Serendipity times two

Updated June 2x 

It’s not exactly breaking news to contend that proper storage is really important for aging wines, but I had an experience at a friend’s house in France that re-emphasized same at an almost miraculous level.

To celebrate our both having survived hip replacements, Louis decided to open two of his oldest Bordeaux bottles, a 1972 Château Les Ormes-de-Pez and a 1978 Château Phélan Ségur, both from St. Éstephe and classified as Cru Bourgeois Exceptional wines these days. Not for a nanosecond did I think either would be drinkable and the crumbling corks seemingly confirmed same. But the color of the wines was encouraging and, against all odds, they went down nicely, having retained a measure of fruit despite their advanced years and serious problems with their respective vintages.

The former is still considered one of the worst ever in Bordeaux while the latter is often referred to as the “miracle” vintage because so little was expected early on. But the grapes rallied because of perfect pre-harvest weather in September and many wonderful wines resulted.    

Still, most critics will tell you nothing good could have happened to either wine since the turn of the century, no matter how well they were cared for. But because Louis’ natural underground cellar, located beneath his 200-year-old farmhouse in the Ubaye Valley, offers ideal temperature and humidity levels, nothing bad happened to them, either. What a treat to taste!

As it happens, there’s a case of the ’72 Ormes de Pez for sale on line at an Asian website for $942 (sg.cruworld.com). It would be a risky purchase, though, without detailed storage history over half a century.

A much safer option, to be sure, will be the 2019. In an odd twist of fate, I found out Wednesday that the Union des Grands Crus de Bordeaux was kicking off its North American tour to showcase the new releases at the Corinthian downtown Thursday evening. (Remember, I’d been in France myself for two months and was a bit out of the loop.) Upon entering the exhibition space, the first bottle that caught my eye, and I’m not making this up, was the Ormes de Pez, which is owned by the Cazes family of Lynch-Bages fame.

Minutes later, an old friend fortuitously flagged me down. It just so happens that Pamela Wittman represents Phélan Ségur in the U.S. C’est parfait!

It’s not often one gets a chance to compare notes on the same wines separated by half a century. The “babies” were predictably compelling and have the added advantage of representing a better vintage than their ancestors, although 2019 wasn’t without its issues, too. The sultry, Houston-hot early summer days gave cause for concern, but heavy rain in late July eased tensions. Every wine I tasted, the aforementioned included, checked most of the requisite boxes. Overall, the Bordeaux Union itself has scored the vintage 3.5 on a 5-point scale.

When the 2019s are released later this year, I’ll be first in line to purchase both the Ormes de Pez and the Phélan Ségur. It’s a given bottles of each will make their way back to Louis. But to be drunk, not cellared, this time.

Neither of us are getting any younger.

Explore the wineries’ respective stories at phelansegur.com and ormesdepez.com.    

A tradition continues

Elton Slone

Early in my tenure as the Houston Chronicle’s wine columnist, I enjoyed a memorable dinner with a jovial fellow named Robert Craig, a Houston-area native of who had made his way to San Francisco while serving in the Coast Guard, fell in love with wine and ultimately became the Hess Collection CEO before launching his own eponymous winery.

“I’m the most famous winemaker ever to come out of Dickinson, Texas,” Craig said, chuckling.

Robert Craig wines are still around, although Bob, sadly, isn’t. He retired from the business in 2012 and, after battling Parkinson’s Disease for years, passed away in 2019. But his former partner turned successor, Elton Slone, shares Craig’s joie d’vivre, also making him delightful dinner companion, and he has done wonders for the brand, which continues to showcase some of Napa Valley’s finest mountain fruit.

Craig had led efforts to gain official recognition for both the Mount Veeder and Spring Mountain District AVAs and had himself put down roots high up on Howell Mountain when, in 1992, his partnership purchased 25 prime acres at the summit. The winery remains headquartered there today, although it has a lovely new tasting room in the city of Napa.     

Slone’s roots are in Indiana, no more of a proving ground for vintners than the upper Texas Gulf Coast. But he landed a job in a wine bar in Bloomington during college and one of his regular customers, who became something of a wine mentor, was the rocker John Mellencamp.

