
On Easter Sunday we were driving through Sonoma county on our way home from Safari West. We chose this route so as to allow us to stop at Kunde, where I was looking forward to tasting some row designated Zins. Alas, it was Easter and there was a dearth of tasting rooms that were open. The first open tasting room that we came across was the attractive Mayo Family Winery.
When they sat "Family Winery" they really mean it. Every member of the Mayo family, up to and including distant cousins work at the winery. Our pourer was Courtney, who is some sort of a cousin to the founders on what she called "The Family Internship".
The tasting room was in a glorious setting. Set amid the vineyards in a new barn-like structure at the intersection of two country roads. The atmosphere inside was conducive to a pleasant tasting experience (even if it was a bit crowded; which I will forgive them for being the only open tasting room for miles). Courtney was very accommodating by allowing us to substitute reds from the regular tasting list for the whites on the reserve list. She also told us some good stories about the vineyard and the Mayo family.
The wines were nice. Although they produce some purportedly good Zins, we didn't get to try any as they had sold out; however Courtney did sell us some pre-release Zin on the promise that we would cellar it. They did have a varietal that you do not see very often outside of a blend: Carignane. That was refreshing. I always like to see an unusual bottling every once in a while. It shows that the vintner is not afraid to experiment.
There was a tasting fee, but I don't remember how much as it was waived with my purchase.
The Verdict:
If I am in Glenn Ellen when they have some of their Zins on hand, I will stop in again.
Friday, April 20, 2007
Mayo Family Winery Valley Hospitality Center
Posted by
MRA
at
10:03 AM
0
comments
Labels: California, Mayo, Sonoma, tasting rooms
Monday, April 2, 2007
2004 St. Francis Sonoma Old Vines Zinfandel

This is the third bottle we opened up on Friday night. It was one of the Costco mixed case bunch.
This wine had a rich burgundy colour with peaches on the nose. The fruit smell was not strong enough to hide the alcohol smell from the 15.5% in this bad boy. As the high booze content would suggest, this wine was anything but legless.
On the tongue I got plums and chocolate. I was surprised again that this "Costco special" would be as pleasing as it was; but then again perhaps I'm just addicted to zins...
Later on in the evening a distinct buzz had been achieved and a second glass gave me a nose that was close to the burnt rubber you get in a syrah - and I thought I could taste it too. Another tasting the next evening banished that note as a delusional drunk thought as it was as good on the second day as it was on the first.
The presentation was good. It came in a proper Zin bottle with a synthetic cork. The back label gives some info, and the tasting notes, while for a previous vintage, at least give what they mean by "old vines".
The Verdict:
I would buy more, and would like to try their other Zins.| Style: | Zinfandel |
| Varietals: | Zinfandel, Petite Sirah, Alicante Bouschet |
| Appellation/Terrior: | Sonoma, California |
| Vintage: | 2004 |
| Vintner: | St. Francis |
| Alcohol: | 15.5% by Volume |
| Price: | $18.65 |
Posted by
MRA
at
8:33 AM
1 comments
Labels: $15, Alicante Bouschet, California, Petite Sirah, Sonoma, St. Francis, Zinfandel
Sunday, April 1, 2007
2004 Rodney Strong Knotty Vines Sonoma Zinfandel

