VINTJS 2010 Sauvignon Blanc Napa Valley

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VINTJS 2010 Sauvignon Blanc Napa Valley

The Wine: Finally (in Northern California), summer has arrived. Summer time means cold, refreshing white wine is bound to be on the table and new releases from last year’s vintage are making their way to market. Sauvignon Blanc is a wine best consumed sooner rather than later . I was particularly happy to seethe VINTJS stemming from Napa Valley, which I liked so much last year. However, I noticed a change in the name of cellar origin. Last year’s offering came from Maxwell Creek Cellars and this year’s is from JBA Cellars – however a visit to Tax and Trade Bureau confirms both wines are from the same ‘super’ origin. Thank you Internet! So how is this wine?

The Experience:

Color: Nice light hay/straw yellow.

Nose: (Directly from the fridge) Very bright and crisp pear, pineapple and little beer hoppyness; nice.

Palate: (Directly from the fridge) Pear, little grassyness, pineapple, flabby and a bit too ‘heavy’. Lime lingers on the finish. Lacks crisp acidity.

Bottom Line: Next-Wine-Please!/Give-A-Try

Fresh out of the fridge, the nose on this wine was so attractive.  But as the wine warmed up, the nose lost some the bright pear and citrus notes and the palate just became flabby. I wish this wine had more acidity and crispness.  I know last year was a cold growing season, then a massive heat spike a few weeks before harvest, I wonder how that affected this wine? At $7, I’d be more willing to try something else before I’d revisit this wine. But if you kept this wine ice cold, I think you’d enjoy this wine more. What did you think of this wine?

VINTJS 2009 Pinot Noir Santa Lucia Highlands, Monterey

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Thanks to all who participated in my poll and decided the next three varietals I am going to review on my site! The winners are:

1. Pinot Noir – 32.49%

2. Red Wine Blend – 25.71%

3. Zinfandel and Petite Sirah – 11.74% each (Executive decission, I’m going to review Petite Sirah since I reviewed so many Zins just a few weeks back. But I have several Zins from TJ’s in my stash and it’s one of my favorite varietals, so we’ll talk about that very soon, too!)

VINTJS 2009 Santa Lucia Highlands Pinot Noir

The Wine: Pinot Noir is one of the four Noble Grapes; it’s also one of the most challenging grapes to grow and then produce amazing wine from. For lack of taking its Noble Title away, it’s a sensitive grape. Weather, soil, atmosphere, air quality, temperature and water, they all can vastly effect the success in producing rich grapes to make wine with; to make matters more challenging, any Enologist will tell you, you must stress the vines during growth so they struggle, thus producing richer and more complex grapes and ultimately wines. This puts into context why you don’t see ‘cheap’ Pinot Noir on many shelves, and if you do see one for $4, I’d be highly suspect of its ability to deliver anything more than a cheap buzz. Our wine today comes from the Santa Lucia Highlands in Monterey County, California. This AVA has prime coastal fog and air, along with the rich California sun and soil to produce some Pinots which are worth trying, which is why it’s on the review board tonight…

The Experience:

Color: Right away, the youth of this wine is revealed through it’s very violet color. There are the slightest hints of red hues in the center of the bowl, but the wine remains rather thin in density. I’m going to go on a limb here and predict this is not the richest of wines.

Nose: Directly out of the bottle after removing the cork, this wine smells like applesauce. Kinda cool. It then develops into a cider-y nose with hints of several baking spices (cinamin, all-spice) making themselves known. Like a classic Pinot Noir, you begin to pick up earthy and grassy (green) qualities which definitely inform you that you are about to drink Pinot Noir.

Palate: Tart sour cherries was the first note I wrote down, followed by a short and more than slightly alcohol driven finish. Upon my second tasting, I tooke note of the earthy qualities picked up on the nose which deliver equally as apparent on the palate, but oddly, hardly any oak or vanilla components are picked up. I’m not sure if there are tannins or if my tounge is reacting to the 14.5% alcohol. Judging by the ‘drying’ effect of my entire mouth, I wouldn’t doubt for a second if was about 2-5% Petite Sirah in this wine. The body of this wine is on the thin side. The lingering finish reminds me of Welch’s Grape Juice with a little baking spice added.

