26 May Wine Lovers Share Their Favorite Wine Regions
Do you have a favorite wine region? Is it where you took your first wine trip or is it where you celebrated a special event? Perhaps you love multiple regions but is there a wine region that holds a special place in your heart? That was the challenge for my wine friends and I on our weekly virtual tasting which I wrote about in the Napa Valley Register and you can read it here. ****************************** In my weekly virtual wine tastings with wine industry friends from around the country, we try to come up with different themes each week that will inspire interesting and funny conversations. As we cannot travel, we decided this past week to focus on our favorite wine regions.
Sonoma-based journalist Sarah Stierch picked Amador County as her favorite region. Originally from the mid-west, she said that Amador County, located southeast of Sacramento, reminds her of Indiana. It is a gorgeous and unpretentious place and she opened two wines to represent the region—the 2018 Bella Grace Vineyards Estate Grenache Blanc Amador County and the 2018 Leoni Farms Amador County Barbera.
Working for Wine.com, Kelly Cohen is exposed to wines from around the world. While she has a lot of favorite regions, she chose the Santa Cruz Mountains in honor of her recent move there from San Francisco and opened a 2016 La Honda Salinian Block Cabernet Sauvignon from the Santa Cruz Mountains.
Virginia-based owner of CorkEnvy, Jason Stubblefield selected Paso Robles with the 2010 Aron Hill Vineyards Estate Grown Primitivo from the West Side of Paso Robles. He loves the approachability and down-to-earth nature of Paso Robles, as well as the diversity of the plantings that produce quality wines in different styles.
And, after enjoying wines made from Bordeaux to Rhone varieties, it has piqued his interest to travel to the Rhone Valley and Bordeaux when travel is possible again.
Bay Area-based Michael Wangbickler of Balzac Communications felt like he was picking his favorite child. Ultimately, he selected the 2018 David Paige Wines Chehalem Mountains Pinot Noir to represent the Willamette Valley. He says that with regard to domestic Pinot Noirs, Willamette Valley overdelivers for the value. The Willamette Valley Pinot Noirs differentiate between AVAs and he loves the balance of fruit and earth on the wines.
Wine Antics founder Jenn Nelson lives in Florida but is originally from Maryland. She first started studying wine while living in Maryland and opened a bottle of Old Westminster NV Tapestry, a blend of Cabernet Franc, Merlot and Syrah from a small family-owned sustainable winery in New Windsor, Maryland, in honor of where her love of wine started.
Bay Area-based wine educator and writer Fred Swan decided that there are too many wonderful regions in America, and he could not choose just one. Instead he went overseas to one of his favorite places, a place he visited last year, Southern Australia. To represent the versatility of the McLaren Vale region, he opened a 2013 Yangarra Estate “Old Vine” Grenache, McLaren Vale, South Australia.
Texas-based wine blogger Jeff Kralik opened a bottle of Champagne, which was no surprise to the rest of us as we know he is a big fan.
Why? He used to lead bike tours in France and when he was first learning about wine, a friend told him to pick one region and learn it well and then go from there. Champagne was the region he delved into.
New York-based sound engineer and wine blogger Jim VanBergen also selected a French region. He explained that Bordeaux and Burgundy cannot get all the attention and he loves the tiny region of Jura where the wines are made using 700-year-old techniques and are delicious. He enjoyed the 2015 Frédéric Puffeney Trousseau from Jura, France.
Our Canadian wine journalist friend Christine Campbell represented her own country, picking the 2017 Township Cabernet Sauvignon from the southern towns of Oliver and Osoyoos in the Okanagan. She is proud of British Columbia wines, with different regions emerging showcasing different terroirs and producing wines with great acidity.
Bay Area-based freelance writer Doug Levy also picked British Columbia, and with a love for the intense fruit Syrah they produce, opened a 2017 Orofino Wild Ferment Syrah from the Simikilameen Valley in B.C.
If there a wine region that holds a special place in your heart? While you are not able to travel there right now, open up a bottle from the region and celebrate it and relive the memories of why the place is so special to you.
Read the original story in the Napa Valley Register.
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