
I had the pleasure of visiting the fine folks at Preston Vineyards this past Sunday during my whirlwind tour of Dry Creek Valley for some wine newbies. Preston is a winery after my own heart: it's all organic, sustainable, they are serious foodies, and they have goats!
After the usual tasting in the front room (we had the Grenache Blanc, the Rose', Barbera, L. Preston, and Petite Syrah) we were instructed to take our glasses into the barrel room. I love barrel rooms!
What awaited us in the barrel room was an elderly man, a jug, and a barrel. He says "jug wine?" and we all say "yes please!". And from his jug he pours a blend of mostly Zinfandel with Cinsault, Carignane, and Mourvedre. Yum. A bit of of history on the jug wine, courtesy of Lou Preston:
"My old neighbor Jim Guadagni was a second-generation Italian farmer in Dry Creek Valley. His family moved to the area around 1900 and Jim grew up here during the inter-war and Prohibition periods. Unschooled, untraveled, and functionally illiterate, Jim was nevertheless wise in the ways of people (opinionated), informed in the habits of his neighbors (nosy), and savvy in the wonders of grape growing and winemaking (if you didn't do it his way, you weren't doing it right). His unofficial reputation as "Mayor of Dry Creek" wasn't for nothing."
Hence, it is in the spirit of Jim Guadagni that Preston has made this wine. After a quick taste and a quick education on the history of Guadagni, we said we'd take a jug. The gentleman grabbed a jug, filled it straight from the barrel, hand-stamped a label, and put the label on the jug. $32 later (refills for $31) and we were out the door.
I'm sipping on this right now after a dinner of a stew that contained the Guadagni, pork shoulder, cranberry beans, chipotle peppers, and the odds and ends of my vegetable drawer. It added an earthy backbone to the stew, and as I sipped on it, the wine managed to stand up to the chipotles. This is not philosophical wine, but the kind of wine you can drink every night for an entire year and not tire: fruit forward, with a nose of stone fruits and nutmeg, and just enough earthiness to keep it interesting. I'm hooked.
The verdict: Throwing a party? A definite 'drink me'. The folks at Preston are a hoot, and this wine is perfect for a gathering of food and friends (as a side note, we were there with friends who were married by the brother of Jim Guadagni, and they are planning to serve the jug wine at their reception).
3 comments:
What a great day!
@Andrea, it was a great day! I was very lucky to have you guys with me :)
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