599 Bottles Of Wine on the Wall……

And none of them fell.

Not that there wasn’t a little drama today. The labels have not yet arrived, so those will actually go on the bottles on Thursday. And some of you will get nice corks that say “Stefania” and “2005” on them. Some of you will get the rare and elusive ones with just “2005” on the cork. As in: “It just says ‘2005’ , the cork supplier must not have sent enough corks with ‘Stefania’ on them”.

It also looked like the Cam was not working. At least I could see El Tejano on the chat board going: “The cam is not working”.

But all in all it went very well, and there are 587, 750ml bottles, and 6 magnums waiting for pick up to go to the warehouse in Napa. The wine tasted very well, with the floral and fruit notes coming out very well and the nice balance and structure the wine has.

The bottling line went smoothly and I loaded in the clean new bottles at the start of the line. Stefania should have some pictured for me to post up soon.

Help I’ve fallen in my vineyard and can’t get up!

In addition to Stefania Wine, we also run Two Gringo’s Vineyard Management. Two Gringo’s is really just a sub-company that we manage the vineyards we produce grapes from for Stefania Wine. I’ve never advertised Two Gringo’s past a link on the Santa Cruz Mountains Winegrowers Page and a small website.

Still, every year I get 25-30 calls from people looking for help with their vineyard projects. Mostly these calls are pretty easy to say no to. They are looking for help outside our area, or they want something specific done like changing posts out in the vineyard. If the vineyard project doesn’t fit into the long term plans for Stefania Wine, I just refer them to someone else.

I also get calls on large projects 20-30, even 100 acres. Again it’s pretty easy to turn down. Stefania Wine is going to make small lots from specific vineyards until we have our own estate vineyard. Producing 20,000 cases is not what we are after.

Every now and then though a call comes in for a site and a situation that really makes sense, and we’ll take on a new project. Usually just one new project a year and it fits in with what we are already doing.

I also get emergency calls sometimes, and I just love growing vines so much, that I can’t say no. Last summer Stef and I went down to San Martin for some emergency consulting on a small family project that was struggling with over vigor and Powdery Mildew. We couldn’t save the crop for them last year, but we got them back up on their feet, and they phone us now for help and guidance. I suspect they’ll get a good crop of 2-3 barrels this year.

I got another call like that yesterday. A homeowner with a one acre Cabernet vineyard in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. He’s got two year old vines and he doesn’t know how to prune. I couldn’t help myself. Not only is it almost too late to prune, but if he does it wrong this year, he’d be better off to rip out the vineyard and start over than try and correct the problem next year. It’s a hard concept for most people, but with grape vines fixing a problem can take just as long as starting over, 2 or 3 years.

So we sent out a note to some close friends and put a little crew together for Saturday, and I hope we can save this little vineyard. It might not be one we keep long term, but I really think one successful vineyards in the hills is one less McMansion, and that’s worth it.

The volunteer crew will get some home made Osso Bucco, and a lot of great wine as a reward too, and any excuse for a party ain’t bad either.

Newsletters Out

Our first Newsletter, Spring 2007, just went out. We’ve been busy these past few weeks with so much office work it’s been hard to believe. As I sit here now, Stef is printing out order forms, which will go out next week, and trying to make the label printer work.

Something easy to forget in this entire endeavor is that it is a small business. Books need to be kept, order forms printed, mail sent out, forms completed and 100’s of other tasks that go with running any business. We joke a lot about being the ‘Accounting Department’ and ‘Shipping Department’ as we sit in the office at home.

This weekend though we’ll be back out in the vineyards doing spring work, and Monday looks like we are set for bottling. It will be really nice to step away from the desk and get outside, or into the winery and smell the smells.

It’s not all drudgery though, the nice part about being at home…. We just opened a bottle of wine to sip on while we work!

All the Details.

I can’t imagine that the second release could be as hard as the first. As we’re a week away now from sending out Allocation letters, almost every thing is done.

