Red Soil

It’s the time of year to start checking on all our vineyards for sugar readings and ripeness.  We think everything will be on the early side.  Maybe a week eariler than last year, which would be four weeks ahead of 2011 and 3 weeks ahead of 2010.  Right now this year reminds me of 2009 or maybe 2007.  Our first vineyard we’ll pick is the Under a Lucky Star vineyard in Los Altos Hills.

Like most of our vineyards it’s on a steep hill.  The steps below are on the right of the vineyard and go from the bottom to the top.  It’s the best way to enter the rows.  I took the picture though to show the red volcanic soil.  This soil type is pretty rare in the Santa Cruz Mountains and Santa Teresa Foothills.  Most of the soil is lift thrust from earthquake activity.  There is a small band though of volcanic soils, usually to the west of the San Andres fault.  The Crimson Clover vineyard has a band of this soul that covers about 30% of the vineyard.  The Lucky Star vineyard though is 100% red volcanic soil.

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I love this soil and wish we had more grapes planted on it.  The best grapes from Crimson Clover come off this soil.  It brings out lots of bright and intense fruit and super dark color.  So far the Pinots we’ve made from Lucky Star would fool most lovers of Santa Cruz Mountains wines.  They have the flavor profiles of the Santa Cruz Mountains but the fruit is more intense and the wines much darker.  Pinots from the southern and eastern side of the mountains, where the soil is sandy, can almost look like a Rose.  On this soil though the wines get very dark.

The vineyard is just about ready and I think we’ll be picking on August 31st or September 1st.  About 5 days ahead of last year.  This site is always our first and always 1-3 weeks ahead of Pinot from the eastern sides of the mountains.  Because the vineyard is so steep we’ll use our regular ‘A’ team of pickers with Millie, Stefania and I helping out.  This vineyard is just to dangerous for inexperienced helpers.  Usually for people who want to come out and help we invite them to the Crimson Clover vineyard which is mostly flat and has lots of shade around the vineyard.

 

lucky star

 

Brix was at 21.1 on Saturday and we’ll pick at between 23 and 24.  The flavors are not ready yet.  Stef said the grapes taste ‘plain’ still.  It will take the additional few weeks to get more fruit flavors to develop.  Yields look about the same as last year.  This is a vineyard we’re still doing some recovery work on so we think yields will stay low for another year or maybe two as we strengthen and retrain the plants.  When that work is complete the vineyard will yield 1500-2000 pounds a year or about two barrels.  Right now it’s getting about 800-1000 pounds or one barrel.

Tucking at Crimson CLover

These are actually pictures from about a month ago.  We generally let the vineyard get a little crazy in the late spring and early summer.  We’re trying to not touch them while flowering and fruit set is going on so we don’t disturb that process.  I also like that at this stage the young fruit is protected from the direct sun if we have a heat wave.  In the picture below you can see Stefania at the back of the row.  Millie, Stefania and I went out to do the tucking

before close

It has been a good year for vine growth so things at Crimson Clover where the thickest we’ve seen then since 2009.  The objective here is to remove any extra shoots and then get the vines tucked up into the wires.  We also cut off any really long tops on shoots.

before long

 

We accomplish a lot with this effort.  The plant can then focus on getting fruit ripe and not on growing extra shoots.  The maturing fruit will also get more sunlight now.  This also let’s us see if there was any mildew present and treat it.  There was not as we’ve had a pretty easy/good spraying schedule this year.  The final thing this does is get the vineyard ready to put on bird nets

after long

 

At Crimson Clover the process goes pretty easy as we have movable wires.  You move down the row and pull both sets of wires off the trellis stakes.  One person then lifts the lower wire and places it just above the fruit zone.  Once this is complete you go back and take the second wire and raise it to the height of the growth.  In this case we were raising it to the very top.  The other two people then follow behind and tuck and cut anything loose.  The hardest part is removing the wire since the vine wants to attach to wire.

 

When it’s all done you have nice clean rows.  Millie came back a few days later and cleaned up the last of the weeds under the rows with a weedwhacker and we were already for netting.

after close

 

A Couple of Pics

My schedule has been terribly busy but I made a pledge to set aside two hours a week to blog and keep the website updated.  We’ll see how well I do at that but it’s a start.  It looks like WordPress has finally made some improvement to how photos are uploaded so that should make it a little easier.  Part of being able to keep up on the blog was really derailed by the need to spend 4-5 minutes editing each photo before it went up.  6 photos was 30 minutes before a word was even written and then try to get them set right on the page was another 15 minutes.

