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2014: The Year in Washington Wine

What follows is an excerpt from an article in the Winter issue Washington Tasting Room magazine. 

A peek at the 2014 harvest plus a review of what’s trending in Washington’s wine industry

Washington State growers and winemakers saw their second straight warm growing season in 2014. For many vineyard sites in Eastern Washington, it was their warmest growing season on record. Growers appreciated the relatively stress-free year which was without frosts, freezes and other significant events. Read rest of article here.

Fresh Sheet December 30th 2014

Today’s Fresh Sheet – reviews of new and recent releases – includes wines from sommes des partiesSilverback VineyardsColumbia WineryErathAnam Cara CellarsKramer Vineyards, and La Crema.



Note: These are reviews for wines received and sampled prior to October 1st when my responsibilities changed for Wine Enthusiast to cover all of Washington. This will be the last set of such wines to be posted from Washington.

Somme des parties

Somme des parties – the sum of the parts - is a new winery from winemaker David Rudnick. “It’s that old Aristotle quote: ‘The whole is greater than the sum of its parts,’” Rudnick said of the name. “A grape is the product of its soil, topography, weather, terroir, cultivation, etc. A wine is the product of that grape, but also the cellar, the yeast, the barrel, and the winemaker. And the winemaker is a product of the wines they've consumed, the harvests they've endured, the lessons they've learned (in and out of the classroom), and the artistry that they bring to the table. Everything is a sum of its parts.”

Rudnick took classes at the Center for Enology and Viticulture at Walla Walla Community College in 2004 before spending time in Napa, Australia, New Zealand, and Paso Robles.

For fruit, Rudnick sources grapes from Patina Vineyard (Walla Walla Valley), Elephant Mountain (Yakima Valley), and Red Heaven (Red Mountain). Rudnick said of his approach at the winery, “One of the great things I learned from Scott Hawley in Paso Robles was that there is a somewhat inherent outcome to any ferment. We as winemakers have a few tricks up our sleeves, but the old adage about wine being made in the vineyard is pretty spot on. I believe our job is to put together the best wines we can, trying to show the consumer what we see in the vineyard and the cellar and to translate that out of the bottle.”

Somme de parties is located in Walla Walla with the wines being made at the El Corazon facility. The winery makes 200 cases annually.

somme des parties Down in the Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 90% Syrah 10% Columbia Valley 2012 $38
 (Excellent) This is a moderately aromatic wine with notes of assorted dried herbs along with black and red fruit. The palate shows a pleasing mix of fruit and savory flavors showing good depth without getting overburdened with the oak in the background and bright acids drawing out the flavors. An impressive offering. 90% Cabernet Sauvignon, 10% Syrah. Elephant Mountain Vineyard. Aged 20 months in French oak (50% new). 14.5% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

somme des parties The Philosopher’s Companion Red Wine Columbia Valley 2012 $32
 (Good) This is a moderately aromatic wine with fresh herbs, savory notes, cherry, vanillin, woodspice, and licorice. It’s medium bodied with firm but well integrated tannins along with mouthwatering acids. Leans a touch green but still provides plenty of interest. 80% Tinta Cao, 13% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 7% Syrah. Red Heaven Vineyard. 14.1% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

somme des parties A Stream Diverted Syrah Walla Walla Valley 2012 $34
(Decent/Good) This wine is aromatically reticent with notes of dark fruit, mineral, fig, and licorice. It’s medium bodied with a silky, restrained feel to the fruit flavors and a slightly sharp uptick on the finish. 98% Syrah, 2% Cabernet Sauvignon. Patina Vineyard. Aged in French oak (33% new). 14.1% alcohol.


Silverback Vineyards

Silverback Vineyards is a new winery from winemaker Charles Herrold. Herrold came to the wine business after years of playing in rock bands. “Music kind of got me in to alcohol,” Herrold said with a laugh.

After starting out making wines in California, Herrold moved to White Rock, Canada in 2001. That year he leased five acres of land in the Okanagan Valley and in 2003 and 2004 made 22 barrels of wine in his house. “I tore the carpets out of the back two bedrooms,” he said.

Herrold’s Blackwood Lane had its first commercial release from the 2004 vintage, a Bordeaux-style blend. After selling Blackwood Lane at the end of the decade, Herrold decided to turn his interest to making wine in Washington. “I’m American born. I wanted to do something here,” he said.

Having met grower Andy Den Hoed back in 2006, he decided to focus his winery on fruit from Wallula Vineyard. “From Wallula I smell the earth, I taste the dirt,” Herrold said. “I’m excited about being even a small part of it.”

