Monthly Archives: August 2010

Wine Tasting at the Phoenix Public Market

Inside the Phoenix Public Market

Inside the Phoenix Public Market

I recently attended a free wine tasting at the Phoenix Public Market in downtown Phoenix, Arizona.  Every Wednesday starting at 5pm the Public market pours local Arizona wines for the public to sample.  The wines being offered this particular night were Oak Creek Vineyards 2008 Chardonnay, Rancho Rossa 2006 CSM and Canelo Hills 2009 Sauvignon Blanc.

3 arizona wines

Oak Creek Winery, Rancho Rossa and Canelo Hills

First up was the Canelo Hills 2009 Sauvignon Blanc.  The first thing I noticed was a very crisp acidity and tartness.  This wine is not for people who can only drink the ripe fruit forward styles of Sauv Blanc.  Personally I thought the crispness and tartness were quite welcome considering it was at least 106F outside!  The tart fruit is along the lines of green or Granny Smith apples mixed with a bit of lemon.  There is a hint of grassiness along the lines of what is commonly produced in New Zealand.  The alcohol came in at 13.7% which was pleasant, no heat on the finish. This is a dry Sauvignon blanc.  $22 a bottle retail.  Canelo Hills was one of the vineyards almost completely destroyed by a violent wind and hail storm this summer.  So there might some sort of collectability to this vintage as their 2010 vintage will most likely have to be sourced from alternate growers.

Red Yellow and Purple pepper

Interesting Purple Peppers

Next up was the Oak Creek Vineyards and Winery 2008 Chardonnay.  This wine is made in the Burgundian style with no oak.  It underwent malolactic fermentation.  Unfortunately I found this wine to be a little on the flat side.  The fruit was lacking in something that I could really grasp and say “Ah thats it!”  To be honest I would say Chardonnay is the wine of which I am most critical, it takes a lot for me to be wowed by a Chardonnay.  This Chardonnay did not wow me.

Barrel wine sign

Signs made from old barrels

Last but not least was the Rancho Rossa 2006 CSM.  This wine is a blend of Cabernet, Syrah and Merlot.  This wine was the most interesting of the three.  Full-bodied with solid tannins throughout.  There is a predominant smokiness that I think could use a little toning down, but there is a decent complexity to make up for that.  The fruit is along the lines of blackberry and cherry, and plum.  Standard fare for red wine.

After the tasting I enjoyed a fabulous sample platter paired with a brand new wine from Dick Erath…

Sample Platter

Delicious sample platter

Click here to see a quick video tour of the Phoenix Public Market

Canelo Hills website

Oak Creek Vineyard and Winery website

Rancho Rossa website

A quick tour of the Phoenix Public Market

I visited the Phoenix Public Market

Phoenix Public Market logo

Cool Logo

in downtown Phoenix and was treated to a wonderful wine tasting and sample platter of their food offerings.  Patty (PJ) also was brave enough to give me a quick video interview and talk about the Public Market.

Click here to see some wine reviews

Happy birthday to me!

I celebrated my birthday last week, woo hoo right?  Normally I’m not much of a birthday celebrater but something very interesting happened on that day.  This blog was featured on the WordPress homepage!  My post on the new Wine Match wine wheel was news worthy enough to be featured and as a result the Weekly Wine Journal experienced a massive spike in traffic.  It was the first time that the Weekly Wine Journal broke 1,000 visits in a single day, quite a nice birthday present I must say.  And to top it off I went out for dinner at FnB restaurant in Scottsdale where owner Pavle Milic treated us to some POTENT lemoncello after dinner!

A new way to evaluate wines: The Wine Match Wheel

I had just finished a piece for Corkd.com about the various rating systems out there, and the possible need for a different way to evaluate wines when I got an email from a Mr. Ed Leard, President and founder of Winematch.com  The Corkd article was posted on August 24th which also happened to be the day that Mr Leard was going public with his new wine profiling system.

CLICK ON THE PICTURE TO EMBIGGIN IT!

