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We had to put our shipment on hold....
Good news is that's because we're in Napa and visiting with Mike tomorrow!!
Sounds like a good day.
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We had to put our shipment on hold....
Good news is that's because we're in Napa and visiting with Mike tomorrow!!
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For TX wines I recommend trying Calais and Kuhlman. Very complex stuff.
quote:"Produced by" is the key word. Also for Texas wine, SOME indication of Texas appellation must be on the "front" label. The phrase "For sale in Texas only" on the back label indicates the grapes are not from Texas.
Producer and Bottler
Mandatory. This part of the label gives a great deal of information about the production of the wine. The label must indicate the bottler and its location. Several descriptions are common:
[ol]"Produced and bottled by" certifies that the bottler fermented 75% or more of the wine at the stated address (for example, "Produced and Bottled by ABC Winery, St. Helena, California"). In combination with other information on the label, such as a vineyard designation, this term provides the consumer with significant information about the origin of the wine and who is responsible for its production. "Cellared and bottled by" indicates that the bottler has subjected the wine to cellar treatment before bottling at the stated address. "Made and bottled by" indicates that the bottler fermented at least 75% of the wine at the stated address. "Bottled by" indicates that the winery bottled the wine at the stated address, which may have been grown, crushed, fermented, finished, and aged by someone else at some other address. [/ol]
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For TX wines I recommend trying Calais and Kuhlman. Very complex stuff.
Kuhlman is trying really hard, but they're not making Texas wines yet. Most of their wine is from California. They also do not crush their own grapes. So even though some of their wines are nice, they aren't "Texas wine" yet. I'm looking forward to their on site vineyard producing though. It was planted last April, so will produce some grapes this year but won't be in production for another year or two.
Ben Calais is producing Texas wine. Some of it is good IMO. He is trying to do it right. His lower priced ($40-ish) Bordeaux blend is really good. However his top cab is over $100 and IMO a little overpriced. It's also very heavily oaked (40 months in barrel) and isn't a flavor profile I look for. It's good wine, but I think he should dial back the oak some. He's also tiny right now, but it's fun to visit.
quote:I want to see Texas wine succeed. IMO, having wines over $40 and trying to grow Bordeaux is not the way to do it. merely one dude's opinion, though.
Thanks for the correction. We get a white or two in the club release but I don't pay much attention to them. I see now the bottles we picked up Friday include a 2013 Texas Zin. However from the label Kuhlman didn't ferment the wine, just cellared it. Unsure about the 2014 vintage. Will those be High Plains grapes? Texas is producing plenty of grapes now, but quality is the issue. There's a bunch in cryo storage in west Texas that was produced a way too high of yield (like 12+ T/acre) and didn't sell. I think we'll see tremendous improvement in the coming years.
Ten years ago when Dan put a $40 price on a bottle of his Tempranillo he was ridiculed. Now his base Temp is still $40 and you can't throw a rock on US290 without hitting a $50 bottle of wine! Also seeing more and more Texas wine. The quality can only continue to improve.
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Thanks for the correction. We get a white or two in the club release but I don't pay much attention to them. I see now the bottles we picked up Friday include a 2013 Texas Zin. However from the label Kuhlman didn't ferment the wine, just cellared it. Unsure about the 2014 vintage. Will those be High Plains grapes? Texas is producing plenty of grapes now, but quality is the issue. There's a bunch in cryo storage in west Texas that was produced a way too high of yield (like 12+ T/acre) and didn't sell. I think we'll see tremendous improvement in the coming years.
Ten years ago when Dan put a $40 price on a bottle of his Tempranillo he was ridiculed. Now his base Temp is still $40 and you can't throw a rock on US290 without hitting a $50 bottle of wine! Also seeing more and more Texas wine. The quality can only continue to improve.
quote:I'd love to taste with you when I can get to that area again! I don't think, though, that Bordeaux varietals can be grown consistently well in Texas, even though I know there are some high plains areas that are having some success in good weather years. but it is expensive to grow.
Come by and visit me at Inwood some Saturday. Bordeaux grapes can do just fine in Texas, you just have to grow them right and be willing to restrict the yields to ensure phenolic development. Dan's growing Cab just north of Fredericksburg that's pretty dang good. But yes, varietals like Tempranillo will likely be the flagship. I'm biased of course, but it was Dan Gatlin that induced (took a couple of years to convince him) Neal Newsom to first plant Tempranillo vines in the high plains. Dan supplied the vines and guaranteed purchase of the grapes. It's estimated there are 2 million Tempranillo vines out there now!
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so here's the deal, I can drink pretty awesome wines from Cali or even Italy for well under $30. The economics of Texas winemaking may keep it from ever really succeeding.
If the more Mediterranean style grapes can be grown more consistently and in quantities to make it more affordable, Texas can carve a niche (I think). but that is a long ways away since there isn't really a great market for locally grown and made wine that isn't overly ripe and over oaked merlot and zin, etc.
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So after all our spring shipments and this last Napa trip, we've already just about filled our 160 bottle wine cooler....
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Yeah. We obviously expect it to start dwindling down until the fall.
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Takin' one for the team!
quote:If you are in that area, I'd recommend Lancaster. They have a really cool tasting in the cave.
I'll be in Napa/Sonoma at the end of next week and into the following week. We're planning on hitting up the below places:
Alexander Valley
Simi
Stryker
White Oak
Hanna