Still Scaling the
Transcription
Still Scaling the
s ine of W ew evi 008 yR g2 erl rin art Sp Qu Still Scaling the “Heitz” Forty-seven years out, an iconic Napa winery shows no let-up in quality. Richard Paul Hinkle Kathleen Heitz Myers, Alice Heitz, and David Heitz I clearly remember the first time I met the late, legendary Joe Heitz. I was writing harvest reports for the (then) wine newspaper I helped found (initials WS), and I was asking Joe to assess his most recent round of grape picking. Must have been 1977 or 1978. His words were crisp and hard: “Mother Nature’s a mean old lady!” Ma may be mean, but Joe seemed to know how to handle the old gal in milieus as diverse as Grignolino and Martha’s Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon. The winery was founded by Joe and Alice Heitz in 1961 on the site of Leon Brendel’s ancient facility (it is now the Heitz tasting room on Highway 29 in St. Helena). Brendel only made Grignolino, and sold it under his “Only One” label. (Alice, by the way, is still going strong. She lives much of the year in a San Francisco retirement community, where she can partake of the city’s vast cultural opportunities. She is particularly pleased that they don’t charge corkage when she brings her own wines to the dinner table!) “We still make Grignolino,” says winery president Kathleen Heitz Myers. “We make a little Rosé from it, we make a red, and we also make a little Port from it. It has such a lovely floral quality about it that you almost expect it to be sweet. But it’s got fairly high acidity, so it’s great with spicy foods. I think of it as something akin to a red Gewürztraminer. We call it our ‘midweek wine.’ You know, for your Tuesday night spaghetti. It’s not for special occasions; it’s for the hamburgers or pasta that you put on the table on a daily basis and it’s especially good as an ingredient in your favorite red pasta sauce!” Quarterly Review of Wines, Spring 2008 (Kathleen has the honor — and the extreme responsibility — of chairing Auction Napa Valley 2008. “As you know, it’s a charitable event that raises funds for our community’s healthcare, housing and youth service non-profits. We see ourselves as neighbors helping neighbors.” It’s almost hard to imagine, but when Heitz was founded, the large wooden oval barrel-end sign that welcomes people to the Napa Valley … listed fewer than 20 wineries then existing in the valley.) That said, Cabernet Sauvignon remains Heitz’s raison d’etre. Of the winery’s 40,000-case annual production, more than 25,000 cases are devoted to the variety Bordeaux made famous. The largest part of that is the Napa Valley Cabernet, followed by much smaller allotments of the three vineyard-designate wines: Martha’s Vineyard, Bella Oaks, and Trailside Vineyard. “We have made some subtle changes in our production of Cabernet over the years,” admits David, who graduated from Fresno State in 1974. “What’s the same is that we’ve managed to stick with our extended aging program [see below]. What’s different is that we’ve got a new, more gentle Willmes press, new filtering equipment, and we’re one of the very few to use Limousin oak with Cabernet. We just like the flavors better. Limousin is a sweeter oak, with less harshness, and we want the unique qualities of each vineyard to show through in the finished product. Part of the equation, too, is that our extended aging period allows the oak to better integrate into the wine without overpowering it. We use a blend of new and once-used oak barrels for most of our Cabs, but the Trailside is big enough to handle all new oak.” David allows that he had always intended to become a winemaker. “I love the business. I love the Napa Valley. I love the agricultural basis of the business. I love to watch how each wine ages and develops. The creativity that’s involved, the artistic challenges and the opportunities to learn are exciting. It’s always a mystery how wine develops. That’s the wonder of it all. I have a particular fondness for Ports, which started when I was in college. I would write to the producers in Portugal, and read any- thing I could lay my hands on. By the late 1980s we had planted nearly six acres to the Portuguese varieties: Touriga National, Tinta Roriz, Tinta Cao, Sauzao, Tinta Bairrada, Tinta Madeira, Tinta Amaraella and Bastardo.” Curiously, though the wine can carry the “Napa Valley” appellation, as all the fruit is Napa Valley-grown, it does not carry the “Napa Valley Grapes 100%” emblem (on the back label), since the high-proof alcohol needed to fortify the wine comes from San Joaquin Valley fruit. A T T HE T A S T IN G T A B LE • Chardonnay 2006 Napa Valley, $20. Wonderfully creamy, oily texture, with lemon, green apple and sweet pear fruit, and just a touch of sweet oak. “This wine shows some of my influence,” says Kathleen. “I didn’t like the intrusion of oak into our Chardonnay, so we tempered that a bit, so that the fruit could show through in a lighter, crisper, more refreshing style.” Taste it, and you’ll see the wisdom of her words. • Grignolino 2005 Napa Valley, $15. Native to Italy’s Piemont area, this varietal reminds you a bit of Tempranillo, with its round, fleshy, come-hither sweet plum, blood orange and strawberry fruitiness — along with that floral quality that is artless and innocent. “Youthful exuberance” is Kathleen’s apt phrase. • Cabernet Sauvignon 2003 Napa Valley, $39. Voluptuous, with fluid black currant, violet and blackberry fruit that is silky yet solid. That is a killer price for a Napa Valley Cabernet that is this well put together. “Some people are put off by our pricing, saying, ‘Aren’t your wines any good?’” grumbles Kathleen. “I don’t know quite how to respond to that, except to say that that’s part of our family ethic. We want people to drink our wines. It took us nearly 50 years to break the $100 barrier. Way back, our Chardonnay used to bring a higher price than our Cabernet, if you can believe that!” Yes, in 1963, the Riesling cost almost 50¢ more than the Cabernet, at $2.07 the bottle, and in 1965 the Chardonnay was an outrageous $8 the bottle (as against the poor old Cabernet at just $1.85). • Cabernet Sauvignon 2002 Bella Oaks Vineyard, $65. Crisp and tangy, with iodine and coffee up front, backed up artfully with a smoky peppermint quality that adds to this wine’s inherent liveliness. “This is the lighter, more feminine of our vineyard designate wines,” says Kathleen. “As delicate as it seems, it has a strong backbone, and is thus quite popular in restaurants.” You can see why. • Cabernet Sauvignon 2002 Trailside Vineyard, $80. A richly-textured wine, this one has a thick cloak of currant and plum, framed with plenty of toasty-bacon-like oak [David calls it “briary”]; the ripeness of the fruit, and subsequent alcohol, is noticeable. Not made for the faint of heart. “Where Bella Oaks and Martha’s are owned by longtime family friends, Trailside is our own vineyard, located on the Silverado Trail near the Rutherford Crossroad [between Mumm and Conn Creek],” says David. “All of our vineyard designate Cabernets go through an extended aging process: three years in barrel, a year in oak uprights, and then a year in bottle prior to release. We want these wines to be ready to drink when they are purchased, though we know that they are capable of extended aging in the bottle as well.” • Cabernet Sauvignon 2002 Martha’s Vineyard, $138. Deep, long and marvelously fluid texture, with great depth of blackberry and violet fruit that lasts and lasts on the palate. Yes, if you really look for it, you’ll find that timehonored eucalyptus spiciness, but it’s only there as a most subtle complexing agent; the primary fruit speaks loudly and succinctly for itself. Tom and Martha May still own and work this extraordinary 35-acre vineyard, and two of their three children are presently working there too. • Inkgrade Vineyard Port (non-vintage), $25. Oily texture that simply coats your tongue with rich orange peel, black walnut and black currant fruit. Great fruit sweetness, enough to stand up to the sharpest of cheddars. You’ll want a roaring fire in the background, to be sure. Quarterly Review of Wines, Spring 2008