Korbin Ming Pours Korbin Kameron – Part One

It was quite an event at The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan; as Korbin Ming, the General Manager of Moonridge Vineyards and Korbin Kameron was pouring thirteen wines including four Library wines.

We started off the tasting with Korbin Kameron Sauvignon Blanc Moon Mountain District, Sonoma County 2023 from Moonridge Vineyards.  Moon Mountain District AVA which is a sub-appellation of the Sonoma County AVA.  Moon Mountain is for the western slopes of the Mayacamas mountains between Sugarloaf Ridge and Carneros, while Mount Veeder AVA encompasses the eastern slopes.  The AVA is named after Moon Mountain Road which runs through the area and means “valley of the moon” in the local Native American dialect.  The AVA was granted in 2013, because of the region’s iron-rich volcanic soils, quite distinctive from the sedimentary soils of the surrounding area.  Initial Fermentation is in Stainless Steel followed by Malolactic Fermentation in French Oak barrels, eighty percent neutral and twenty percent new, for four months.  With one-hundred-fifty cases of wine produced.  A pale straw-colored wine offering notes of lemongrass, melon, and lime.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine with bright acidity displayed tones of calamansi, pineapple and honeydew and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit and terroir.

We also enjoyed Korbin Kameron Cabernet Sauvignon Sonoma Mountain 2006 from the Library of Moonridge Vineyards. The winery was started by Mitchel Ming and named after his twin sons Korbin and Kameron.  Over the years, I have had the good fortune to try the Cabernet Sauvignon wines going back to 2005 and considering that the vineyard was planted in 2000, that was one of the earliest issued wines.  Moon Mountain District AVA is a sub-appellation of Sonoma County, just north of the city of Sonoma and on the eastern edge of Sonoma County and is the western slopes of Mayacamas mountains between Sugarloaf Ridge and Carneros, while Mount Veeder AVA encompasses the eastern slopes.  Fermentation and Aging is done in French Oak, of which fifty percent is new, and the barrel time is eighteen months.  With a production of eight hundred cases produced.  A deep garnet colored wine that offers notes of black fruit, figs, cassis, lavender, and some molasses.  On the palate this full-bodied wine belied its age and displayed tones of black cherry and blackberries, cocoa, espresso and traces of leather, mingling with tight tannins, and ending with a nice long-count finish of fruit and terroir.

We then followed with a tasting of Korbin Kameron Cabernet Sauvignon Moon Mountain District 2019 from Moonridge Vineyards.  By this time the Moon Mountain District had become a sub-region of Sonoma County, at it was granted on October 1, 2013.  First commercial planting began around the 1880s and had been continuous since that time.  The terrain is recognized as mountainous, ravines, gorges and hillside plantings on shallow well-drained volcanic soils; dark brown and red, basaltic, ash and rhyolitic tuff (from ancient volcanic explosions). The fruit is hand-harvested, and the wine is aged for eighteen months in French Oak, of which half is new.  There were six hundred-twenty cases produced.  The deep garnet colored wine offered notes of cassis, eucalyptus and sous-bois.  On the palate this full-bodied wine had excellent balance and displayed tones of blackberries and black cherries, with secondary tones of cacao and espresso ending with a nice long-count finish of dark fruit and terroir.       

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An Interesting Day Trip

There are some times when we make a day trip, just to get away, sometimes just to another community to walk around or even to a farmer’s market.  This time we extended the drive to Port Huron, but we didn’t cross the bridge into Canada.  

We started off by having breakfast at an interesting restaurant/bistro that I had read about.  I tend to save articles that I see on the internet about quirky places to visit.  We went to the Raven Café which is both a coffeehouse and a spot for cocktails along with food.   Edgar Allen Poe is featured everywhere, and there are books, especially his or studies of his writings and biographies in bookcases, that just seem to pop up all around.  They maintain a rotating collection of local art that is for sale, plus eclectic statuary mostly geared to The Raven, plus they also feature at times live music. My Bride had the quiche of the day, and I had a breakfast sandwich, while my choice was excellent, she had the better selection.  While she had a coffee, I had a Mimosa, after all what is the purpose of having a wine blog.  The Raven Café used Salmon Creek Brut California Sparkling Wine NV, part of  Bronco Wine Company, one of the largest wine producers and vineyard owners in the United States and located in Ceres, California.  Bronco is family-owned and founded in 1973 by Fred, Joseph and John Franzia after the sale of Franzia winery, and today they have the capacity to produce 230 million liters of wine a year.  They have over sixty brands, including the Charles Shaw (“Two Buck Chuck”). Salmon Creek Cellars is sold exclusively to restaurants.  The wine is 84% Chardonnay and 16% French Colombard and is made using the Charmat Method (bulk production) and is called California Sparkling Wine, as Gallo has the grandfathered brands for “California Champagne.” The golden colored wine offered notes of apple, pear, lime and a trace of brioche.  On the palate this wine displayed medium-size bubbles and displayed tones of orchard fruits and ending with a short count finish of fruit.  It was fine for a Mimosa drink.

