Video Wine Review: Ravines, Merlot, Finger Lakes New York 2018

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Wine Review: Torii Mor Pinot Noir Olson Estate Vineyard Dundee Hills 2014

Another day, another bottle to check out. I tumble into my “cellar” (aka crawl space) and pull out a fine-dusted bottle of single vineyard Pinot Noir from 2014. If this virus gets me, at least I enjoyed one more wine that otherwise would be forgotten until some far flung day.

Today’s tipple is a navel-gazing, Genesis, origins kinda wine. It comes from the Olson Estate: a dinky 10 acre vineyard planted in 1972, back when Oregon’s Dundee Hills consisted mostly of forests speckled by a few farms and orchards.

Many regarded 2014 as a hot vintage that just snuck by with enough balance.

Torii Mor Pinot Noir Olson Estate Vineyard Dundee Hills 2014

The wine retains a bright, medium intensity ruby color with flashes of garnet.

Medium plus aromas waft of dried red cherries, rose petal, blueberries, clove, orange peel, and volcanic ash.

The palate feels dry, pings with medium plus acidity, medium tannin, medium alcohol, medium body, and fine-powdered texture.

Medium plus flavors lead with spices like clove, dill, cigar box, dried red cherry fruit leather, cranberry, fresh blueberries: all of which last for a long length ending on nutmeg powder and volcanic ash.

Torii’s 2014 Olsen Pinot is only starting to strut its stuff. The next five years will only increase interest. It is supremely supple, pleasant, and not over-extracted or demanding. Consider enjoying it alone, but do not overwhelm it with food too brash: think young cheeses, mild bries, mild white meat dishes, sautéed white mushroom fair, that sort of thing. Outstanding stuff.

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Wine Review: Philippe Colin, Premier Cru, Chassagne-Montrachet, France “Les Chenevottes” 2012

Philippe Colin is a terroir-ist. He produces up to 25 wines a year, mostly drawn from 13 hectares (32 acres) of single plots in Chassagne-Montrachet: Burgundy’s central heart of golden, powerful Chardonnay (and some Pinot Noir). He would make more if possible. Colin has shifted from traditional 228 litres to 450 and 500 litres oak barrels, 20 to 25% of which are new, to not overwhelm the fruit with wood.

Today’s Les Chenevottes is one of Colin’s three Premier Cru parcels. Les Chenevottes sits low on flat land, producing more powerful, characterful, and spicier wines than his other sites, thanks in part to the high clay content of the soil. I held onto a bottle of 2012 for five years now. Let’s see how it shows:

Philippe Colin, Premier Cru, Cassagne-Montrachet “Les Chenevottes” 2012

The wine looks a clear, brilliant medium intensity gold color with brassy highlights.

Pronounced aromas smell of marzipan, pineapple, lemon peel, white melon, and vanilla bean husk.

The palate feels dry, with racy high acidity, medium but warm alcohol, a plump medium plus body, and a dual viscous yet crackling texture.

Pronounced flavors ring with the fruits: citrus, ripe pineapple, and melon. A delicate vanilla and nutmeg dusts around the edges. The long finish carries all these but tightens into a lemon, lime, and brine laser of light.

Colin’s 2012 is outstanding Chardonnay from a warm vintage and a stellar Premier Cru vineyard. It tastes brilliant alone but could stand up to a variety of Fall food faire, or chicken piccata, young bries, nuts, olives, and nearly anything with cream and a dash of lemon. It has enough ripeness to please your Chardonnay daily drinker but push them into a more demanding, intriguing realm. Meanwhile, your Chardonnay hater, fearful of butter and syrup, may just come back to the light side of the force.

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My Daughter’s Wine Label Design

One morning, while making coffee, I heard some clanking bottles. Panicked I ran into the living room to find this:

So she’s not yet four years old, but I think her “Disney Princess Collection” wine lineup has a great chance in the market. If Hello Kitty can have Prosecco, I don’t see the TTB objecting to Disney-themed vino.

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MULTIPLYING SUSTAINABILITY: DAY WINES AND DAY CAMP COOPERATIVE

JancisRobinson.com recently finished their summer 2020 Wine Writing Competition (WWC20) and published 75 entries on Sustainability Heroes in the wine industry. I was honored to have all three of my submissions published. Although, I did not win the final, the below article on Day Wines and Day Camp Cooperative made it.