Anyway we’ve been pretty busy, me with the day job and Stefania keeping the winery and vineyards humming along.  We did just recently complete a bottling of our first 2012 wines.  We bottled our 2012 Pinot Noir and 2012 Chardonnay.

Below the Chardonnay barrels are drying before being sterilized.  We had already put the wine in tank for cold stabilization.

ready for filtering

After cold stabilization the wine is filtered.  We rarely filter red wines but do filter the Chardonnay.  That makes it a big challenge to remember how to set up and run the filter since we only do it once a year for an hour or so.  Last time we did it though Stefania took pictures of the set up which she taped on the walls for us to view as we set it up this time.  The filtering went very easy.

filter

 

This is the kind of stuff most wineries don’t want to show but being honest about production is not something we ever shy from.  This is the ‘gunk’ at the bottom of the tank after filtering.  Mostly it’s dead yeast.  For a red wine this isn’t such a big deal.  We rack a few times to get as much of this gone as we can but some will end up as sediment in the bottom of the bottle.  In a white wine though it looks a little sludgy to leave this stuff behind.

the gunk

One final unrelated picture.  This Saturday at 5 PM we will be at the Silicon Valley Roller Girls bout http://svrollergirls.com/  We are the official wine sponsor and they will have our 2009 Chardonnay and 2010 Crimson Clover Cabernet by the glass.  Hope to see you there.

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Onion Chutney and Sausage Making

 

 

 

 

 

It’s been a pretty good growing season so far and there really isn’t that much to tell you about the grapes or activities at the winery lately.

I take that back, it’s been an amazing grape growing season so far.  Veraison is just around the corner and soon the bird nets will go on, the last spraying for mildew will be over then we watch and we wait.

In the meantime, we’ve been having a great time in the kitchen.

I dabbled with a mostly made up recipe for curry onion chutney using the ingredients below.

Onionchutney

 

 

 

The next photo is the onions reducing in the vinegar, sugar, apple mixture.

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And while I am busy tinkering with chutneys and pickles,

Paul has been learning the fine art of sausage-making.

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The first attempt at sausage making was a huge success!

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Spicy Italian

Sweet Italian

Boudin Noir

 

Trees

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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So, I didn’t realize how many tree pictures I was accumulating this year, apparently I have a thing for trees in 2013.  I’m happy to share them with you.  Call it a vineyard intermission of sorts while we are busy doing manual labor thinning, tucking, spraying, repairing drip systems, etc.

 

Chicago

The Picasso image was taken at the Art Institute.  It’s from the “Original Etchings for the Texts of Buffon” display, and dated 1936.  I liked that he captured the grapevine, leaves, clusters, and tendrils so completely.  I also snapped a couple more photos from that particular grouping and a handful of other very colorful paintings of his.  I’m not sure yet how I feel about the folks with iPads snapping photos of all these famous works…I think it’s great we can share art across many mediums, and although it wasn’t really intrusive, I wanted it to be rude and it wasn’t.

Thank you Windy City for blowing my hair all crazy on our walk over to the Art Institute.

That’s Mrs. Oleary’s cow, they blame the cow for knocking over the oil lamp that burned the city down (that’s my quick summary about the cow). It’s actually a horrible story, a lot of people were killed, and miles of the city were destroyed.

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Random photo of a perfect ice ball in an Old Fashioned.  I have become obsessed with the perfect ice ball…

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Another Picasso etching, I’m a Capricorn and have a thing for goats and goat art…

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Paul took me to a Cubs game.  It was cold.  We drank beer and ate hot dogs.  It snowed.  The Giants won.  I’d like to publicly thank our friend Allison for suggesting we take blankets, they saved our frozen butts.  Did I mention it snowed?  At noon, at a baseball game, in late April.  Snow.

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We met friends at Caro Mio in Chicago, a lot of friends actually.  I’m not sure I could begin to describe the scene, but for 20 people, there were easily twice that many bottles of wine that we opened.  The food was family style Italian and perfect for the event.  Good Food, Good Friends, Great Wine!

We did get to showcase our latest release and some of our previous vintages for newcomers to try.  Only a handful of new faces this time, we are becoming regulars to Chicago and getting to be very close friends with more folks, this winemaking gig has been a lot of fun, I won’t lie.

 

LadyBugs!

I know Paul already wrote about the new pruning method in the Chardonnay section at Chaine d’Or, and let me tell you what, the bud break this year is AMAZING!

As much as it sounds crazy, I kept telling Paul that I was getting a “vibe” off the vineyard when the old cordons were cut off. I could feel the vines go “aaahhhh”.  Well, they are definitely loving having all that dead weight gone, they are THRIVING!