Silverback’s first releases clock in at high prices for a Washington winery, with the 2011 Reserve Syrah the most expensive bottle produced in the state to date. “You put a target on your back if you have an expensive bottle of wine for sure,” Herrold said. “I felt that the wines were comparable to wines I’ve tasted in Napa that are in this price range, and I can afford to sit on them a little longer than I normally would.”

Herrold says he plans to slowly grow the winery to 2,000 cases annually.

Silverback Vineyards Chardonnay Wallula Vineyard Horse Heaven Hills 2011 $55
90 points. Coming from 15-year-old vines at Wallula Vineyard, this is a well-constructed wine with barely a hair out of place. True to the vintage, it’s light and elegant in style with notes of toast, straw and melon that linger effortlessly on the finish. Needs some time to open up and drinks best slightly chilled. Wine Enthusiast, 12/31/13

Silverback Vineyards Référence Wallula Vineyard Horse Heaven Hills 2010 $105
91 points. This blend of Cabernet Sauvignon (43%), Merlot (31%), Petit Verdot (12%), Cabernet Franc (9%) and Malbec was assembled after just a little more than a year in barrel and then aged for an additional year in 500-liter French oak puncheons. It’s 85% free-run juice and locked up with notes of graphite, dark chocolate, cassis and wood. The flavors are elegant, tart and tightly coiled, surrounded by chewy tannins that still need some time in the bottle to be tamed. Wine Enthusiast, 12/31/13

Silverback Vineyards Sangiovese Columbia Valley 2010 $55           
 (Good/Excellent) Closed up aromatically at present, it leads with barrel spices of coffee and spice followed by berry and sour cherry. The palate is on the lighter side of medium bodied, elegant in style with good acidity. The wood flavors are quite prominent but there is a pleasing seamlessness to the palate. 87% Sangiovese, 9% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 4% Syrah. Aged 24 months in American oak puncheons. 14.2% alcohol. 185 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Silverback Vineyards Syrah Columbia Valley 2010 $80
 (Excellent) Locked up tight as a drum at present with woodspice, stewed boysenberry, freshly ground currant, and a light smokiness. It’s precise and detailed with a soft, supple elegance and texture. Lingers long on the finish. Aged 25 months in second fill French oak. 14.8% alcohol. 149 cases produced.

Silverback Vineyards Reserve Syrah Columbia Valley 2011 $240
(Excellent/Exceptional) Made all from free run juice and almost impenetrable when first cracked, it opens to reveal smoke, mulberry, raspberry, cream, graphite, and spice. The elegant fruit flavors flesh out after a day of being open. 100% Syrah. Aged 15 months in 500L puncheon. 15% alcohol. 55 cases produced.


Columbia Winery

Columbia Winery is in the midst of a rebirth after the winery was purchased by E.&J. Gallo Winery in 2012. The winery subsequently hit the reset button, moving production to eastern Washington (though it maintains its facility in Woodinville), rebranding its logo, and accelerating its offerings to the 2012 vintage, which new winemaker Sean Hails was responsible for. Hails grew up in Canada and has had winemaking stints in Australia, Okanagan Valley, and the Niagara Peninsula. He joined Gallo in 2005.

Columbia Winery Small Lot Viognier Columbia Valley 2013 $26
 (Good) An aromatic wine with abundant notes of honeysuckle, ripe peach, and nectarine. The palate drinks a hair off dry with full bodied fruit flavors and a finish with lingering floral notes. 98% Viognier and 2% other varieties. 13.9% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Columbia Winery Small Lot Riesling Columbia Valley 2013 $26           
 (Good) An aromatically expressive wine with notes of jasmine, flowers, apricot, and tropical fruit. The palate drinks just off dry with a rich feel to the fruit flavors that carries through the finish. 13.1% alcohol. 568 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Columbia Winery Chardonnay Columbia Valley 2012 $15
 (Good/Excellent) A moderately aromatic, fresh, and appealing wine with melon, apple, and spice. The palate is full bodied with a textured, rich feel and a lingering finish. 13.8% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Columbia Winery Merlot Columbia Valley 2012 $17
 (Good) A moderately aromatic wine with red fruit, herbs, plum, and wet stone. The palate drinks young, needing a full day to settle into its chewy tannins and mouthwatering fruit flavors. 85% Merlot, 10% Syrah, 2% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 3% other varieties. 13.9% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Columbia Winery Cabernet Sauvignon Columbia Valley 2012 $17
 (Good) A moderately aromatic wine with black cherry, wood spice, herbs, and pencil lead. The palate is packed tightly with chewy, rustic, black tea tannins along with herb, cherry, and plum flavors. 76% Cabernet Sauvignon, 11% Syrah, 10% Malbec, and 3% Merlot. 13.5% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Columbia Composition Red Blend Columbia Valley 2012 $17
 (Good) A vibrantly fruit filled wine with cherry and raspberry, licorice, and fresh herbs. The flavors are supple and soft in feel backed by firm, chalky tannins. Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Merlot. 13.3% alcohol. Sample provided by winery. Recommended


