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Austin Beeman

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My 12 Most Memorable Wines of 2021

December 29, 2021

This had to be the fastest year on record. It feels like I was just writing this list for 2020 a few months ago. As I look back through the year, I remember moments of normalcy, weeks of expectation, much uncertainty, and a few times of tragedy.

Check out the Most Memorable Wines of Past Years

2020 and 2019.

And through it all there was wine. Most often than not, it was consumed in the presence of my closest friends. A gift of time together, hopefully but with an unknown future ahead.

Without further ado: Here are the Most Memorable Wines of 2021 in order of memorability.

Adelsheim 1981 Pinot Noir “Elizabeth’s Reserve”

#1 Most Memorable of 2021.

Last Summer I was lucky enough to be a guest of Elk Cove Vineyards at a dinner they co-hosted with Adelsheim. In an evening full of delicious old bottles, the 1981 Elizabeth’s Reserve was not only the standout, but my most memorable wine of the year.

David Adelsheim was personally pouring the wines and talking about how important this was to him. At this moment, “we had no idea what we were doing.” The label is an artists prediction of what their daughter would eventually look like.

The wine was delicate, fragile, ethereal. We held our glasses as if we were holding a newborn baby, which was ironic of course. I have no idea what Oregon Pinot Noir of this age is supposed by like, but it was unmistakable.

I may never get a chance to taste this again, but there was no better place or moment or company to experience it.

Produttori del Barbaresco 1978 Pori

#2 Most Memorable of 2021.

Birth Year Wines are always special, but rarely are they this good. Dark, spicy, and earthy with layer upon layer of beautiful complexity. Fully mature and at the top of its game. The best Birth Year Wine I’ve ever tasted.

Bonny Doon Vineyard 2006 Le Cigare Volant

#3 Most Memorable of 2021

While the name “Cigare Volant” still exists, new ownership has turned one of America’s great Rhone Blends to a solid, but unexceptional every day blend. However, for those of us who still have bottles of the original - especially in magnum - we can revisit the dark, complex, feral, earthy, wine that was. Another beauty.

Domaine des Baumard 1973 Quarts de Chaume

#4 Most Memorable of 2021

One of my closest friends, Bill Schuck, passed away this year after a long battle with cancer. He was a wine lover, fellow traveler, and a great guy. After paying our respects, a group of our friends, had dinner at Basil Wine Bar and drank this bottle (and many others.)

It is good to remember that some things don’t die.

Like Great Friendships and World-Class Dessert Wine.


Chateau Pape Clément 2014 Pessaic-Leognan Blanc

#5 Most Memorable of 2021

Been a fan of Pape Clément since having it during a long and decadent Bordeaux lunch. Poured by a good friend in celebration of vaccination with some cheese and bread he’d learned to bake during Lockdowns.

Rich and intense with a serious structure. This is layered with grapefruit, apple juice, but then luxurious toast, herbed, and buttered. Long and decadent.

Briedé Family Vineyards 2019 Arandell

#6 Most Memorable of 2021

A hybrid variety that Cornell University believes is ideal for its quality and disease resistance, The Briedé family was one of the first to grow this in 2013.

It is a exceptional version of a Virginia Red. Dark cherry. Tangy. Very smooth tannins with only a bit of noticeable oak. Delicious and unexpected.

Le Carrillon d’Angélus 2009 & 2010 Saint-Emilon Grand Cru

#7 (tied) Most Memorable of 2021

Its fitting that these beautiful right bank Bordeaux tie for #7, because they were consumed with good friends to celebrate the release of the newest James Bond movie.

The 2009 was lush, sexy, and full of refined fruit. The 2010 was forceful with prominent tannins, but still lush and giving. Two great years for Saint-Emilion strutting their style.

Chateau Musar 1991 Estate Blanc

#9 Most Memorable of 2021

Almost no wine in the world offers the level of complexity and profundity as an old Chateau Musar Blanc from the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon. It has a medium-amber color. An explosive nose of dried apricots, candied apple, honeyed almonds, roasted carrots in balsamic. All that and more gets confirmed on the palate and the hauntingly long finish. This is a wine that sucks all of the attention out of the room.

Larmandier-Bernier Champagne ‘Rosé de Saignée’

#10 Most Memorable of 2021

The champagnes of Larmandier-Bernier are exceptional, but sometimes the moments of champagne are more important. At this year’s Wine Media Conference, a few of us were invited to share a moment of mourning, healing, friendship, and champagne with Christine Campbell. She writes eloquently about the experience in “Sadness Uplifted at the Wine Media Conference.” Go read that article.

