is now the state earlier than in many other parts of the country, nearly destroying the vineyards of the area.

It was not until the mid-1900s that commercial development of the Washington-state wine industry began to take hold, leading to National attention with a top-100 award from The Wine Spectator in the late 1980s. Still, today the Washington wine industry continues to juggle a challenging balance with some highly respected and award winning individual wines, and an overall reputation of being a younger wine industry.

Stone Cap 2009 Columbia Valley Washington Syrah

click on comic to enlarge

The Stone Cap Columbia Valley Syrah showcases the production potential of this varietal within the Washington industry. Though the vines of this estate have only been growing since 1999, the Monson Family’s wines have already won “Best Value” Estate Grown Wine awards for each of their several Stone Cap wine varietals, including this 2009 Syrah. To add to the charm of the brand, it is entirely family owned and farmed.

Red wines found only half of the Washington state wine industry, with more of the success being settled on the side of white wines. The Columbia Valley, however, where Stone Cap is located, stands as the flagship of wine production for the state, and this particular AVA (American Viticulture Area) is looked to for its red wines, with Syrah as one of its main mistresses. Still, the region is understood to be deep within the process of coming to understand its own micro-climates, and best developed wine growing practices.

The Washington wine industry is young, and as such many reviewers have criticized the wines of the area as lacking character. It is said that, because of the youth of this wine region, many producers are still finding their feet, so to speak, in generating wines with balanced flavors. With the newer history of the wine industry, growers have less knowledge to draw on for how to best respond to the particular growing conditions, and season-to-season changes of the region. As such, there is a degree of luck in what best practices will produce a top wine in any particular year. Further, some of the wine-making styles of the area have been questioned in the past by top critics, with the Eric Asimov of the New York Times stating back in 2005 that Washington Syrahs have far too much propensity for oak, and overall imbalance. The question, then, is how the syrahs of the region may have developed in these last 6 years.

In investigating the wines of any region it is necessary to strike a balance between discovering what is uniquely offered by that particular region–each wine growing area has its own character–and at the same time giving that region enough respect as to critique honestly what it does have to offer. That is, it is in being willing to see where a wine could develop further that we are generous enough to believe in its longer term potential. This balance becomes particularly important in considering the wines of less established growing traditions where we would want to bolster its efforts, and at the same time expect more from it in the long run.

The Washington wine region is at an important stage where it has garnered deserved respect for its wine making abilities, and yet is still young enough for us to expect a great deepening in its quality. As should be obvious, the heritage of other wine regions does not show in Washington reds. But, to expect wines of this area to compare directly to longer standing traditions would be unfair. There is certainly a sense of having to choose carefully from Washington wines with a consideration of your own taste preferences. That is, many of us dedicated to Old World styles are not going to enjoy the Washington offerings to the same degree. It is also necessary to investigate which wine-makers are able to bring a particular knowledge of the area’s growing conditions to their wine production. However, I do believe Washington is worth researching, and considering for a number of high quality wines from the region.

This particular varietal wine by Stone Cap showcases the dark fruit and spice characteristics of the syrah. Syrah is considered to be one of the three most tannic grape varieties (Nebbiolo, and Cabernet Sauvignon being the other two), celebrating, then, a textured mouth feel and good aging potential as well. This wine also shows the dryness of syrah, with a good full body that can hold up to rich flavored meats, and stronger cheeses.

Stone Cap Syrah is an approachable, versatile wine that definitely offers excellent value. Coming in at well-below the $20 mark, you are getting a wine here that does more than you’d expect for the price. The nose is lovely, and I enjoyed spending time just drinking in its scent. Admittedly, much of its complexity was found there. The flavors were less developed than the bouquet, but the wine was pleasant to drink, and will not work against your food choices. Again, you are getting a lot for the money.

The Stone Cap Syrah is a wine to be enjoyed with the woodland, slightly wild flavors of game birds. It will also hold up to stronger cheeses. Enjoy the nose of this wine, and approach drinking it with a playfulness that will do best to bring out its flavors for you.

