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Austin Beeman

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My 12 Most Memorable Wines of 2020

December 28, 2020

2020 was a year to forget, but one we’ll always remember. COVID-19 was the big story of the year with lockdowns, stay-at-home-orders, restaurant industry devastation, and hundreds of thousands of deaths. Fires ripped through the wine countries of California, Oregon, and Australia while believable reports of sexual abuse ripped through the Court of Master Sommeliers. Of course, I shouldn’t ignore that we also had protests, riots, and an ugly, protracted political election.

With all the challenges and trauma of the year, it became necessary to focus on community, friendship, and the human connections. These moments were few but precious. Risk could be limited, but not fully removed. For a lover of wine, I sanctified these moments, by embracing special wines that in a previous season might have been deemed too special for a simple dinner with a friend.

In 2020, the motto became, “Drink the Good Stuff!”

What made wines memorable in 2020 is something that we often forget. The purpose of wine is to lubricate human connections with beauty, grace, and an intimate interaction with the world around us.

Here are 12 wines listed in the order I experienced them.

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Bonny Doon Vineyard 2007 Le Cigare Volant

Having sold in January 2020, one of the greatest Rhone-varietal advocates in California is not what it was when I worked there. Under new management, many of the beautiful older wines were sold at extreme discounts.

This beautiful Chateauneuf-inspired wine was absolutely singing in 1.5L magnum. Wild, primal, earthy, and exotic. It reminded my why this was arguably California’s most underrated wine.

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Hervé Souhaut 2018 La Souteronne

It was the night before Ohio closed down restaurants and last time I would have dinner in a restaurant for over 10 months, but I didn’t know it at the time. I was dining with Mike Gregg, the excellent Sommelier at Basil Pizza & Wine Bar in Perrysburg, at one of my favorite Cincinnati restaurants - Please.

This Gamay from the Northern Rhone is a cult classic of the Natural Wine Community. Juicy, smoky, and delicious with lots of wild red fruits. Superb!

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Smith-Madrone 2016 Cook’s Flat Reserve

2020 was the year that every winery tried to go digital. The most memorable was a virtual ‘influencer’ tasting with Stuart Smith, Founder & General Partner of Smith-Madrone.

A red blend patterned after Bordeaux, this is a seriously luxurious taste of Napa Valley’s Mountains with just enough structure to keep from descending into goo. Pretty great stuff.

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Champagne Bollinger 2011 ‘James Bond Edition’

Covid did a number on the movie industry as well with many films delayed, including the new James Bond film. This bottle was originally meant to be opened the night of the release, but when surprise synchronicity put my James Bond-loving friends and I in the same place on a Saturday afternoon, I knew this had to be opened.

I’m glad I didn’t wait, because this is a gorgeous Champagne. Full-bodied, yeasty, and rich with crystalline bubbles that reflect the sunlight. It was wonderful to share it.


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Raft Wines 2019 Counoise

My good friend, Thea Dwelle of Luscious Lushes turned me on to this boutique woman-owned winery. I’m glad she did.

Bright and frivolous! This low-alcohol red is almost transparent. If the ‘Manic Pixie Dream Girl’ could be a wine, this Counoise is she. So much fun!

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Dr. F Weins-Prüm 2011 Graacher Domprobst Riesling Kabinett

Another casualty of Covid was one of Cincinnati’s finest restaurants: Bauer Farm Kitchen an elevated German place run by the excellent Jackson Rouse.

This Riesling came from their wonderfully eclectic wine collection. While very youthful at 9 years old, the wine shows off a fusion of dense stone, exotic melon, yellow apples, and wisps of petrol.

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Suavia Soave Classico ‘Le Rive’

Dinner parties that in 2019 were a dozen people became socially distanced groups of four in 2020.

This was the precious last bottle of one of Italy’s great white wineries. I’ve produced two videos on my wine show during my visit to Italy in 2012. Here & Here.

I don’t remember the vintage, but it was no younger than 2010. This oaked interpretation of Gargenega had aged like fine White Burgundy. Dense, layered, complex, and profound.

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d’Arenberg 2010 Shiraz ‘J.R.O. Afflatus’

Like it did for many others, Covid destroyed my travel plans. The blessing here was the ability to spend that time with family instead. My father grilled steaks and I decided to “Drink the Good Stuff.”