Jean-Philippe Fichet 2018 Meursault ‘Le Mieux Sous le Chateau’

#11 Most Memorable of 2021

A small lieu-dit with vines planted in 1953, this was an exceptional Chardonnay. Cold and clear with a sense of eating frozen tropical fruit. A serious wine with a intense and focused structure. One of the best white burgundies I had in a very long time.

La Grand Vignolle 2019 Samur-Champigny

#12 Most Memorable of 2021

The beginning of the year was still a time of virtual wine tastings for work. Rarely does a wine jump out and grab me during one of these sessions, but the delicate ethereal nature of the Cabernet Franc was so enthralling that I had to talk a moment at just be present with the wine. This is great value and easy to find. Absolutely a gem to seek out and drink.


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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Walking the Original Vines of The Eyrie Vineyards with Owner and Winemaker Jason Lett

December 15, 2021

In the Summer of 2021, I had a chance to visit the Original Vines of The Eyrie Vineyards with Owner and Winemaker Jason Lett of The Eyrie Vineyards. In this long video, shot amongst the Original Vines, Jason Lett discusses the terroir of the vineyard, the effect of a variety of soil types, the benefits and challenges of own-rooted grapevines, and a little of the Lett family history..

I’m very proud of this video as I believe that it communicates not only a lot of superb information about one of the world’s most important vineyard sites, but also expresses what I felt about visiting it.

Special Thanks to Amy McCandlish, who made it all possible.

Enjoy the 22 minute video or check out the transcript. *The video is way better.

https://youtu.be/Q56fP3sLt3s

Note: Transcript was created by a third party service and I’ve endeavored to clean up the spelling of ‘wine words.’ Any persistent errors are mine alone and not Jason Lett’s. Or, watch the video. It is awesome, with moving pictures, music, and you get to see Jason in his element.


Transcript:

Austin Beeman:

It's 6:30 in the morning, and I am headed out to visit a place that has always been really special to me. I'm going to be visiting the original vines of Eyrie Vineyard with owner and winemaker, Jason Lett. There are very few vineyards that are as important as this one, vineyards that have planted the seed that would spring up into an entire wine industry. I've never had a chance to visit and today we're going to go there and hopefully learn a lot about it and discover what makes it so exciting.

Jason Lett:

Hi, I'm Jason Lett with the Eyrie Vineyards. I'm standing here in front of the original vineyard site in the Dundee Hills.

So we're located in Oregon. Oregon, sort of geographically in the United States, second down on the left, we're between Washington and California over by the Pacific coast. And the Pacific coast is actually this way to the west of us and to the east of us is the Great Basin desert, and we are in a valley between two ranges of mountains that separate us from two hostile climates. The Pacific ocean over there, very cool, very wet, 10 feet of rain a year. The desert over there, that's where all our hot weather comes, on this beautiful sunny day in August. We're going to get some of that heat from the desert, but most of that heat is blocked from us by what's called the Cascade Range.

So we're in this little magical pocket right in between there and the Dundee Hills, if you kind of look at the Willamette Valley as a triangle, is located kind of up here, up in the top third sort of scooted over to the west, and you can almost look at the Dundee Hills like a fist. One of our larger producers Stoller Vineyards is wrapped around the thumb here. Eyrie and Outcrop, the two vineyards that we're standing at from Eyrie right now, are located on the forefinger and up this forefinger we also have our Roland Green and our Daphne Vineyard. And then down below on the middle finger, below the Archery Summit Winery, we have our Sister's Vineyard. So we have five vineyards all together in the Dundee Hills, ranging in a range of elevation from 200 feet down here at the Sisters Vineyard up to 900 feet at the Daphne Vineyard.

In the Dundee Hills, as you go up in elevation, as you do when you go up through our vineyards, three things happen, there are three changes. The first thing that happens is you change soils, the second thing that happens is that things get windier, and then the third thing that happens is that things get cooler.

So the higher you go, the cooler things get. Where we're standing right now is a great place to talk about soils, so we're standing right at the interface of six different soils. We've got three volcanic soils and three sedimentary soils. The volcanic soils are all sort of collectively known in this group as Jory soils, but actually if you start getting down and refining in that group, chemically they're all the same but they differ in their depth.