I enjoyed the experience I had with this varietal. I’m curious to discover how a bottle will do with age, and hope to be able to taste it again in a few years. I’ll be keeping an eye on other wines from the Stone Cap Winery to see how they develop as well.

***

Post Edit:

Justin Michaud from Goose Ridge wines was kind enough to write in regards to this Stone Cap Syrah wine review. Thanks, Justin! I’m grateful to hear from you. This post edit is to share some important information he shared regarding aging of the Stone Cap as bottled, versus the wine in general.

Here’s his comment:

…Anyway I am glad you enjoyed the StoneCap Syrah, I would like to mention that we are using a composite cork on this [The Stone Cap wines] project that is only good for 3 years so this is not the wine to put in your cellar rather something to be enjoyed now. The vineyard I work with on these wines has lots of age ability potential it is just not where we are going with these wines, you can check out Goose Ridge wines to see what we are doing with these grapes to make a wine that has more cellar
potential.
Thanks for the write up and best of luck.

Thanks, Justin! I look forward to trying your other Goose Ridge wines as well!

Cheers!

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

The History of Syrah, and Wine Review: Barruol 2009 “La Dore’e” Cote Rotie

The history of Syrah includes near obliteration of the grape, and travel throughout the wine growing regions of the world. As recently as the 1960’s Syrah stood out as an under privileged grape, even with it having been brought from the Northern Rhone region of France into the likes of Australia, Argentina, and California, among others.

Syrah is one of the oldest, established grape varietals, and helped develop the traditions of the Northern Rhone region. It’s origins are contested, with some claiming it was brought over from Persia as early as the 3rd century, and others saying it originated in the Rhone valley itself.

Though the juice produced from this fruit is hearty with strong tannins that do well for aging potential, the plant itself has proved vulnerable to pests, most especially the grape louse, phylloxera. The 19th century showed almost total devastation to the vineyards of Europe due to a phylloxera epidemic that spread rapidly through the fields of the continent. It is said that 2/3 to 9/10 of the grape fields of France were destroyed from this crisis.

Syrah’s vulnerability to such issues impacted growers reliance on it for producing wine. By the 1960’s the highly regarded fields of the Northern Rhone were under producing, and held little room on the international stage. In the 1970’s, however, Syrah was ‘rediscovered’ by numerous wine critics, leading to wine drinking attention returning to an investment in Syrah at a global level. Within a decade the Northern Rhone, regulated to use only Syrah for red wines, had again boomed.

Syrah was exported to multiple areas of the globe as early as the 1800s, arriving in Australia as Shiraz in the 1830s, and in Argentina in the 1880s. As a result Syrah is a grape that enjoys prominence in several major wine industries around the world, and as a blending grape in numerous others.

Louis Barruol 2009 “La Dore’e” Cote Rotie, blended and imported by Kermit Lynch

click on comic to enlarge

We open a week of focusing on Syrah with a classic incarnation of it–a French Cote Rotie, the Northern Rhone Syrah-focused wine rich in tradition. This particular rendition of the Cote Rotie is blended by Louis Barruol, a wine maker known for his work in Gigondas at Chateau de Saint Cosme. Incredibly, Barruol is a fourtheenth-generation wine maker.

Barruol has also begun working with some of the best growers of the Northern Rhone, and acting as a negociant–purchasing portions of their grape production to blend into his own wines. This “La Dore’e” is just such a wine. Working closely with Kermit Lynch, Barruol has selected portions of an ancient Syrah still maintained by small production Northern Rhone growers, and produced this exquisite example of a Cote Rotie.

Cote Rotie is, of course, a regulated wine. It is one I find fascinating for its focus on a seemingly unusual combination. That is, though many Cote Rotie’s are produced as full Syrah wines, regulation allows that up to 20% of the wine can be sourced from non-Syrah grapes.