This is insanely old-vine Shiraz (1912) from McLaren Vale. I first was exposed to this in 2014, when visiting Australia for my MBA. It is one of the finest Syrah/Shiraz made anywhere in the world.

Dry herbs. Bitter chocolate. Dense black fig. Eucalyptus. Ridiculously long finish. Wow!

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Penfolds 1997 Grange

In late summer, as COVID was apparently waning, a few of us tried to get together for an outdoor gourmet dinner. Almost everything we opened that night could have made this list, but the 1997 Grange was the standout.

I love rooting for underdog wines, but it often good to be reminded that legends are expensive and respected for a reason. This is a monumental wine. Both an Aussie Ur-Shiraz and completely distinctive bottle.

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Lucien Le Moine 2014 Volnay 1er Cru ‘Hospice De Beaune: Cuvée General Muteau’

Another expensive legendary winery showing that it was worth every dollar. I opened this with two very good friends from Pittsburgh. A silence - pregnant with awe and beauty - came over the entire room.

This is kind of experience that inspires you to throw money at Burgundy for a lifetime. I won’t try to describe the taste. It just wouldn’t be fair to the wine.

Domaine Tempier 2018 Bandol Rosé

Lucie ‘Lulu’ Peyraud, Matriarch of France's Domaine Tempier, died at 102. Her story and the quality of her wines were instrumental in creating my fascination with the world of wine.

As usual, this rosé was wild and intense without ever losing the freshness. Cheers Lulu! Thanks for the inspiration.

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Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars 1978 Cabernet Sauvignon Napa Valley

There was obviously no big birthday party in November, but instead some delicious wine and cheese with a close friend. So why not open a birth-year wine?

A bit of the barnyard funkiness but quite a bit of black fruit left. Well balanced with cigar box and a bit of greenery. A lot better than most 1978’s I’ve opened.


Disclosure 1: At the time of this writing, I work for a wholesale distributor that represents some of these wines in Ohio and Kentucky. Neither my representation of these wines or lack thereof, affects this list in any way.

Disclosure 2: The wines on this list were a combination of promotional samples, purchased at discount due to my industry status, tasted with friends who purchased them, or purchased by myself at full price.

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The One Rule for Perfect Wine and Food Pairing

November 18, 2020

The following is a clip taken from Austin Beeman's interview on the Upside of 40 Podcast with Sean Mooney.

Topic: How to Pair Wine with Food: The One Simple Rule

"Sean Mooney: Well, and now let's get to the basics, because I grew up and I was a waiter at a place called The Vineyard, and I learned the basics and the different types of wine and I could suggest, and we had wine tastings, it was great. But a lot of people don't really know wine at all. And there's always been this you have a white with chicken, and fish, and pasta, and then you have reds with meat. And does that still stand true or is it whatever your preference is? And is there a reason for that, that they go better?

Austin Beeman: So wine pairing is absolutely a real thing based on chemistry and biology. If you wonder whether or not wine pairing is real, brush your teeth, drink orange juice. The last thing in your mouth matters..."

ABOUT UPSIDE OF 40 WITH SEAN MOONEY

Upside of 40 finds Sean Mooney wrestling with something new – the facts of life after 40. It’s candid talk for men with real experts on money, dating, relationships, fitness, health, technology, food, travel, retirement, sports and more. Get the good, the bad, and the funny about life after 40.


Full Transcript:

Sean Mooney:

Well, and now let's get to the basics, because I grew up and I was a waiter at a place called The Vineyard. I learned the basics and the different types of wine and I could suggest, and we had wine tastings. It was great. But a lot of people don't really know wine at all. And there's always been this you have a white with chicken, and fish, and pasta, and then you have reds with meat. And does that still stand true or is it whatever your preference is? And is there a reason for that, that they go better?

Austin Beeman:

So wine pairing is absolutely a real thing based on chemistry and biology. If you wonder whether or not wine pairing is real, brush your teeth, drink orange juice. The last thing in your mouth matters. So if the last thing in your mouth is a fleshy, fatty piece of steak, then if you have something that is gooey and fleshy as well on the wine, it's not going to pair the way that having something that is firmer and can contrast it. So let me walk you through a couple of really simple things that a person can do to be better at wine and food pairing.