Right now we're standing on a combination of Jory, Nekia, and Gelderman, and so those are soils typified by the depth of their top soils in descending order. So Nekia being the thinnest top soil and Gelderman being the ... I mean, excuse me, Jory being the thickest. All of those top soils are perched on top of basalt cobble. Basalt is not a very porous rock and so it actually tends to capture the rain water that we get copious amounts of in the winter and hold it all through the summer in those little cracks between the cobbles, and so that's what the vines are accessing. You see these vines behind us, they're very green, very healthy in spite of this being a dry summer. It's because they're tapped into those deep sources.

"The other three soils here are going to be sedimentary soils starting with kind of over the top, the Missoula flood soils from about 15,000 years ago. And then if you look behind me, you'll see that we're standing ... There's a little temporary stream bed behind us, that runs water in the winter and brings with its small amounts of silt, and those silts build up and create the Dayton and Amity soils. So those are the three sedimentary soils and they overleaf the top of the volcanic soils, and depending on your elevation, you get varying sort of quotients of sedimentary or volcanic until you get so high, that finally you're on pure volcanic.

"The other things that happen as you go up in elevation in the Dundee Hills is not just that soil change, but also more wind. So where we're standing right now, we receive winds from the west and those winds usually kick up in the afternoon, six or seven hours from now, and they get stronger through the evening and they bring with them much cooler temperatures.

So here in the Willamette Valley, we can have a high temperature as we're going to have today in the mid 90s, but then an evening temperature in the mid 50s, so that's a 40 degree temperature shift and that really helps our acidities here, but it's that wind that carries the cool weather to us. And the higher you go, the windier things get, and the bigger that daily shift is.

Finally, the third thing that happens is that things just get cooler, and this happens everywhere, the higher and elevation you go, the cooler things get. So like our Daphne Vineyard, right at the peak of the Dundee Hills, might flower and ripen 12 days later than our Sister's Vineyard down at the bottom, and it's nice to have that span because I can control my picking decisions based on the vintage. If it's a cool vintage and I need more richness, I'll let this lower elevation hang longer and bring that richness in. If it's a warm vintage, as we're having so many of these days, it's really nice to have these high elevation vines. Pick those little earlier, bring a little acidity, a little sprightliness into the mix. And that's how I can get away with making wine without adding acid is because I have these vineyards, a whole spectrum of vineyards to play with, and it's super helpful.

So we're entering veraison right now. It's the stage where the grapes kind of announce who they are, what they are.

You can see, this is pinot noir and it's moving towards its colored phase. This is a really exciting time of year. One of the things that happens this time of year is that you can weigh these clusters and they're about half the weight they'll be when they reach their final ripeness. This year we have a lot more clusters than we did last year, thank God, but what you'll see is that the berries are quite small, so we're going to get a lot of intensity this year. Even once this cluster is fully expanded, it's probably only going to weigh about 80 or to 100 grams, which is almost ideal for the kinds of wine that we want to make from this block.

"Yeah, so this is a great time of year to be looking at the vineyards. You can see that there's a lot of variation in these vines in which vines are starting to color up. Look here, this vine is starting to get some nice purple berries, but if we jump a vine down here, this one is a little bit less ripe and that's just genetic variation. That's actually something that we're looking for in the vineyards, because you don't want everything to be perfectly consistent and cookie cutter.

Complexity comes from variation, complexity comes from diversity, and so that's what you see here in these vines.

Oh, look over here, this vine here is an older vine probably due to be re-trunked, or maybe it's stressed out because the voles have been nibbling on its bark, definitely appears to be the case. So this one here is coloring up faster than its neighbors because it thinks it doesn't have long to live, and if we don't step in and do something for this vine, it won't. So we'll be working on that this winter during pruning time.

Austin Beeman:

What would you step in and do for it?

Jason Lett:

Well, these are un-rooted vines. Because the vines are un-rooted, you don't have to sort of worry about the root stalk overtaking the scion, and so you can actually grow a shoot from the base of the plant, train it up, and create a new trunk. I'm just trying to see if there's one close by where we've done that. I see one three rows over. So if you look here, okay? This is a shoot that we just started training up last year and you can see it's growing out from down here. It's tapped into those old roots.

