Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Kevin Kelley's Incredible Petillant Naturel
I'm pretty amped up to pass along a little sneak preview of something very exciting that's coming down the pipeline in early December:
A few weeks ago my brother and I ambushed Kevin Kelley (Salinia, NPA, etc) on a Saturday night at his cellar where he greeted us with two unfinished, partially 2nd-fermented flutes of one of the most fascinating and exciting local wines I've had in a really long time: A 100% redwood valley, mendocino sauvignon petillant naturel, comprised of a blend of primarily 2011 wine, plus a touch of 2010 skin fermented wine added for depth and alcohol (the 2011 base wine started off at a mere 10.9%abv!). The final introduction of fresh juice necessary for second fermentation in bottle comes from this year's 2012 sauvignon harvest - but no additions, no filtering/fining, no packaged champagne yeasts, no disgorging, and zero sulfites. We could tell immediately that the wine was going to become deliciously rustic and wild stuff when finished...if it finished, that is.
After all, bottling true petillant naturel is a process I've heard numerous winemakers regard as amongst the most challenging and risky in all of winemaking: Underestimating the percentage of fresh juice means no bubbles. Overestimating the percentage means too many bubbles and exploding bottles. Unhealthy fruit and/or too much sulfite means a stuck fermentation in the bottle, that may or may not reawaken months later and result in - you guessed it - more exploding bottles. And you only get once chance per vintage, so growers who experiment with petillant in the cellar often give up after cleaning up a lot of broken glass and wasted wine.
Anyhow, Kevin's petillant was obviously still midway through the second fermentation and weeks away from completion: quite cloudy, with present, but not fully developed bubbles. Similarly, the wine's aromatics were still in a primary/stone-fruit state, versus the intense minerality and more subtle, almost beer-like qualities that would ultimately (hopefully!) define the finished product. But awkward adolescence aside, we could already tell it was going to be an incredible wine.
After all, bottling true petillant naturel is a process I've heard numerous winemakers regard as amongst the most challenging and risky in all of winemaking: Underestimating the percentage of fresh juice means no bubbles. Overestimating the percentage means too many bubbles and exploding bottles. Unhealthy fruit and/or too much sulfite means a stuck fermentation in the bottle, that may or may not reawaken months later and result in - you guessed it - more exploding bottles. And you only get once chance per vintage, so growers who experiment with petillant in the cellar often give up after cleaning up a lot of broken glass and wasted wine.
Anyhow, Kevin's petillant was obviously still midway through the second fermentation and weeks away from completion: quite cloudy, with present, but not fully developed bubbles. Similarly, the wine's aromatics were still in a primary/stone-fruit state, versus the intense minerality and more subtle, almost beer-like qualities that would ultimately (hopefully!) define the finished product. But awkward adolescence aside, we could already tell it was going to be an incredible wine.
Those of you who were able to try last year's "Taken Rustic" from Kevin, can consider it a prototype of sorts for the upcoming release. "Taken Rustic" received an avalanche of press and buzz, and many of you have asked me about it following its mysterious introduction and immediate disappearance from the market last year (40cs were produced - and largely consumed at NoPa, Slanted Door, and by my mother). Regardless, I think you'll find this year's incarnation even more refined and expressive. Whereas last year's wine was a first time experiment, this wine is the result of numerous trials&errors over the past 12mos to perfect the temperature, balance of fresh juice:fermented, and technique necessary to produce a true, delicious petillant naturel. The closest analogs to which I can equate these wines are Movia's "Puro" or Camillo Donati's Malvasia...but Kevin's sparkling wines are even more intense in mineral/texture, while still being driven by lees/fruit. Perhaps most thrillingly - and unlike many petillant naturel's from the EU - the wine is built for the cellar and evolves dramatically: I ordered last year's bottling at NoPa recently, and after 12mos in bottle, all the subtle funk and cider/beer-like qualities have fallen away to reveal a delicate, extremely pure and gin-clear sparkling wine. In short, it's very exciting, incredible stuff, and there is *nothing* like it made in this country.
