|
|
Estate Wineries of the
Year
Wine & Spirits Buying Guide 2003
Every
year, we taste the three new releases of Diamond Creek: Red Rock Terrace
(from seven acres of reddish-brown soil facing north), Gravelly Meadow
(five relatively flat acres with a gravelly, sandy soil) and Volcanic Hill
(eight acres of white volcanic ash on a hillside facing south). And every
year we recommend them all with exceptional ratings. In ’97 and ’98, it
was Gravelly Meadow and Red Rock that showed best; in ’99, Volcanic Hill
was the clear favorite.
When Al Brounstein bought this
70-acre parcel on Diamond Mountain in 1967, he had the foresight to plant
each vineyard block by the soil structure and exposition – that, and the
plant material he smuggled in from two premier cru chateaux in Bordeaux,
help to emphasize the site expression. Collectors have recognized the
individual character in the wines from their early releases, even when
they were made in a remarkable basic, artisanal winery.
Today,
the style of Diamond Creek’s wines is somewhat more accessible, while the
site distinctions are no less apparent. Much of that accessibility can be
attributed to changes winemaker Phil Steinschriber made after his arrival
in ’91. He trained the vines from their two-wire California sprawl to a
vertical trellis, allowing more light into the canopy. In the most
vigorous soils, he used a Geneva double curtain, raising the fruit higher
while training the canes and leaves below. The grapes achieve a more
balanced ripeness, and they are harvested late, sometimes into November,
Steinschriber also installed stainless steel fermenters with temperature
control. Together with a new crusher, the equipment allows him to maintain
the concentrated Diamond Creek fruit without aggressive tannins. Volcanic
Hill, which once produced the most tannic and inaccessible wine, grew
the
most elegant Diamond Creek Cabernet in ’99. While the others show some
hyper-ripe flavors - the jet-black tannins and black cherry liqueur fruit
of Gravelly Meadow, or the soft, black and lavender depths of the Red Rock
Terrace – Volcanic Hill grew more perfectly ripe. It has a tailored feel,
the flavors black cherry up front, fruited chocolate in the end, balanced
and dry. Over the years, Brounstein has consistently found that the wines
that grow out of the soil on Volcanic Hill are the longest lived of the
three vineyards. Recently, he won approval to plant three more acres on
the same white volcanic ash. The vines went into the ground in 2001, more
densely planted than his other vineyards, and Brounstein believes they
will make his best cabernet yet.
– J.G.
|