This vine is planted '68, so it 53 years old now. This young vine is on 53 year old roots, and eventually we'll be able to trim this trunk away and have this brand new trunk in its place. It's a way to kind of revitalize the vine in situ. It's not something you can do with grafted vines. This is something you can only do with un-rooted vines, but un-rooted vines have their problems, and I'll go show you what those are.

So we're standing here at the Eyrie Vineyard. These are the first vines planted in the Willamette Valley back in 1965. These vines behind me here are in fact, those first vines. However, they did not start here in this spot, they started at a nursery site that my father established south of us here about an hour within the Willamette Valley, but my father was starting with cuttings, sections of stick this long, and they needed a place that was irrigated, that had rich soils, basically the exact opposite of what you want in an established vineyard. And so he found a spot in a grass seed field south of here, planted the vines, let them grow out for a year, and then brought them here with the help of his new vineyard assistant, my mother, in 1966, and planted them in this present spot. So the vines are from '65, they've been growing here since '66.

What is an eyrie?

My father's newly recruited vineyard help, my mom, named the vineyard, and she was an English major so she knows fancy words like eyrie, and eyrie is a hawk's nest. And as my folks were planting the vines in this big tree behind me here, there was a pair of hawks that were nesting and sort of building their nest and having their babies, and my parents were planting their vines and getting ready to have their babies. And they just felt a real kinship and connection with the hawks that were here, and so it's named the Eyrie Vineyards after the hawks that lived here. And the hawks still live here today. I just picked up this feather down the road there, and this is a feather from a red tailed hawk. And every Eyrie label that you see is probably going to have a hawk on it, or some sort of abstract watercolor, if not. But we're always trying to refer back to the ecology of the place, and that's really what the name symbolized and always has symbolized.

I know a bottle of bleach doesn't seem like it has very much to do with organic viticulture, and you're probably right, but this has a purpose and we're just trying to slow the spread of phylloxera in the vineyards.

Unless you're a European in the 19th century, you probably don't know what phylloxera is. Phylloxera is ... It's an aphid basically that feeds on the roots of European grapevines, and it's defeated by planting vines on root stalks, which is something that my father didn't want to do. So all of these vines are un-rooted and we talked about re-trunking, so un-rootedness has a lot of advantages. The vines have better access to water, you can re-trunk them, training, pruning, disease resistance. There's lots of reasons that you want to have un-rooted vines. Phylloxera is one of the reasons you don't, so I'm just going to wash my feet here and then we'll go into a phylloxerated block.

Let's talk about phylloxera. When I have winemakers and visitors from Europe, they always love this part of the vineyard because they haven't seen phylloxera in 120 years. I wish I could say the same. This poor vine that has just a little bit of green here is still struggling along trying to survive, and you can see behind me here that we've already started the process of taking out vines. I've grown up working with these vines. I'm almost as old as they are, and so this makes me very sad to see this. You can see this vine here has completely given up. This one is still struggling along, trying to give us something.

There's really nothing you can do about phylloxera. The only thing you can do is to replant on root stalk, and it's very sad.

We are however, trying to extend the life of these vines for as long as we can, and one of the ways that we do that is we don't plow. So if you look between these rows, you'll see our native grass cover. It's brown and dry looking right now. It's not dead, it's just dormant, and as soon as we get a rain, that stuff will wake back up again. But something else you'll see is between the rows here, we're also leaving the grass, and in the spring when everything is up and blooming, you'll see 15 to 20 different species around each vine. There's a lot of genetic diversity tucked around down here living underground, and it's all dormant right now because really, the only thing that can survive in this summer heat is a grape vine.

A lot of people ask me about sort of what the future looks like at Eyrie, and obviously, when I came on here, it was right at the time when phylloxera was settling in. Our winery, we'd been working in it at that point for 45 years, and my dad had amassed quite a collection of library wines. And so I view my challenges as we go forward as sort of releasing those library wines to the public and making sure that they taste the way they're supposed to. Someday I've got to rebuild that winery, still haven't done that yet. And especially important is to maintain the estate by replanting vines as they pass away. And because of the phylloxera problem, that's an accelerated need.

You can see this field behind me here is open, and so I'm following a traditional practice of fallowing here. These were pulled out three years ago, I'm going on the old Burgundian principle that you fallow for seven years before you replant, and that's largely because there are fungal organisms in the ground breaking down the roots of those dead vines, and you want that process of decomposition to have fully completed before you plant again. At the same time, because we're leaving this field here, we're adding carbon to the soil, the soil is sort of recalibrating and getting ready for that next plantation.

