Winemaking Update
We’re enjoying unseasonably warm weather during the final picks of harvest, but the vintage has been, as Gustavo rightly says, just about perfect overall. In a little over a week, all our fruit will be in, and we’ll settle into fermenting, pressing, and barreling all those beautiful clusters.
In contrast to 2023, where we were cautious about under ripe fruit, 2024 presents a different challenge—managing ripeness to avoid any overripe, raisin-like characteristics dehydrated by the heat. Our team is working diligently to manage the ripeness and tannin levels of the grapes and I’m very impressed by what I’ve gotten my hands on thus far.
A big perk this year has been continuing our trial with an optical sorter. The revolutionary tool can detect even the slightest flaws, taking only the best grapes and discarding the lesser fruit. As we always do, we pick the fruit under the cool cover of night. It’s the best time for stabilizing acid and sugar levels, retaining the firmness of the fruit, and concentrating aromas and flavors. There’s something magical about picking grapes beneath the stars, with the occasional owl as your only companion—it’s a time when the vineyard feels truly alive.
In this shipment, you’ll experience three very different wines from the 2022 vintage. The Circle Hill Cabernet Sauvignon, built around clone 33, offers a tremendous coupling of fruit and spice. I’m always amazed by the flavor of these just-picked grapes, as they tend to taste like they’ve already been aged in oak. There’s a mountainous freshness to this wine, showing boysenberry jam and cherry juice.
The Rutherford Cabernet Sauvignon is uniquely a Pine Ridge creation. The appellation is renowned for its benchlands, which afford a cocoa powder-like quality to the fruit. Our site boasts unique and fine volcanic soil called tuff on the west end. It so often produces a wine that’s not only concentrated and deep, but serious and ripe with structure.
Finally, the Malbec. Admittedly, this is a varietal I didn’t always love, especially years ago. But I’ve learned to truly appreciate the layer it adds in blends and, as a standalone wine, how it brings incredible lavender and violet notes to its best iterations. Malbec never lacks in terms of mouthfeel and roundness and the color is absolutely insane. The wine is so fragrant, it practically leaps out of the glass.
As we wrap up the harvest season, we’re incredibly thankful for another vintage under our belts and for the continued support of our loyal members. I hope you’re finding time to enjoy the rewards of this year’s efforts and, like me, look forward to a slower pace as the holidays approach—a time to reflect, recharge, and, of course, enjoy a glass of wine.
Josh Widaman
Estate Winemaker