MULTIPLYING SUSTAINABILITY: DAY WINES & DAY CAMP COOPERATIVE

We, especially in the West, tend all too often to isolate our narratives around an individual. Since before Homer’s Achilles or Odysseus, we think and write about onehero’s journey. The same goes for professions be they film directors, industrial moguls, athletes, politicians, and even sustainable winemakers. However, for any project to be truly sustained beyond its originator, it takes a village. Brianne Day has begun just that. Her Day Camp cooperative winery and tasting room constructs an ecosystem where multiple makers mingle, learn, and reinvent the ways we think about wine’s authorship and its sustainability.

But before the revolution, let us start with Brianne’s story. Her family moved to the Willamette Valley when she was 16. Wine-inspired, she then solo-traveled to study natural producers especially in the Loire Valley for nearly two years. She worked in France, New Zealand and Argentina, then returned to Oregon to work for sustainable producers like The Eyrie Vineyards, Brooks Winery, Grochau Cellars, Belle Pente, and Scott Paul, then retail at Storyteller Wine Company, then as a server at Portland’s French-inspired icon restaurants, Le Pigeon and Little Bird Bistro, then sold barrels for Bordeaux cooperage, Saury. In 2012, she made her first 125 cases from a friend’s family vineyard, which distributors in Chicago and New York City picked up and the RAW Natural Wine Fair in London invited her to pour. In 2019 her winery Day Wines made 6,000 cases, distributed to seventeen states and three countries, which broke a personal sales record, and received her first James Beard Award semi-finalist nomination in early 2020.[1]

Day Wines’ fruit comes from exclusively sustainable single vineyard sources: Tannat, Syrah, Viognier, Marsanne, and Roussanne from Southern Oregon’s first Biodynamic vineyard Cowhorn and LIVE Certified Quady North, while Pinot Noir, Meunier, Chardonnay, Chenin Blanc, and Alsatian whites come from Boidynamic Johan, Twelve-Oaks, Belle Pente, and Momtazi vineyards in the Willamette Valley. Her methods are minimal: not filtering nor fining, adding no inputs aside from neutral barrels, occasionally cold-stabilizing, and minor SO2only after natural malolactic conversion.[2]Many wines are co-fermented field blends or experiments with whole-clusters, pétillant naturel, or skin-contact Orange wines.

However, Day Wines often looks beyond profit to support its community. For instance, she donates all proceeds to breast cancer research from sales of 2016’s “Vicis” Momtazi Vineyard as “a tribute to a dear friend’s courageous struggle with a deadly disease”.[3]Meanwhile, in response to the Black Lives Matter movement, $10 of every bottle of 2016 Pinot Noirs, “Broken Destemmer” Johan Vineyard and “Two Pretty Barrels” Cancilla Vineyard have gone to the NAACP in support of disadvantaged minorities “to create a more equitable America”.[4]Brianne uses her wine to make the world a bit better.

Brianne’s commitment to community crystalized with her creation of cooperative Day Camp in 2015. She states that “I feel like American culture encourages separatism for the most part”.[5]So she took her first work experience with her construction company dad, bought a large former vitamin factory in Dundee, and hiredFieldwork Design. Brianne guided them with her value of nature and organic and biodynamic farming. In 2017 they opened Day Camp’s tasting bar, which starts with a large raw timber screen entrance modeled after wine barrels, a tasting courtyard, fire pit, and patio surrounded by floor to ceiling cedar panels and giant windows that allow natural light in and views out. In this large inclusive space, she finds that “the efficiency of communal living became really appealing”.[6]

Day Camp winery houses up to 11 producers. It has provided equipment, mentorship, and marketing support for a diverse range cutting-edge naturalists, including Ross & Bee Maloof, Jackalope, Granville Wines, Fossil & Fawn, Script Cellars, Adega Northwest, Burner Wines, Montebruno Wine, William Marie Wines, Yamtunk Wine Company, Bud’s Bloom, Hooray for You!, J. Douglas Wines, and Ricochet. Already, many of these young guns have now found their footing in Oregon’s highly competitive wine industry. In just five years Brianne’s pride shows, “Day Camp is a cooperative in every sense of the word: It has brought together smaller producers who work side-by-side and collaborate throughout the year”.[7]

However, when COVID-19 shut down most tasting rooms, she feared, “if it drags on for months there are many, many small makers like my winery that aren’t going to make it”.[8]Brianne took over all online sales, customer service, while also winemaking. She kept adapting by posting online sales, free shipping nationwide, participating in online tastings, and slowly, safely bringing staff back. 

