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We then drove back North towards Newburg and Dundee for an appointment at Domaine Drouhin. After being stuck in the daily traffic jam on 99W, we were so thankful the tour at Drouhin had waited the extra 10 minutes for us to arrive. Domaine Drouhin's tour and tasting, at twenty dollars a head, turned out to be well worth it. We begin outside looking over their hillside vineyards in the Red Hills of Dundee. The views were spectacular! The brief history of Drouhin is that Robert Drouhin of Maison Joseph Drouhin in Burgundy, lost a wine tasting competition to a wine from Oregon. Robert quickly scouted out locations in the Red Hills and purchased over 200 acres (today 90 acres are planted) of prime hillside land to cultivate. In Burgundy, elevation determine your social status in the wine industry. If your vineyards are low on the hills or the valley floor, your wine is for lack of a better word, crap. If you are to high on the hillside, ditto. You want to be right in the middle, like the grand crus of Burgundy. Domaine Drouhin is located on a such a location, just the right elevation. We then toured Drouhin's gravity flow winery. The wine enters the crush pad on the highest level and only gravity is used to move the wine from the top down through the fermentation tanks, barrel and aging room, and into the bottling room. The belief is that by not using mechanized pumps, you don't stir up and disrupt the natural fermentation and aging of the wine with unnecessary aeration or movement. They also use French Oak Barrels that have been carefully selected from the best forests in France and aged at Maison Joseph Drouhin for up to three years. After the tour we tasted Domaine Drouhin's Oregon offerings against their Maison Joseph Drouhin equivalents from Burgundy. However, equivalent would not be the right word choice, because the Oregon wines simply out-classed the Burgundy wines. First up was the Burgundy Chardonnay against Arthur, the Oregon Chardonnay named after the winemaker's son. Arthur seemed more fresh and lively then its counterpart from France. Next was a good quality Burgundy against the Willamette Valley Pinot Noir. Once again the Oregon was superior, and seemed to be approachable and enjoyable. Last was a high quality Burgundy and Laurene, a reserve Pinot Noir named for the winemaker's first daughter. Laurene was amazing! The earthiness, spiciness, and berry flavors all danced
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Look for the next post to focus on a blind-tasting I did with my friend Mike up in Providence. After that will be the dining in Willamette Valley. Till next time..."Oh its flavors, they're just the most haunting and brilliant and thrilling and subtle and...ancient on the planet." Miles discussing Pinot Noir, Sideways
1 comment:
very good post!, I really liked the decription of the gravity wine process, and the reason why.... did you take the photos? oh and thanks for linking my blog!
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