After breakfast we went to the Blue Water Sandfest, which was the purpose of the trip.  This was the Eleventh Sandfest and it was on the grounds of the Fort Gration Lighthouse, which is a bonus to my Bride, as she and most Michiganders love lighthouses, since there are so many in the state. We were watching as the works of art were being created, one was going to depict the original Batmobile from television fame, and another was a whimsical take “Hare B&B.” There was a large pavilion for live music, plus food and beverage service around the sand art.  We also decided to scale the Fort Gratiot Lighthouse. The original lighthouse was built in 1814 and collapsed in 1828. The replacement was built in 1825 and is the oldest in Michigan and the second on the Great Lakes (which is Presque Light/Erie Land Lighthouse in Erie, Pennsylvania).  There are ninety-four iron steps in a circular staircase to get to the top of the lighthouse, and you better not be in a hurry.  Also the handrail, which is a must, must have been designed for Quasimodo, as it was so positioned at a much lower stance to today’s standards.  One could walk the entire circumference of the lighthouse at the peak outside, so there were beautiful vistas.

Later on, we walked the downtown Port Huron district admiring the architecture of the buildings and then we ended up at the Vintage Tavern, which is not on the water, but the restaurant up on the second floor, one could observe the water way and the ships and boats, plus we could hear the horns for the two drawbridges as they would stop automobile and foot traffic to allow boats onto the rivers from the lake.  It was a shame that we really weren’t that hungry even with all of the walking and stairclimbing, because the restaurant has a great menu and wine list.  We just noshed, though my Bride did have a bowl of Pickle Soup, along with the Smoked Salmon Spread.  The restaurant has a small wine carte, and we had Privatkellerei St. Antonius Biroth Kreuznacher Kronenberg Riesling Auslese Nahe 2023.  The winery is located in the small wine village of Schweppenhausen in the Nahe region and known for Riesling wines.  The winery is owned by Anton and Stephan Biroth.  There are 4100 hectares of vineyards in Nahe, basically planted on clay overlays of sandstone and known for long, warm summers.  A golden colored wine that offered notes of pears, apples and plums.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine with low acidity displayed tones of pineapple, mango, apples and pears, a dry wine with a splash of sweet, that ended with a medium-count finish of fruit, honey, petrol and slate.  Not a terribly indicative example of a Riesling Auslese, but very reasonably priced, even at a restaurant.   

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One More Graduation Celebration

Another High School graduation and while it feels to us like another grandchild, it is actually The Wine Raconteur Jr.’s daughter and we have known him and his family for ages.  The story goes a long time and we are all pleased to get together whenever possible, he is much more on the go, then we are.  He and his Bride hosted an excellent party in their backyard with tables under  tents, with food, desserts and beverages.

As we followed our host into the kitchen, he wanted to pour some wine to help alleviate the summer sun, so that we wouldn’t melt.  He poured us some Gerard Bertrand “Cote des Roses” Languedoc 2022.  Gerard Bertrand, a former rugby player and an heir to a line of winemakers, and a committed ambassador the wines of Southern France.   In 1975, he had his first grape harvest at Chateau de Villemajou, in Corbieres; he began his apprenticeship with his father, Georges Bertrand. In 2002, he began a conversion of his properties to biodynamic farming. By 2024, he along with many others celebrated one hundred years of biodynamics, and that almost his entire 930 hectares have achieved this goal. The Art Edition of Cotes de Roses features the work of artist Morgan Jamieson, along with Emma Bertrand and features a rose-shaped base.  All the artwork is intended to recognize the two soils of schist and limestone and the undulating terrain.  The wine is a blend of Grenache, Cinsault and Syrah; the different varieties are manually harvested and the whole bunches are left to macerate in a vat, and the juice is extracted after a short maceration, once the desired color has been achieved.  Initial Fermentation is done under temperature-control in Stainless-Steel vats, with a portion vinified in barrels; there is no Malolactic Fermentation, and the wine is bottled quickly.  This pale pink colored wine offered notes of strawberry, cherry and a touch of licorice.  On the palate this light-bodied wine and well-balanced wine displayed tones of strawberries and cherry and ended with a medium-count finish of the fruit and hints of shale and limestone.