Luckily, Day Camp’s large communal area allowed it to open for tastings earlier than most. The future for her small family growers, distributors, and customers remains uncertain. Yet, months later Brianna and Day Camp’s family of producers have adjusted. Two of Day Camp’s producers, Fossil & Fawn and Ross & Bee Maloof have joined forces and bought their own collaborative winery and vineyard No Clos Radio in August.[9]Her dream of creating a collaborative community of producers under one roof will continue to shake and complicate our hero worship paradigm. Regardless of the pandemic, sustainability will never look the same.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

PHOTO:

By Christine Dong in Jordan Michelman, “Brianne Day’s Big Break As a Winemaker Came Because of Her Grape Tattoo”, Willamette Week, February 14, 2017, https://www.wweek.com/wine/2017/02/14/brianne-days-big-break-as-a-winemaker-came-because-of-her-grape-tattoo/

Belgard, Tamara, “Happy Campers Winemaking: co-op, tasting room opens in Dundee”, 1 April 2017 https://www.oregonwinepress.com/happy-campers-day-camp

Day, Brianne, Day Wines, “Wines for a Cause,” https://mailchi.mp/daywines/wines-for-a-cause

Day Wines website, https://www.daywines.com

Maloofwines Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/CDaYcP5hMrf/

Michelman, Jordan, Eater,Should I Even Be Making Wine at All Right Now? An independent winemaker considers her options in the face of the coronavirus pandemic by Brianne Day  Mar 27, 2020, 4:30pm EDT

Revel, Luc, Sprudge, “Day Camp: The Stunning New Wine Tasting Room From Oregon’s Day Wines” 30 May  2017 https://wine.sprudge.com/2017/05/30/willamette-valley-day-wines-new-tasting-room-at-day-camp/

Signer, Rachel, Eater, “How Brianne Day is Leading the Next Generation of Natural Oregon Winemakers”, https://www.eater.com/drinks/2015/6/30/8868287/how-brianne-day-is-leading-the-next-generation-of-natural-oregon June 30, 2015


[1]Day Wines website, https://www.daywines.com

[2]“Most people sulfur at the crush pad,” she said, speaking generally about winemakers everywhere, “but I don’t want to kill the microorganisms there,” Rachel Signer, Eater, “How Brianne Day is Leading the Next Generation of Natural Oregon Winemakers”, https://www.eater.com/drinks/2015/6/30/8868287/how-brianne-day-is-leading-the-next-generation-of-natural-oregon June 30, 2015

[3]2016 ‘Vicis’ Momtazi Vineyard McMinnville, Day Wines, https://www.daywines.com/product/2016-Vicis-Momtazi&

[4]Brianne Day, Day Wines, “Wines for a Cause,” https://mailchi.mp/daywines/wines-for-a-cause

[5]Luc Revel, Sprudge, “Day Camp: The Stunning New Wine Tasting Room From Oregon’s Day Wines” 30 May  2017 https://wine.sprudge.com/2017/05/30/willamette-valley-day-wines-new-tasting-room-at-day-camp/

[6]Luc Revel, Sprudge, “Day Camp: The Stunning New Wine Tasting Room From Oregon’s Day Wines” 30 May  2017 https://wine.sprudge.com/2017/05/30/willamette-valley-day-wines-new-tasting-room-at-day-camp/

[7]Tamara Belgard, “Happy Campers Winemaking: co-op, tasting room opens in Dundee”, 1 April 2017 https://www.oregonwinepress.com/happy-campers-day-camp

[8]Jordan Michelman, Eater,Should I Even Be Making Wine at All Right Now? An independent winemaker considers her options in the face of the coronavirus pandemic by Brianne Day  Mar 27, 2020, 4:30pm EDT

[9]Maloofwines Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/CDaYcP5hMrf/

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