The Wine Match Wheel is a project 5 years in the making.  Ed, like most of us had bought plenty of $20 bottles of wine that he loved and quite a few $50+ wines that were disappointing.  He turned to all the wine publications to try and develop a new way but it quickly became immensely time consuming and was still based largely on the the subjective 100 point system.  Ed points out how flawed this system is in a humorous analogy:

“I thought that a point system with a single number was shallow. I remember being in high school, and I knew what a 10 for a girl was then, but I was shallow. Now a ten is not only pretty, but smart, honest, trustworthy and ‘has my back’. By the way, that’s my wife!”

I asked Ed for more info and this is the rest of his response:

I figured wine, much like people, is multi-faceted, and should be shown as such. The other goal was to remove as much subjectivity as possible, thought here will always be some. So to reduce subjectivity, we use multiple tasters to start. We also reduce the amount of wines in a flight to minimize there is little acidity and tannin build-up factors as well. I see tasters go through 10 cabs and wonder “how can you be fair on the last few cabs regarding tannins?” when you have that build up. We do flights blindly (black Riedel ISO glasses) as taste is what we care about. In fact, a lot of folks do unfiltered, and even working with UC Davis folks, they see a little cloudy and call that a defect. We don’t as we don’t see it. I would think unfiltered would mean less handling, which is a good thing.

We get all our wines submitted by wineries through our web portal. (you can go to winery.winematch.com and see the PDF of “what info do I need” to see what information we gather from the wineries.) We also run a wine lab, calibrated daily with standards and monthly with outside labs.  In a previous occupation, I was a tooling inspector so know the value/purpose of well-calibrated systems. We also are the only ones I know that measure free sulfites. We have all high-end equipment.

So we combine multiple-sensory, winery data, and chemistry to come up with the Wine Profile on the WineMatchWheel TM. There are numerous calculations that sanitize the data on the wheel. Then there’s the matching engine. Twelve to twenty points of matching, depending on varietal(s) and other variables (oaked/unoaked, tannins/no tannins, etc). Wine matches are shown real-time, but you need a free user account to view them.

On the consumer side, after setting up the free account (free account in return for some demographics), a user finds wines and adds them to their favorites. Then, as we continue to profile, they get an e-mail when matches are found. Wineries have the same ability and I suggest wineries sign up as both a winery and a user to have the complete experience. We keep wine profiles even after it’s no longer available for trending information as well as someone may have liked it, can’t get it, but is willing to try a new wine with similar qualities. Wineries can adjust availability flags as well (retail and winery only).

It also has a free retailer area, and you can exclude your larger chains (BevMo, Costco) for a more personal wine shop, and can flag those that do tastings. Wineries can also submit and maintain events, and a user can search with dates, regions, even down to AVAs if they recognize them.  It can do a lot more (click on Cabernet and sort by percent of primary varietal, for instance). It just multi-faceted and data-base driven. The parent company, Roundbrix, is a Microsoft shop, so we have the intellectual assets on board! Changes in an instant if need be. We’re giving away free profiles through October, but may need to make that September based on the great responses we have been getting. After that, it’s between $100- $150 per wine, based on how many wines you want profile.We don’t sell wine and only profile wines of the United States, as my grandfather died in WW2 for this country so I thought I would keep it close to the chest. Also, it keeps it on the AVA system, so it makes sense overall and I can (and do) visit wineries frequently and can communicate well with them.We have done over 500, have a couple hundred in wait, and are getting more every day. Goal is to maximize the populating of wines to bring more consumers and have more matches. I think that’s it, in a rather large nutshell!

Ed

Arizona Wine Aid 2010

I was just forwarded an email announcing a wine tasting to try and help out the Arizona Vineyards that were devastated by a hailstorm last Sunday:

“The wineries down in Sonoita and Elgin have become more than just clients. They also are friends. Well, our friends are hurting right now. A severe hail storm hit Sunday night wiping out virtually all of their grapes that were to be harvested in the next couple of weeks to make this year’s wines. The fruit in the vineyards along Elgin Road – Callaghan’s Vineyards, Dos Cabezas, Canelo Hills and more – are a complete loss.