You always want to figure out what is the dominant flavor on the plate. And so if I'm doing a grilled chicken, then the dominant flavor is that chicken. If I'm doing a grilled chicken covered in a mushroom sauce, then the mushroom sauce is the dominant flavor. If I'm doing chicken, and turkey, and mashed potatoes, and cranberry sauce, and it's all on the same plate, cranberry sauce is the dominant flavor on that plate. Find the most prominent, dominant flavor and then we talk about pairing that. And so if you have something that is lighter, go lighter.

So if you think about a fresh fish in like a butter sauce, a lighter bodied wine or something buttery like a Chardonnay, you're going to match those flavors and match the overall intensity. It would feel wrong to have a light delicate fish and pound it with a big Shiraz from the South of France. But it would also be incredibly wrong to have steaks on the grill and this delicate little fragile white wine. So match that intensity.

If you have both, if you need one wine to bridge two very distinct dinners, the classic she's having fish, he's having steak, and they're sitting down for dinner together, then you can do something like a dry rosé, which bridges the gap between, which is actually made with red wine grapes made in the style of a white wine, and that's how many rosés will often be made. So just match the overall intensity and you're going to have a real win.

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Mac McDonald: Winemaker of Vision Cellars. The Complete Interview

August 1, 2020

Mac McDonald of Vision Cellars is not what you would expect from someone making some of California's best Pinot Noir. 

Mac speaks with a southern drawl, wears a farmer's hat, and sports blue jean overalls in a world of California's "Wine Country Casual."  He is a boutique craftsman who makes his wine in the corporate beast that is Wagner Family Wines.  He is also African-American in an industry where diversity is in the terroir and almost never among the winemakers.

This is my full interview from 2013, recorded at Walt Churchill’s Market in Maumee, Ohio. Originally released as episodes #55-#61 of Understanding Wine with Austin Beeman. In the interest of supporting diverse voices in the wine business, I’ve assembled the entire interview here.

Enjoy the 25 minute full interview. Or scroll down to read the transcript.

Mac McDonald:

I am Mac McDonald. I'd like to say I'm the owner, winemaker of Vision Cellars but I'm married with Miss Lil so I just make the wine for Miss Lil. 

Well, you know, it's kind of interesting how I got into wine. I grew up 89 miles south of Dallas, Texas. I grew up way in the woods, way in the country. I consider myself as an old organic kind of a guy, growing back up in there, squirrel eatin' type of a guy. At 12 years old, there used to be a couple hunters used to come down in these woods and go hunting with my grandfather and drink my father's moonshine. So one of them used to drink burgundy and these guys would give him a hard time about drinking that burgundy wine, blah, blah, blah.

But they was drinking corn whiskey. So one day he said to me, he says, "Hey, son, would you like to have this bottle of wine?" And said yes, but 12 years old, I didn't know how to get it open but I finally dug out the cork out of it and I took a stick and shoved it off in there and I tasted it. You don't have to worry about Child Protective Service because they didn't have anything back off in the woods to do that anyway. At any rate, I tasted it and I drank a half a bottle of that wine that day. It tasted pretty good. From that point on, all I talked about was I wanted to be a winemaker. Fast forward through high school, my coach says to me, "If you wanna make wine, you need to move to California."

That's why I moved to California, from Texas to California. I grew up about 89 miles south of Dallas, Texas, around Palestine, Waco, in that area. So I get into California, we had a pretty tough time getting to know winemakers and I didn't know who they were or what they do, any of that thing. So I started hanging around up in Mendocino County, which is about 160 miles north of San Francisco. Met a guy by the name of John Parducci up there and old John wouldn't give me the time of day but that was okay because some kid coming out of Texas talking about you wanna make wine but I kept going back up there and he started talking to me, telling me stuff. But really what kicked me off into this wine business is I met a family over in Napa valley. A family called the Wagner family and I hung out with Mr. Wagner probably for 9 months and I didn't know who he was, he didn't say anything about who he was.