After the first wine was finished, we enjoyed 2 Lads Rosé of Cabernet Franc Old Mission Point 2022 from the State of Michigan.  This winery sits on fifty-eight acres and they are a mix of traditional and new.  They use gravity flow and gentle handling techniques to keep the wines from bruising, and they believe in modern sustainability farming as well.  There are twenty-three meticulously tended acres, that were planted in 1999, 2001, and 2008; as they specialize in cool-climate red wines, sparkling wines and small-run white wines.  This wine is pure Cabernet Franc, grown on their 3 Little Bears Vineyard.  The grapes are hand sorted, crushed and destemmed, and pumped into the grape press, where they allowed the juice and pomace to soak for about four hours to enhance both the color and the flavor.  The pomace is then pressed, and the juice is settled for forty-eight hours prior to fermentation.  Fermentation lasts for sixty-five days, using a yeast strain isolated for the Cote du Rhone, and then the wine is aged for seven months in a Stainless-Steel tank.  This rosy-pink wine offered notes of pomegranates, peaches, raspberries, and strawberries.  A light to medium bodied wine that was well-balanced displayed tones of delicate and refreshing fruit, as promised from the nose and ending with a short-count finish of fruit.      

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Our Last Grandchild to Graduate from High School

We kept very busy with graduations, and this one could have been with the two boys out in Vegas, but her family moved back to the old stomping grounds.  It was kind of hit or miss, with school transcripts, but everything worked out, and we got to see her graduate in the sweltering heat, and thank God, a school organization was selling ice-cold water for one dollar. So, it was wonderful for us to see her in cap and gown with all the pomp and circumstance (but they don’t play that march anymore). Only one grandchild was deprived his senior year and all of the glory, and that was when our governor wanted people if they had to go swimming, that they must wear a cloth mask.

With the big move from Vegas back to here, everything was rather impromptu, and that is totally understandable.  We offered to take everyone out for dinner to celebrate, but our son wanted to have a gathering at their new house.  He went one way to get some carry-out dishes, so we went to get some wine to celebrate, and we also picked up some shrimp and some other munchies.  There was a limited selection, and I couldn’t resist getting a bottle of Francis Ford Coppola “Sofia” Rosé Monterey County 2024; since that is our granddaughter’s name.  The same Francis Ford Coppola, whose middle name is Ford, for Henry Ford, when his father was a musician in the Detroit Symphany Orchestra and is known for some spectacular films, and somewhere I am have even been photographed next to a famous desk that was in the introduction of, I think his greatest film.  While he still has the Inglenook Estate, this part of his wine making venture was sold to Delicato Family Wines in 2021. Delicato Family Wines has been family owned and operated since 1924 and last year they celebrated their hundredth anniversary.  It began with Gaspare Indelicato, an emigrant from Sicily, who planted the first vines for his estate, and now the fourth generation is still part of his dream. The fruit for this wine was grown in Monterey County and is a blend of Pinot Noir, Grenache and Syrah.  To achieve the signature salmon-pink hue, the grapes are held in the press for one day, until the juice has its own unique color to add to the total blend.  The wine undergoes fermentation in cool temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks and then is aged for one month in oak barrels.  The salmon-pink colored wine offered notes of strawberries, blood oranges, roses and spices.  On the palate this light-bodied wine displayed tones of cherries, strawberries and tangerines with good acidity and a short -count finish of fruit, tea and traces of flint.

