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WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

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JC (NC)

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WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

by JC (NC) » Sat May 16, 2009 12:45 pm

This was one of the larger events of the Nantucket Wine Festival under a tent at White Elephant.

We had Chardonnays and Pinot Noirs and Syrah at this tasting with David Hirsch of Hirsch Vineyards, Ehren Jordan of Failla, and Andy Peay of Peay Vineards. (Mr. Jordan went to grade school on Nantucket.)
All are winemakers in northern Sonoma Coastal area near Mendocino County around Fort Ross, Annapolis, CA etc.
Peay has vineyards near a river with coastal influence and fog. Also the San Andreas fault is only a mile away which has resulted in a melange of soil and rock types as part of the terroir.
The first flight was Chardonnay from each of the three winemakers. (Andy Peay is in business with his brother Nick and sister-in-law Vanessa Wong who has winemaking experience with Peter Michael.) I have seen lots of buzz about Peay wines, mainly on eBob/Mark Squire bulletin board but my preferences came out differently as you will see.

The 2007 Chardonnays presented a nice gradation of "butteryness."
My favorite was the Hirsch Chardonnay which was more lemony and crisp speaking to me of lemon drops and minerals.
The Peay Cardonnay was in between the Hirsch and Failla with some butter cream, chewy, with a long finish. It had some noticeable mineral but perhaps not as much as the Hirsch. It was 100% malolactic fermentation in 100% French oak, 40% new oak.
The Failla Chardonnay, from Keefer Ranch, was the most buttery although Ehren Jordan said he wants to produce wines with acidity to go best with foods. He uses 1/3 new oak, all French barrels. Says he doesn;t want to let wood overpower the fruit.

David Hirsch ferments 40% of his Chardonnay in stainless steel, then neutral oak barrels also wanting to bring the acidity forward. He may buy a concrete fermenter for further experimentation.

On the flight of three Pinot Noirs my preference changed to the Failla. The Hirsch entry was a cuvee he calls "M" for middle (not his top Pinot.) The "M" was the most transparent of the three wines with framboise on the nose and deep red berries/cherries on the palate--still in the red frui range. Young for optimal showing--may show more in a year or two.

Interestingly, the Failla Pinot Noir was made with grapes from Hirsch. Very nice fragrant nose--of strawberries. Strawberries on the palate with initial pure fruit followed by a puckery finish. My favorite of this flight. Not his vin de garde--top-of-the-line wine to age but delightful now.

The Peay Pinot Noir had a liqueur-like nose and a lengthy finish with some smoothness but didn't impress me greatly. To be fair, this wine may need a few years to show its best.

The third flight had a Hirsch Pinot Noir Sonoma Coast (2006) which is a notch above the "M" cuvee and Syrahs from Failla and Peay.
Hirsch said they removed about two tons of fruit before harvest. He was seeking balance in the wine and I feel he succeeded. More cherry than strawberry this time. Very refined and elegant and would be a good food wine. Semi-transparent. Light body but really delicious. Drinks easily.

I didn't get down the vintage of the Failla Syrah but it was probably 2006 the same as the Peay. Quite opaque. Fermented in stainless steel then aged in oak. It had an elegance and was not too tannic. Could be a versatile food wine. I prefered the Failla Syrah over the Peay Syrah "La Bruma."

2006 Peay Syrah "La Bruma"
Low brix. Not much sugar in the grapes. Peay makes 2 estate syrahs. Opaque. Pepper on the finish. Although my personal preference was for the Failla, this is also a well-constructed Syrah and may have a good future ahead of it.

A limited amount of Syrah is grown on the Sonoma Coast so it was nice to sample two from different producers. They were going on to a wine store tasting of their older wines but I didn't make that event as I had another session lined up with an importer of Italian wines. I may not get that posted until after my vacation. Also this afternoon I am going to a tasting of Cain Five and tomorrow (Sunday) to the Grand Tasting with all vintners contributing.
Last edited by JC (NC) on Wed May 20, 2009 8:40 am, edited 1 time in total.
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David M. Bueker

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Re: WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

by David M. Bueker » Sat May 16, 2009 12:58 pm

Looks like you were doin alright.
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Michael Malinoski

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Re: WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

by Michael Malinoski » Sat May 16, 2009 2:53 pm

He knows all the chords...

Thanks for the note on the Failla Chardonnay. I have a single and it is good to know where it falls on the spectrum.

-Michael
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Two Comments...

by TomHill » Sun May 17, 2009 5:05 pm

Nice notes, JC.....on two of my favorite producers (Peay & Failla).
Vanessa is the wife of either Andy or Nick. Andy & Nick are dramatically different in looks, but danged if I can figure out an algorithm to decide which one is which. I always have to stumble around for the correct name. Makes me feel like such a doofus.
The Failla Chard....from the KeeferRanch. This vnyd is just to the north and east of the town of Occidental. Though technicially in the SonomaCoast, I don't think it's all that cold, as cold as Hirsch or Ehren's Estate. They always seem much more along the lines of RussianRiver wines than true extreme SonomaCoast.
There's some exeptional wines coming out of extreme SonomaCoast/coold climate areas. The QueSyrah Vnyd of AlRago's, to the west of Sebastopol, is one such. Some of the wines from FortRossWnry, just a stone's throw from the Pacific, are exceptional. Their Pinotage is probably the world's greatest Pinotage.
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JC (NC)

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Re: WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

by JC (NC) » Wed May 20, 2009 8:39 am

Vanessa is married to Nick Peay. I misheard her name as Vanessa Long and it is actually Vanessa Wong so I have corrected that in the original posting.
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Brian K Miller

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Re: WTN: Sultans of Sonoma Coast

by Brian K Miller » Wed May 20, 2009 10:54 am

I have one bottle from 2005 of Peay Syrah (La Bruma). I've enthused here in the past about their second label wine, Ceps, which is imho an incredible steal at $22 for cool climate Syrah.
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