Round Table: Walla Walla, Pt. 4

January 18, 2010 by Wino  
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The last installment of the Walla Walla Round Table, we bring you the Syrahs (at long last!). Not nearly a complete list of everything Walla2 has to offer, our Round Table session with scads of bottles brought back from Walla Walla was a daunting one. But, with a panel rostered with seasoned and disciplined professionals, we studiously worked our way through the lineup to bring you a mere sampling of our long weekend in Onion Town. Now, you’ll have to get over there yourself to try these and the myriad other wines flowing through the land of many rivers.

The Syrahs

Saviah Cellars
2006 Syrah
Red Mountain
$30

On the nose, striking notes of dark fruit and smoked meats with floral characteristics peaking through. On the palate, it has even more sizzle and pep, with smoke, meat and intense, dark fruit seasoned with anise, while maintaining a surprising freshness. Expressive and complex, it’s the total package of Syrahs. An overall favorite of the panel.

Saviah Cellars
2006 Syrah
Walla Walla Valley
$32

With less oak than you would expect, this WWV Syrah greets you with herbs and spices. Light and elegant on the palate, it’s a refreshing switch from the intensity of most Syrahs, while it still has enough oomph to go the distance on the finish with flavors of cherries, plums and olives.

Round Table: Walla Walla, Pt. 3

December 9, 2009 by Wino  
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We brought back so many wines from our trip to Walla Walla this year that we decided to split them up into four Round Table segments. In this third part, we examine the Cabernet Sauvignons that we snagged in the land o’ many rivers. Stay tuned for Part 4, where we delve into the many Syrahs in Walla2.

The Cabernet Sauvignons

Whitman Cellars
2005 Cabernet Sauvignon
Walla Walla Valley
$36

The Whitman Cab Sauv combines seriousness and glee in the manner of Mary Poppins. On the nose, you get some green pepper and other vegetal notes, along with a hint some Juicy Fruit gum. On the palate, it’s earthy and textured along with tart, sweet fruits and a Bing cherry finish. Really well balanced and structured, this wine has a little something for everyone. You may find yourself singing, “A spoon full of sugar helps the medicine go down…”

Dusted Valley
2006 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon
Columbia Valley
$45

Thick, rich, chewy and viscous, this Cab has the texture of a late-harvest, though it isn’t. It’s an artery-clogger in wine form. Most interesting on the attack, it has some earthiness and a little funk, along with suggestions of chocolate covered cherries. Big and lush, the flavors meld together on the mid-palate, and slowly fade through the long finish. This is a wine that eats like a meal.

Round Table: Walla Walla, Pt. 2

September 15, 2009 by Wino  
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Among all the wines we brought back from Walla Walla, there were just a few Merlots, but boy were they worth talking about. Keep checking back, because in Part 3 of this Round Table, we’ll take a look at Cabernet Sauvignon, and in Part 4, we’ll look at the many Syrah’s Walla Walla wineries are turning out.

The Merlots

Pepper Bridge Winery
2006 Merlot
92% Merlot, 3% Cabernet Sauvignon, 3% Malbec, 2% Cabernet Franc
Walla Walla Valley
$50

From the nose to the palate, the Pepper Bridge Merlot is like the freckle-faced adolescent girl who suddenly stuns the schoolyard boys at her own debutante ball. On the nose, the Merlot brings red rope licorice, sandy mineral notes and a heat worthy of a day on the beach building sandcastles. On the palate, though, it proves to be silky, sexy and confident—trading flip-flops and a pail for high heels and a rhinestone encrusted clutch. With dark fruits and spice, and a mysterious intensity, this PYT (pretty young thing) is sure to be turning heads for a long time to come.

James Leigh Cellars
Spofford Station 2004 Merlot
Walla Walla Valley
$40

On the nose, the Spofford Station Merlot by JLC Cellars recalls a well-worn overstuffed chair in a mahogany lined library. That funk that comes from a lived-in room, worn carpets, dust on picture frames and stories imbedded in the walls. On the palate, it offers a rich juiciness up front, followed by stemmy notes like bitters in cocktails. Pull a book off the shelf, put on your smoking jacket, settle in to that faithful chair, and imbibe.