While we were shopping, I also grabbed a bottle of Sieur d’Arques Saint-Hilaire Blanquette de Limoux Methode Traditionelle 2021.  Limoux is in the Languedoc wine region and wine was introduced to the area by the Greeks in the 5th Century BC, but it was in 1531 when the Benedictine monks from the Abbey of Saint Hilaire, a town near Limoux allegedly produced the first sparkling wine.  The claim of the sparkling wine discovery has proponents in Champagne that argue who was first and that is not for me to decide (thank God).  The Lord of the region at the time, the Sieur d’Arques was a huge fan of this wine and the local wine growers decided to rename their winery after him.  The AOC Blanquette de Limoux is the first AOC in the Languedoc and one of the first appellations in France.  The association of wine growers created the Société des Producteurs de Blanquette de Limoux in 1946 and in the 1990’s changed the name to Sieur d’Arques.  The Traditional Method, which has a second fermentation in the bottle is used for the Blanquette de Limoux wines.  Blanquette is a local name for the Mauzac grape variety, and to confuse matters three other local varieties are also known as Blanquette and they have nothing to do with this famed wine.  Originally by regulation this wine was totally Mauzac, but lately the regulation has been softened to appeal to new generations of wine drinkers, and the wine must be ninety percent Mauzac and the balance can be Chardonnay and/or Chenin Blanc.  The grape is known for its high acidity and low alcohol and delivers flavors of honey and green apples.  We left before this bottle was opened, as there were more people coming to celebrate.

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The Wines of Piedmont – Part Five

We were now down to the last three wines of the tasting session at The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan.  I noticed that more of the early arrivals for the next hour session, were starting and I always marvel at how the staff can keep in their brain where each set of tasters are, when they are juggling fifteen wines and discussing the virtues of each wine.  Not to mention the pain in the arse guy who keeps delaying things by having to take a photo of each bottle with a glass of wine adjacent to the bottle, especially since he is not that great of a photographer.

We proceeded to Luigi Giordano “Cavanna” Barbaresco DOCG 2020.  Azienda Agricola Luigi Giordano winery was established in the 1930s by Giovanni Giordano.  It was his son Luigi, that decided to vinify his own fruit under his own label in 1958.  Another decision is when he decided to create “Cavanna” the only single-vineyard wine in Barbaresco.  Since 1971 when Cavanna was first labeled, this vineyard is closest to the center of the village of Barbaresco and to date, it is still the only vineyard designation.  The soils are composed of laminated marls mixed with silt, divided into three parcels and ends at a sheer drop-off on the cliffs of the Tanaro River.  The wine is pure Nebbiolo and Initial Fermentation begins with a period of maceration for about thirty days in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks with regular pump-overs, and the Malolactic Fermentation continues in the tank as well.  The wine is then aged for about eighteen months in large Slavonian Oak barrels, that average about twenty-five years in age.  Then the wine is bottled and cellared, and the total time is about three years.  This garnet-colored wine offered notes of red cherries, raspberries, roses, tobacco and herbs and spices.  On the palate this full-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of cherries, currants, and secondary tones of tea and spices blended with fine tannins and ending with a long-count finish of fruit and flint (terroir).

The penultimate wine of the tasting was Vite Colte “Paesi Tuoi” Barolo DOCG 2020 from Azienda Agricola Terre da Vino.  You may have noticed that there were a total of six wines from this winery, because when the representatives of Terre da Vino came to Michigan earlier in the year, they wanted to meet with the store that basically bought the entire allotment of their Roero Arneis wines, so they ended up pouring their new offerings and The Fine Wine Source made another large purchase and endorsement of their wines. “Paesi Tuoi” translates to “Your Countries” which must refer to the different plots of their Nebbiolo vines to represent their best Barolo wine.  The winery uses classic blending techniques that were developed at the beginning of the last century.  The Initial Fermentation and Maceration is for about twenty days to acquire the rich tannins for long cellaring in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks.  The wine is then transferred into large oak barrels for up to two years, followed for about six months in bottle before release.  A deep garnet red colored wine that offered notes of cherries and raspberries, violets and roses, licorice, and spices.  On the palate this full-bodied and well-balanced wine displayed tones of cherries, raspberries, mocha and vanilla blending with still fresh and tight tannins leading to a long-count finish of fruit, spices and terroir.  A beautiful wine that needs some more cellaring to let the tannins mature and there will probably be some great secondary and tertiary flavors to enjoy at a later date.  

The final wine of the tasting was La Bioca “Bussia” Barolo DOCG 2019.   La Bioca is a small winery in the Langhe near Serralunga d’Alba.  The winery has eight hectares of vineyards located in Monforte d’Alba, Novello, La Morra and Barbaresco.  This wine is pure Nebbiolo, and the fruit is hand-harvested, destemmed and cold maceration for a few days.  The wine undergoes fermentation in Stainless-Steel tanks without temperature control for seven days with regular punching down and pumping over: with secondary maceration for twenty-five days.  The wine is then aged for a minimum of eighteen months in oak casks.  A deep garnet colored wine that offered notes of black cherries, blood oranges, violets and a whiff of cinnamon.  On the palate this full-bodied wine displayed tones of black cherries and other black fruit, citrus, and spices blended with velvety tannins, bright acidity and ending with a long count finish of fruit, spices and terroir.  