What captures my attention, however, is that it is the white grape Viognier that wine makers of a Cote Rotie may choose to blend in (that is, regulations demand only these two grapes can be blended to count as this style of wine). The result is the body of a red wine, with the scents and flavors of a delicate white dancing through it.

A good Cote Rotie will often showcase the Viognier based scents of honeysuckle or jasmine, coupled with Syrah’s tendencies towards red or black fruits, and hints of meat and smoke. The flavors in the mouth will usually follow. What a combination! I say I am fascinated by the Cote Rotie style because where else would it occur to you to expect both white floral and smokey-meat notes?

This Barruol-Lynch project offers just such a blend. Though Kermit Lynch’s wine site lists only Syrah in the wine’s technical information, there are unmistakable Viognier scents and flavors of honeysuckle and other white flowers.

I was lucky enough to drink this wine with some of my close friends. We marveled too at how the scents and flavors opened over time as we drank it slowly. While it began with tightly focused, crisp white floral scents, the wine opened into more fruit scents and meat flavors. To capture yet another surprising combination hosted within this wine–it manages to simultaneously grip your mouth with drying qualities, and yet make it water for more.

Enjoy!

Seriously. When it comes to this wine–enjoy!

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Nebbiolo Characteristics Card

1

click on comic to enlarge

One of the things I like about having focused on Nebbiolo this week is that it’s also given me the chance to reflect on Italian food. As I’ve tasted these wines, I’ve had foods, and images of countryside put to the imagination as well. The commonality is a sense of rich simplicity, ranging from the rustic to the elegant. The encompassing feelings and flavors of terroir captured in a Nebbiolo reflect links to the styles of cooking.

Nebbiolo is one of the well-known grape varieties that flourishes within very particular conditions. Like Pinot Noir, it is a grape that knows what it wants, and demands the right circumstances to blossom into full expression. Outside that range and the flavors of Nebbiolo can suffer. As such, it is a grape variety that, so far, has done best within one particular region–Piedmont, Italy. Even there a slight shift in the climate and sun exposure has been shown to alter its flavors noticeably.

People are currently experimenting with growing Nebbiolo in other parts of the world. California, Washington, Australia, and Mexico are currently minor growing areas for Nebbiolo. Interestingly, the wine production market in Mexico is flourishing locally but producers prove reluctant to consider export. To taste such wines, then, we’ll have to take a business trip to the Baja. Damn.

If you’re interested in Nebbiolo, the Piedmont district of Northern Italy is still the main go-to area. Take into account that such wines generally like to age, or be given room to breathe, so decant before drinking. There is a nice richness to Nebbiolo that is well worth exploring. Enjoy it with stronger flavored meats, or slow cooked stews. It does well too with more flavorful, firm cheeses.

Enjoy!

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: 2007 Ronchi Barbaresco

click on comic to enlarge

The truth is I love wine for the experience of it. It is an opportunity to immerse yourself in your own sensory riches, and through them explore the specifics of a beautiful world. It is easy for people to take wine culture as elitist, or inaccessible. I suppose at times some people do in fact act that way too. But ignoring the loveliness of wine for such reasons is missing out on truly special opportunities for joy.

Wine to me is the consideration of a story. Each wine has its history behind it–the development of the vineyard itself, the family that invested in making it happen, the intricacies of making the aromas, and flavors of particular grapes sing their most beautiful. The considerations that go into bringing out the expression of any particular wine are indicative of both the simplicity and brilliance of which humanity is capable.

Barbaresco is considered to be one of the finest expressions of Nebbiolo. Carrying a dark, almost black skin, the Nebbiolo grape offers some of the strongest tannins of any varietal. It is most often also touched with a strong acidity. As such, the producer of a Nebbiolo based wine must consider the best ways to bring out more fruit from the grape to establish balanced flavors, and also how to best enliven the complexities of a wine that requires age in a market that wants to drink wine young.