We’re really hoping that this first time is the hardest, because it’s been hard. Some big details we’re still working on :The bank hasn’t set up our Visa-Mastercard processing yet, we’re really not 100% sure that the printer can handle 150+ color letters (we had to by a printer two weeks ago). I need to finish the newsletter, but really at this point those are small things.

There have been dozens of little details as well. It never occurred to me to send out confirmation emails for sign ups until a couple weeks ago, so I’ve just started doing that. I had to come up with a point system and I just did that this morning. At least I know a lot of these tasks will be one time deals.

Still it will be nice to get a few sunny days and get out in the vineyard and do some real wine work. The rain seems to be catching up, and I think we’ll have bud break in a few weeks, and the focus can go from the office, to the vineyards.

Save the Date

April 21st, from 2pm-5pm.

Our Release Party! We’ll be at Unwined http://www.unwinedshop.com/ to celebrate the official release of our 2005 Eaglepoint Ranch Syrah. Mail orders will start to go out the week before that, so you may get your wine before the 21st, but this will be our official party. We really wanted to have it close to home and the view from the front of the wine shop is very close to the view on our website and the one we’ll likely use on our 2006 bottles.

The details are not finalized yet, check back at our site and the Unwined site as we get closer to the date. There will be snacks of cheese and small tapas. We’ll also have our wine available to try by the glass plus 2-3 other wines we like to try as a ‘flight’. We think the cost will be $10 or $20 per person and both we and Unwined will have tickets.

Unwined will also have a small amount of our wine to purchase that day at $35 a bottle. It’s very likely to be the only retail sale available as it looks like the rest of the wine will be sold directly by mail order and go to a few select restaurants.

Bottling Date Set.

The question Stefania and I have heard more than any other is: “When will you have wine?”. I think I even remember one of the neighbors asking that as we were digging holes in the yard to plant our first vines six years ago. Now there’s a date. Monday February 26th we’ll be bottling our 2005 Eaglepoint Ranch Syrah.

Everyone should be able to watch live by following the cam link at http://www.crushpadwine.com/index.php

We’ll both be there through the day.

The wine will need to rest for a bit after bottling, then we should start sending it out in April and May. We’ll have an official release in mid April and a party somewhere in San Jose to celebrate. More details coming soon!

Magnums

I’ve had a few questions asking if we are going to offer magnums or half (375ml) bottles.

We’re not going to have half bottles this first year. It was price prohibitive to have them. With such a short production run, switching over the bottle line was going to add a big cost to half bottles and they would have ended up having to be priced at $25 or so. With 400+ case scheduled for the 2006 vintage though, we should be able to start offering half bottles next year.

Magnums were a little easier to do. Basically those are hand filled and hand corked, so the bottling line does not have to be stopped and switched over. We’ll have six magnums total of each 2005 wine.

We’re not going to offer those for sale. We’ll keep a couple for ourselves and the other four will be given out as gifts. Right now I’m coming up with a ‘rewards’ point system. Something like Sea Smoke uses, giving their customers points for each purchase, length of time on the list and referrals. I’m also thinking that if people fax or email me receipts from restaurant or retail purchases, I’ll include points for those purchases.

The four magnums will then be a gift to our best customers. It seems like a very small thing we can do to say thank you.

Can Yan Make Wine?

Recently I was talking with a friend about cooking. She wanted to know when I started to cook, and especially how did we get to be able to plate dinner for 15 people at a time. She said she can do four pretty easy, but even six is hard.

Well I started cooking when I was twelve. Mom started working late and my sister and I would cook before she got home. While my sister loved Mac and Cheese, I liked to try new things. I really got serious though after watch Martin Yan’s, “Yan Can Cook” in the late 80’s and early 90’s. I went out and got his cookbooks and cooked through them.

