Wine reviews
Good bright red-ruby. Less expressive on the nose than the Clone 6, hinting at minerals and licorice. Densely packed and tightly wound, with dark fruit and mineral flavors currently cut off by serious tannins. Less sweet and floral today than the Clone 6 example: this will probably need a good six to eight years in bottle to open up and express itself. The most backward of this superb trio of 2008 cabernets from the To Kalon Vineyard.
The same can be said for the 2008 Cabernet Sauvignon Beckstoffer To Kalon Vineyard Clone 337. (This clonal study being conducted by Tor Kenward reminds me of what Carol and Fred Schrader are doing with their various offerings from the Beckstoffer To Kalon Vineyard that are based on different parcel and clone selections.). Slightly better but with a character similar to the Clone 6, the Clone 337 offers abundant aromas of cassis, licorice, forest floor and toasty oak. Full-bodied with a multidimensional personality as well as tremendous texture and length, it should drink well for 20+ years. The majority of Tor Kenward’s production is from Napa Valley, but I have included one Sonoma cuvee. One of my long held beliefs is that in order to make truly world-class wine, one has to have tasted a lot of it and know how those wines were made. Tor Kenward is, at the very minimum, a longtime connoisseur who has had exposure to great wines from all over the world. That, plus his long career at Beringer, has put him a position to know some of the better vineyard sources in northern California. When combined with a thorough understanding of the world’s finest wines, he is in a terrific position to translate that into top products, which he in fact has done. There are three 2009 Chardonnays that will be available in the marketplace in early 2011. 2009 appears to be a very fine vintage for Burgundy varietals in northern California (along the lines of 2005). Nearly all the fruit was harvested before the major deluge hit in mid-October. Tasting through the 2009s suggest that Tor Kenward must have picked virtually all his fruit prior to the rains. I’ll wait until they are in bottle to pass judgment, but certainly they all appear to be fabulous wines. The 2009 Cabernet Sauvignon Napa and the 2009 Cabernet Sauvignon Cimarossa Vineyard from Howell Mountain are both very good. However, his Beckstoffer To Kalon cuvees (there will be four in 2009) look to be mid to upper 90-point efforts that are slightly more front end-loaded with sweeter tannins and more precocious personalities than either the 2007s or 2008s. They will probably be charming, nearly irresistible when released, but I will report on them more fully next year. The 2007 Cabernet Sauvignons, which were reviewed last year, were terrific, and the 2008s appear to have equaled, perhaps eclipsed those cuvees. Moreover, barrel samples of the 2009s indicate they may be among the finest wines he has yet produced.