2001 Los Robles Viejos White Wine
Our 2001 Los Robles Viejos white wine is a blend of Roussanne (50%),
Viognier (25%), and Marsanne (25%) from an exceptional new vineyard in the
west-side area of Paso Robles. I've always enjoyed the varietal wines made
from these grapes in California, but felt there were ways that combining
them might create something finer and more interesting, particularly if
they were grown by the same hand, in the same place, and if that place
was especially well-suited to the varieties. The area west of Highway 101
in Paso Robles is a glorious, archetypally "old-California" landscape:
tall rounded hills, crowned by magnificent old oaks (hence the name:
Los Robles Viejos), and features calcareous soils akin to those found
throughout southern Europe, where that continent's great wines grow.
Los Robles Viejos is really a kind of culmination of the project I
began in 1985, when the first Les Cotês Sauvages wine was
produced, where the aim was to generate California wines from the same
varieties grown in the South of France, that would exhibit a similar
kind of equilibrium and spirit -- generous wines with abundant perfume,
yet finely balanced, so that despite the weight of ripeness, they could
dance across the palate, angels on the head of the pin.
FRUIT SOURCE: Rozet Vineyard,
Paso Robles. Planted in 1998, in limestone soils, roughly a mile west
of Highway 101, in the Paso Robles hills. It's hot in Paso in the
summertime, with daytime temperatures reaching into the 100's, yet by
mid afternoon, the westerlies begin to come into play -- strong cooling
winds racing through the famed "Templeton Gap," and bringing the mercury
down overnight into the 50's (and sometimes below). The limestone soil
seems to give wines of both firm structure and great finesse. It also
lends a "minerally" side to the aroma and taste profiles of the wines
grown in it. The Roussanne, Viognier and Marsanne at Rozet are farmed
with great attention to detail, and yields are restricted to maximize
fruit intensity. This is one of the most exciting vineyards from which
we've ever had the privilege to source fruit.
WINEMAKING NOTES:WINEMAKING NOTES: All grapes hand-picked,
and whole cluster-pressed into neutral French oak puncheons (average
age: 17 years) and fermented therein. The Viognier and Marsanne were
co-fermented, and blended with the Roussanne after its fermentation was
complete. Malolactic occurred naturally, in barrel. The wine was racked
out of wood in May, and bottled at the end of August.
WINEMAKERS TASTING NOTES: Pale gold color, with slightest
suggestion of green. Fresh aromas of honey, lime, green hay, resin,
a whiff of cardamom. Medium-body, nicely fleshy entry. Firm flavors of
honey, spice, a trace of lime; quite fresh and bracing, finish long and
clean. Should be a delight over the next 2-3 years, yet longer aging
may produce really compelling complexity. Will anyone wait?
TOTAL PRODUCTION: 475 cases.
SUGGESTED RETAIL: $19.00
RELEASE DATE: April 2003
PRODUCED AND BOTTLED BY INTUITION AND BLIND LUCK
Under the direction of Steve Edmunds, winemaker.
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