Tag Archive for 'Syrah'

Lafond Winery and Vineyards

Open House
Saturday January 26, 2008
From 10:00-5:00
2006 SRH Wines

This is an opportunity to try all three 2006 SRH wines — Pinot Noir, Syrah and Chardonnay — together. All these wines come from vineyards in the Santa Rita Hills district (thus SRH) and the majority from our own Lafond Vineyard. The wines are still young and will continue to develop with aging but with six months in the bottle we think they are already fabulous.
Manager Mirella Valdez, as always, will provide cheese, bread and some desserts to accompany the wines. With the recent rains the hills are green, the air is crisp and it should be a great day.
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New Release Lafond Winery 2006 SRH Syrah

 Lafond Winery 2006 SRH Syrah

The ‘SRH’ designation on the Lafond label signals Winemaker Bruce McGuire’s intent to blend a selection of vineyards located in the Santa Rita Hills AVA (American Viticultural Area). Located in the western end if the Santa Ynez Valley, Santa Rita Hills is a cold climate region where grapes benefit from a very long growing season.

After the bountiful 2005 harvest, the Syrah vines rested a little. Between the smaller harvest and Bruce’s strict selection criteria from within our vineyard and the neighboring Hill Top Ranch Vineyard, the production of the 2006 was down by 550 cases. The wine shows the beginnings of being a big Syrah needing time to integrate in the bottle to show off the concentrated fruit and intense flavors.

Bruce’s selection of seventeen vineyard lots from multiple Syrah clones has really paid off in a powerful expression of fruit from aroma to finish. He then aged the wine in a blend barrels to give the wine layers of complexity and texture. This Syrah shows the “cool-climate” character found in Syrah grown in the Santa Rita Hills. Flavors are marked by forward dark berry, violets, and terrific white pepper spice intensity.

This wine will nicely integrate in the bottle before early 2009 and will continue to be very impressive into 2012. One of our favorite wines for pairing with hearty fare and grilled foods, this wine is also fun to match with cheese such as Taleggio.

To order

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Lesson Learned

With all of the stress of holiday entertaining, why add choosing the right wines for your meal to the list? Chances are your guests are not going to pay much attention to whether you chose to serve a 2004 Oregonian Pinot or a 2002 Russian River Valley Pinot. That being said, wine and food pairing is a challenging, yet satisfying task for which there are no right or wrong answers. Who is to say that you cannot drink Chardonnay with steak? Or Syrah with salmon?

Until I became interested in wine I probably would not have even thought twice about it or noticed the difference. I barely even knew what tannins were let alone why they complemented certain foods and not others. But as my wine and food knowledge grows with every successful pairing I have encountered I now understand why some people become obsessed with finding the “perfect” matches.

There is just so much to think about in making the decision that it can be incredibly overwhelming. And every time I think that I am making progress in my wine education I open a restaurant’s wine list and am discouraged by the vast amount of information about wine that I don’t know.

This Thanksgiving was the first that I have paid any attention at all to the wine selection. The main lesson that I learned is that the rules are flexible. There is no perfect wine for Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Hanukkah dinner. All that you can do is use the knowledge that you have about the food you are serving, follow some basic guidelines and do your best.

Here is where the “rules” get tricky… My Dad asked me to look at the wines he was trying to choose from to serve with our Thanksgiving dinner. I was expecting to be choosing from a selection of Pinots because that is THE Thanksgiving wine right. Well, I was not prepared to be choosing from a selection that included a Napa Merlot, a Sea Smoke Pinot, and a rustic Chateauneuf du Pape.

The Merlot and Chateauneuf wines were older vintages (2002) so the tannins had mellowed, making their earthy complexity a good match for our dinner. It is this type of thinking outside the box which makes rules so frivolous. The wines were excellent with the hearty meal and it was interesting to experiment with different varietals than I would have come up with off of the top of my head.

We also had a Virginia Chardonnay from Monticello that paired very nicely with our truffle butter mashed potatoes (though I wouldn’t know first hand because I cannot stand potatoes). My uncle brought a great Sonoma Pinot, which was interesting to taste side by side with the Sea Smoke Pinot, adding an additional element of terroir pairing experimentation to the mix. Why are they different? Which flavors in the dish are brought out by each of the wines?

So I guess what I’m trying to say is that food and wine pairing is a life long journey upon which you will discover successes and failures. But that perfect pairing will knock your socks off once you find it. Until then, my advice is to drink a lot of wine because tasting is the only way to learn.

This is not information that can be learned from a book, it is about your personal experience and sensory memory. Granted there are certain lessons that can be learned from outside sources, which is why I will share any great lessons or pairings I come across on our blog. Especially with Christmas right around the corner…

Joanie Hudson, Assistant Tasting Room Manager, Santa Barbara Winery

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Mountain Drive Wine Stomp Part II

A follow-up of the Mountain Drive Wine Stomp. Mountain Drivers pressing and barreling their Lafond Vineyard Syrah. A slow process — the press capacity is on the small side — the basket press is very gentle and with care and ageing the wine will turn out OK. Click the photo of the Mountain Drive Picking Crew to enlarge. Lafond Winery does not encourage child labor — but hey!

David Lafond can be seen in the second picture – on the left of the red jacketed Press Master.

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Syrah Harvest

We have finished with the Pinot Noir and now we are beginning to pick the Syrah. The Syrah harvest is going to be down this year but not as much as the Pinot Noir. The clusters are smaller and the berries are smaller — good news for quality. And the fact that we are picking later than normal — longer hang time — also good news for quality.

The second picture shows the vibrating table with screen over which the grapes pass. You can see what falls through. These small shot berries, seeds and other small particles are scooped up and discarded.

The third photo, working the line, is our inestimable public relations maven Koleen Hamblin who has taken under her wing a row of Syrah for which she is personally responsible — pruning, leafing, harvesting — time permitting.

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