That seemed an odd explanation to her, since I rarely cook Cantonese, or any Asian food for guests. But I told her I learned three important things from Martin Yan that helped me become a better cook.

First, he always stressed the importance of good fresh ingredients. Part of his show was always devoted to where you can find the best ingredients and how you can tell if they are fresh. He always stressed you could not make great dishes with out great ingredients, and that good ingredients would make up for any mistakes.

Second, Cantonese food is all about preparation. You have to have everything prepared and ready to go exactly when you need it. Since cooking happens so fast, you can’t stop and chop some garlic in the middle if you forgot it. Everything has to be planned in advance. This has helped be able to get 15-20 plates with 3-4 things on it out together, hot, and ready to go.

Finally he taught about understanding how elements come together to create a dish. If you add carrots after onion, you’ll end up with either underdone carrots, or burnt onion. You have to understand how each thing cooks, so you know when to add it to get the best flavors and textures. This taught me how important timing is in cooking and how to bring things together at just the right time.

And all this made me think of something that happened earlier that same day. We were at Crushpad, testing our wine and settling on bottling times. At the same time another person making wine was there. He was talking with one of the assistant winemakers about his 05 Cabernet and saying he wanted to get more structure in it.

I thought that was one of the oddest conversations I’ve heard. The 2005 Cabernet’s are already ‘cooked’, we’re just figuring out now when to ‘plate’ them. It’s too late to add structure to a 15 month old wine.

If you wanted more structure you needed better ingredients, and you needed to have everything prepared to add structure to the wine at ‘cooking’ (pump overs, submerged caps, extended soaks, new oak), and finally you needed to understand when to apply these things to get the ‘dish’ right. It’s to late now for new oak, or pumping over to have much if any effect.

So I thought what a great teacher Martin Yan is. Not only can he teach Asian cooking, but his teaching can be applied to plating 15 Rib Eyes with crusted veggies and cranberry salad. It also turns out it’s pretty sound advice on how to make wine.

First Notes on the 2006’s

Last night we drove over Hwy 17 in the rain to Felton to do the first real tasting of our 2006’s. The wines have not finished Maloactic Fermentation yet, and need to be racked, so they are not really ready for tasting yet, but we wanted to get an idea where we are at so we could put a racking plan together.

2006 Cabernet Sauvignon, Uvas Creek Vineyard, Santa Clara Valley – 5 barrels total + 20 gallons of topping wine, should make about 130 cases. Alcohol 14.6, aging in 40% new wood. (the wood wasn’t really showing yet on any of these wines). Much darker color than last year, deep red with a similar nose as the 2005 at the same point, minty with lots of berry fruit, much fruitier than the 05. Already showing a savory finish, with good balance and length. We we’re very happy with this.

2006 Cabernet Sauvignon, Santa Cruz Mountains – 5 barrels total +10 gallons of topping wine, should make 125 cases. Alcohol 13.9, aging in 20% new oak. Darker than the Uvas Creek, almost purple, tons of black cherry and dark berry flavors and aromas, long and smooth and very plush. We all got the sense that this wine was really something special. This was a mix of Martin Ranch Cabernet with a little Merlot from Elandrich Vineyard. No one wanted to spit this wine.

2006 Syrah, Eaglepoint Ranch, Mendocino County – 5 barrels + 40 gallons on topping wine, should make 140 cases. Alcohol 14.8 Aging in @ 25% new oak (one new and one once used + 3 neutral) Red garnet color, with berries and mango. Very ripe tannins and sound acidity. This wine has been the slowest on Malo and we think that was what was giving it a tropical/berry nose right now. It was much more intense that the 05 at the same point.

John kept commenting on what a good job we did bringing in ripe, problem free, fruit. He said it was a real treat to work with all these fruit sources and watch the wines go with so little need for intervention. We’ll be back every weekend for the next few weeks to check on barrels and get everything racked. I left very happy, I think all these wines are better at this point than the 2005’s were at the same point last year.