grenache

February 18 – “Blending”

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by Grape Stomper Todd on February 18, 2011

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Jess made a lot of “Jacksons” blending wine with Kendall

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On this day in 1930, Jess Stonestreet Jackson, Jr. was born.  And in 1974, he bought an 80-acre pear and walnut orchard in Lakeport, California.

Okay, I love pears but I despise walnuts.  Not only am I allergic to them, I also got stuck in a walnut tree when I was 5 years old.  I was sure I was gonna die in that damn tree and the emotional scars may never heal…

But I digress.

Anyway this lawyer decided to rip out the pretty pears and evil walnuts and planted beautiful, beautiful wine grapes.

He sold his grapes to other wineries until 1982 when demand for his fruit fell off.  So he decided to make his own wine with his wife, Barbara Kendall, under the label Kendall-Jackson.  His philosophy was to blend together wines from different grapes and vineyards to get the flavors he wanted. That went against the trend of the time of making wine from a single varietal.

This brings us to our Wine Word of the Day: Blending

Blending is the art of mixing different wines together to create a final wine for bottling.  And winemakers will blend wines for a variety of reasons. Hmmm, where should I start?

A winemaker may blend wines to get the color they want.  A classic example is when making Zinfandel wine.  The Zinfandel grape is notorious for making red wine that’s a little lighter in color.  Winemakers, knowing critics and judges are fools for darker reds, will often add a small amount of the inky Petite Sirah wine to their Zin to to make it darker and more opaque.

“Balance” is also a common reason winemakers blend.  They may blend a high alcohol wine with a lower alcohol one to mellow it out.  Or an overly sharp and acidic wine could be blended with a flat wine to make a new wine that’s both smooth and refreshing.

Not all blends are created equal.  In fact, blended wines can be either the most expensive in the world or the cheapest of table wines.  The famous wines from Bordeaux, France are almost always blends, and the 2010 Wine Spectator “Wine of the Year” was a blend of Grenache, Syrah, and Mourvedre.  High caliber blends are carefully crafted in an attempt to create complex flavors and age worthiness.

On the other hand, some blends are made from whatever wine is left over in the cellar or made from unsold product from financially distressed wineries.  The price tag and the taste usually give away these bland blends.

Obviously, Jess figured out the blending deal.  He parlayed his success into a billion-dollar enterprise and is now the 9th largest wine-business in the world. He’s done so well that he also owns a couple of Kentucky Derby Thoroughbreds.  In fact, I think he’s blending those together to create and even faster and more expensive horse. But in those circles, I think it’s called breeding.

Wineries owned by Kendall-Jackson:

Kendall-Jackson
Murphy-Goode
Robert Pecota Winery
Byron Estates
Edmeades
Matanzas Creek
La Crema
Stonestreet
Arrowood
Lajota
Cardinale
Atalon
Lokoya
Carmel Road
Cambria
Hartford Family Wines
Vérité, Archipel
Chateau Potelle
Freemark Abbey

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August 24 – “Rosé”

by Grape Stomper Todd on August 24, 2010

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Pete Rose or pink Rosé?  One might gamble a pink slip for some pink juice!

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On this day, in 1983 Cincinnati Reds baseball star Pete Rose ends his streak of 745 consecutive games played.  Six years later on this very same day, Pete Rose is suspended from baseball for life for gambling. Which still leaves us wondering how such a veteran of the game could be such a rookie with the bookies.

That brings us to our wine word of the day: Rosé


Rosé wine has some of the color typical of a red wine, but just enough to turn it pink.

Most all grape juice is clear or golden.  But when red grape skins are in contact with the juice during fermentation, the resulting wine turns from clear, to pink, to reddish purple.  Many winemakers will attempt to make a richer, deeper colored wine by removing some of the juice after just a day or two of fermentation.  The removed juice is used to make a rosé wine, while the rest of the wine gets extra dark due to the presence of extra skins.


I know we in the United States tend to think of syrupy-sweet White Zinfandel  when we think of rosé.  But it doesn’t have to be that way.  I just got back from France where I consumed mass quantities of…I mean, enjoyed, many dry, elegant, and refreshing rosés.  They were mostly made in Provence where they used high quality Syrah and Grenache grapes.  I must say these rosés were the perfect wine for a summer lunch outside at a street corner cafe.

Vintners and wine critices, to their shame, continuously fail to convince the public that rosé is a well deserving wine.  Just like Pete Rose continuously fails to convice the public he should to be inducted into Baseball’s Hall of Fame.

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