This is the second bottle we opened up on Friday night. We had bought this about a year and a half ago at Costco as a part of a mixed case; most of which were Zinfandels that the vintners had claimed were "old vine". As there is no governance over the use of "old vine" you have to take any vintners claim to old vines with some sceptiscism. Old to one vintner may mean 20 years, whilst anything under 80 to another is young. Fortunately, Mr. Strong dates his vines on the rear label - at least some of them come from 100 year old vines.
Mr. Strong also claims "Estate" on the label - in this case it's a meaningless claim because Mr. Strong's estate is non-contiguous and in several different AVA's.
I was very pleasantly surprised by this wine as I usually don't expect an excellent wine from a vintner of this size.
The colour was almost as purple as a Petite Sirah (but then again it could be that my glass was still stained from the Petite we had just finished). The nose had white pepper on it and the first taste was of black currants. MMMmmmm.
My wife got citrus on the nose and apples on the tongue. I couldn't get the citrus even after an additional swirl, but after she mentioned it I got both apples and pears on the palette.
By the end of the bottle, I was getting concord grapes sans-fox and SaraGrace was getting lemons.
The presentation was good. It came in a Bordeaux bottle with a real cork. The back label gives some info, and the tasting notes give more.
The Verdict:
I would buy more and drink it now.| Style: | Zinfandel |
| Varietals: | Zinfandel |
| Appellation/Terrior: | Sonoma, California |
| Vintage: | 2004 |
| Vintner: | Rodney Strong |
| Alcohol: | 14.5% by Volume |
| Price: | $18.45 |
Posted by
MRA
at
7:35 AM
0
comments
Labels: $20, California, Rodney Strong, Sonoma, Zinfandel
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
2001 Villa Encantado Sonoma Dolcetto

This was yet another Wine Shop at Home wine. Villa Encantado (Spanish for enchanted villa) is actually a private label produced by Viansa in Sonoma (not to be confused with the vintner in Solvang).
Dolcetto is Italian for sweetling. And this wine is indeed sweet. It had a cherry nose and a light red colour more reminiscent of a rosé than a red; indeed this wine might even taste good <aghast>chilled</aghast>. No; seriously this Dolcetto is so light and fruity that it goes down like Kool-Aide on a hot summer day. It's as smooth as a wine cooler.
The presentation was good. It came with a real cork in a traditional bottle. While the label was weak in the information they give; they get bonus points for the bottle as it's unusual. The cork was literally encrusted with crystals.
The Verdict:
I bought more.| Style: | Italian |
| Varietals: | Dolcetto |
| Appellation/Terrior: | Sonoma, California |
| Vintage: | 2001 |
| Vintner: | Viansa" |
| Alcohol: | 11.2% by Volume |
| Price: | $18.39 |
Posted by
MRA
at
6:23 PM
0
comments
Labels: $20, Dolcetto, Italian, Sonoma, Villa Encantado
Friday, March 23, 2007
2002 Kunde Estate Zin

This is the second of three bottles that we opened up for the Venison BBQ on Wednesday. It is a wine that I picked up at Safeway earlier this year. What attracted me to it was again the 2002 year - wines at Safeway don't usually get that old, and 2002 was a bitchin' year for zin.
This is an estate wine, which legally only means that the vintner owns the vineyard and fermented and aged the wine on the premises. Since the perceived value of estate (amongst those that do not know what it means) is high, plonk makers over use it. On the flip side, at a family run vineyard (as the photo of the Kunde family on the label attests to) this usually means wine from their house, so they are more careful with it (which was the original point of the estate designation on American labels).
The presentation was good. It came with a real cork in a Rhône coloured Bordeaux bottle, with no data on the label. The reason this rates better than an OK is the tasting notes are fantastically detailed.
The wine opened to a big fruity jammy nose full of raspberries. Mmm mmm. The first sip gave a fruit taste with a hint of charcoal. Subsequent sips were predominantly blackberries. There were legs all over the place.
Doug called it big but not monster and claimed a smokey finish.
The Verdict:
Oh Yea. Loved it. Bought the last 14 bottles at Safeway. Liked it enough that I would like to visit Kunde and taste some of their block designated wines.| Style: | Zinfandel |
| Varietals: | Zinfandel, Petite Sirah, Grenache, Mourvèdre |
| Appellation/Terrior: | Sonoma, California |
| Vintage: | 2002 |
| Vintner: | Kunde |
| Alcohol: | 14.1% by Volume |
| Price: | $17.39 |
Posted by
MRA
at
10:07 AM
0
comments
Labels: $15, California, Grenache, Kunde, Mourvèdre, Petite Sirah, Sonoma, Zinfandel