Erath

Erath Pinot Noir Oregon 2012 $19
 (Good/Excellent) A moderately aromatic wine with notes of dried strawberries, fresh cranberries, pomegranate, and plum along with a kiss of vanilla. The palate is medium bodied, fresh and fruit filled with a pleasing sense of purity. 13.5% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Erath Leland Pinot Noir Willamette Valley 2011 $50           
 (Excellent) Pale in color. A lightly aromatic wine with notes of vanilla, woodspice, sarsaparilla, cranberry, and cherry. The palate is juicy with a light, airy feel with abundant fruit and barrel flavors along with exquisite acid balance that stretches out the flavors. 100% Pinot Noir. Aged 12 months in French oak (40% new). 12.5% alcohol. 527 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Erath Prince Hill Pinot Noir Dundee Hills 2011 $50
(Excellent/Exceptional) Moderately aromatic with an assortment of barrel spices, licorice, sarsaparilla, dark coffee, and cherry. The palate is juicy, light, and elegant in style with a long, tart finish. 100% Pinot Noir. 71% Pommard, 22% 115, 5% 113, and 2% 667 clones. Aged 12 months in French oak (40% new). 12.5% alcohol. 988 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.


Stoller

Stoller Family Estate Pinot Noir Dundee Hills 2012 $30
 (Excellent) Dark in color, it’s brightly aromatic with notes of dark raspberry, pomegranate, kirsch, and plum. It’s full bodied and fruit-filled, bringing some heft to the tannins that should smooth out with some additional time in the bottle. 100% Pinot Noir. Aged in French oak (30% new). 13.8% alcohol. 7,050 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Stoller Family Estate Reserve Pinot Noir Willamette Valley 2010 $45
(Excellent) Brings notes of cola, raspberry, baking spices, and thistle. It’s medium bodied with a lot of richness to the fruit flavors while still displaying pleasing subtleties and elegance. 100% Pinot Noir. Aged 10 months in French oak (40% new). 13.5% alcohol. 3,290 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.


Anam Cara Cellars

Anam Cara Cellars Dry Riesling Nicholas Estate Chehalem Mountains 2012 $22
 (Good) An aromatic and appealing wine with lemon zest, white grapefruit, and abundant mineral notes. As labeled, the palate is dry with puckering acidity. The concentration isn’t all there for it to stand alone but it perks up dinner quite nicely. 100% Riesling. 1.2% Residual Sugar. 9.16 g/L TA. 11.8% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Riesling Nicholas Estate Chehalem Mountains 2012 $22           
 (Good/Excellent) A moderately aromatic wine with citrus zest, white peach, jasmine, and mineral notes. It drinks off dry with good tension with the sugar and acids and a lingering finish. 100% Riesling. 2.2% Residual Sugar. 7.1 g/L TA. 10.8% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Pinot Noir Vineyard Selection Chehalem Mountains 2011 $24           
 (Excellent) Pale in color. Lightly aromatic with notes of dark strawberry, cherry, mint, forest floor, and baking spices. The palate is ethereally light with mouthwatering acidity and a pretty sense of balance that carries through the finish. 12% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Pinot Noir Wädenswil Chehalem Mountains 2011 $55
 (Excellent) An aromatically pleasing wine with notes of sarsaparilla, coffee, wet moss, and cherry. The palate is on the lighter side of medium bodied and glides along with seamless flavors and an lingering finish. Tannins still need a bit of time to stretch their legs. Best after 2015. 12.2% alcohol. 95 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Reserve Estate Pinot Noir Chehalem Mountains 2011 $45
 (Good) A brooding wine with cinnamon, baking spices, cola, pine needle, and sweet herbs. The palate is on the lighter side of medium bodied with unresolved, tightly wound tannins and cleansing acidity. 100% Pinot Noir. 26% Dijon 777, 22% Pommard, 23 %  Dijon 115, 17% Dijon 114, and 12% Dijon 667 clones. Aged in French oak (37% new). 12.5% alcohol. 420 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Pinot Noir Heather’s Vineyard Chehalem Mountains 2009 $65          
 (Excellent) A moderately aromatic wine with vanilla, cocoa, cola, bark, cherries, and mushroom. The palate is medium-plus bodied with seamless, textured fruit flavors. 100% Pinot Noir. Dijon Clone 114. Aged in French oak (22% one year old, 78% two year old). 14.0% alcohol. 55 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Pinot Noir Mark IV Chehalem Mountains 2009 $65          
(Excellent) Coming from the warm 2009 vintage, it’s somewhat riper in style but still retains its restraint and freshness with appealing aromas and flavors of mint, cherry, and cola speckled with barrel spices, with the charm here equal parts feel and flavor. In a sweet spot at present. Drink now. 100% Pinot Noir. 75% Dijon 777, 15% Dijon 114, 6% Pommard, and 4% Dijon 115 clones. Aged 11 months in French oak (22% new). 14.0% alcohol. 55 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Anam Cara Cellars Pinot Noir Nicholas Estate Chehalem Mountains 2011 $32
 (Excellent) Quite light in color and aroma with notes of moss, cherry, and cola with touches of barrel spices running from cinnamon to smoke. The palate is elegant and almost completely transparent in style – perhaps too much so for some tastes - while still retaining some juiciness to the mouthwatering fruit flavors. 100% Pinot Noir. 33%  Dijon 114, 27% Dijon 115, 15%  Pommard, 14% Dijon 777, and 11% Dijon 667 clones. Aged in French oak (21% new). 12.4% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.