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The Wines of Piedmont – Part Four

While I was having this wonderful wine tasting at The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan. It was a pleasure hearing our moderator asking The Wine Raconteur Jr.’s Bride her opinion on the wines as we were going.  I find it always fascinating to hear discussions about wines from others.  All the while the shop was slowly filling up for the next hour’s tasters. 

The next grouping began with La Bioca “Zabalda” Barbera d’Alba DOC 2022.  La Bioca is a small vineyard estate comprised of nine hectares located in the hills of Langhe, in the municipalities of Monforte d’Alba, Novello, La Morra and Barbaresco.  Zabalda is named after the prior owner of the vineyard and is pure Barbera.  Barbera is usually thought of after Barolo and Barbaresco and is thought of as an alternative to the other two.  All around Alba are rolling hills and Barbera vines thrive on the chalky, limestone-rich clay soils, and the best vineyards are sites closest to Barolo.  This wine is pure Barbera, the fruit is manually harvested, destemmed and cool fermented in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks for about eight days and then an additional maturation for six months. A reddish-purple wine that offered notes of cherries, raspberries, and blueberries with additional notes of lavender and roses.  On the palate this dry, medium-bodied wine displayed tones of the fruits, juicy acidity with fine tannins and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit and spices.

We then had Azienda Agricola Tintero Langhe Nebbiolo 2021 in Piedmont.  Elvio Tintero Piedmont estate is in the steep hills of Mango in the province of Cuneo, and it is now represented by the second and third generation.  The vineyards are planted in the optimal position of south and southwest on the hills.  Langhe Nebbiolo is considered as a “junior” version of Barolo and Barbaresco and does not have the same stringent requirements as those designations.  The wine is pure Nebbiolo, and the maceration and fermentation occur in Stainless-Steel tanks and then is aged in Slavonian Oak for six months.  The deep garnet colored wine offered notes of dark cherry and plum, scented with violets and roses and a wisp of graphite.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine had tones of dark fruit blended with soft tannins, fresh acidity and a medium-count finish of fruit.

We followed up with Vite Colte “La Casa in Collina” Barbaresco DOCG 2021 from Azienda Agricola Terra da Vino.  In 2010, a new cellar complex was built, that is temperature and humidity controlled and can hold up to two-thousand barrels, and also large oak barrels for Barolo wines, as well as accommodating temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks.   Barbaresco was awarded the DOCG classification in 1980. Barbaresco wines must be aged for a minimum of twenty-six months, of which a minimum of nine months must be spent aging in oak barrels.   This wine is pure Nebbiolo.  Historical production techniques are used, blending batches from plots in different areas and microclimates.  Initial Fermentation lasts for about twenty days, followed by Malolactic Fermentation while aging in large oak barrels, for about one year.  This garnet red wine offered notes of black cherry, strawberry, and plums, along with violets, coffee, tobacco, herbs and spices, and sous-bois.  On the palate this full-bodied and well-balanced wine displayed tones of black and red fruits, blending with firm and taut tannins with great secondary tones of herbs and spices, bitter orange and hazelnuts; finally ending with a long-count finish of black cherry, vanilla, cinnamon and sous-bois.

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The Wines of Piedmont – Part Three

We were getting to the half-way point of fifteen Piedmontese wines at The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan and not only were the two Raconteurs having fun, but so were all the other patrons that were coming in for the tasting and being treated to some unique wines from the region.