Round Table: Walla Walla, Pt. 1

August 31, 2009 by Wino  
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For this session of the Round Table, we traveled to Walla Walla like crusaders and hauled back about three cases of spoils from that land of milk and honey. By far the largest Round Table we’ve done to date, we had to enlist the help of a few more fellow winos.

Basil Cellars

Basel Cellars

Yashar Shayan, Erik Seigelbaum and David Bender from the NeoSommes of Seattle joined us to taste through the wines, along with Darin Williams and Seth Furman of Small Lot Co-Op, Dave Egan from Vino Verité, and Jameson Fink of QFC. Peter Moore offered up the mezzanine of Poco Wine Room along with his stemware, palate cleansers and spit buckets, and his amazing staff made the daunting task at hand easy-peasy—Peter, of course, joined us in the tasting, too. While we were all busy sipping, spitting, and speculating, the incomparable Lisa Basher took studios notes—no easy task among a large table of yammering winos. To all that participated, a huge thank-you.

The following is the first installment of the Walla Walla Round Table. Stay tuned, as more will follow.

Tamarack Cellars
2007 Chardonnay
Columbia Valley
$18

A veritable study in the American Chardonnay, this wine offers everything consumers have come to expect in a Chard, and then some. Showing oak with almond and vanilla, this Chard goes beyond with aromas you might find in the funky little teahouses that are growing in popularity: earthy, woodsy tea steeped an hour ago, finishing with a touch of citris. While a little hot, it’ll still have you longing for the three o’clock break, complete will miniature sandwiches.

Five Star Cellars
2008 “Kynzie” Rosé of Sangiovese
Walla Walla Valley
$20

With 14.8% alcohol and acidity to match, this big boy needs a cold shower. Surprisingly well integrated, this rosé doesn’t register as super hot, but instead greets you with dry grasses and mild strawberries, with a tiny bit of that mushroomy funkiness so typical of Sangio. Guys, pour yourself a glass of this rosé at your next backyard barbecue, and then laugh at the pansies drinking Bud Lite.

Round Table: June ’09

May 31, 2009 by Wino  
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We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. We invite a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, talk a lot, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste.

AlmaTerra
Set of four: $220, Single bottle of Coéo: $48

almaterra-minick2006 Syrah
Minick Vineyard, Yakima Valley

This Syrah delivers you to your grandmother’s kitchen with a complex nose belying homemade raspberry jam, smoke, leather, cherry menthol, tobacco, white pepper and clove. On the palate, very balanced with fruit, oak, and tannin. This is an elegant, Northern Rhone style syrah. The nuances are subtle, earthiness and spices are unique, and the balance very much plays to an old world palate. It has the mineral nature that is so common in Yakima Valley wines, and demonstrates a quiet wisdom that will get you to quit your bickering with a single look.

Round Table – April ’09

April 10, 2009 by Wino  
Filed under Blog, Round Table

We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. This month, we invited a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, draw pretty graphs, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste. This month: Jameson Fink, Erin Thomas, Josh LaRosee and Doug Haugen.


san-juan-vineyardsSan Juan Vineyards

2007 Madeleine Angevine- $17.00

Crisp, grapefruit citrus on the nose, powerfully tart on the palate. Oyster shooters with a spritz of lemon juice and dab of sauce could very well be the Yin to this wine’s Yang. On the flip side, a hearty chowder wouldn’t stand a chance against this juice, but pitting the two against each other again and again would certainly be fun. Definitely a summer sipper, but only for those who prefer Granny Smiths over Fuji’s.

Round Table – February ’09

February 7, 2009 by Wino  
Filed under Blog, Round Table

We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. This month, we invited a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, draw pretty graphs, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste. This month: Jameson Fink, Josh LaRosee and Doug Haugen.