Kramer Vineyards

Kramer Vineyards Celebrate Pinot Gris Yamhill-Carlton 2013 $22
(Good) An aromatic wine with notes of Asian pear, citrus rind, and spice. It drinks off dry with melon flavors and a crisp, biscuity finish. 12.5% alcohol. 0.6% Residual Sugar. 99 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Kramer Vineyards Celebrate Müeller-Thurgau Yamhill-Carlton 2013 $22
 (Decent) An aromatic wine with notes of ripe peach, pineapple, and high toned citrus. It drinks off dry with sweet fruit flavors, trailing off on the finish. 11% alcohol. 1.5% Residual Sugar. 325 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Kramer Vineyards Celebrate Rosé of Pinot Noir Yamhill-Carlton 2013 $24
(Decent) Medium pink in color with notes of watermelon, raspberry, and spice. It’s dry and crisp with fruit and herb flavors. 10.3% alcohol. 0.5% Residual Sugar. 65 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.


Onesies

La Crema Pinot Noir Willamette Valley 2012 $30
 (Good/Excellent) Sourced from ten different vineyards across the Willamette Valley, it’s a moderately aromatic wine with complex notes of orange zest, black tea, cola, cherry, and pencil lead. The palate is medium-plus bodied, full flavored with slightly dry wood tannins and a spice filled finish. 100% Pinot Noir. Aged nine months in French oak (25% new). 13.5% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Walla Walla Valley Report 2014


This report on the Walla Walla Valley includes wines from Cayuse VineyardsNo GirlsAbejaWoodward CanyonDelmas, and Maison Bleue.


***

The Walla Walla Valley marked its 30th anniversary as a federally approved wine growing region earlier this year. At a celebratory event over the summer, numerous valley founders assembled on stage in downtown Walla Walla, including Gary Figgins (Leonetti), Rick Small (Woodward Canyon), Marty Clubb (L’Ecole No 41), Eric Rindal (founder, Waterbrook), Casey McClellan (Seven Hills Winery), and Norm McKibben (Seven Hills Vineyard, SeVein, Les Collines Vineyard, AmaviPepper Bridge).

It’s hard to overstate just how far the valley has come since Figgins planted the first modern day vinifera vines at the family homestead in 1974. At the time the Walla Walla Valley received federal approval ten years later, there were just four wineries in the area. Today that number stands at over 120. In 1984, the valley had only 60 acres of wine grape vines planted. Today there are over 2,000 acres planted, and that number looks to rise dramatically in the coming years.

It would be easy to say that the Walla Walla Valley’s success as a winegrowing region was pre-ordained. In fact, it was far from it.

“We didn’t know what the hell we were doing,” Gary Figgins recalled of the time. “Rick (Small) and I called it ‘seat-of-the-pants winemaking.’”

Small agreed. “The great thing about ignorance is you don’t know what you don’t  know and you don’t care because you don’t know any better,” he said.

Eric Rindal also jumped in head first after working a harvest at L'Ecole. "I got the bright idea after working one crush and not knowing anything that we would start a winery," Rindal said.

Despite the relative lack of experience, Small said failure was never a consideration when starting Woodward Canyon. “I just knew I was going to do this,” he said. “I had blinders on. You don’t do a business plan. You don’t do any financial analysis or anything like that because you just want it.”

Figgins made his first Cabernet Sauvignon at Leonetti Cellar in 1978. When his wife called to tell him that the wine was judged to be the best in the country in 1983 by Winestate Wine & Spirits Buying Guide in (the name for what is now Wine & Spirits Magazine), his response was simple: “I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me!” Figgins recalled. This recognition is credited with helping launch the winery specifically and Washington more generally. “Everybody along the way needs that boost,” Figgins said. “That did it for us.”