We were poured La Bioca “Daje Mach” Verduno Pelaverga DOC 2021.  This was the second wine from La Bioca which is a small winery in Serralunga d’Alba in the Langhe zone.  The word “Bioca” is a Piedmontese local word to describe a decisive person with a “tough head.”  “Daje Mach” is also a local Piedmontese idiom which translates to “Go for It,” or in today’s parlance “May the force be with you.”  The winery began in 2012 and now has two spacious warehouses, an underground cellar, a large tasting room and terrace and an “agriturismo” with six rooms, along with their large production facility.  Verduno Pelaverga DOC was elevated in the 1990s to promote Piedmont’s lesser-known varietals.  The entire area is tiny acreage at the northern edge of Barolo DOCG.  Pelaverga is a rare red grape, also known as Pelaverga Piccolo, Carola, Cari, Fra Germano and Taddone.  This wine is pure Pelaverga Piccolo and is manually harvested, destemmed and undergoes cold maceration for seventy-two hours with two pump-overs daily in a temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tank.  Ther fermentation lasts for about nine days, followed by fifteen days of maceration, followed by Malolactic Fermentation and aging in Stainless-Steel for six months.  This light red colored wine offered notes of red currants, violets, and freshly ground black and white peppers.  On the palate this dry medium-bodied wine displayed savory tones of fruit, spices with velvety tannins, and ends with a medium-count finish of fruit and spicy peppers; this wine served slightly chilled, could easily be an aperitif with a charcuterie board.

We then had Ercole Barbera del Monferrato DOC 2023 by Angelo Negro.  Monferrato is a triangular shaped region in the middle of Turin, Milan and Genoa, and the vineyards are designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.  An historically significant winery whose origins date back to 1670, with the planting of two vineyards: Perdaudin and Prachiosso.  Ercole is derived from Hercules and is a cooperative of local growers in the Monferrato region, committed to sustainable farming. The vineyards on average have thirty- to fifty-year-old vines.  This wine is pure Barbera typically planted with southern exposures.  This deep red wine offered notes of cherry and leather.  On the palate this full-bodied dry wine displayed tones of cherry, plum, blueberry and leather with medium acidity and medium tannins and ended with a medium-count finish of fruit.

We followed with a Vite Colte “La Lune e I Falo” Barbera d’Asti DOCG Superiore 2021 from Terre da Vino and the brand name translates to “The Moon and the Bonfires.”  They created the subsidiary Vite Colte to create a distinction and to focus on the company’s top lines in terms of content.  There are one hundred and eighty wine growers cultivating three hundred hectares, with each wine grower devoting only part of his harvest to the Vite Colte project.  Barbera d’Asti became a DOC in 1970 and was upgraded to its DOCG classification in 2008. The DOCG requirements are that the wine must be at least ninety percent Barbera, and the Superiore designation requires 12.5% proof, and needs fourteen months of aging.  This wine is pure Barbera, and the fruit comes from over sixty hectares of vineyards, with blending fruit from different soils and microclimates.  The wine begins with Initial Fermentation during ten days of maceration, followed my Malolactic Fermentation and twelve months in French oak barriques.  This deep ruby red wine offered notes of cherries, strawberries, blueberries, violets, licorice and vanilla.  On the palate this medium-bodied dry and crisp wine displayed tones of red berries, vanilla, spices with silky tannins and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit and spices.       

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The Wines of Piedmont – Part Two

There were fifteen wines to be tasted from the Piedmont region at The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan and we will look at the next three wines.  I had a bonus, as The Wine Raconteur, Jr. and his Bride was also at the tasting.  I did notice that there must have been a couple of customers that were having the same tasting at other locations, as I watched some of the staff, grabbing a bottle of wine at times to take into the original room, which had two tasting tables as well.

The next wine was Fabio Oberto La Collina di Dioniso Roero Arneis DOCG 2021.  Paolo Oberto had a few hectares of vineyards in La Morra, one of the principle towns of Barolo.  He died suddenly and his son Andrea left his career to take over the family farm.  In 1978, he began bottling the family production instead of selling it to the local cantina sociale.  Eventually the estate grew to eighteen hectares, including the famed Giada Vineyard with its eighty-year-old vines, as well as almost one hectare of Barolo’s true Grand Cru vineyards – Rocche del Annunziata.  His son Fabio worked along side of his father for twenty-two years.  In 2017, Fabio created his own company “La Collina di Dioniso da Fabio Oberto” which was employing his grandfather and father’s vineyards but producing wines in his own ideas.  His vineyards are included in the list of heroic vineyards of the Piedmont region, as the average slope of the terrain is more than thirty percent.  This wine is pure Arneis grapes from the Montaldo Roero region and was planted in 2001.  The fruit is manually harvested, destemmed, pressed and the juice is in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks, including Initial Fermentation and Malolactic Fermentation on the lees, for three months, followed by another three months in the bottle before release.  A straw-yellow colored wine that offered notes of pears, apricots, acacia flowers and honey.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine is a dry wine with crisp acidity and displaying tones of white fruit and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit, a touch of hazelnuts and minerals.