They still have some fruit they can get from Willcox but all of their work in the Elgin vineyards has been lost. Now instead of preparing for the huge annual harvest, they will be working just to save the plants so they can survive winter. To say this is depressing is an understatement. So we bring you ….

Wine Aid 2010

Friday, Aug. 20

4-6 p.m.

at the Moses Anshell Wine Bar

Willie Nelson was booked. But here’s what we do have.

Some of us bought a nice big sampling of the Sonoita/Elgin area wines.

We’re putting a signup sheet at the front desk to bring desserts/appetizers and other edibles.

So Friday will be a chance for free eats and free drinks. All we ask is a donation in the collection box that we will pass on to the wineries.

Tell clients, friends and significant others. We want to share Arizona wine – and do something to help”

Mosesanshell website

Innovative Branding: Wine Tasting and Concierge Mixer at the Wrigley Mansion

In July I attended a Wine Tasting and Concierge Mixer held at the Wrigley Mansion.  The featured winery was Arizona Stronghold.  I received an email with the event details, I quickly scanned the email and noticed two things:  Free and Wrigley Mansion.  Sounds great!  The day of the event I just wanted to make sure of the time so I quickly googled the event.  Nothing came up…I went on the Wrigley website and checked out the calendar.  Nothing.  Finally I logged in and checked my email, and as I had previously thought it said 4pm.  I always double check these things.

I arrived at the mansion and was greeted by the friendly staff who directed me to the wine event.  Once there I checked in at the greeter station and picked up a name tag.  A quick glance around

Jeff Hecht

the room and I started to recognize people, some of whom I have never met!  How is that possible?  Twitter.  Most people have a picture of their face as an avatar, which is very helpful in situations like this.  I started out with a conversation with Molly Maguth.  She coordinated the event and is a public relations account manager for MMA advertising, a premier metro phoenix advertising and PR agency.  The pieces of the puzzle started to fall together.  MMA handles the Wrigley account as well as the Arizona Stronghold account.  I found the idea to piggyback the two clients into one event to be very interesting.  The even more interesting thing was the very deliberate selection of guests.  I had a chance to ask Ms. Maguth and Jeff Hecht, director of public relations for MMA about the reasoning behind the selection process.  They explained that everyone that had been invited was either a Concierge at a metro Phoenix resort style hotel, or a prominent member of local social media.  So what was I doing there I wondered!  Then it hit me.  After 8 months of wine blogging, the Weekly Wine Journal might have actually crossed the relevance threshold!

Back to the guests…  every year millions of people visit the Valley of the Sun.  And some of these people stay at wonderful resort style hotels complete with a full time concierge.  The concierge deals directly with the public, often answering questions about the local community and giving recommendations on where to eat and where to visit. They are influencers in every sense of the word.  The second angle on the guest list was the local social media influencers.  I have written about the power of social media over at corkd.com as well.

This event was a great case study in guest selection.  Although I wasn’t able to meet all the guests I did run into the following Twitter personalities:

@AZVineyardGuy, @AZWineries, @AZVinesandWines @Noshtopia – also known as @skinnyjeans, @CChaserun @ReneeMoorePR

Just these personalities alone have a combined 50,000+ followers on Twitter ( Stephanie @skinnyjeans is responsible for at least 48,000 of them) but Twitter is not  only about how many followers you have, it’s also about your influence.  @AZVineyardGuy, Josh Moffit is Arizona’s go to guy for vineyard real estate and has over 2,500 acres of land in his portfolio.

Josh Moffit

His lovely wife, Rhonni Moffit ( @AZWineries and @AZVinesandWines) is the executive director of the Arizona Wine Growers Association.  @CChaserun is Colleen Chase, and she runs a joint venture wine tour company with her sister called Arizona Grape Escapes.

Collen Chase

They take up to a dozen people on Arizona wine country tours every weekend.  @SkinnyJeans is Stephanie Quilao.  She is a professional blogger and has really taken it to the next level with her Noshtopia website.  Renee Moore is in PR as you might have guessed from her Twitter handle, @ReneeMoorePR.

This event was the best wine tasting I’ve been to.  I’ve been to a few, and I thought this was so well coordinated in terms of the guests, the setting and the wine.  I noticed that all the wines were being taken care of in terms of proper serving temperature.