When Marty Clubb of L’Ecole No 41 moved to the Walla Walla Valley in 1988 to work at his family’s winery, he quickly found himself in charge. After his first harvest, his wife's parents and winery founders Baker and Jean Ferguson moved out of the winery.

“People in town were going, ‘You mean he just handed you the keys to the winery and just left?’” Clubb recalled. “Baker would tell people, ‘You know I’m a banker. And bankers get rid of their liabilities!’”

Much has changed in the Walla Walla Valley in the ensuing decades, with the area establishing itself as a premium region for red wine production. “Back then, you have to realize no one really knew what variety was going to be strong in which state,” Casey McClellan said. “Planting Cabernet and Merlot in the early ‘80s was kind of a crazy thing to do but it panned out pretty well.”

Pretty well indeed.


Cayuse Vineyards & No Girls

As always, there is much going on at Cayuse Vineyards with the winery completing a new building dubbed ‘Studio 3’ this past fall. The concrete structure, which is adjacent to its existing facility (it was almost impossible not to write ‘a stone’s throw’ there) includes 6,000 feet of production space as well as underground storage capacity. “It’s always a challenge of what we can do to make the wines better,” said Christophe Baron of the changes at the winery. Baron also recently launched Horsepower Vineyards, a project focusing on a new set of vineyards where the land is plowed by draft horse.

On this visit, in addition to tasting through the 2010 vintage releases, I had the opportunity to taste several older Cayuse wines, including the 2000 Cailloux Vineyard Syrah. Some question how well wines from The Rocks will hold up over time given their higher pHs compared to wines from other areas of the Northwest. This wine, a full fifteen years old and from fourth leaf fruit, would seem to answer those questions, as it’s still drinking beautifully and is in an absolute sweet spot.

In terms of the 2010 vintage wines reviewed below, this was, as many will recall, Washington’s coolest vintage since 1999. While the vintage was challenging for many winemakers, it also produced some extraordinary wines and Cayuse is no exception. In a stellar lineup, the 2010 En Chamberlain Vineyard Syrah, Bionic Frog Syrah, and Cailloux Vineyard Syrah were particular highlights.

While Cayuse Vineyards (and now the No Girls project) have come a long way since Baron planted his first vineyard in The Rocks in 1997, he takes the longer view. “We are just in our infancy stage,” Baron said.

Cayuse Vineyards Syrah Cailloux Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2000 $NA
 (Excellent/Exceptional) A full fifteen years old, this wine – which comes from fourth leaf fruit – appropriately shows some age with tertiary notes of leather and spice along with raw meat and a salty brine. The palate is supple in feel, with fruit and mineral flavors playing beautifully off of each other. In a very pretty spot right now. Drink. 14.5% alcohol.

Cayuse Vineyards Camaspelo Walla Walla Valley 2002 $NA
 (Exceptional) This is an expressive wine with notes of tapenade, cherry, mineral, and spice showing a pleasing mixture of secondary and tertiary notes. The palate is a beautiful mixture of fruit and savory flavors with a supple, soft feel. Still seeming quite youthful. Drink or hold. 70% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Franc. 14.2% alcohol.

Cayuse Vineyards Wallah Wallah Syrah Cailloux Vineyard Special #1 Walla Walla Valley 2005 $NA
 (Exceptional) A perfumed wine in full bloom with notes of flowers, tar, burnt embers, peat, smoked meat, truffle, sea salt, olive, and umami, showing great complexity with a seemingly endless list of aromatic descriptors. It displays incredible texture but also shows lightness, intensity, depth, and length. A heart stopper that hits every single high note. 100% Syrah. 144 magnums produced. Bottle number 89/144.

Cayuse Vineyards God Only Knows Grenache Armada Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2006 $NA
(Exceptional) The second vintage of this wine, it leaps out of the glass with complex, expressive notes of flowers, black olive, peat, smoke, mineral, earthy funk, and sea breeze. It’s chock full of persistent, palate-shaking savory flavors that lead to a hyper-extended finish. A shockingly good wine. Drink or hold. 15.2% alcohol

Cayuse Vineyards Bionic Frog Syrah Walla Walla Valley 2007 $NA
(Exceptional) A vibrant, intensely aromatic wine with notes of smoke, bacon fat, raw meat, ash, orange peel, and fire pit. It displays an outrageous inner mouth perfume with great depth and texture with fruit and savory flavors that persist on the long, mineral filled finish. Pushes high into the top levels of quality. While almost completely irresistible now, this wine is still nowhere near its peak. Hold. 14.9% alcohol.

Cayuse Vineyards Impulsivo Tempranillo Walla Walla Valley 2008 $NA
(Exceptional) This is an aromatically brooding wine with notes of coffee, exotic spices, and papaya. The palate is seamless with fruit, mineral, and savory flavors with great length and beautifully integrated tannins. Still quite youthful. Hold.