Our next wine was Vite Colte “Derthona Timorasso” Colli Tortonesi 2022 from Az. Agr. Terre da Vino.  Terre da Vino represents 5,000 hectares of vineyards, by more than 2,500 wine growers.  They are a major player in Piedmont for decades, and the growers must abide by the requirements demanded by Terre da Vino.  Timorasso is an ancient Piedmontese grape variety that was almost extinct by the 1980s. Originally revived by Walter Massa of Vigneti Massa and has been rediscovered and witnessing a resurgence for dry white wines and for grappa production. Timorasso is a native to the Colli Tortonesi region and this region was awarded a DOC in 1973, just prior to Gavi. There are thirty communes in the province of Alessandria that can use this name.  The wine must be at least eighty-five percent Timorasso, and the balance can be Moscato Bianco and Favorita (Vermentino).  Colli Tortonesi is often labeled as “Derthona,” which is the local traditional name, and Derthona has also been proposed for a DOC.  This wine is pure Timorasso, and after a soft crush and a short cold maceration period, the free run must is fermented in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel vats, followed by twelve months on the lees.  A deep straw-yellow colored wine that offered notes of peaches, honey, acacia and minerals.  On the palate, this medium-bodied dry wine offers a complex texture of peaches, honey, with hints of nuts, good acidity and ending with a good medium-count finish of fruit, flint and minerals.

We then had our first red wine with Alessandro Rivetto Langhe Rosso 2022.  A winery started in 2012 by Alessandro Rivetto and Alessandro Bonello, who grew up as friends and had gone to school together.  The wine is a blend of seventy percent Nebbiolo, twenty-five percent Barbera and five percent Merlot from different Rivetto estate vineyards near the township of Sinio, Alba County on soil that is a combination of limestone and clay.  The fruit is manually harvested, destemmed and crushed, the must is left with peels at cold temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks for thirty hours, then the whole maceration and Initial Fermentation process lasts for twelve days with frequent punch-downs to extract extra color.  The wine is then refined in wooden barrels and after Malolactic Fermentation the wine is aged for an additional six months, then bottled and cellared for an additional six months, the wine is aged for a minimum of one year before being released.  This deep ruby-red colored wine offered notes of black cherries, raspberries, violets, orange peel, herbs and vanilla.  On the palate, this medium-bodied, well balanced wine displays tones of cherries, raspberries, rosemary blending with soft velvety tannins and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit, cocoa and limestone.    

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The Wines of Piedmont – Part One

Who wouldn’t be excited about a wine tasting labeled as “The Wines of Piedmont” especially when it is hosted and curated by The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan.  It was also a tasting where all the wines were affordable, OK, maybe one would need some arm-twisting.  And even as a bonus, I was doing the tasting along with The Wine Raconteur, Jr. and his Bride, though they had started a little before me.

We started the session off with Vite Colte “Aureliana” Gavi 2024; and depending on the market the wine could be labeled as Terre da Vino brand.  The winery was founded in 1980 and is situated below the most prestigious Barolo cru vineyards and the architectural design has been reviewed by many modern architecture periodicals.  The wine is pure Cortese grape and comes from vineyards with alluvial soils with silty clay sediments and interspersed with reddish brown grit.  The grapes are soft pressed, and the must ferments in temperature controlled Stainless-Steel vats, followed by a short aging period on the lees, also in Stainless-Steel vats to maintain the freshness and the fruit.  The soft straw-yellow wine offered notes of green apples, ripe pears, white florals, freshly cut hay and a touch of anise.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine displayed tones of the green apples and pears, well-balanced with crisp acidity and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit and subtle minerality.

We then went with the Vite Colte “Tra Donne Sole” Sauvignon (Blanc) Piedmont 2023 and over the years this wine has carried both the Monferrato DOC and Piemonte DOC.  The wine “Tra Donne Sole” (The Lonely Woman) is named after a work by Cesare Pavese.  The members of Vite Colte ad their families, partners and winegrowers are the cornerstone of a modern winery with a combined goal to maintain the high standards that are part of the Piedmont tradition.  The vineyards for this wine are located in two different areas with different soils and microclimates, and also low yields, and these points are used to create a complex and balanced wine, as the regions ripen at different times.  The earlier vineyard have grapes that are higher in acidity and have class aromas of Sauvignon, while the later vineyard displays tropical fruit.  Ater the grapes are pressed, the juice is allowed to ferment in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel vats and then the wine rests on the lees for three months until bottled.  A straw-yellow colored wine offered notes of pears, apples, passion fruit, gooseberry, citrus and white florals and grass.  On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of grapefruit, baked apples, vanilla with a touch of mint and licorice in an unfussy and very easy drinking wine that ended with a medium-count finish of fruit and terroir.

