I don’t want it to sound like I just drink, when my Bride and I have dinner at home, we will open a bottle, unless she is going to church function, as she doesn’t want to give the wrong impression; I don’t have that problem. I am also in the process of culling photos from my iPhone.

Of course, at home my Bride is partial to having fish, she was like that since the early days that we were dating. She has also become very partial to Sauvignon Blanc over the last several years. We have had a bottle of Sauvignon Blanc from New Zealand, and I had refrained from opening it, because some are known for being rather aromatic and quite distinctive. I opened it up, as I always keep learning to this day, so we had Tua Tua Sauvignon Blanc Marlborough, New Zealand 2023 by David Clouston. In a small coastal village in New Zealand there is a legend about a mysterious seashell called Tua Tua. It is said to represent good luck and prosperity and is kept and revered as a talisman. David Clouston crafts distinctive, innovative Marlborough wines that reflect the valleys where they are grown. His grapes are grown on the clay soils of the high-density planted Brookby Hill Vineyard along with select sites in the Awatere and Wairau Valleys. His winemaking techniques include native fermentation, aging in concrete egg tanks, large oak cuvées, a range of French Oak barrels, and clay amphora. The wines are bottled, unfiltered and unfined to preserve complexity and texture. This wine is pure Sauvignon Blanc and was a delicate straw-like hue that offered notes of pineapple guava, elderflower, currants and wet stones. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displays tones of kiwi, passion fruit, pineapple, pink grapefruit and ending with a medium-count finish of exotic fruits and lime zest.

Now we don’t always have fish, we were having a classic roast beef dinner, as we had a leisurely day at the house, to make this dinner with all of the sides. I went down to the cellar to look for something different, and that is really a joy with a cellar. I selected a bottle of Scheid Hames Valley Vineyard Petite Sirah 2009. This is a new AVA for me, Hames Valley, located in the Southern part of Monterey County. One of the unique aspects of Hames Valley is that it can have a fifty degree temperature differential from day to night, which the winery claims is ideal for growing Petite Sirah. Scheid Family Wines was founded in 1972 by Al Scheid, a Harvard graduate, and is now managed by Scott and Heidi Scheid. The winery began with ten acres and now they have a few thousand, and after three decades they created their own brands. The wine is pure Petite Sirah and the fruit is hand-harvested and destemmed and placed in bins for fermentation and it gets punched down twice a day to extract color, tannins and flavor. Then the wine is racked and placed in small barrels for secondary fermentation for about eighteen months in a mix of Hungarian and American Oak, with about ten percent new, with a production of about two-hundred cases. I decanted the bottle, as you can see from the residual dregs that coated the bottle. This was a deep blackish purple wine that offered notes of blackberry and plums, followed by tobacco and mocha. On the palate this full-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of dark fruit, in a big chewy wine, and the bold tannins had mellowed, but still feisty, ending with a long-count finish of rich fruit, oak, spiciness and terroir.

The third wine I will mention is because my Bride was preparing filets, and she still doesn’t like cooking them, she would rather have them in a restaurant. For her endeavors, I went and selected one of the first wine brands that she developed a special affinity for, as I opened a half- bottle of Peju Province Merlot Rutherford 1998 and after decanting we had two excellent servings of the wine. The estate was founded in 1983 by Tony and Herta Peju along with their daughters and the original Rutherford estate was twenty-two acres, and today they have more than ten times that amount with all their other vineyards in Napa Valley. I went into my original brochures and pamphlets when we bought this wine, but there were no production notes and they no longer make a Rutherford Merlot, just a Napa Merlot. The current Merlot wine is aged for sixteen months in a mix of French and American Oak, of which forty percent is new. Even at twenty-eight years of age, this wine was still a deep garnet and offered notes of black cherry, blackberry and plum, along with some coffee, spices and Sous-bois. On the palate this full-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of black fruit, spices blending with very mellow tannins and ending with a long-count finish of fruit, spices and terroir; and a very happy smile on my Bride who is probably mad that we didn’t buy more.


