Cayuse Vineyards Viognier Cailloux Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2011 $70
(Excellent/Exceptional) A perfumed wine with abundant notes of peach and mineral. The palate is sultry and mineral laden with a light, textured feel. 100% Viognier. 59 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Edith Grenache Rosé Walla Walla Valley 2011 $45
(Excellent) Very pale in color, almost looking like a white wine. It brings abundant aromas of mineral and oyster shell. The palate is supple and restrained, showing abundant minerality with the enjoyment as much about feel as flavor. 100% Grenache. 12.5% alcohol. 136 cases produced.

No Girls Grenache La Paciencia Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $65
 (Exceptional) A perfumed wine with opulent aromas of floral notes, peat, mineral, crushed rock, and olive brine. It’s full of savory flavors simultaneously showing intensity, delicacy, and restraint. 100% Grenache. 14.4% alcohol. 236 cases produced.

No Girls Syrah La Paciencia Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $65
 (Exceptional) This is initially an aromatically brooding wine with notes of smoked meat, mineral, peppery spices, and flowers. The palate has great richness, depth and texture along with extraordinary length. Give additional time in the cellar or a long decant. 100% Syrah. 14.8% alcohol. 199 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards God Only Knows Grenache Armada Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $90
 (Exceptional) A perfumed wine full of floral notes, peat, crushed strawberries, olive brine, and smoked meat. The palate is packed to the brim with textured savory flavors, showing both an ethereal lightness as well as intensity. 100% Grenache. 14.4% alcohol. 491 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Flying Pig Red Wine Walla Walla Valley 2010 $85
 (Exceptional) This wine brings pungent floral notes, high toned herbs, and dusty earth. The palate shows a surprisingly amount of fruit flavors for a Rocks wine with good depth and concentration and exceptional length. 50% Cabernet Franc, 37% Merlot, and 13% Cabernet Sauvignon. 14.6% alcohol. 187 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Camaspelo Walla Walla Valley 2010 $80
 (Excellent/Exceptional) Dark in color with notes of elderberry, high toned herbs, blackberry, smoke, and peppery spice. The palate has chewy tannins with persistent, focused fruit and savory flavors that linger on the finish. 80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 20% Merlot. 14.6% alcohol. 329 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards The Lovers Walla Walla Valley 2010 $90
 (Excellent/Exceptional) An aromatically locked up wine with notes of blackberry, rhubarb, and peppery spices. The palate shows more fruit than is often seen on the winery’s offerings backed by fine grained tannins. Stick it in the cellar or give it a long decant. 84% Cabernet Sauvignon, 16% Syrah. 14.3% alcohol. 176 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards The Widowmaker Cabernet Sauvignon En Chamberlain Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $90
 (Exceptional) An aromatically brooding wine with notes of high toned mortared herbs, cherry, blackberry, olive, and mineral. The palate shows a lot of elegance with a supple feel with dried flower flavors, soft, sultry tannins, and exquisite length. A classic example of Rocks Cabernet Sauvignon. 100% Cabernet Sauvignon. 244 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Syrah Cailloux Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $80
 (Exceptional) An aromatically distinctive wine with abundant notes of black pepper, mineral, olive, dried herbs, and crushed stone. The palate is outrageously flavorful with shimmering intensity, grabbing hold of you and simply refusing to let go. 100% Syrah. 14.8% alcohol. 730 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Syrah En Cerise Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $80
 (Exceptional) Pops aromatically with complex notes of charcuterie, burnt embers, mineral, tar, crushed rock, smoke, and a kiss of citrus. It’s layered and intense with great depth of flavors – a hedonist’s delight on the upper reaches of the quality scale. 100% Syrah. 14.8% alcohol. 305 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Syrah En Chamberlain Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $80
 (Exceptional) This is an aromatically vibrant, wildly expressive wine with notes of smoke, ash, embers, olive, mineral, mushroom, and umami. It explodes with mineral and savory notes that lead to a near endless finish. A very special wine at the absolute upper reaches of quality. May have the longest life ahead of it of any of the 2010s. 100% Syrah. 14.7% alcohol. 316 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Bionic Frog Syrah Walla Walla Valley 2010 $95
 (Exceptional) This is a brooding wine that displays outrageous minerality, smoke, dried herbs, olive, peat, earth, and smoked meat. It shows a dazzling display of richness, depth and intensity of flavors and an almost tangible sense of energy. 100% Syrah. 14.8% alcohol. 360 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Syrah Armada Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $90
 (Exceptional) A distinctive wine with notes of dried herbs, crushed stone, smoke, blood, iron, meat, and tapenade along with a floral accent. It’s silky soft in feel showing great depth, intensity, and persistence with an extended finish that goes on as long as you care to count. 100% Syrah. 488 cases produced.

