Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet Sauvignon (1.5 Liter Magnum) 2013

  • 100 Wilfred
    Wong
  • 100 Robert
    Parker
  • 100 Wine &
    Spirits
  • 95 James
    Suckling
  • 95 Decanter
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Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet Sauvignon (1.5 Liter Magnum) 2013 Front Label
Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet Sauvignon (1.5 Liter Magnum) 2013 Front Label

Product Details


Varietal

Region

Producer

Vintage
2013

Size
1500ML

Your Rating

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Somm Note

Winemaker Notes

Volcanic Hill is the longest lived of Diamond Creek's wines. The winemaker describes these wines as "full bodied, loaded with intense ripe berry fruit, cassis, violets and a smoky richness, finishing with good length and firm tannins."

Professional Ratings

  • 100
    What happens when one tastes and gives a wine 100 points? I am not sure how to explain it— it just feels so good. When I tasted the incredible 2013 Diamond Creek Volcanic Hill Cabernet Sauvignon recently, my senses became elevated and my knees nearly buckled. Proprietor Boots Brounstein—she and her late husband, Al, founded the winery in 1968—had just poured me a taste amongst a crowd of other wine professionals. This wine was young and seamless. As the wine's beautiful black fruit aromas gently rose from the sides of the glass, I could feel the vineyard's energy reaching out for me. I have tasted many vintages of Volcanic Hill—some have been really great, but this one is special. I even asked for a second pour—something I rarely do at these kinds of tastings. (Tasted: August 22, 2016, San Francisco, CA)
  • 100
    From the biggest of the three vineyards, the 2013 Cabernet Sauvignon Volcanic Hill comes from pure volcanic, iron-rich, rocky white tufa of volcanic origin. Marginally speaking, this is bluer and blacker than the Red Rock Terrace or Gravelly Meadow. A tour de force of perfection, this wine offers up crème de cassis, blueberry liqueur, licorice, earth, truffle and graphite. It displays spectacular richness, magnificent balance and texture, and a long, incredibly pure finish of close to a minute. This remarkable, full-bodied elixir should drink beautifully for another 30+ years, if not longer.
  • 100

    Initially used for storage, oak barrels, and their transformational qualities, have long been a matter of close study by winegrowers. In the New World, oak has become a flavoring agent, especially when fruit from young cabernet vines is used with winemaking strategies adopted from Bordeaux’s Left Bank. In fact, the premier cru wines of the Médoc—and the grands crus of the Côte de Nuits—have an unparalleled ability to eat new oak, so that rather than genericizing the wine, making it fat and delicious, time in new oak barrels adds a frame to the wine, becoming almost an invisible element of the taste. This is something that is rare, both in the New World and the Old: In 35 years of blind tastings, I have never come across a California cabernet that handles oak as graciously as this vintage of Diamond Creek’s Volcanic Hill. In recent vintages, winemaker Phil Steinschriber has adopted the somewhat controversial practice of introducing a second round of new oak barrels during the aging of his cabernets. He does it selectively, and in 2013, it may have helped to both tame the wine and frame it for long aging. Volcanic Hill starts out with a trumpet blare of black cherry flavor, a deep blue savor to the fruit, an explosive richness that’s transformed into silken delicacy by its time in oak, in the way that a young Charmes-Chambertin might feel in a great vintage. This vineyard, on a south-facing slope of white volcanic ash, often produces the most powerful of Diamond Creek’s wines. As I tasted this wine over the course of several days, there was a moment in the chaos of a young Napa Valley Cabernet when it reached the sublime. 

  • 95

    Lots of currants and hints of plums and flowers. Complex and beautiful with a real sense of earth and fresh sage. Full body with crushed stone and very ripe fruit. Minerals. Flavorful. High toned. A blend of 78% cabernet sauvignon, 9% malbec, 8% merlot, 4% petit verdot and 1% cabernet franc.

  • 95
    The most virile and brooding of Diamond Creek's cuvées, a tight-knit bouquet of dark fruit and incense leads into a seriously structured and powerful wine, underpinned by fresh acids and crisp tannins. The Volcanic Hill, which the late, great Al Brounstein liked to compare to Château Latour, always takes the longest to open up.

Other Vintages

2019
  • 99 Robert
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  • 96 James
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  • 95 Wine
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  • 92 Connoisseurs'
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2018
  • 98 Robert
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  • 97 James
    Suckling
  • 93 Wine &
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  • 93 Connoisseurs'
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2017
  • 96 James
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  • 95 Connoisseurs'
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  • 95 Wine &
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  • 94 Wine
    Spectator
  • 91 Robert
    Parker
2016
  • 99 Robert
    Parker
  • 98 Wilfred
    Wong
  • 97 James
    Suckling
  • 96 Wine
    Spectator
  • 95 Wine &
    Spirits
  • 94 Connoisseurs'
    Guide
2015
  • 96 Robert
    Parker
  • 94 James
    Suckling
  • 93 Wine
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  • 93 Wine
    Enthusiast
  • 93 Wine &
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2014
  • 96 Robert
    Parker
  • 96 Wilfred
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  • 96 James
    Suckling
  • 92 Wine
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2012
  • 98 James
    Suckling
  • 96 Connoisseurs'
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  • 95 Robert
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  • 94 Wine
    Enthusiast
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  • 90 Wine
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2011
  • 96 Robert
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  • 94 Decanter
  • 93 Vinous
2008
  • 93 Wine
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  • 91 Wine
    Spectator
2007
  • 94 Wine
    Enthusiast
  • 94 Wine &
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2005
  • 95 Robert
    Parker
2004
  • 96 Robert
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  • 94 Wine
    Enthusiast
2002
  • 96 Robert
    Parker
2001
  • 91 Wine
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2000
  • 94 Wine
    Enthusiast
1998
  • 94 Wine
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1997
  • 94 Robert
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1994
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1986
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1985
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1984
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1982
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1980
  • 91 Wine
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Diamond Creek

Diamond Creek

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Diamond Creek, California
Diamond Creek Winery Image

Diamond Creek, California's first "Cabernet only" estate vineyard, was established in 1968. Visionary pioneer, Al Brounstein, defied modern convention and planted Bordeaux varietals on secluded Diamond Mountain. The three distinct soil types on theis 20-acre property produce different single-vineyard Cabernet Sauvignons. Light ash soild of Volcanic Hill is in sharp contrast to the iron-rich Red Rock Terrace and the pebbly Gravelly Meadow. Each year, the estate produces a small amount of long-lived wines that are revered by connoisseurs the world over.

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Covering the most vine acreage in the state compared to any other red wine variety, Cabernet Sauvignon produces as much wine in California as Merlot and Pinot Noir combined. The state’s diverse terrain and microclimates, as well as the freedom of its winemakers, allow for an incredible range of wine styles from this single grape.

California’s most famous region—and especially for Cabernet Sauvignon—is the acclaimed Napa Valley. While Cabernet is successful throughout the world, rarely has it achieved such merit as it does from the Napa Valley. At this point the two are so intrinsically linked that it is difficult to discuss one without the other.

Napa’s closest neighbor, Sonoma County, does an impressive job keeping up with Napa’s fame and glory. Alexander Valley, Sonoma Mountain, Moon Mountain and Knights Valley contribute to the lot of some of California’s top-rated Cabernet Sauvignon.

Lake County in California’s North Coast has become a focus for some of Napa’s more respected growers. From the Central Coast come iconic examples of classic California Cabernet; Lodi and the Sierra Foothills are great budget-friendly sources of amicable Cabernets.

RPT88809301_2013 Item# 163846

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