“His studio was practically next door,” Slone said. “He kept me on my toes. He knew his stuff.”

Slone tasted me through a half-dozen Robert Craig wines at a’Bouzy one evening this week while digressing sufficiently on other topics – we share a passion for cycling, European travel and Barolo – to hang out for nearly four hours. Hey, time flies when you’re drinking well, right?

The quality of the cabs didn’t surprise me in the least, but the 2019 Gap’s Crown Vineyard Chardonnay and the 2018 Howell Mountain Black Sears Vineyard Zinfandel were wonderful discoveries. Note that the latter, which spends 18 months in French oak (half of it new) and is bottled unfined and unfiltered, is my “Sippin’-with-Sporty” red tout for today. Truth to tell, it’s one of the most interesting zins I’ve ever had the pleasure of sampling.            

Sippin’ with Sporty

Rosé

2020 de Négoce Rosé of Sangiovese – This is a simply delicious pink wine, redolent with melon and red fruit on the nose and offering both in spades on the palate, too. The Alexander Valley fruit was direct pressed and the juice then spent time in stainless steel for both fermentation and aging. It’s a steal for the sale price of $13 at denegoce.com



White

2021 Clockwise Sauvignon Blanc – A MacRostie wine from the Sonoma Coast, it’s  aromatic and nicely textured.  The juice fermented in stainless steel and didn’t undergo malolactic fermentation. These days the winemaking decisions are made by Heidi Bridenhagen, but the winery’s founder, Steve MacRostie, whose roots in his neighborhood date to the mid-1970s, remains a hands-on owner. $30 at macrostiewinery.com


Red

2019 Robert Craig Black Sears Vineyard Zinfandel Howell Mountain – Slone proudly calls the Black Sears plot, located atop Howell Mountain at some 2,400 feet of elevation, “without a doubt the best zinfandel vineyard in the world” and I can’t argue after tasting this gem. It’s fittingly sold in a Rhone-style bottle because, truth to tell, it could pass for a great syrah from that region. Fewer than 300 cases were made, however, so $65 (store.robertcraig.com) is a reasonable price to pay. As it happened, I would taste a Turley Howell Mountain Zinfandel Saturday and found it similarly smashing. It’s shame so many zin vines at elevation are disappearing because cabernet generates much higher profit margins. Follow the money . . .   

H-town Happenings

* Ninth Birthday Celebration – Camerata, Sunday, July 10. 4 p.m. until closing. 713 522-8466 or cameratahouston.com

Follow me

* Podcast: Sporty Wine Guy

* Instagram: sportywineguy

* Twitter: @sportywineguy

* Facebook: Dale Robertson

Other folks to follow

* Sandra Crittenden (winelifehouston.com) – Sandra gives us the lowdown on Oregon wine country’s newly designated  sub-regions.

Russ Kane (vintagetexas.com) – Russ’ latest Texas Fine Wine Tasting Stop is Bingham Family Vineyards: “Texas farmer discovers terroir in High Plains Dirt; You can too!”

Jeff Kralik (thedrunkencyclist.com) – Jeff writes about shrugging off the effects of maddening flight delays (Italian air traffic controllers were on strike) to explore the new Garda DOC surrounding the gorgeous lake of the same name.

 * Jeremy Parzen (dobianchi.com)  – My podcast partner in crime shares the news that the Union of Communes of the Langa Hills and Barolo has commissioned a study of a potential ban on tourist traffic between the villages of Barolo, Castiglione Falletto, and Monforte d’Alba, proposing to institute an electric shuttle instead. Hmm . . . I know those roads well and have never found them to be particularly congested. Of course, I haven’t there lately during truffle season.

* Katrina Rene (thecorkscrewconcierge.com) – Kat proposes seven rosés to help us beat the heat. Two of them, the Minuty “M” and the Hampton Waters are always on my short list of favorites. The latter is a collaboration between the Languedoc vintner Gerard Bertrand and the rocker, Jon Bon Jovi. They met when Bon Jovi performed at Bertrand’s summer jazz festival, which remains a bucket list event for me.    

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