It's very important, and one of our practices is that we don't fertilize, we don't irrigate, we don't plow. There's a lot of things we don't do, and a lot of people say, "Well, if you're not doing anything, how are you wine making?"

And comes out of the fact that like not doing something is actually harder than doing something, this case in point. If we were following standard practice and getting in there with a plow and plowing that down and immediately replanting and throwing in an irrigation system, we would be up and running and profitable in three years with vines. But instead we're taking this very long, slow, kind of natural, traditional approach to planting vines with the hopes that the quality of the wine down the road is going to justify that.

So this is where I grew up. These vines are just a couple years older than I am, and I definitely grew up working here. I followed my dad around from the time I was three until the time I was 13, and like every kid probably, when I turned 13, everything my dad did suddenly became lame.

And so I continued to work here for pocket money. I can definitely remember coming through these vines and tending them as a teenager, listening to my Walkman, high tech stuff. But that was just to make pocket money. I paid for a ticket to France to go be a stagiaire with the [inaudible 00:18:45] family in 1987, by working in these vines. And that was a great experience, but unfortunately, probably lost on a 17 year old.

At that time I didn't think I wanted anything to do with the wine business, and I was just using it as my entree into a beautiful place. And it was a beautiful place, still is. But I do think I was able to absorb enough there that the wine business always kind of stuck in the back of my mind, and even though I moved away and I lived in places like Connecticut and New Mexico for 10 years and stayed away from the family domain, these vines brought me back. They're siblings and not really knowing how they were going to be taken care of in the generations to come, I realized it was just time for me to step up.

And at the same time, I'd gotten a degree in plant ecology and kind of realized that if you want to understand how plants interact with their environment, wine is a great way to do it. I mean, wine just distills that experience the plant has had for a hundred days in this place, on these soils, with these conditions, in this climate. It's just pulling all these factors together into a glass, and it's just amazing. So when you drink a glass of wine, you're getting an incredible amount of information delivered straight to the deepest parts of your brain, and that to me was just something that was too attractive to pass up.

So I came back here in 1997, worked to harvest in one of the most difficult vintages of the 90s and loved it, and asked my dad if I could come back and work in wine. And both of my folks were surprised because they had thought that that was kind of the last thing on my mind, but we worked together on and off for five or six years, I went off and started my own wine label called Black Cap. And then in 2005, my father's health really took a turn for the worst, and so he invited me back to be the winemaker and really just very gracefully executed that move.

He just said, "Jason, from this point on all decisions in the vineyard and winery are yours, I just ask that you ask my advice from time to time." So that's how we worked it out, and so we were able to work together on that basis until 2008, he passed away, and I've been running the business with the help of my co-owner, my mother, ever since, and I'm very grateful to do it.


FTC Compliance: I currently work for Cutting Edge Selections which represents The Eyrie Vineyards in Ohio and Kentucky, but this blog and podcast are completely separate from that business relationship.

THIS IS EPISODE #82 OF UNDERSTANDING WINE WITH AUSTIN BEEMAN

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Amongst the Old Vines of Bethel Heights Vineyard with Winemaker Ben Casteel

December 5, 2021

Family Owner and Winemaker Ben Casteel of Bethel Heights Vineyard shows Austin Beeman around his old vines. Specifically some own-rooted Wente Clone Chardonnay and Geneva Double Curtain Trellising.

Filmed on location at Bethel Heights Vineyards in the Eola-Amity Hills AVA of Oregon.

Enjoy the Video (12 minutes) or Read the Transcript below

Transcript:

So my name's Ben Casteel, I'm the winemaker and one of the family owners of Bethel Heights.

We're standing right in the middle of our vineyard on the Western side. We are in a block of Chardonnay that was planted here in 1977. These were the first vines that were planted at Bethel Heights.

This is Chardonnay that was taken out of the Wente Vineyard in Livermore, California. Cuttings literally just taken and stuck in the ground here 43 years ago.

So half of Bethel Heights is still own rooted and un-grafted. So when I say own rooted plant, all I mean is that it's not vinifera grafted on top of phylloxera-resistant root stock. To graft a grape vine, as my friend, Jason Lett, likes to say, you only need a very sharp knife.