Nice work keeping the wines cool!

Arizona is very hot and my pet peeve is people serving red wine at room temperature in Arizona, so I thought that attention to quality control and detail was very refreshing.  Secondly the guests were extremely engaging.  We would have stayed all night talking!  Right now MMA has no plans to handle other wine accounts as they want to focus solely on the Arizona Stronghold brand.  However, they do handle other accounts, large accounts such as The Mayo Clinic, Harkins Theatres and Desert Schools Credit Union.  MMA has a combined 70 years experience in Advertising branding and PR in just it’s 3 principals.  They really know there stuff, and especially the new media way of doing things.  They get social media, they get viral marketing.  It was exciting to be a part of this event, and I am looking forward to future events by MMA and Arizona Stronghold.

What say you?  Branding and PR, have you seen good/bad examples?  Is marketing and branding a wine different from say branding a potato chip?  What do you think of social media’s role in branding?

go ahead, don’t be afraid…comment! :) If I missed anyone out please let me know, I will add them

Molly Maguth on Twitter
Jeff Hecht on Twitter
MMA Homepage
Wrigley Mansion Homepage
Arizona Stronghold Vineyards homepage

Roadtrip to Jerome Arizona for “Blood into Wine”

On Sunday August 8th I took a road trip to Jerome Arizona to watch “Blood into Wine”.  Blood into Wine is a documentary directed by Ryan Page and Christopher Pomerenke and stars Maynard Keenan and Eric Glomski.  Jerome is located in the Verde Valley which is in northern/central Arizona, about 120 miles north of Phoenix and a world away in terms of climate.  Jerome is a former copper mining outpost situated on the steep slope of Cleopatra hill at an elevation of over 5,000 feet above sea level.  It was once nicknamed the wildest town in the west.  The documentary was playing at the appropriately named “Spook Hall” in Jerome.

I arrived early and the first thing I noticed as I stepped out of my truck was the air.  Humid and cool!  Clouds and fog were caressing the top of the mountain, I could see them passing by, almost as if the earth was rotating right in front of me.  I took a stroll through the town, looking in the store fronts and getting a general feel for the location.  I decided to head over to Spook Hall early, I didn’t know what to expect as there were rumors that Maynard Keenan would be showing up to answer questions.  And as I thought people were beginning to gather, an hour before showtime.  As showtime drew nearer the anxious crowd lined up down the street.  I have never seen the rock concert experience at a movie theatre before, it was quite interesting.  There was an eclectic crowd, some Tool fans, some children, some senior citizens, locals, out of towners.  The doors opened and the crowd surged, but managed to stay composed enough to proceed in an orderly single file.  I sat down in the front.

The film:  I wouldn’t say that I’m a documentary buff, although I do enjoy watching the History Channel.  However, this film is not your average documentary.  The film makers manage to incorporate a real sense of humor.  A quirky sometimes under stated sense of humor.  There were quite a few moments that had everyone in the hall laughing out loud, heartily.  Other times the jokes would elicit chuckling.   One of the funniest bits in the movie is the part where Maynard is interviewed on a show called “Focus on Interesting Things”  I won’t spoil it for you, but that refrain was quite funny.  One of the things that really comes through is that although Keenan is a very serious artist, he does also have a sense of humor.  He has made a career out of not revealing too much about himself outside of what he conveys through his lyrics.  He has been a master of maintaining and protecting a personal brand, the Maynard brand, the mystique,the aloof and sometimes angry rock star.  However, in this film we see that he is also capable of self effacing humor, and that he is also capable of hard work.  Very difficult physical labor.  If you think owning and maintaining your own vineyard is easy, think again.  In fact, if you are up for a REAL challenge go and volunteer at a vineyard during harvest.  Preferably a small one on a very steep rocky slope in the thin air at 5,246 feet.  You’ll feel your oxygen depleted muscles burning in no time.  It’s quite apparent from the film that Keenan is not just lending his name to a wine label, this is not just passing fancy for him.  This is what his life consists of:  He lives in Jerome, tending to his vines and making wine.  To take a break from that he sometimes goes out on tour.  Not the other way around.

