Porter’s Wine Blog

The Great New World Syrah Showdown 2010

Northern Rhone Syrah Vines

Northern Rhone Syrah Vines

Four Syrahs in seven days…. I tried for seven Syrahs, but new world Syrah (second only to Malbec) is one of my least favorite types of wine so I find four to be both an overwhelming number and an admirable effort. The thing about New World Syrah is that each one seems to be imitating an Old World blue print, but imitating it poorly and without replacing what’s lacking with anything new.

How did the personal challenge turn out? Well, I didn’t get any “I <3 Syrah” tattoos, and I didn’t throw any of the bottles out the window onto the street (as I expected to do) so I’d consider it a smashing success! Here’s the rundown:

Quinta de Viluco Reserva Especial Syrah from the Maipo Valley, Chile 2005: $20… Dark fruit, dark chocolate, and a enormous body. Really, truly fun to taste. Between three people trying it, we finished the bottle, and I bought two more to pour at dinner parties. It was obviously working at being a Crozes-Hermitage, but failing at having any complexity.

The Wolftrap Syrah from the Western Cape of South Africa 2009: $15… Wow, this is ripe! Fruity, fruity, and fruitier, BUT it’s also smoky. Mostly, it’s really burnt apricot pits… and what is this? It has some Viognier (and Mourvedre) in it!? Ah, that explains the smoke even more than the South African heritage.  The Cote-Rotie in the northern Rhone of France is mostly Syrah with often just a little bit of Viognier in it. The name translates roughly as “The Roasted Coast” and the Viognier adds a little hint of citrus so the burnt apricot pits coming through in the Wolftrap make perfect sense in this context. I can’t say the Wolftrap was a good bottle, but I liked it- probably just because of the Viognier’s ability to add some finesse and make the wine fun to taste.  Two people, some quite sarcastic conversation, and most of the bottle finished.

Coriole Vineyard’s Redstone Shiraz from the Mclaren Vale of Australia 2005: $20… This wine was supposed to be a Cornas… again, a Northern Cotes-du-Rhone version of Syrah that has a very jammy, red fruit and spice quality to it. Of course, it’s not a Cornas; it is a quick-finishing Australian.  I didn’t like it, but I think that was mostly because I’m prejudiced against Australia.  It was easy, red, and boring… it actually tasted a lot like the movie Avatar (yes, I know my roommate and I are the only two people in the world who didn’t like it).

Barrister’s Syrah from the Columbia Valley of Washington 2004: $25… Hermitage is the flagship Syrah of the Northern Rhone. It was loved by Russians Tzars. The complete AOC produces fewer bottles than many highly sought after American brands of wine. More importantly, Hermitage tastes like coffee, leather, and chocolate, and it finishes (when aged correctly, i.e., 10+ years… even 50 years if you’re doing it right) like velvet. The Barrister tastes exactly like a Hermitage, but finishes with the finesse of a cup of cold bodega decaf.

The better question is why do I keep doing this to myself?


Tres Palacios’ Merlot Reserve 2006

Quite a boring  focused wine. Really nice black plum skins (like the waxy ones with the white dust on them that you find in the organic side of Whole Foods when you’re thinking to yourself “Yeah, this is me. I’m totally the kind of guy that eats organic plums!”) cover the nose and palate. A ripe tobacco leaf accompanies it only strongly enough to be smelled by people who just quit smoking and really wish they didn’t. I’m also tasting some bitter chocolate on the finish that I think might just be a mirage but which I’m loving anyway.

Beauty

Tres Palacios' Vineyards

 

 

It’s the mouth-feel and tannin structure though that really do it for this $11.99 wine. Bitter red berries represent the tannins and a candy-smooth mouth-feel give the sour cherry and sour blackberry flavors an arena with which to shine. I’m loving this wine right now actually… and wondering where I can get some brie to go with it at 1 o’clock in the morning.

My only problems with this wine (and with many new world wines under $20) is that it tastes like both the beautiful vineyard pictured above and this very sterile winemaking facility pictured below.

 

Sterile, but tasty wine

Sterile, but tasty wine

Of course, that’s just me asking for way too much from a $10 bottle of wine.


Santa Carolina Reserva Cabernet Sauvignon 2006

A punch in the face. Black fruit, chocolate, and green peppers. Thick, heavy, and hard to drink more than a glass - this is more a dare than a wine…. a yummy dare though if you remember they are growing grapes, fermenting them, bottling them, and then shipping them 10,000 miles just for you to drink … all while keeping the price under $10.

$9.99 at T.B. Ackerson 6.9/10