You take a cutting, the buds on the bottom become roots, the ones on the top become leaves, and you have the genetically identical thing that you cut it off of. Okay. But what that means is, it's susceptible to the little tiny root laos called phylloxera that will usually let in a secondary pathogen that'll kill the vine.

The original plantings were 1977. And then when my parents bought the property in 1978, they planted a whole swath of Pommard in 1979. So half of the property is fairly old vines, un-grafted.

You can see with Wente, people sort of historically have sought this out because these are going to get bigger, but you can see the sort of hens and chicks, the big berries intersperse with little teeny tiny berries. The little teeny tiny berries rarely will have any seeds. This is mainly just skin and pulp. It's one of the reasons why people seek out Wente is because you get these hens and chicks.

You can get a lot of concentration with Chardonnay like this. The trick is that being on an own rooted plant, so, I mean, as you can probably tell, this isn't what a traditional grape vine in Oregon looks like. You can get a little closer, you can see these guys are probably almost five feet tall.

This is a Geneva double curtain. It was developed in Geneva, New York with the idea that you would have, you can see that sort of double arm to sort of fill out both sides of the fruiting wire. This was done primarily for fruitfulness, that you get more grapes when you can put out two different canes. So we alternate a single and a double hanging trellis. We alternate just because if it was a double and a double, it would just be an absolute jungle in the vine row.

This is one of the latest ripening things we have. I've been making the wine here since 2005. And the notion that we would bottle this separately, let alone that it would make the most expensive wine that we make, I would've laughed out loud probably even five years ago, but here we are. I think with warming weather, I mean, every vintage in Oregon between 2012 and 2018 was in some way or another defined by heat, we're standing here in 2021, a vintage that I very much think will be defined by heat. And with more growing season, we're able to get the Wente riper than we ever hoped we could. It used to be sort of many years ago that the Wente was sort of defined by the margin of viticulture, that we got the grapes as ripe as we were able to, never as ripe as we wanted to.

Whereas now with warmer weather, it's flipped around and now we can get this in most years as ripe as we want. Being own rooted it is susceptible to phylloxera. So this vine looks very healthy, lots of clusters. This is actually pretty balanced. We haven't done anything here yet, but if we walk up here just a little bit, with this plant, you'll start to notice shoots are all whole lot shorter. It's not as many clusters on the plant. Most of these basal leaves, this is more just burn from when it got really hot. But I mean, we can see that this vine is obviously weaker than the one we just came from. It's sort of bittersweet. I mean, usually the crop that we get off of a vine like this is very, very good because fewer clusters means that things are really concentrated. The sad part, of course, is that it's dying and we probably will never plant on a trellis like this again. I mean, this is sort of a relic of a bygone era.

The thought here also is, I mean, as you can tell, doing any farming here with a tractor is going to be a challenge. We can't hedge this with a tractor because we'd be taking off grapes. But the idea was that this was a trellis system you could do with fairly little mechanization. So we hedge this with a machete instead of a tractor if things get too vigorous. This plant looks like it was only hedged once. We can just simply cut it back. I mean, it's very much a by hand operation as opposed to a VSP where the fruiting zone is way down here. Here, everything's up top. It's also easier on people in that regard that, I worked in Burgundy a long time ago and having to bend down to pick grapes over and over again certainly takes its toll on taller people.

I think that was also a part of this was the personnel piece that it was just easy. And you can see sort of a hallmark of Wente, teeny tiny little berries. Now this, we just went through lag, so we now have hard seeds. And what we typically do is we'll take weights per plant and then we'll sort of guess how many plants we have, take an average cluster weight, and that way we know about how many tons per acre we're looking at here. This is a notoriously hard block to judge because we do have these clusters like this with teeny tiny little berries. There's also clusters maybe we can go look at in a minute that, I mean, I could probably fit two of these in my hand. There are others where I could probably only fit one in my hand. I mean, there is genetic variety in here.

It's been in the ground for 43 years. And I think with that comes some genetic instability, be it virus, be it environmental conditions to where things have changed, which is really interesting with a stalwart block of 43-year-old vines, that things are still dynamic and still changing. And yeah, I mean, it's one of my favorite things about this block.

It's sort of maddening because it's impossible to sample. It's one of our running jokes. We send our interns out here to get a representative sample and they come back with sort of a bewildered look on their face with a couple of teeny tiny little clusters and then one gigantic one. There is no good way to sample it. I mean, this is sort of beyond science in terms of us getting numbers to pick. Usually we just use our neighboring block as an indicator. So once we've picked that Chardonnay, we wait seven days and then come pick this.