Laurelhurst Cellarswino-approved-thumb
2005 Red Mountain Syrah – $38.00

Nose: New leather drenched in cherry cola, earthy, eucalyptus.

Palate: Brilliant structure from start to finish. Deep red fruit stands out as prominent, sided by chocolate, coffee, hints of menthol and some burly tannins that, even while playing nice with food, will allow this wine to sit for years. After sitting for five days, this wine was still firing on all cylinders. A great effort.

Round Table – November ’08

November 10, 2008 by Wino  
Filed under Blog, Round Table

We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. This month, we invited a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, draw pretty graphs, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste. This month: Jameson Fink, Brooke Young, Josh LaRosee and Doug Haugen.

Waving Tree Winery
2004 Grenache, Columbia Valley
Retails: $25.00

Nose: Rubber hose, antiseptic white powder (sugical gloves).
Palate: Very juicy! Open this and drink it all day. A little more tannin would make it a more serious wine, but boy a fun wine to drink. A great lastditch wine of the “summer.” Slap a steak on the grill, pop a bottle or two of this wine, and thank us later.

Round Table – September ’08

September 10, 2008 by Wino  
Filed under Blog, Round Table

We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. This month, we invited a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, draw pretty graphs, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste. This month: Jameson Fink, Brooke Young, Erin Thomas, Josh LaRosee and Doug Haugen.

Donedei Wineswino-approved
2004 Cabernet Sauvignon
Retails: $38.00

Nose: Tobacco, cedar, baking spices, menthol, plum, chocolate, black currant, inky darkness.
Erin: Full-bodied blast of Cab and Cab Franc, giving it a nice boost of dark fruits and earthiness, a lengthy finish, and teethcoating tannins. Tastiest of the bunch, but it could see more time in the bottle. Rope in some of that fruit, Cowgirl.
Doug: Deep, dark and mysterious, this wine has a bitterness that balances out the rich fruit.
Jameson: A step up from the Donedei Merlot, this has much more balance. Worth tucking away for a couple years; the patience will be rewarded.
Josh: Bold, bombastic, teeth-kicking tannins…a Big Bad Wine.
Brooke: O-A-K! Oak, Oak, it’s no joke! Chocolate and raspberry. Ya, ya, ya, it’s GOOD

Round Table – August ’08, Rosé Revolution!

August 10, 2008 by Wino  
Filed under Blog, Round Table

We are committed to not rating wines. That is totally up to you. However, we do want to tell you what wines taste like. Everyone has a unique set of taste buds, so how can we be objective? Group wisdom, my friends, group wisdom. The WINO Round Table is a wine symposium of sorts. This month, we invited a diverse group of winos over to taste various wines, take studious notes, draw pretty graphs, and then relax and finish off the rest of the wine. What we’re left with is an average of each taster’s flavor profile, and a variety of things you may pick up on when you try these wines. Have a look, and then go have a taste. This month: Greg Brisendine, Curtis R. Campbell, Douglas Haugen, Josh LaRosee and Dan Suski.

White Heron Cellars
2003 Mariposa Vinyard Rosé
Retails: $10.00

Dan: Floral, tropical fruit (punch), well balanced, layered, with a strong, lingering finish. Definitely bring this one out again. Long-term relationship worthy.
Curt: Contrary to an earthy nose, this wine offers layers of fruit and balanced structure. Has a sort of delayed “stanky” aftertaste that parallels a dry, tart lingering.
Josh: On the nose, butterscotch, white cheese, rhubarb, bacon fat, and Starburst candy. Easily the most interesting of the group aromatically. Grapefruit on the attack followed by tropical fruit, maybe kiwi. Lingering acidity that would cut through an appetizer.
Doug: Pie cherries.
Greg: Pine needles, dry and crisp finsh. Complex, multi-dimensional. Layered fruit with grass and pomegranate. Drink with summer dinner of chilled salmon with fresh dill. Have three glasses.

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