Cayuse Vineyards Impulsivo Tempranillo En Chamberlain Vineyard Walla Walla Valley 2010 $85
 (Exceptional) This wine pops aromatically with notes of tropical fruit, exotic spices, citrus, and red fruit. It’s intensely rich and flavorful displaying more tannic heft than in a number of previous vintages. 100% Tempranillo. 165 cases produced.


















Abeja

These three releases from Abeja – one each from 2011, 2012, and 2013 – display the distinct differences from these three years with the 2011 Cabernet Sauvignon displaying the vintage’s elegance, the 2012 Estate Syrah this year’s power and intensity, and the 2013 Estate Viognier the warmth of the year.

Abeja Estate Grown Viognier Walla Walla Valley 2013 $30
 (Good) This is a richly aromatic wine with notes of peach, sliced pear, and fresh flowers. The palate is medium-plus bodied, lightly creamy in feel with a warm finish. 100% Viognier. Mill Creek Vineyard. Aged 4.5 months in neutral French oak. 14.5% alcohol. 148 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Abeja Estate Grown Syrah Walla Walla Valley 2012 $40
 (Excellent/Exceptional) This is an aromatically appealing wine with floral notes along with an assortment of berries, char, coffee, and smoked meat. The palate is medium-plus bodied with palate coating fruit and savory flavors and bitters on the finish. Still has some edges sticking out. Give an additional six to twelve months. 97% Syrah, 3% Viognier. Mill Creek Vineyard. Aged 14.5 months in French oak (35% new). 14.7% alcohol. 182 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Abeja Cabernet Sauvignon Columbia Valley 2011 $45
(Excellent) This is a moderately aromatic, appealing wine with notes of fresh brewed coffee, buttery barrel spices, vanilla, fresh herbs, cocoa, and cherry. The palate is medium bodied with abundant coffee notes, silky smooth cherry and herb flavors, and a vanilla filled finish. A pretty wine with the oak playing a significant part in the show. 85% Cabernet Sauvignon, 14% Merlot, and 1% Petit Verdot. Heather Hill, Bacchus, Dionysus, Weinbau, and Kiona Heart of the Hill vineyards. Aged 22 months in French oak (60% new). 14.5% alcohol. 1,740 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

















Woodward Canyon

While the 2011 vintage was challenging for many, the releases from Woodward Canyon show the winery in full stride. This is where all those decades of grapegrowing and winemaking experience come into play. In a very high quality lineup, the 2011 Merlot in particular is a testament to how well this variety can grow in the state. Meanwhile the 2012 Celilo Vineyard Chardonnay is a high note for the variety and for the region.

Woodward Canyon Chardonnay Celilo Vineyard Columbia Gorge 2012 $66
92 points. This single vineyard wine shows both the warmth of the vintage and the coolness of this site, showing depth and richness to the fruit flavors while retaining good acidity. It brings notes of apple, peach and lees with light barrel accents—20% new French—and a creamy feel. Enjoy with shrimp stir fried in olive oil for a pairing nirvana. Wine Enthusiast, December 31st 2014.

Woodward Canyon Estate Grown Sauvignon Blanc Walla Walla Valley 2013 $26
 (Good) A blend of four different clones from the winery’s estate vineyard, this warm vintage wine shows abundant notes of pear along with pineapple, toast, and mint. The palate is full bodied with a creamy, rich feel. 100% Sauvignon Blanc. 14.1% alcohol. Sample provided by winery.