We then tried La Bioca “Cyrogrillo” Rossese Bianco Langhe DOC 2023.  La Bioca is a small winery in the Langhe near Serralunga d’Alba.  The winery has eight hectares of vineyards located in Monforte d’Alba, Novello, La Morra and Barbaresco.   Their first vintage was in 2012.  Rossese is a mildly aromatic red grape variety found in Liguria, and along the Riviera in southern France to the Franco-Italian border.  It is rather rare to be seen on its own, and is often blended with Sangiovese, though a few wineries are staunch supporters of this grape.  There is a mutation of this grape known as Rossese Bianco, the most famous being Rossese di Dolceacqua.  This wine is a blend of eighty-five percent Rossese Bianco and fifteen percent Manzoni Bianco.  The fruit is manually harvested, destemmed, and softly pressed without maceration.  The wine is fermented in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel tanks, and the two juices are vinified separately on the lees for about five months, and then the two wines are blended about two months prior to bottling.  This straw-yellow wine offered notes of lemon, chamomile, white florals, herbs, cut grass and minerals.  On the palate this light-bodied wine displayed tones of lemon-lime citrus, white pepper, traces of vanilla, good acidity with an oily-like texture and ending with a medium-count finish citrus and terroir.    

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Fine Wine Source Club – July 2025

I went to The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan and I was on a mission.  I had to pick up the monthly club wine selections and there was another wine tasting to attend. The wine club not only introduces the members to a wine from the Old World and one wine from the New World.  Also as a member it allows me entry to the myriad of special wine tastings that are offered at the shop.   And as a very happy bonus, I ran into The Wine Raconteur, Jr. and his charming Bride, as they were picking up the club wines and attending the tasting as well. 

The first wine that represents the Old World is from Chateau La Grande Metairie Bordeaux Rouge 2022 from Vignobles Buffeteau.  Vignobles Buffeteau has two estates and has continued growing with four generations in neighboring villages.  They use traditional vinification methods and go out the day before harvest to eliminate unripe or rotten fruit, and then the next day the fruit is mechanically harvested, separating the grapes from the vines while in the plots and done at night to maintain the freshness and aromatics of the fruit.  They installed a new cellar in 2015 with thermos-regulated Stainless-Steel vats, and with a semi-underground ageing cellar with both concrete vats and traditional oak barrels.  The wine is ninety percent Merlot and ten percent Cabernet Sauvignon.  This wine underwent Initial Fermentation and Malolactic Fermentation and aging for one year in Stainless- Steel vats with periodic stirring with fining and filtering.  This dark claret wine offered notes of ripe red fruits, spices and herbs.  On the palate this medium-bodied wine displayed tones of black and red cherry, blackberry and currants, with good acidity blended with medium tannins and a medium-count finish of fruit and herbs.

The second bottle represents the New World and is Pisoni Family Vineyards “Lucy” Rosé of Pinot Noir Santa Lucia Highlands Monterey County 2022.  Jane and Eddie Pisoni started farming in the Salinas Valley in 1952; and their pride in being stewards of the land has been taken up by their son Gary and his sons Jeff and Mark.  In 1982, Gary began planting grape vines, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and Syrah on the family’s forty acres in three vineyards in the Santa Lucia Highlands.  Gary created the “Lucy” label and raises funds to support breast cancer research, ocean conservancy and the Big Sur Fire Department.  Rosé wines are either produced through whole cluster pressing or by Saignée, a practice which a proportion of the juice from pressed grapes is bled away in order to concentrate color and tannins.  “Lucy” is produced by combining both processes and is then cellared and aged in neutral barrels for three months, prior to bottling.  Since they began making this wine, they have contributed one dollar from each bottle sold and they have generated over $250,000 for Breast Cancer Research.  The wine is described as being a light salmon in color and offers notes of fresh strawberry, honey dew melon, raspberry, tangerine, lemon and rose petals.  On the palate the wine displays tones of grapefruit, raspberry and minerality in a completely dry and fermented wine with fresh acidity and ending with a medium-count finish of fruit and terroir.    

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