Sunday, June 9, 2013

THIS JUST IN - UPDATE ON BEER FEST ©


            Right after I posted the piece (BarrelHouse Brewery etc.) including the SLO Brewers Guild's upcoming event, more details emerged. The (www.)Seven Sisters Fest (.com) has an event web site. Tickets are now on sale at Boo Boo Records or Tap It Brewing in San Luis Obispo or you can call 1-855-966-7767 for more information. On line tickets are available through Vallitix.com (888-825-5484) as well.

Held at the El Chorro Regional Park & Campground in San Luis Obispo, campsites for the festival can be reserved by calling the 855-966-7767 number. Eight bands have been booked for non-stop music during the July 12-13 dates and over 30 breweries will be offering samples of local craft beers. Local vendors will also be on hand with plenty of food. This is one of several beer centric events that have gaining strength with the renewed interest in small volume micro breweries in the area, as reviewed in the posting noted above.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

CENTRAL COAST REPRESENTS 30% of HOT BRANDS ©


            Over the past decade, Wine Business Magazine has featured a list of "Hot Brands" that spotlight interesting, sometimes unusual, labels that have had an impact in the market or stand out in their approach. The list from 2012 includes five California wineries, three of which are from the Central Coast. Other featured  producers came from Virginia, Washington, Oregon and Texas. The tenth winery honored was from Canada's British Columbia, a 100% varietal Cabernet Franc, a grape that was also seen in three of the selections. Six of the ten were single varietal wines, the others were blends of two to as many as four grapes. Retail pricing was from $13 to $40, total cases made ran from 100 to 10,000.

Another piece of interesting data was alcohol content. In this age of big wines and 15% + levels of alcohol, this group only broke 14% in two wines. One of those was only by .1% and the group averaged 13.5%. The Oregon winery, Troon, blended Viognier with 88% Vermentino and was only 11.5% alcohol. Other rarely seen varietals included Tannat, Lemberger, Tempranillo and Grenache Blanc - the last two being 100% of the variety. The only other 100% varietal wine was made from Syrah, and one of our Central Coast picks, as was the maker of the Grenache Blanc which was also the smallest production in the list.

The least expensive and largest production was also the most blended, featuring Cab, Zin, Merlot and Petit Sirah. Since you might actually be able to find this example, it was 2010 Rosso di Napa from Ca' Momi. I doubt a Napa appellation red will stay on the shelves for long at this price. Good luck! Since WBM  serves these wines at their holiday party and to those at the Unified Wine & Grape Symposium, you may want to find a friend in the industry and tag along.

I should mention the author of the article (in the February 2012 issue) was Mary-Colleen Tinney. It was a well researched piece and truly offers a wide range of interesting wines. Plus, my guess is she may come from fine stock of the same old sod as I, sla'inte.

Two Shepherds is the producer of the Grenache Blanc, which retails for $24 if you can find one of the only 1,200 bottles made. The maker is a tech industry sales & marketing professional, William Allen, who lives in Sonoma County and blogs at "Simple Hedonism". He was a consumer who decided to make some hobby wine and was introduced to this grape when he tried some made by a Paso Robles vintner. He sourced this 2011 vintage from the Saarloos vineyard in Santa Ynez. It is the source that makes me consider it eligible for my Central Coast focus. Allen works primarily with seven Rhone varieties but sources most of his grapes from Sonoma and has planted his own vineyard. So, he may not be "Central Coast" for much longer but the roots of this wine are.

The Syrah is a 2007 Santa Barbara County version from Kunin Wines. Seth Kunin made 490 cases of this wine, which retails for $30 and was the highest in alcohol content of those selected. While not especially well known, the winery has been in business for fifteen years. His background was in the restaurant business, which landed him in the Santa Barbara area and work in the cellars at Gainey Winery in Santa Ynez. He set out to build his own brand and shied away from the Pinot and Chardonnay focus of much of that area at the time. He liked the elegance of northern Rhone wines that lacked the big smack of many of the versions being made then in Australia and California and sought a cooler vineyard location. That is fairly common in the appellation, which has the lowest degree day ranking of the major California AVAs. While now common, and differing stylistically from the warmer climate versions made in Paso Robles, there were not a lot of Syrah growers for Seth to talk to in Santa Barbara when he started the winery. He credits his old world style on a long growing season and sources grapes from Alisos Vineyard in Los Alamos Valley, Larner in Ballard Canyon and Paradise Road in E Santa Ynez Valley. He has worked with those three growers from the beginning. He holds the finished wines longer than most do these days, as shown by the current release being from the '07 vintage.

The third Central Coast wine is also a 100% varietal - Cabernet Franc - and named Carr for its winemaker Ryan Carr, a former art student. A 2010 vintage, 826 cases were made and it retails for $30. He came into winemaking through his parents move to Santa Barbara and subsequent purchase of some land in the Santa Ynez Valley. They were thinking to plant some vines and have Ryan manage it. After finding out more about vineyard management and the reality of planting and farming a vineyard, they sold the property. But the experience lit a fire under Ryan, who had come to like the industry and farming. So he continued to work the vineyard for the new manager. He also did graphic design for wineries and was allowed to harvest some excess fruit in 1999. Suddenly he was a trash can level winemaker and the result was pretty tasty. He invested in his own winery, makes about 6,000 cases (including premium kegs) of wine and oversees fifteen vineyards in the county, from which he obtains most of his fruit.