Bud break is out of control (in a really good way) and I’ve already gone through and thinned them.  I already dropped a ton of fruit, the shoots all have teeny little grape clusters on them already.  Crazy Good, Exciting Good, Really, Really Good!

Can you tell I’m excited?

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Oh yeah, and there are ladybugs everywhere!  Not just at Chaine d’Or either.  I saw them on the vines at the church, and the ones at home.  It’s the first time I can remember this many of them.

My rose garden is the healthiest it has been in years, I have a great feeling about this growing season.  We are going to have strong, healthy plants all across the board, not just vines.

 

Roller Derby

Allow me to introduce you to some of our new friends:

Captain – Patty Hearse – #74
Co-captain – Skater Tots – #1212
Avida Sane – #L8R
Belle Wringer – #203
Brigid Fitch – #0K
Bullet Sucker – #950
Culo Whippin’ – #125
Demanda Rumble – #10
Fightmaster Flash – #31
Foo Bar – #F00
Jem Jones – #8
Jentropy – #1337
Jessika Rakkit – #190
LauRawr – #789
Leigh Featherstone – #6
Lizapalooza – #217
Mad 4 Gravy – #4
Mad Eye Molly – #22
Mongoose – #609
Spankin’ Firecracker – #M80
Surge – #426
Take-Out Dinah – #49
Unleasha Moore – #5150
Volcanic Ash – #2000

SAMSUNG

Forgive me for the really poor blurry image, but these women move FAST!!!  I’ll take better photos at the next bout.

On a whim I bought tickets for their first home bout on February 16th.  The official beer sponsor at the event was Strike Brewing, and as of this blog post, Stefania Wine is the the official wine sponsor for the season.

<— that’s Luna Chick in front of me, she and husband EiPhilTower (sp?) were guests at our meet and greet party last month.  We’re looking forward to entertaining the team this Spring/Summer, finally people that eat carbs!!

 

svrg beverages

We’ll have our specially designed banner hanging in the Beer Garden at the next event.  We’re very excited to sponsor these women!

 

Home Bout Schedule:

February 16th, May 11th, June 22nd, August 17th, and September 28th

http://svrollergirls.com/schedule/2013-bouts/
San Jose Skate
397 Blossom Hill Road

San Jose, CA 95123
(408) 226-1155

Spring Release Shipped!

See that smiling face ?  Could be the glass of wine in his hand, or the steaks on the grill, but either way, that’s what finishing a giant task looks like around here!

Yay Team Stefania!

I’m certain some folks did not receive the Spring Release announcement, because for the first time we didn’t mail hard copies.  Paul sent out email offers in waves to each tier of customers.  If you missed it, or lost it, or deleted it, that’s ok, you can still pick up some wine.  The great news is that it’s now available online through this website!

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And while orders were being packed and boxes were getting shipped,  I pulled out my paint brushes and started in on a huge project.  Painting the house, by hand, one brush stroke at a time.  Not like there was much vineyard work to do, in this photo the vines are still dormant.

 

Dad’s Birthday

tank for sale

If the Colonel were still alive, he would be 81 today.

We had a distant relationship after my parents divorce,  but I always made time to visit him on his birthday and fathers day.  No regrets other than he never got to try our wine, he died before the first vintage was in bottle.  He liked Paul a lot and the only time I did miss his birthday was the year Paul and I got serious about dating.

Over the weekend, friends invited us to join them on a tour of military vehicles in Portola Valley (just a few yards from two vineyards we have tended).  The picture with me standing next to a tank is what sparked this silly blog.  The tank is for sale: $40K.

 

Panther

Next photo is of the tank that inspired the tour for us.  It’s a fully restored Panther.  We happened to catch a video of it a few years back but didn’t remember or notice or pay attention well enough to see that at the end of the video, it refers to the restoration location in California.  Well, our friend saw the same show just recently and noted the location and called them up.

As it turns out,  you can tour the collection,  Field Trip!!

I can’t tell you how much fun I had.  Chalk it up to being an Army Brat, but I got to spend almost all day long with Dad, in spirit.

Paul and I had winery work after the tour and we were in the neighborhood.  Glad we cranked out the two hours of prep work on Saturday, because Sunday was a long day working.

All I could talk about the whole time we were working was the tank exhibit, I’m still talking about it!

This all ties back to my dad in a round about way. See, that tank is for sale, and something in my gut tells me he would have bought it.

paul outside          Here is Paul in the courtyard prior to the start of the tour.  We walked through 4 “barns”, giant warehouses actually, over the course of a couple hours and barely glimpsed the collection…it is Amazing.

Anyway, Happy Birthday Dad, I had a great weekend thinking about you.  I better get back to my day job and start growing some grapes.