In the grip of such a strong grape, Barbaresco is known for accomplishing such balance and with it also delicacy of flavors. There is a pleasant lightness found in a good Barbaresco, even as the wine itself will likely have a full body. This particular Barbaresco furthers the charm by dancing a smooth or silky mouth feel, with a kind of freshness in the flavors associated with a younger wine. Again, Nebbiolo is often thought of as a grape that needs age. In this particular Barbaresco, the wine does well with drinking now, and at the same time could certainly develop further with a rest in your cellar.

2007 is considered to be a particularly good year for the grapes of this region. North Berkeley Imports, who brought this particular wine to North America, describes the wine maker, Giancarlo Rocca, as having taken full, and simple advantage of the gifts of this vintage by presenting a straightforward expression of it. The result is lovely.

I am grateful to have gotten to taste this wine now. It does well with some time in the decanter, as any Nebbiolo wine generally well. If you can manage the wait, I recommend holding onto it too for drinking a few years from now.

If you’re considering any Nebbiolo wines, I recommend allowing yourself time with them. This grape brings a rare balance of strength and delicacy that does well with a slower approach to the tasting and drinking. It generally offers a wine to simultaneously enjoy and learn from–a beautiful kind of balance.

As with any wine I like to say the first question is always, is it interesting? Only after spending time with that do you then ask yourself, do I like it? This Barbaresco is a wine that pleasantly answers Yes to both questions.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Sottimano 2009 Langhe Nebbiolo

click on comic to enlarge

The Sottimano 2009 Langhe Nebbiolo is a great example of how some things just get better with age. This wine is sure to be fantastic after a little more time in the bottle. If you can’t wait to taste it though, just give it some good time in the decanter and the flavors will balance and breathe for pleasant drinkability now.

The Sottimano Langhe Nebbiolo comes from the well-respected Basarin cru in Neive. This area is known for making some of the best Barbaresco, and in fact Sottimano could have qualified his vines for just such a project. However, the plants used to produce this particular wine are a mere 14-15 years old, on the young end for showing the balance and complexity of Barbaresco. As a result, Sottimano chose to declassify from the Barbaresco DOCG to produce a straight Nebbiolo varietal instead.

As noted, this Nebbiolo is grown in a Barbaresco area. This area of the Piedmont offers more moderate temperatures than the Barolo growing vineyards, and also tend to grow grapes with slightly softer tannins. Grapes from this area tend to be picked sooner, and generally ages more quickly than grapes from the Barolo areas as well.

The Sottimano family is known for producing high quality wines. This Langhe Nebbiolo is no exception.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Parusso 2004 Barolo (175 ml.)

click on comic to enlarge

Barolo is often considered one of Italy’s finest wines. It is a red DOCG wine made in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy. As such it is well-regulated, made with only the Nebbiolo grape, from vines planted on slopes with the proper orientation, and covered in calcareous-clay soils.

Calcareous clay is soil that is often chalky, and generally rich in lime. As in with any grape, the type of soil (and overall environment) the fruit is grown from offers various flavor and quality elements to the juice eventually made from it. The ground Barolo is grown in is thought to help temper Nebbiolo’s strong acidity adding a little more softness to the juice grown in the region. The temperatures of this Nebbiolo region are also taken to soften the heat of the juice as well.

Barolo is known to be a long-aging wine, doing well with spending ten years and longer in the bottle. It’s flavors are often associated with notions of tar, and roses, with hints of red fruit.

Being shown in the half-bottle, this particular Parusso Barolo is ready to drink. I recommend letting it decant for some time–it tastes lovely straight to the glass, but the menthol flavors that showed at first softened considerably opening to more dark fruit, with light vegetal elements.

Wonderful tannins here.

***

If you’re in Flagstaff, this wine is available in the full bottle (which is said to show less of the menthol and more of the fruit than the half-bottle I tasted due to the difference in aging qualities shown in the differing bottle sizes) at The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Tintero Rosso

click on comic to enlarge

***

I’ve decided to occasionally take a week to focus on specific grapes, culminating in a characteristics card for the grape featured that week. Such weeks will try to include a wine where the particular grape variety serves as the foundation to a blend, then several wines predominately featuring, and in fact also serving as a sole focus on creating a varietal wine.