After the film  Keenan and one of the films two directors  Christopher

The crowd for the 2pm showing

Pomerenke and Producer Chris “Topper” McDaniel got up on stage for a quick Q&A session.  At this point you could feel the excited tension in the air.  I managed to ask a question.  I wanted to know more about how Tim Alexander managed to “get” Maynard to Jerome.  Keenan answered me with his deadpan humor: “Tim brought me here, he left, and I stayed”  I wanted to know how Tim managed to convince Maynard who was living in L.A. at the time, to get all the way over to Jerome in the middle of nowhere, in Arizona.  Then I remembered a little info from the film.  Maynard said he had a dream about being in Arizona.  So maybe when Tim made the suggestion he thought to himself  “wow that’s a weird coincidence, I just had a dream about that, well okay mr Tim, how do I get there?”  and Tim might have said something to the effect of you go to Phoenix and turn left, left again and then another left.  It would have been interesting to witness that initial response.  The response of the man who wrote about L.A. and California so lovingly in the song Aenema .  He might have stepped out of his vehicle much like I did, surveying the expansive view of the Verde Valley and the Mogollon Rim in the distance.

The view that Maynard Keenan might have seen!

He might have taken a deep breath of that fresh cool mountain air.  He must have realized quite quickly that this is where he was to live for the next 15 years.

One of the more interesting questions which elicited the most forth coming response from Keenan was a question about fame and wine.  The questioner asked if the recent successes and awareness created by the film would allow Caduceus to expand and ship wine out all over the world.  Keenan said that was not the goal.  The goal is to operate a sustainable operation.  A representation of the local terroir, sourced from the local land and for the local people.  Putting the wines in trucks and ships and planes and expending energy and resources to send the product all over the world would defeat the purpose.

After the film everyone in attendance was treated to a free glass of wine at Maynard’s Caduceus Cellars and Merkin Vineyards tasting room, in Jerome.  I had the Merkin Vineyards 2009 Shinola, which they informed me has not even been released yet.  The 2006 Shinola was a blend of Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon, and only 140 cases were produced.  It was a decent inexpensive representation of Arizona wine.  Good fruit, not to0 ripe, solid tannins.

Also after the film I ran into Christopher Pomerenke on the street

Christopher Pomerenke

and he allowed me to snap a couple of pictures of him.  Totally cool, down to earth guy.  In retrospect I should have asked him if he would do a little video for the Weekly Wine Journal’s Youtube Channel.  Maybe next time.

Blood into Wine comes out of DVD September 2010, look for it, or buy it from the website: Bloodintowine.com

Caduceus Cellars and Merkin Vineyards website

“I’m a Blogger” is the new “I’m in a Band” !

The late ’80′s and early ’90′s was an amazing time for live music if you lived in the Pacific Northwest.

Old School

During that time it seemed that everyone was in a band or starting a side project with members of another band.  Bands like Green River, Mudhoney and The Melvins were DIY before DIY even existed.  Bands like Mother Love Bone, Soundgarden and The Screaming Trees brought the Seattle Sound a step closer to the masses.  And eventually the movement exploded with the success of Pearl Jam and Nirvana.  There were over 80,000 people at Lollapalooza ’91 at the King County Fairgrounds in Enumclaw, Washington State.  Organizers were completely overwhelmed when 4 times as many people as they had expected arrived.  All pretty much by word of mouth and one ahead of the curve radio station,   Unfortunately I missed Lollapalooza that year as I had only $2 to my name at the time and decided to spend it on a couple of cans of Chef Boyardee instead. “Back in the day” in the city of Vancouver, British Columbia there were dozens and dozens of bands all contributing to a vibrant local scene.  Independent record labels like Sub Pop from Seattle were springing up across the city.  Scratch records and Zulu records were just a couple.  By the summer of 1993 my own band was ready to move out of the rehearsal space and begin playing shows at bars.  Unfortunately or fortunately most bars were still mostly interested in bands that could play cover songs all night.  In 1993 there was really no internet and very few cell phones.  So how did bands promote themselves??  Word of Mouth and networking.  If you had friends in a band, you would always make sure to go to their shows, and they would return the favor.

