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- Path: sparky!uunet!news.tek.com!vice!jbrewer
- From: jbrewer@vice.ICO.TEK.COM (John Brewer)
- Newsgroups: rec.food.drink
- Subject: Oregon Pinot Noirs
- Message-ID: <11031@vice.ICO.TEK.COM>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 23:59:34 GMT
- Organization: Tektronix, Inc., Beaverton, OR.
- Lines: 75
-
-
- Well, I'm glad to see that someone way back in Illinois is interested in
- Oregon Pinot Noir. Here is my personal list of favorites (in no
- particular order):
-
- Redhawk (Reserve; if you can find some of the old 1988 Stangeland
- Vineyards stuff on the shelf, and you like a northern Cote du
- Nuits, you'll enjoy it as well -- I'm still drinking mine...)
- Maker of relatively (for West Coast PN, at least) intense
- wines based on spicy oak and blackberry/intense raspberry
-
- Domaine Drouhin (especially 1988)
- SMOOTH, deep strawberry fruit with soft yet balanced oak;
- closest thing to Gevrey-Chambertin made on West Coast
-
- St. Innocent (regular and Reserve; all vintages)
- medium intensity strawberry/raspberry flavors with toasty
- oak (sometimes a little spicy); styled in model of
- Mory-St. Denis (I think so, at least); benefits from 2-4
- years aging (my 1987 is drinking well now)
-
- Cooper Mountain (regular and Reserve; all vintages)
- Another wine in Cote du Beaune intensity levels; Reserve
- is a little pricey for what you get (I think); strawberry
- flavors and toasty oak are predominant
-
- Lange (regular and Reserve)
- If you're into the "barnyard" nose thing (what I usually
- refer to as "intense strawberry"), this is your wine;
- neither wine merits much bottle aging, but both are medium
- intensity with balanced levels of spicy oak
-
-
- Most of these run in the $12-20 range (in OR). For a cheaper wine with
- GOOD fruit characteristics, try the following: Grateful Red (Redhawk) -
- $6; Secret House - $7; Laurel Ridge - $8 (there are others; I just can't
- remember them right now...).
-
- You might avoid the following because of their lack of quality (as I see
- it):
-
- Ponzi (all bottlings; TOTALLY overrated, overpriced, overextracted
- and over-oaked)
-
- Amity (fruit usually overdone by toasty oak)
-
- Sokol Blosser (ALL bottlings; hard to find fruit under oak,
- stemmy tannins on a regular basis)
-
- Knudsen-Erath (not as bad as the above, but usually a very smokey
- wine with too much tannin and too little fruit)
-
-
- Most other wineries are hit-and-miss (Tualatin and Shafer are excellent
- examples of wineries with great successes -- Tualatin 1987 -- and great
- misses; include Elk Cove and Oak Knoll in this group).
-
-
- By the way, my wife and I are just putting out a Preliminary Issue of our
- newly-created newsletter for Northwest (OR, WA, ID) wines (yeah, we know,
- there are a million wine newsletters already) and we need some critical
- evaluation of what we've done so far. If you'd like a shot a ripping
- someone else's efforts at wine reviews to pieces, just drop me your postal
- address in the next couple of weeks and a copy of our Prelim issue will
- appear at your door, complete with survey form to record your brutally
- blunt comments on. Seriously, we'd appreciate anyone's inputs who'd like
- to help. Thanks in advance.
-
- To Illinois -- hope these comments are helpful. Let me know what you see
- on the shelf back there from the NW...
-
-
- John Brewer
- jbrewer@vice.ico.tek.com
- Portland, OR
-