Three people with vastly different backgrounds who came to love winemaking in a winding road sort of way. All now considered a Hot Brand for 2012 and making small lots of wine as a personal statement of style and varietal expression.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

BARRELHOUSE JOINS SLO CRAFT BREW BOOM ©


You may remember a few years back when home brewing and craft beers were all the rage and brew pubs popped up everywhere? Many people found out brewing their own was fun but not worth the time it took to clean up everything. Finding friends to help you sterilize the bottles was about as easy as finding one with a pickup truck and those who'd help you move. But they still enjoyed beer with a style different than what was in the typical store reach-in. The other problem was the movement got enough traction that the big boys started to notice and started either their own in-house labels that would compete in that segment or just bought the micro-brew brand. Then they proceeded to make more, if less well made, versions of that brand until they killed it.

Thus, that (very tiny) piece of the beer market went into a slump for awhile. Suddenly there seems to be a resurgence of interest in craft brews and the pubs that go with them. That certainly is the case along the Central Coast and especially in San Luis Obispo county. The upcoming Firestone-Walker Invitational, hosted by one of the larger and better known established breweries in the area, is again a sold out event, drawing an international group of malt and hops fans and brewers from around the world.

SLO county, which benefits from having both a Cal Poly campus and lots of guys with the previously mentioned pickup trucks as potential end users, has seen an average of two new brew pub openings per year since 2008. This included a rebirth of Dunbar and a relocated SLO Brew, Tap It, Einhorn Beer Company, Figueroa Mountain, Solvang Brewing, Manrock, Pismo Brewing and Orcutt Brewing. The latest group has focused on "north county", or the Paso Robles area vs. those closer to the actual town of San Luis Obispo. These include Cambria Brewing Company, Paso Robles Brewing, Molly Pitcher and the open if not quite finished BarrelHouse operation. The latter is the largest of the newbies and is within sight of the Firestone-Walker location, just off the 101 junction with 46W. Firestone has also undergone a renovation to add space for the brewing component but also a larger dining and tasting room facility.

BarrelHouse is the brainchild of a local contractor, able to build out the brew house at a reasonable cost. He also benefitted from an oft used trick in the recent expansion, buying used equipment from failed operations from a world-wide search and reselling some of that to the competition. Even the passing of other local brands in the early 2000s has led to their old parts and pieces finding use in new homes.

If you are a fan of small batch beers, and can't find a scalper with tickets to the Firestone event, head to the San Luis Brewers Guild's first annual Seven Sisters Fest, July 12-13, at El Chorro Regional Park They also will hold the annual Brews & Bites event on August 31 on the Mission Plaza in SLO. The group does not appear to have a web site but there is a Facebook page that lists upcoming events and details.

I haven't tasted them all, but I can tell you there are some amazing specialty beers being made in the area in a variety of styles. Some of those require extended barrel ageing and rare ingredients and are not generally seen in the open market. If you are in the area, go direct to the source and taste some great beers, often available with tasty grub as well.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

"VINO" SPRING ISSUE IS OUT AND ABOUT ©


            The Paso Robles area wine lifestyle magazine, VINO is out and found at many local tasting rooms. One feature of this thrice yearly publication has been focusing on six winemakers in the Paso AVA, the "Rockstar" selections for each issue. I've been present at the previous two tasting events that marked the launch of those editions and enjoyed the one on one time with the winemakers profiled. My postings on this, if you haven't seen them, are available in the archives.

I was out of town when the newest offering came out but quickly located a copy and read it with interest. The magazine is a product of Paso Robles Press, with articles by a varying selection of contributors as well as staff writers. A major change may be in the offing, as revealed in the A Word From the Publisher lead in piece. Jeremy Burke stated that the current format is unable to truly provide all the information available about as dynamic a wine region that has developed in Paso. A VINO Weekly may be forthcoming, though details were not disclosed. He did, however, solicit story concepts and actual stories from the readership. If that interests you, send an email to Jeremy - publisher@pasoroblespress.com.

If you can't locate a copy of the magazine, learn more about the following Rock Star Winemakers at the web sites that follow. Caliza Winery's Carl Bowker (www.calizawinery.com); or the four guys at Oso Libre (www.osolibre.com) - Jeff Freeland, Chris Behr, Jeff Fandrick & Michael Barreto; Stanger Vineyards' J P  French (www.stangervineyards.com); Blake Kuhn from Clayhouse Wines (www.clayhousewines.com); Matt Ortman, at the recent addition to Pleasant Valley, Villa San-Juliette Vineyards & Winery (www.villasanjuliette.com); or J&J Cellars' (also Pleasant Vly) Maureen Qualia (www.jjcellars.com).