***

This week we’ll focus on Nebbiolo, beginning with a blend imported by Kermit Lynch Wine. The Tintero Rosso brings together Nebbiolo and Barbera primarily, adding a bit of Dolcetto, and Cabernet Franc for lightness and verve.

This is a drinkable, spry, young table wine that offers excellent value coming in within the $10-20 range. It is food friendly with light tannins, and pleasing acidity offering just a slight grip in the mouth.

Nebbiolo often shows strong tannins. As a result, it is not uncommon for Nebbiolo wine to be blended with Barbera, which has very light tannins in comparison. Nebbiolo on its own often takes years of aging to bring its tannins and acidity into balance, by blending in Barbera the tannins are softened, and by bringing in hints of Dolcetto and Cabernet Franc, a little lighter focus on fruit and earth is also offered. A lovely blend. Well worth drinking, especially at the price!

***

I was lucky enough to taste this wine at Pizzicletta, Flagstaff, AZ, USA’s hot new Italian-style Pizza place. Their food is fantastic, and they focus on a selection of high quality Italian wines, plus local beers on tap. If you’re in Flagstaff, or visiting the area, be sure to check them out!

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Peter Franus 2009 Red Hills Lake County Red

click on comic to enlarge

The flavors of this 2009 Peter Franus Red Hills Lake County Red Wine are fresh, and pleasing. This is a well-structured, well-balanced red with inviting scents and flavors.

As he describes it, Peter Franus wines focus on small production, and reduced intervention “in a wine’s evolution.” He sources his fruit from multiple small vineyard sites managed by small production growers, selecting the sites based on his belief in the grape’s suitability to the area, and his faith in the growers of that fruit. From here Peter Franus works with a small team to develop what he believes is the best those grapes can offer.

The Red Hills Lake Country Red is a classic Grenache, Syrah, Mourvedre wine done with California influences. The 2009 vintage brings together the richness and subtly that such a blend can offer with a focus on balance between structure and flavor.

This wine read to me like a piece of fine literature–astutely crafted to pull you in, and take you along on a well-focused journey. Enjoy!

Thank you to Mickey of Lloyd’s Liquors in Prescott, Arizona for sharing this wine with me.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Livera Fixin En Olivier 2006 Burgundy

click on comic to enlarge

What a treasure! This wine was truly special to taste now. It was clear from both the color, and concentration of flavors that this wine has deepened in its age. I’m thrilled to have tasted this Livera Fixin now.

Fixin wines (those from the Fixin village of the Cotes de Nuits area of Burgundy) are sometimes thought of as strict, and focused, reflecting a smaller band of scents and flavors. In the hands of Philippe Livera, this Fixin wine has a luscious, complex range of flavors, offering a beautiful turn of earthen scents mixed with deep berries and pepper. This is shown in the mouth, along with the tartness of a cranberry, and a layering of smoked meats.

***

Though I recognize describing a wine with references to tundra herbs, and caribou soup are certainly *not* typical in wine culture, this wine overwhelmed me with such scents and flavors. In fact, the longer the wine breathed the more it smelled and tasted of caribou soup.

For those of you that have not had the pleasure of eating caribou soup, one of the most beautiful foods any where, another way to think of this reference would be to imagine the scents offered by a wild-game bouillon. Wild game has a richer, more herbal scent and flavor than store bought meats. But it is also a leaner, cleaner tasting flavor because of the remote, so active lifestyle of the animal. The flavor is also reflected through it’s diet. Caribou live off the low bush plants of the tundra that grow out of the wet, dark earth peat of the north.

Somehow, this wine carries flavors of dark berries, herbs, pepper, and the lean, clean, almost-musky flavors of wild game.

If you have the chance to taste this hard to find wine, I recommend it. Other vintages by Philippe Livera are also considered jewels of Burgundy.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com