And one day the taster room manager came out and said, "Hey, why you always out here bothering Mr. Wagner?" And I says, "Well, what do you mean? That old guy out there?" He goes, "That ain't just some old guy, that's Mr. Wagner. He own this place." I had no idea for 9 months I'd been hanging out with the owners of Caymus Vineyard. Fast forward a little bit further, I've known the Wagner family for around 31 years. 17, 15 years or so after hanging out with him, Mr. Wagner said to me, "Son, you ought to be in the wine business." And I thought, "Well, you know, I'd like to but I don't have that kind of money." He goes, "Don't worry about it, we'll take care of ya." So 17 years ago, my wife and I, Miss Lil, we started Vision Cellars and to this day, I'm the only non family member that's allowed to make wine at Caymus.

All my wines are crafted at Caymus Vineyard in Rutherford, California. I make 'em all myself. We own some vineyards in Sonoma County, which is about 110 miles north of San Francisco, Russian River Valley. We own this little vineyard there and we do craft wine from that vineyard. That's basically how I got into the wine business.

***

Pinot Noir is what we do. Folks often ask me, why do you choose or select the toughest type of grape? Well, number one, in California, Northern California, and you want to make Cabernet unless you come out of Napa Valley, folks normally think it's not that good. So I thought if I could craft a great Pinot Noir, because Burgundy is the same grape, that if I could craft a good Pinot Noir then I think I could play with the big dogs. I'm pretty competitive in everything that I do so I want it to be good, I want it to make a mark for doing what I was doing. And at the time as a winery in California called William Seylem that I thought was doing a great, great job and then I also thought Sanford down in the Santa Barbara, those are the only two great Pinot producers that I thought was really, really good and I thought if I could make a great, great Pinot Noir then I could compete. 

That's why they was selected. I had no idea all the crazy things about that grape even exists but I'm a pretty fast learner so I learned a lot about it. Well, it's a real challenging thing because if you think normally about the clones of a Pinot Noir grape, the challenge of growing the grapes, making the wines and selecting the right yeast and keeping the temperature at a certain control. To start off with, you have to really know your soil condition and really match your soil condition with your root stock. Root stock, how much water you have, the soil condition, how much you want to grow per ton, like a Sauvignon Blanc, it doesn't care, it's like a weed, you can just overload it with tons and tons of fruit. In the Chardonnay world, let's say, you have about 50, 60 plus clones some place in their different varieties, different clones. Same with the Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon, you have about 50 or 60 there.

But in the Pinot world, you have about 11,000 clones. These things just mutate, you start out, for example, with a 667 or a 777 clone and you may have one side of the road, you may have this clone planted over there, the other side another different clone and they'll completely go different flavors. Then you get into the pruning process of it. You talk to different Pinot growers and they have different methods of pruning and I just like a little bit of exposure to my fruit. So it's really consistent with leaf picking, in other words, if you get more sun on the east side you may wanna leave a little bit more leaves on that. You don't get enough on the west side of the vine you may want to pull some of that off. So it's a constant juggle of trying to get the ripeness, in the evening ripeness, on the fruit itself. 

Austin Beeman: Isn't that challenging? 

Mac McDonald:

Yeah, it's pretty challenging and like I said, we all, a lot of us have different thoughts about it but I think we all come into an agreement. That's why we've been able to craft better Pinot Noir in California. It used to be, like I said, Brett William was the king of it but now you've got a lot of folks making great Pinot Noir. In fact, even here in the state of Ohio, they have a Pinot program, it's doing pretty good. I gave a big lecture at Ohio State several years ago on the crafting on Pinot Noir and I came back and tasted what some of the things that they made and they doing pretty good. But it's a real tough grape to grow. There's a whole bunch of choices of selections of yeast that you use to ferment your fruit and that makes a big difference in the end result of the flavor. 

The type of yeast you use helps determine the flavor you get on the end and then you have the other extreme of that, barrel selections is really, really critical because in my mind, a Pinot Noir should be treated like a white grape. It's a delicate thing. You can get too much wood on it or you can get too much alcohol in it. I'm not saying that if you don't like high alcohol Pinot Noir you shouldn't buy them but I'm just thinking that 13.5, 14.5, in there, is ideal alcohol level for a Pinot Noir. Now with that said, sometimes your vineyard, your fruit is just not there. Out of 25 bricks, equivalent to a 13.8, 13.9 of Pinot Noir and so you may have to let the alcohol get up a little bit higher because it's a little bit riper, so the riper it is, the higher the sugar content and the higher the sugar content is, higher the alcohol is gonna be in the finished product. 

