Upcoming Event (Get tickets now)

Stef and I have agreed to a fundraiser event on September 12th. Information is at:

http://www.sipsavorsupport.com/

The cost for the event is $50 and proceeds go to the Alzheimer’s Association of Northern California and Northern Nevada.

There is an impressive group of wineries and restaurants at the event and we hope you’ll stop by and say hello. There’s a chance we will not be there if harvest starts early, but there will be a volunteer pouring wine for us in any event and we’ll likely have previews of our fall releases.

Random Weekend Updates

Friday night we had a friendly dispute about just how much the olive tree has grown in the backyard. Stef’s worried it’s not growing. I said, “It’s twice as tall as you now (it was 6 foot when we bought it.). It’s at about 10 feet now. The vines are also doing really well in the back. You can see just a glimpse here.

Saturday was a busy day. We started out with a trip to a vineyard we installed in Los Altos 2 summers ago. We left at 7AM and arrived at 7:30. Jerry was supposed to be with us but he had a soccer accident Thursday night and couldn’t come. The vineyard owners wanted some help and instructions on green pruning and training their vines. Stef and I spent two hours running through the 200 plants.

The vineyard was in good shape, and there will probably be a little fruit from it next year. The owners are mostly self sufficient and just call us when they need instructions on some new task.

We spent a couple more hours at home taking care of our little vineyard, and then for some unknown reason decided the gym was a good idea. Saturday evening we went to a small house warming party for a friend. Stef brought along home made green salsa and I brought a couple bottles of our wine.

Sunday morning we headed out for a hike in Santa Teresa County Park. The Santa Teresa foothills are the hills that contain our Crimson Clover and the Uvas Creek vineyards. The park is just about 5 minutes from our house. It was a fast climb up to about 800 feet from the valley floor. In the picture below you can see the valley floor. After the initial climb though it was pretty easy going.


We hiked just under 5 miles total, and were off the trail by 11:30. It was very hot, 90 degrees when we got back to the car. There were Cooper Hawks and Red Tail Hawks, plus lots of turkeys and a few deer. This picture of a bush below was actually a young deer that we surprised around a bend. She was just about 10 feet away when I tried to snap the picture.


We finished the day with a long nap then opened a Belle Ponte Muscat and a Super Tuscan for dinner.

What Does Sulfur Smell Like?

Stefania and I had an email exchange with a friend in Vermont and we exchanged a lot of good information about sulfur in wine. I’ve edit the excerpts here:

From our Friend:

I thought I had a mold problem in my cellar? …. I’ve isolated that it’s not the cellar and it’s not the glassware, I think I’m super sensitive to something in the wine. I’ve noticed that it’s a smell that’s much more prevalent in young wines than older wines,…Also, it’s usually a smell that improves with some mollydooker shake, or with a few hours in the decanter. As you know I have trouble describing the smell. So I’m thinking that it’s probably something that gets added to wines that dissipates over time. Any idea what it could be?

My Reply:

Sulfur! No doubt about it. From the conditions you describe that’s got to be it. Most people think sulfur is going to smell like matchsticks, burnt rubber, rotten eggs (that’s Hydrogen Sulfide, a by product of Sulfur) or mothballs. In reality, in the amounts added for most good wine, it smells slightly sweet and maybe chalky or minerally would be a descriptor. I could easily see someone thinking it’s mold. It’s kind of a sickly sweet smell with a hard tinge, like mold growing on something sugary.

We monitor our SO2 levels pretty closely and I usually bottle at 25-35 ppm of Free Sulfur. Free Sulfur is really what you smell. Over time sulfur in wine will become bound with oxygen or amino acids. That’s what happens when you do the Mollydooker shake, or decant. The Free Sulfur is bonding with oxygen and ‘leaving’ the wine. It also happens with bottle age. Something like Mollydooker, with a pH over 4, they’re going to have 75ppm+ of Free SO2.

I’d suggest continue to decant and give the decanter a good swirl or two to expose more of the S02 to oxygen. Something like a Venturi would probably also help. Everyone had different degrees of sensitivity. Stef says that after she’s been working in the winery with SO2 she can pick it up easily in any wine and that now having working with it, she can pick it out in wine when it’s in elevated levels.