So, the happy ending to this post is that Kevin delivered me three sample bottles of the finished wine a few days ago and it is just outstanding: without question, one of the most soulful, pure, and outright delicious domestic wines I've ever tasted; one glass of which will make even the most devoutly europhile wine drinker fall deeply back in love with Calfornia wine. Aromatically, it is just bursting with pineapple and stone fruit + the almost lemongrass-like tang from the 10% 2010 skin-fermented fruit. On the palate, it is grippy, tart, and bone dry.
Kevin is only bottling a few hundred cases of this wine, and despite the considerable cost of the project (heavy duty Champagne bottles for this one wine, alone, cost $10K), he is pricing the wines at a virtually non-existent profit margin that will allow it to be poured by the glass at our favorite restaurants, and at an incredibly reasonable and sub-industry standard price. In order for the project to continue the price will necessarily have to increase in future vintages, but for now, everyone just wants the wine to get out into the world and into glasses for the holidays.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Renardat-Fache
Mid-Summer is always a skitzophrenic time for me. It's right about the point when, every year, I start getting bored with wine. All I want to do is hike, eat fresh produce, and be away from alcohol, restaurants and my cellphone. And being the mental case that I am, I soon start worrying that I'm not cut out for the wine business, that I should be doing something foolish like helping children or working to save the environment, and that This Is My Last Summer Carrying A Bag. This temporary infection of healthfulness and professional insecurity typically lasts 4-6 weeks...or until right about the time the new vintage of alpine French wines arrive. Because as soon as that container lands, immediately all I can think about is sharing these fresh wines with their existing small cult of followers, converting those who've never tasted them, and gulping them down, myself, with all manner of fatty alpine french foods.
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Cerdon |
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Elie is the biggest boss you've seen thus far. |
Perhaps the most exciting, and limited of all these wines is Renardat-Fache's Bugey Cerdon. I realize that many - if not most - of you have had Cerdon before, and we can all agree that even the cheapest, shittiest, most industrial versions of this demi-sec sparkling Gamay-based wine are still pretty delicious! Having said that, I am humbled that the portfolios I represent hold more than a few "best in the appellation" growers, and that in the region surrounding the village of Cerdon (a tiny, tiny town wedged deep into one of the Bugey's many valleys, just off the highway between Lyon and Geneva), Renardat-Fache is an obvious one.

For me, there are myriad reasons that make this THE wine in the appellation, but I'll stick to the big ones:
1) There are 170 hectares of land under vines in Cerdon. 163 of those hectares are Gamay, and 6 are Poulsard. 3 of those 6 hectares of Poulsard are, and always have been, the property of Renardat-Fache. Elie is a HUGE fanatic about Jura reds, and particularly those of Pierre Overnoy, and though the vines are far lower yielding and more difficult to farm, he is proud to have them play a starring role in the family's wine. And ultimately, the inclusion of a significant volume of Poulsard is why the wines retain an extra degree of texture and depth that you won't find in other Cerdon. ...and it's also a major contributor, for me, why the wines are not just simple dessert wines, but also ideal as an appertif, or with liver or charcuterie:
the best head cheese and pork belly i've ever had. from here. |
3) These are seriously some of the most dramatic, steepest vineyards I've ever seen in my life. Steeper than the Mosel, steeper than the Ribera Sacra - STEEP:
4) Kids love dipping their 1,700-calorie sugary butter tart in it.
-Al
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Cantina Noussan. Saint-Chrisophe, Valle d'Aosta, IT
After spending some time in the Valle d'Aoste in June 2012, I
can say with confidence that Franco Noussan is bottling the freshest,
realest, most un-tinkered with wines in the region. Granted, there is plenty of solid
wine made there and due to the virtual absence of barriques and an apparent local affinity for tart, low-abv% reds (i.e. my soft spot), I enjoyed almost everything I drank there...but no bottles we opened even approached the raw
purity of Franco's wines. I don't want to waste anybody's time with a bunch of wine
nerd babble, but below are a few observations:
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