So it's kind of an up and down thing with that grape in that sense as well.

***

From my mind, what makes California fruit a little bit more consistent is that we've kind of figured out what type of soil condition, what type of weather patterns that you have is the best area to grow Pinot Noir. We've found that nice cooler areas, cool at night, maybe when it's a little bit warmer during the day, you know 80s is not to high into the 100s and stuff like that. Well, its more ideal for drinking and making Pinot Noir because you don't get the over ripe fruit all the time, unless you purposely trying to do that. So I think we are a little bit more consistent and we do have a tendency to get a little bit more alcohol you see than Burgundy or Oregon. I think when you look at Northern California, I think we're pretty consistent in finding a good location to grow Pinot Noir and I think that, that's really the determining factor.

Burgundy, you know they don't get a lot of heat and in that Burgundy area. So your alcohol normally is not as high and the wine can last a lot longer. Of course, we make our wines in California so that they'll be able to be consumed a little bit earlier. Now when I get into California itself and I think about Carneros, I think about a more dense, maybe a little bit more hardier of Pinot Noir because you don't have a lot of hot, hot weather in that Carneros area. It's quite close to the water. You get over into Sonoma County where I live, Sonoma County, Russian River Valley, ideal for Pinot Noir.

Our property is maybe three quarters of a mile from the Russian River, which is nice and cool in there. When the ocean itself is about 45 miles away. It's nice and cool in that Russian River Valley, where you get up in the 80's, once in a while you get up, you know 95 or something like that, but normally it's in the 80's and at night it kind of cools down so you get more of a cherry, real ripe plum kind of a fruit from that area, not as dark as it is in Carneros. Then when you get down to Monterey County, to the Santa Lucia Highland, particularly upper part of the Santa Lucia Highland, around Solidad, in that area. I purchased fruit from the Gary's in Rosella's Vineyard and a Las Ventura's vineyard that's owned by the Wagner family, and I tell you, that's an ideal area itself for growing Pinot Noir.

You still get that little dense kind of a fruit there. The acid can be high in that area, a lot higher than it is in I say Russian River Valley, Sonoma County, or Carneros, or in Napa area and part of it is in Sonoma. The acids can be pretty high down in the Santa Lucia Highland and into Monterey County. When you get down past Santa Barbara and that area, now you're picking up a little bit more ripe of fruit, a little bit lighter fruit and you can kind of get more of what I call that candy apple kind of a bright sweet kind of a real cherry, real not wild cherry, but real bing kind of a light cherry kind of a wine. With maybe a little bit of berries and the typical raspberry flavors down there.

I don't think that, that's a problem with that, but I think we're consistent in all the areas that we're making Pinot Noir in, but finding out that the temperature in except in those areas makes a big difference in how Pinot Noir should be coming out and how the trellising of the vines and how you can actually get the exposure to the grape to the sun shine that you need, but we can't change the sun. We can change how the sun hit the fruit itself by the way we prune it or by we go out and pick the leaves off of it. So I think overall, California's learned how to farm is the bottom line.

Now Oregon, a lot of folks in Oregon they kind of maybe live there, made wine in California so they've taken a lot of the practice up there that we had. They started out in Oregon using the fruit from that area and not trying to make it a California Pinot Noir style. They started out real light. They're gonna get a lot of sun, lot of heat. So they were able to just make a wine from the area and it was so different than California and I can remember when I used to go up there and I'd taste those Pinot Noir's and I use to think, "Oh, what do these guys think they doing?" Because, I was suggested to drink in a little bit different style of Pinot Noir. But I think overall, they doing a great job. They're making their Pinot Noirs up in Oregon and parts of Washington as well now.

***

What does wine mean to me? Wine means to me friendship, enjoyment, socialization. It means a lot to me, and the reason that I say that is because I've met so many wonderful folks through this wine business and having a glass of wine. I just think that folks who drink wine, they're very interesting individuals because you have something in common right away, you can talk to them about it. It don't matter if you don't even like the variety of wine. You may like Pinot Noir. You may like cabs. You may like Zin. Whatever it is, you got something in common. I find the reason that I say that socialization, friendship thing, over the years that I've been traveling with Miss Lil around the country doing wine events, wine tasting, I've met so many folks.