Live bands tonight! $5 Cover. Full Bar!

We would put up posters on vacant buildings, we would print up handbills and hand them out the night of our shows.  Shows would be held in small art galleries, in empty warehouses, in restaurants.  A whole underground music culture developed independent of the gate keepers at all of the local bars.  At a decent boozecan show you could expect hundreds of people to show up, all looking for cheap drinks and LIVE music.  I managed to get in contact with most of the bands in the city by placing a $20 ad in the local independent newspaper: “bands wanted” and my home phone number.  I had an answering machine with a voice message to the effect “leave your band name and number’.  I stored all of this information in a Rolodex.

Fast forward to 2010.

The Door to the Future

There have been huge advancements in communication technology, but I think the basic time tested system is still the way it works.  Build a network by word of mouth.  These days blogs are exploding in number like bands were 20 years ago.  Everyone has a blog or writes for a blog, or is starting a new blog, branding themselves promoting themselves just like before. Some blogs are better than others.  Content is like songs.  Catchy songs helped people remember your band just like great content brings people to your blog nowadays.  If you visit a blog and comment, they’ll do the same, we trade links on our blog rolls, we attend each others tweetups just like the band scene and community provided mutual support in the past. We share in each others successes, we say things like “I knew so and so before they made it’.  We are building communities around the subjects we are passionate about, just like we built a fan base centered around different genres of music.  In the music scene of the past eventually bands would jam with each other onstage and form side projects.  The most well known side project ever is probably Temple of the Dog a collaboration between members of Soundgarden and Pearl Jam.  These days bloggers regularly make guest appearances on each others blogs and many bloggers have decided to start multiple blogs.

And I have noticed that “I’m a blogger”, is the new “I’m in a band”  It elicits the same response “Really?  what kind of music do you play, where do you play? Do you have a tape/CD?  or Really? what do you blog about? How much traffic do you get?”  People are genuinely interested. They view blogging in the same way as being in a band was viewed.  You are viewed as an influencer,  a trend setter in the community.  And secondly blogging has largely been a response to being shut out of the system by the big gatekeepers of our day.  When we couldn’t catch a break back in 1992, we would rent a hall or gallery and make our own shows.  In Vancouver, a whole music showcase called “Music Waste” was developed as a response to the exclusive and industry/radio friendly “Music West”.

Something else I’ve noticed is that a lot of bloggers are actually musicians too!  I guess creative types are drawn to mediums in which they can create right?

What do you think?  Are you old enough to remember the Seattle Scene? Was there a scene like that in your town “back in the day” ?   Hows your local blogging community coming along.  Are you making the effort to connect in real life as well as online?

COMMENT PLEASE :)

Is Twitter the new eHarmony?

I don’t remember where I heard it but someone said “Twitter is the new eHarmony”.

Art Department budget: $0

Initially I scoffed at the idea.  Twitter is for professionals.  Professionals don’t mix business with pleasure, ridiculous!  But then…

Tweetups.  Meetups of people on Twitter.  In my case, wine tweetups.  Suddenly I am surrounded by social people who share a passion for wine, for exploring their senses and who are interested in learning.  Twitter is still very new, there is much to learn, it is still evolving, so I think at this point Twitter is attracting a sort of trend setting crowd of early adopters.  Nevertheless I am noticing a vibe, a trend at the tweetups I have been to.  People are genuinely interested in each other!  Who are you?  What do you do?  What are you passionate about, and what do you do to pay the bills?  Sometimes they are one and the same.  Sure there is an element of networking and a professional theme (somewhat)  but after you start to meet the same people and get to know a group of like minded individuals, I can honestly say that they become friends.  Can that lead to more than friends?  Probably, I don’t have any examples as of yet.  Do you?  What do you think?  Keep it professional, or go with the flow see what happens?