Bottom Line: Next-Wine-Please!

I was really hoping for a diamond in the rough. Good Pinot Noir for under $10 is something hard to come by. But it happens! There was the 2007 Picket Fence Russian River Pinot Noir for $8.99 which wasn’t my style of Pinot, but it definitely delievered a more complex and ‘deeper’ wine. (Check out my friend Jason’s review, it was his wine of 2010) To be fair though, that was a hustle buy and the producer was normally asking for $30 per cork. Pinot Noir is a really difficult wine to review because you will hear ‘experts’ speak of its subtitles and power, which are completely contradictory attributes. Ultimately, these wines need a lot of harmony and balance between all components. This wine is rather disjointed and lacks depth in the fruit and too much (apparent) alcohol. I’d be really curious to see how this wine ‘calms’ down over the course of 1-2 years. If anyone does save a bottle that long, please do share!

Question: What was the last very good Pinot Noir you got for under $10?

Wine Info:

  • Price: $8.99
  • Cellar: Trader Moon Wine Company. Manteca, California
  • Grape Varietal(s): Pinot Noir, Petite Sirah?
  • Alcohol: 14.5%
  • Appellation: Santa Lucia Highlands. Monterey, California

VINTJS – 2009 Chardonnay – Chalk Hill AVA

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In California, Chardonnay is big business.  My store has two full bays of this varietal, 95% of it from California.  So how does a Chardonnay stick out with so much selection to choose from?  Be good and be offered at a great price.

The Wine: The Chalk Hill AVA (American Viticultural Area) is one of the better known locations in the northeastern corner of the Russian River Valley.  What makes Chalk Hill different from its surroundings is the white chalky volcanic ash found in the soil and higher terrain which keeps the region warmer than the foggy Russian River Valley, but cooler than the Alexander or Knights Valley regions.  Chardonnay is king of this mountain, but red grapes (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Malbec and Petit Verdot) are showing up in greater numbers.  There are only a handful of wineries in this limited region; after doing the research where the VINTJS wine was sourced, it seems to have a long and strong connection to this terroir…

The Experience: You will be treated to a sweet and tangy fruit on the nose; think pineapple amplified by another exotic component like guava.  This juice was treated to one-year’s time in oak barrels, so you will find vanilla, oak, honey and buttered popcorn on the nose, as well.  After my first taste, my initial reaction was “Damn, this is a very drinkable wine!”  The wine consists of 96.4% Chardonnay grapes and 3.6% Orange Muscat, which gives this wine a very pleasant sweet finish, yet it remains relatively balanced.  The Orange Muscat provides a nice way to sail away on the finish after the acidity and crispness of the Chardonnay.  After a few minutes, you will recall this great citrus flavor still lingering in your mouth and it beckons you for another taste of the wine.  This is good wine, but not for everyone if you like drier, less sweet wines in general.

The Bottom Line: Give-A-Try/Buy-Half-A-Case

The only thing keeping me from giving this a ‘Buy-A-Case’ rating is the sweetness.  This may not be the ideal wine for most typical Chardonnay food pairings, but it’s a great sipping wine for a party.  I recommended this to a customer for her holiday party, she came back with the news that one guest said this was one of the best chardonnays she’s ever had and was shocked to learn it came from a Trader Joes’ label and floored it costs only $9 per cork!  Stock up on this for your next cocktail party or prepare for Spring/Summer 2011 BBQs while this lasts.

Question: What white wine do you serve when you need to provide several bottles for a party or dinner?

Wine Dork Info:

  • Appellation: Chalk Hill – Sonoma County
  • Cellar: Healdsburg Cellars, Healdsburg, CA.
  • Grape Varietals: 96.4% Chardonnay, 3.6% Orange Muscat
  • Barrel Aging: 100% barrel fermented (new oak, 1 year oak, 2 year oak)
  • Alcohol: 13.98%
  • pH: 3.49
  • SO2: 75 ppm
  • TA: 5.6 g/L
  • RS: <4 g/L
  • Fining Agent: Bentonite/Potassium Caseinate 

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