I probably have, come to visit our winery or visit our vineyard every year, probably have over 1,000 people just stop by to see me that I met from all over the United States, and I think that that felt really good that I meet these folks and give them my card and says, "Come out to visit us. We'll make you lunch or something," and they show up. That's a good feeling because I wouldn't have never met the folks. The big socialization, the big sharing of knowledge, from the knowledge that I get from folks like yourself, doing wine tasting events, and I'm even going to do a wine tasting maybe here later on today. You come in and meet these folks and they come out and see you, or when I come back here to Ohio, I go to these events. I had a big event every night I've been here. I've been here four nights, and it's somewhat like an old family reunion meeting. They come back time and time to see you, and you may not remember all of their names, but they remember who you are, and you just get to see them and you talk to them.

I don't know what I'd do to trade that socialization off for someone else, and let's face it. I enjoy wine.

***

Well, what we do is, we don't make a lot of changes in the vineyard, especially the quality of the vineyard. When you taste Vision Cellar's Pinot Noir, we make seven of them, and we don't change anything in that in the sense that, we don't take a little bit of this vineyard to add to this vineyard to make that better. We want to do the expression of soil from that particular location. And so, we try to get these wines in the middle of the road so that we don't have a problem with the food pairing of it.

And many times, I've done a lot of dinners throughout the United States, and I've noticed that a lot of chefs, they pair different things with our wine. Last night, we were at a country club, and they actually had done some type of custard with one of our Pinot Noirs. And I looked at it at first, I thought, "Oh, I'm not sure about this." But, what was the kicker on it, they had a little bacon on the side of it, and it was a really great pairing. And then, I've had occasion where I never would've done this, by the way, but it's a constant thing that I do now.

I was at a restaurant at another country club and they served oysters on the half-shell with one of my Pinot Noirs, which is a little bit robust Pinot Noir, and I thought, "Oh, whoa. What are you guys thinking about here?" One of the best pairings that I had, as far as with oysters. So Miss Lil and I will often now go out and order a dozen of those small, little oysters and have a bottle of Pinot Noir.

So Vision Cellar's Pinot Noirs, we craft those whether you're doing grilled vegetables, whether you're doing grilled chicken, grilled beef, we have one of those wines in our bag that will fit that occasion, whether it's spicy or not. Because a lot of folks will call me up and say, "Mac, I'm having duck," for an example, and I'll say, "Well, how are you preparing it?" If they're from a certain area, like Texas for example, one of the first questions is what part of Texas do you live in? Because I know if you live in the northern part around Dallas or that area, you know you're not going to have it spicy. If you're living down in San Antonio area or Austin area, you may be a little bit more spicy with your food.

So I may recommend a different one of my Pinot Noir, and so I think we want to make them all to go across the board with food, whether you're having sushi or whatever you're having. But then, if you get down to maybe touching with different spices, I may recommend something different. But, I think all of us in the Pinot producers, we're conscientious that we want all these Pinot Noirs to be able to fit with all types of food, and I think we've accomplished that very well.

***

Well, I would say try blindly. I don't necessarily say just look at price points on anything. I think you get together with some friends or if you have a wine tasting opportunity to come in and taste some.

Because you may say, well, you know what? I don't like Vision Cellars Pinot Noir. That doesn't mean you don't like Pinot Noir. You just don't like Vision Cellars Pinot Noir.

It's like prime rib. You like prime rib but you say, I'll make you a prime rib and you say, well, I don't like that. Well, you don't like the way I prepare it, but that doesn't mean you don't really like it some place else.

I think wine can be the same way. You need to be able to taste a variety of wines and not be so concerned about the price points of them, just the enjoyment. Then you find out the flavors you like. You find out the wine makers that you like because we have a tendency to do a little different things with our wine just like you do if you go out to a restaurant.

You may go to one restaurant and one store, you buy fish. Say you go to a market, you buy fish. Well, you may not like buying fish from that market but you like buying it from the other one. It's the same thing I think in wine as a comparison.

So I would say definitely try a variety of tasting. When there's an opportunity to taste Pinot Noirs, go out and taste them from different producers. And then that way you find your own style that you like.

But never stop experimenting. Never, ever stop experimenting.

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