So. Cal. Winery Review
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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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Latest Blog
Despite the downturn in the wine industry as a whole, new wineries are still opening up in our area.  One of these is a boutique winery in Ramona, Alpenglow Winery.
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Site News:  I've replaced the tasting menus with a listing of blogs on our wine adventures and other bs.  Just click on one to bring you back here and scroll down.  The blog you seek will be there....

Forgotten Barrel Winery

2/3/2020

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​From the pictures below of Forgotten Barrel Winery you would think it was located somewhere out in the country.  It is not.  It is located only a few blocks from the center of Escondido in a residential neighborhood, just off of Upas.  Just a winery, no vineyard, i.e., they make their wines from purchased grapes (though they do have some vines along their driveway).  Does that make it an “urban” winery or a “suburban” winery?  Well, their wine is pretty good so who cares!
​There are several nice outside areas to sit and drink wine.  The tasting room itself has only a small seating area reserved for wine club members, but they do have a large indoor facility to hold weddings and the like.  Pictures follow.
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​As you can see from the tasting menus below, they bring grapes in from all over the place – Napa, Fallbrook, Valley Center, San Diego, Santa Rita Hills.  Wine lots are often pretty small – sometimes as little as five barrels of a specific varietal.  Hence, they depend on selling small amounts of a lot of varietals vs. large amounts of a few varietals.  Tasting is either $10 per person or $15 per person, depending which menu you want to follow.  Pictures of the tasting room follow.
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​I am happy to report that they served the red wines at a good temperature -- I would hope that this was not just because it was a cooler day.  Given that the young man who served us is a level 3 Sommelier it seems like a given…  Anyway, water was readily available, and while they didn’t serve any munchies, they were also available.  No restaurant, of course, but they were setting up for entertainment when we left. 
Now to the wines.  Of the wines on the tasting menus, the best, by far, is the Syrah.  It is really good (bought some).  Below I’ve posted their price list with some wines not on the tasting menu.  The one outstanding wine on it is their GSM – also bought a bottle of it.  But that is not all!  Doc Ed had visited this winery a few days before the two of us dropped in and he got them to let him taste wines not on either list – a Pinot Noir made from grapes from the Alexander Valley, bottled but not yet released, and Tannat made from grapes sourced locally, still in the barrel.  According to Doc Ed, these are really, really good wines.  On the down side, as is the case in many small wineries, they reserve their best wines for their wine club so neither of these wines may become available to the public.
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​As for their wine club, it is a 3 bottle per quarter club with a very nice 25% discount, and 20% on other wines and anything else they are selling (mostly food items – munchies and the like).  Complementary wine tasting is limited to two per month.
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    Jim Treglio

    retired physicist and wine lover

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