Stef chimes in:

I was digging around for other compounds that also dissipate with oxygen exposure. One thing Steve did not mention was mouthfeel, which would also change after decanting. If the culprit is sulfur, there will be a change in how the wine tastes/feels…from being slightly tart making you salivate more than typical, to being less angular and smoother on the sides of the tongue, and then brightening to more fruit forward observances (that’s also a little dependent on the type of wine, but I think we’re talking about reds, and most likely cabs)

And I offered a little more advice on the problem:

One thing you might want to check is the pH. The lower the pH, the less SO2 that needs to be added. It’s a bit of a crap shoot though still. A lot of wineries just add SO2 out of routine. “Every three months add 20ppm, and 50ppm at bottling.” That kind of thing.

Somethings you probably want to avoid are wines under screwcap, wines that have been micro-oxidized, and wines aged in whole or part in tank. Those things all increase the Free Sulfur amounts. This may sound silly but another thing you might want to do is avoid smelling the wine when you first open it. Stef swears sulfur sticks in her nose for hours and effects all the wine she has after exposure. We’ve started wearing masks in the winery now whenever we handle it just to avoid burning up our noses.

and a final though for the blog:

I’m a little reluctant to post about sulfates because so many people have wrong information about them and their effects. 1 in 250 people have a sensitivity to sulfates. You are probably not one of them, nor is your friend who says sulfides give the headaches. For those 1 in 250 people, they genetically lack an enzyme in their digestive system that breaks down sulfates. For those people the symptoms are elevated heart rate, flushing and raised blood pressure. The symptoms dissipate after a few hours. Anyone who has this condition will also be highly sensitive to white bread, broccoli and dried fruits which all have MUCH higher sulfate levels than wine.

If you are not sure, have two pieces of wonder bread. If you don’t get a headache, drink more water next time you have wine and a little less wine, you had a hangover.

My First Time with Brett

I was on a date with Paul. He took me to Restaurant Z in Los Altos (now closed) for a wine tasting dinner. If I could remember the date I would include it, but a search through a memory book didn’t turn up the menu or any notes. I bet I could find it if I really tried, but it’s not that critical to the story – suffice it to say, it was a few years ago.

For reasons I can’t explain but that you might be able to relate to, I was dreading this dinner. We would be sitting at tables with people we didn’t know, listening to an “expert” tell us about the wines, and with any luck, the chef would have made proper pairings to go with them.

The theme was Rhones, something Paul was and is still very passionate about. I too loved them, but didn’t know a thing about them or even what to expect. What I was looking forward to was having an expert on hand so that I could ask questions.

We arrived early, had a sip of champagne in the bar downstairs before being sent up for our seating with the others. The one thing I remember vividly from this restaurant, was the artwork. In rainbow colors, there were images of nude women in poses that mimic the alphabet. Watercolors I think…

I don’t remember the food, I don’t remember the wines, I remember the Brett. Except I didn’t know that’s what it was for certain and I had a question for the host, our expert. I had sampled and experienced a handful of Rhones before that Paul had brought home and I was familiar with horse sweat, saddle leather, barnyard, corral as being aromas that I thought were typical of all French wines. In my naivete I thought this was the definition of terroir…after all, these are kind of earthy, natural smells from the countryside. Right?

So there we are at dinner, the wines are flowing and the host is telling us about each one. Only this time I’m smelling something new, something unique I had not previously noticed. It was like the antiseptic plastic-ey smell of bandaids when we were kids (think 1970’s), and very pronounced. I thought, this is new, this is different. And I raised my hand, I had a question.

I said, what is this smell? This odor, this something I can’t determine beyond it being like a bandaid, from my childhood? ! Can you tell me more about this? I wanted to know, I was an inquiring mind.

He barked at me. He back hand waved at me as if to shoo me aside like a bug. His response was simple. “If you don’t like it, don’t drink it”. No shit.

I never said I didn’t like it. I wanted to know what it was, where it came from, if other wines had it too, why was it pervasive in some more than others? What more could he, the expert, tell me? He told me to piss off, basically. I was aghast and a little more than insulted at $85/person.

Fast forward to now and I can assure you I know exactly what that smell is. Brettanomyces, or Brett for short. Neither of us had read or heard about it being referenced as “band-aidy” before that dinner – it was very pronounced in the wine so I have to assume that there was a large amount of it present in the wine.

I could launch into a long diatribe about Brett, but instead I’ll outline it fairly quickly so you have the gist of what it is. It’s a yeast cell. Which is good right? You want yeast in a winery, right? Sure, but not this creature. This yeast is angular, and because of that, it catches in corners and edges of barrels. Once it’s inside your winery and cellar, it’s nearly impossible to inoculate and remove.

More Los Gatos Follow Up.

We get asked to do a lot of events. I mean alot. We could triple book most Saturdays and fill the week days. We could easily give away all the wine we make if we did every event we were asked to pour at. So we are pretty picky about what we will do. One question we always ask each other at the end of an event is : “Was that a good event?”

