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SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WINERY REVIEW

Southern California has become a great place to go wine tasting!  Great wines, great wineries -- and great people!  This website is dedicated to bringing you the best info on wineries in San Diego and Riverside counties -- and a few other places as well.  Enjoy!
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Day two of our trip to Amador County, and our introduction to Qvevri....

Chuparosa April 2021

4/29/2021

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​I am very happy to report that Chuparosa Winery in Ramona has reopened for wine tasting!  I am even happier to report that we spent a very lovely afternoon on their patio tasting their latest offerings! 
We were not alone – most of the tables were filled as it was a perfect day for wine tasting outside, as opposed to the last time I was wine tasting in Ramona where we had to hand on dearly to our glasses with frozen hands to keep the cold wind from blowing wine all over the place.
Chuparosa for those of you new to this site is a boutique winery growing just five grape varieties – Albariño, Zinfandel, Sangiovese (Brunello clone), Malbec, and Cabernet Franc.  The produce varietals from all of these, and combine the Sangiovese, Malbec, and Cabernet Franc into a super-Tuscan blend with the moniker North Block Blend.  More on this later.  As you can see from the tasting menu below, they’ve added Semillon and Chenin Blanc from grapes obtained from another Ramona winery, Kohill.  Not on the menu is a Bordeaux blend also made from Kohill grapes.
I tasted all of their standard Estate wines for about umpteenth time and I am happy to report that these latest vintages are for the most part the best they’ve made.  The wines made from the Kohill grapes were good, but they were up against very stiff competition.  By the way, the wine in the glass is Albariño.
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The North Block Blend was particularly noteworthy, which made me suspect that the wine was field blended.  Field blending, as discussed in my earlier blog about Viognier, entails picking and fermenting the different grape varieties together.  According to Chuparosa’s winemaker (and owner) Andy Harris, “Co-fermentation yields significantly different (and better in my opinion) flavor profiles than simply blending wines fermented previously and stored for some time prior to blending.”  Andy points out that he follows the techniques learned from Tuscan winemakers.
My understanding is that many American winemakers take a very different approach to wine blending.  All of the wines are picked, fermented and aged independent of each other.  Now not all barrels are identical, so there will be differences in the wines after aging.  Some of the wines will be very good, and will be bottled with such monikers as “Special Reserve”.  Others will be just good, and will be bottled as pure varietals.  The wine that is not all that good, that is somehow flawed, is saved by correcting the flaws by blending.  Hence, the blending laboratory where the flawed wine is mixed with wine from other varietals until a saleable wine is produced.  Of course, winemakers often skip the barrel screening step and go straight to blending with varieties chosen to overcome weaknesses of the pure varietal wine.
As a final note, we came home with a lot of wine....
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    Jim Treglio

    retired physicist and wine lover

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