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Pontifications from the pulpit:
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The Tria wines continue to impress for all the aromatics & fragrance
they seem to always have. Bill Knuttle's Pinot Noir background (at Saintsbury)
seems to translate well into other varieties. Not particularly big and
extracted wines, they are always nice drinking & very elegant/complex/very
well-made wines. A winery that's worth keeping track of.
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Ahhhhhh.... the Turleys!! Because of the prices, all the hype surrounding
them, the feeding frenzy in the marketplace upon their release, their not
particularly impressive showing at ZAP.... I was fully prepared not to
like them. Alas and alack, I did like them.... quite a lot. It seems to
be the fashion to dump all over the Turley wines.... an "emperor waers
no clothes" type of thing. They merely represent one style in the whole
spectrum of winemaking styles to which Zinfandel is vinified. A style that
I particularly am attracted to.... perhaps because I'm not particularly
sensitive to alcohol levels in wine. Wether these will age into great wines
is, in my mind, an open question. The consensus seems to be "no", that
they should be drunk up young. It is possible, I believe, to have high
alcohol levels and high extract levels and still have the balance necessary
for a wine to age. Most of the 16%-17% Zins I've had tend to have a pruney/late
harvesty/raisened character. These Turleys clearly don't seem to me to
have that. How they get those alcohol levels w/o the raisened/pruney flavors
is a mystery to me. These wines remind me a bit (but only a bit) of those
David Bruce Late Harvests of the '69-'70-'71 vintage. High alcohols (up
to 18%), high extractions & tannins, lots of new French oak.
Some became pretty interesting wines, some never did develop into anything;
the off-dry ones seemed to do the best. The Turleys strike me as more balanced,
less exposure to oak, less late harvesty than the David Bruces. Those were
fun to drink when they were young.... you were just salivating out the
thought of what great old wines that you just KNEW they must become, and
smug w/ self-satisfaction over the mother-lode of them you had stashed
away in your cellar. Alas, like many old wines.... they were interesting
intellectual experiences, but seldom great sensual experiences. Perhaps
that will also happen w/ these Turleys. I don't think so..... but then
I have plenty of old-bones and decaying fossils in my cellar that offer
up mute testimony to my great ability to predict the longetivity of wines!!!
Tom Hill, no longer speaking ex-cathedra!
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