Tasting Wine at the historic Wrigley Mansion

The Weekly Wine Journal was lucky enough to be invited to a very special wine tasting last week, held at the historic Wrigley Mansion.  I did a quick bit of research before showing up and found out that the mansion was built between 1929 and 1931 by the same Wrigley fellow who made Wrigley’s Gum.  Tragically he died in 1932 right after completion of his mansion.  My initial impression was that the Wrigley Mansion is some kind of exclusive club.  It is not.  It is a club, but merely as a formality due to zoning restrictions.  It costs $10 a year to be a member and you can sign up when you get there.  They don’t check references as far as I know!  What do you get for 10 bucks?  You get a lot.  Discounts on food and drinks, and a truly unique experience.

The mansion is a 16,000 square foot Spanish colonial style building sitting on a 100ft tall “bump” or hill right in the heart of central Phoenix.

Spectacular view!

This slight elevation allows for spectacular views of the valley, and sunsets and other romantic things like summer monsoon storms!  The mansion has 24 rooms and 12 bathrooms, it has a separate bar and lounge called “Gordie’s” which has really interesting peacock feather lampshades.  Gordie’s has a “pay what you think is fair” pricing structure! No kidding!

Peacock feather lampshade!

I will have to try that out soon.  Then there is the piano room and the front banquet area.  The piano is a 1929 Steinway, that you can play, and it also plays itself!  According to the nice young lady giving us the tour, the piano is priceless.  It costs more to insure the piano than it does to insure the whole rest of the mansion!  I overcame a desire to play chopsticks and headed towards the wine…

Tonight we were tasting Arizona Stronghold’s 4 current offerings:  Tazi, a Sauvignon Blanc/Riesling based blend, Dayden a dry rose, Mangus an Italian styled wine and Nachise a Rhone styled wine.  I found all of the wines to be superb examples of the what Arizona is capable of when it comes to wine.  I especially liked the Nachise.

Complete reviews of  the wines here

Short video of the views

Wine review: Arizona Stronghold

I recently tasted these 4 wines from Arizona Stronghold at the famous Wrigley Mansion.  See my article on that event HERE.

“Tazi” 2008

The Blend: 52% Sauvignon Blanc, 21% Chardonnay, 19% Riesling and 8% Malvasia

Aging: Stainless steel and neutral oak

Production: 1,967 Cases

Alcohol: 13.7%

Price: $17.99

This was the first wine of the evening, and I think it is perfect for that purpose.  A good balance between the crispness of the Sauvignon Blanc and the sweetness of the Riesling.  It’s not to dry and not too sweet.

“Dayden” 2009

The Blend: Zinfandel, Grenache, Sangiovese, Malbec, Sauvignon Blanc –no information on the exact percentages yet

Aging: Stainless Steel

Production: 872 Cases

Alcohol: 11.9%

Delicious!  That is my single tasting note.  Light, crisp and refreshing.  The fruit is predominantly Strawberry and Cherry with a hint of terroir vaguely French in nature.

“Mangus” 2008

The Blend: 55% Cabernet Sauvignon, 36% Sangiovese and 9% Merlot.

Aging: Neutral Oak

Production: 1,359 cases

Alcohol: 14.7%

Price: $19.99

Another interesting wine, I found it to be quite powerful.  If you like the bigger bolder reds this will be the wine for you.  The style is a lot more subtle than an Australian fruit bomb or a highly extracted Napa Cab.  A dry red wine, the fruit is predominantly cherry with earthy components and a strong backbone of acidity.

“Nachise” 2008

The Blend: 52% Syrah, 27% Grenache, 15% Petite Sirah and 6% Mourverdre

Aging: Neutral Oak

Production: 2,009 cases

Alcohol: 14.7%

Price: $19.99

This is a wine a could drink all night long, without having to switch to something else.  Why?  Great dark fruit, blackberry blue berry, very smooth fine tannins and a very interesting component that can only be described as Juniper and or pine.  The wine is French in nature, more specifically Rhone.  Once again, not a highly extracted fruit bomb, which is a welcome change for my palate.  Great supple mouthfeel and nice long lingering finish.  At 14.7% I would have expected more heat from the alcohol but I was pleasantly surprised, the heat is kept in check, and the alcohol provides plenty of lift for the aromatics.