Woodward Canyon Merlot Columbia Valley 2011 $52
 (Exceptional) A moderately aromatic wine with toasty barrel spices, herbs, mocha, cherry liqueur, and red fruit. The palate is full bodied with concentrated, seamless red fruit flavors, well balanced tannins and a long, lingering finish. A classically Washington bottle of Merlot with all of the deliciousness that comes with it. 96% Merlot and 4% Cabernet Franc. Weinbau (96%) and Woodward Canyon Estate vineyards. Aged 19 months in French oak. 14.3% alcohol. 476 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Woodward Canyon Artist Series #21 Cabernet Sauvignon Washington State 2012 $59
 (Good/Excellent) A moderately aromatic wine with notes of toast, barrel spices, herbs, chocolate, and dark brewed coffee. The palate is rich and sumptuous, made in a hedonistic style supported by chalky tannins. Needs time to come into its own. Best after 2016. 76% Cabernet Sauvignon, 11% Merlot, 5% Cabernet Franc, 4% Petit Verdot, and 4% Syrah. Woodward Canyon Estate, Champoux, Spring Creek, Mirage, Discovery, Sagemoor, Andrews, Summit View, and Les Collines vineyards. 14.6% alcohol. 4,019 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Woodward Canyon Estate Reserve Walla Walla Valley 2011 $79
(Excellent/Exceptional) A moderately aromatic wine with notes of mortared herbs, cherry, and milk chocolate. The palate is opulent in style, surprisingly rich considering the coolness of the vintage with sweet coffee and chocolate flavors with the oak playing a prominent part in the show. 95% Cabernet Franc, 5% Petit Verdot. Woodward Canyon Estate Vineyard. 14.5% alcohol. 308 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Woodward Canyon Old Vines Cabernet Sauvignon Washington State 2011 $99
 (Exceptional) An aromatic wine with abundant notes of dark roasted coffee, toast, cherry, barrel notes, and bittersweet chocolate. The palate is rich and opulent, made in a hedonistic style, drinking like a candy bar with rich, concentrated coffee, cherry, and chocolate flavors. 90% Cabernet Sauvignon, 5% Petit Verdot, and 5% Syrah. Champoux (46%), Sagemoor (40%), and Woodward Canyon Estate vineyards. 14.4% alcohol. 433 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

















Delmas

I first wrote about Delmas back in 2012. For this winery, proprietors Steve and Mary Robertson source fruit from their SJR vineyard in The Rocks District of the Walla Walla Valley, with Billo Naravane (Rasa Vineyards, PB) making the wine.

The 2012 Delmas Syrah is a breakout wine for the winery, a wine of extremely high quality that is almost completely irresistible (it came in sixth in my Seattle Metropolitan Top 100 Washington wines list this year) but at a mere 75 case production is tough to get one’s hands on. This is one mailing list well worth considering.

Delmas Syrah Walla Walla Valley 2012 $65
 (Exceptional) A new benchmark for this winery that shows more fruit than is often seen on Rocks wines. It brings complex notes of huckleberry, plum, smoke, chocolate, flowers, and orange peel. The palate is rich with exquisite, seamless blue fruit flavors with smoked meat accents showing a vibrant texture that leads to a hyperextended finish. A very pretty, very precise, and shamelessly appealing offering of Rocks fruit. 92.5% Syrah, 7.5% Viognier. Aged in French oak (50% new). 14% alcohol. 75 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.


















Maison Bleue

Maison Bleue has had a number of changes take place since I last wrote about the winery. Of note, the winery now has a tasting room in downtown Walla Walla where proprietor Jon Meuret has moved with his family. Production, for the time being, still takes place in Prosser. The winery is also now sourcing fruit from a variety of Walla Walla Valley locations. Look for a detailed update on other goings on at Maison Bleue in the spring of 2015.

Maison Bleue Au Contraire Chardonnay French Creek Vineyard Yakima Valley 2012 $25
(Excellent/Exceptional) A flat out gorgeous wine that draws you into the glass with pear, light barrel notes, cream, hazelnut, and an assortment of complex spices. The palate walks the balance beam exquisitely between textured, creamy fullness and cleansing acidity with a long, drawn out feel and a finish that seems almost infinite in length. Far and away the best this winery has ever made and a wine that stands up equally well by itself or at the dinner table. 100% Chardonnay. Aged nine months in French oak (20% new) with full malolactic fermentation. 13% alcohol. 461 cases produced. Sample provided by winery. Reviewed September 25, 2014

Maison Bleue Liberté Syrah Boushey Vineyard Yakima Valley 2011 $50
 (Exceptional) This is a moderately aromatic, brooding wine with notes of dark plum, kirsch, pomegranate, ash, herbs, citrus peel, and peppery spices. The palate is silky and supple in feel while retaining density and richness of flavor. 100% Syrah. Approximately 25% whole cluster. Aged 13 months in 450L puncheons (20% new). 14.1% alcohol. 250 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.

Maison Bleue Le Midi Grenache Boushey Vineyard Yakima Valley 2011 $45
 (Exceptional) Light in color, it’s an aromatic dazzler with a complex array of pomegranate, plum, dried herbs, white pepper, huckleberry, and orange peel. The palate is deft in style with exquisite concentration and texture with a fruit-filled finish that lingers effortlessly. A classic wine that is among the finest examples of the variety I have had from the state. 100% Grenache. 50% whole cluster. Aged 13 months in four to five year old French oak. 14.5% alcohol. 320 cases produced. Sample provided by winery.




 All images by Richard Duval.

Note: This post was updated after publication to reflect that: 1) the 'Winestate Wine Buying Guide' originally referenced with regards to the 1978 Leonetti Cabernet Sauvignon was actually called the 'Winestate Wine & Spirits Buying Guide' and 2) this was the prior name for what is now Wine & Spirits Magazine.