The criteria for a positive answer is : “Did you have fun.” If we had fun, it was a good event. Saturday was a good event. You can tell from Stef’s smile:

Since so many people picked up our little cards and we spent so much time chatting with people I thought I’d review a few of our housekeeping items.

1. There’s a link here to sign up for our mailing list. That will insure you get offers for our lower production wines as well as news about the four days per year we open the winery.

2. We update our day to day activities here. A mix of vineyard activity, winery news, and whatever else is going on.

3. We do have a Facebook link, it is paul@stefaniawine .com, we don’t have a ‘fan’ page. Both Stef and I update that, which is probably against Facebooks rules, but we do it anyway. We don’t want to have ‘fans’, we want to have friends, so we’ve set it up this way. “Make Friends” is our Mission Statement, that’s why we make wine.

And a little bit for long time friends, especially those back east. We pronounce it Lahs Gadtoze, much like we say San-O-zay. If you pronounce it right, people will just know you’re a tourist, or new in town!

We saw hundreds of dogs out for a walk, but just this one little feral rescue kitty.

Thank You Los Gatos&James Randall

It was a last minute call from our sales rep on Wednesday asking if we would like to participate in the Los Gatos Chamber of Commerce 2nd Saturdays.
http://www.losgatoschamber.com/SecondSaturdays.html

She said we would have a table set up in front of James Randall restaurant (RJR) and they would be our hosts for the day.
http://www.restaurantjamesrandall.com/

RJR built sandwiches to pair with our Cabernets. They were NY Steak, with pickled onions, kalamata aioli and arugula on crusty bread. We poured our 2006 Santa Cruz Mountains Cabernet and 2006 Uvas Creek Santa Clara Valley Cabernet.

CinCin Wine Bar participated and there were four other tables set up with food and wine pairings. It started off slow with very little foot traffic around noon, then it really picked up. It was like a neighborhood street party with great food and great wines.

RJR was selling the food and wine pairing for $15, which included a take home Riedel wineglass.

It was a great event, our hosts were fantastic and we had fun participating. Thank you Los Gatos Chamber, thank you everyone that stopped by our table and listened to us, thank you RJR and crew!!

Expresso

Nope, that’s not a typo. It’s:

http://www.expresso.net/

Since we’ve started our Grand Canyon training I’ve been riding that bike like crazy at our gym. The counter says I’m at 217 miles since May. I have to admit I love the thing. The video is not such the attraction, although I do enjoy that the routes vary your effort (uphill and down hill) as you go. What’s really got me hooked is being able to track my rides and see how I’m doing. I think that tracking thing mentality is the same thing that gets into many wine geeks.

Which by the way we spent about an hour in the cellar last night with Stefania entering her bottles into Cellartracker.

Anyway I was wondering if anyone else was an Expresso rider and what you think about it?

I know that I’m feeling like we’ll be in great shape for harvest this year!

Website Refresh on the Way

We admit it – we’ve let www.stefaniawine.com get a little stale. Most of our on line efforts have been here on the blog, or on Facebook. Both are better ways of keeping up with us than the website has been.

Last Friday though we sat down to do a much needed refresh. We started with an update of the front page, the wines section (adding 2007 and 2008 wines) and the vineyard section. Following company rules mojitos were prepared for the staff before we started. Here our friend Amber and Stef get started.

It’s very hard to not enjoy work with a Mojito. I joked that Amber is now our “I.T.” department. I keep notes on each wine and sat across from Stef and Amber as we went through each wine. Stef also wants to update the photo and events sections over the next couple of weeks so look for more changes soon. We should have everything totally updated by the end of the month.

After we finished up for the day we started in on the wine line up for the night. A few other friends joined us, we didn’t drink all these on our own! We started with a really terrible run of 3 TCA tainted wines out of the first 4 bottles we opened, but things eventually settled down.

Full Moon Part II (Notes)

We did open a 2006 Santa Cruz Mountains Cabernet Sauvignon yesterday morning. We had visitors at the winery and it was one of the bottles we tasted. We sent the bottle home with Dave Tong so hopefully he’ll have some notes up on his blog site this week.

I did find the notes of mint and eucalyptus on the nose very pronounced, with a good solid core of currants and black fruit. I found the finish dry yesterday with the tannins very evident. A good showing for the bottle and we brought two more home to continue the moon phase experiment.

You can find notes for this wine from others at:

http://www.cellartracker.com/wine.asp?iWine=600258

Or feel free to post them as comments here.