So still on the same block of Chardonnay. But as you can see, these clusters are at least two to three times as big as what we were looking at. I had mentioned we were in lag. So usually when we do that, we'll weigh the cluster and then we do several different factors. We do 1.6, 1.88 and two, meaning that this cluster is either going to get 1.6 times as big, 1.8 times as big or twice as big, which means that all of these guys lying on top of each other is going to be all sorts of trouble if they do get that big, because obviously we're on an organic program here. And having clumping like this, it's great right now when it's nice and sunny, but if it rains, all of this can lead to rot because you're just giving water extra places to hide.

So thinning passes through here or, I mean, it's not just section by section, it's essentially plant by plant because, as we saw earlier, I mean, things don't all look, they're not the same here. So the instructions usually fall to my harvest crew rather than our typical vineyard crew to come through and do this just because it is fairly detailed work.

“And what would account for the fact that these are so different in size than the ones before?” - Austin

Genetic instability. I think Wente was the parent material of what became the 108 clone Chardonnay, which was a huge success in California. It was almost like it was selected like you would select cereal crops. So disease resistant, high yielding, and late ripening. It was a lot of what was planted here in Oregon early on. Great for California, but high yielding, late ripening for Oregon. In the eighties and seventies wasn't necessarily what anybody was looking for. So the clone essentially became a pariah, everybody tore it out. It was kind of blamed for why we had been making bad Chardonnay for a number of years. It coincided with David Adelsheim sort of negotiating getting the Dijon selections from the French ministry of agriculture brought into Oregon, which were smaller clusters, much more uniform. But it's funny, but what seemed like a good idea at the time sort of looking fast forwarding now to 2021, I wish I had a lot more of stuff like this that pushed deep, deep into the season, that held acidity, that kept balanced flavors.

I find, if we can move a little bit just right over here. So this is Dijon. This is planted in 1994. You can see we're on a vertical shoot trellis position here as opposed to a hanging trellis, more plants in the ground. So basically they kept this big wide row spacing, so 10-foot rows, and they just doubled the density, so where one plant came out, two went in its place. So you're also asking the plant to only ripen grapes to here as opposed, I can't even reach the end, to here. So the carbohydrate source for the plant here, you're counting on things getting all the way down here. So you are going to see things get to be a little bit more varied further down the cane, as opposed to here with tighter spacing where things stay much more uniform.

It's one of the very un-sexy stories of Oregon Chardonnay, but a true one that, while the clones changed, 108 was done away with, Wente, Draper, a lot of those were sort of seen as the wrong plant material, and the Dijon selections came in, the trellising all changed too. People were planting closer and closer together, sort of asking less of the plant to get a shorter canopy ripe. So I know as much as people love to sell clone, I think that the spacings also made a big, big difference.

And this is still considered pretty wide for the state now. Certainly the spacing in between the rows, but even the spacing in between the plants. Our older vines that are dying, do we maintain the trellis system? Say I have a sick plant here and then four healthy plants right next door, do I just tear this one out, and again, double the density but still keeping a 10-foot row space? It's one of those sort of debacles for a family business because, I mean, I think obviously you want to see these generational bottlings go on and on without just wholesale tearing something out, modernizing the trellis, and understanding that you're probably not going to get to bottle it under that name again for 15 years, 20 years.

So here you can see we're in a spot where we are looking at Wadensville planted in 1977. So again, own rooted vine. We haven't done any thinning here. This is sort of naturally what set has looked like in here. So pretty ragged and pretty sparse. This is our west block. We've done a single bottling of this, I think since 1995. It was called the Wadensville on the label at the time, but then the family thought that nobody could pronounce that. And so they switched it to the west block. And so the idea being that we can keep that label going with the older vines as long as they're viable, but still have baby plants becoming adolescent plants eventually in 20 years becoming adult plants when the rest of the block has ceased to be viable. So the idea is we can sort of keep these things going generation one, to me, generation number two, to hopefully somebody's children, generation number three.


FTC Compliance: I currently work for Cutting Edge Selections which represents Bethel Heights Vineyard in Ohio and Kentucky, but this blog and podcast are completely separate from that business relationship.

THIS IS EPISODE #81 OF UNDERSTANDING WINE WITH AUSTIN BEEMAN

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