Winemaker Notes
Professional Ratings
-
Jeb Dunnuck
Dried herbs, savory cherries, and spice notes all emerge from the 2019 Pinot Noir Savoy Vineyard, a classic, textbook Anderson Valley Pinot Noir that reveals obvious minerality, medium-bodied richness, and terrific overall balance. It shows more salinity and rocky, earthy nuances with time in the glass and has the structure to benefit from another year or two of bottle age. It should have a solid 7-8 years of prime drinking.
Anderson Valley, located in Mendocino County just above Sonoma County, is one of California’s coolest AVAs, allowing it a long growing season. Only 15 miles long, the region makes a slice eastward through the mountains, from the frigid Pacific Ocean. Dramatic diurnal temperature variations here preserve grape acidity and thus freshness in the finished wines. These are prime conditions for growing Pinot Noir, and the valley produces many fine versions. Characteristics of Anderson Valley Pinot Noir typically include crisp acidity, cranberry and strawberry notes as well as earthy notes of forest floor and mushroom.
Still Pinot Noir, however, is only part of the story. Pinot Noir, along with Chardonnay, are also grown for Anderson Valley’s exceptional sparkling wines. Produced via the traditional method, these offer a classic toasty note from lees aging, bright, complex fruit notes and a clean, refreshing character.