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Archive for the ‘Private Vineyard Estates’ Category

How to Choose your Malbec by the Label

Monday, April 18th, 2011

Yesterday we celebrated World Malbec day and not only that but it is Malbec season here at The Vines, where we are in full swing with our Malbec harvest at our Private Vineyard Estates. With so much activity and focus on Malbec, it is often difficult to decide what to by, what it all means and what will actually be in the bottle!

For some help on how to traverse these mazes of wine labels, one of our Private Vineyard Estate owners, Barry Chaiken, proprietor of Chaiken Vineyards has a great blog that discusses what information really is on the back label.

Also you should sign up for his newsletters to get an insider’s perspective on Argentine wine and his experiences as a vineyard owner making wine in Argentina. www.chaikenvineyards.com

Here is one of his great blog posts:

Oh so many wines to choose from in most wine shops, it is difficult to know which of the wines available you will enjoy. Market research shows that attractive wine packaging, just like for other consumer goods, can help boost sales. For many years “critter” wine labels – those with the cute animals on the label – were successful in attracting buyers to inexpensive wines from Australia.

For those of us who are more interested in choosing a wine that will be attractive to our taste buds rather than our eyes, reviewing some basic information on the label can help intelligently guide our choices. Although some wine labels may appear to provide rather limited information about the wine, there is almost always enough information available to guide us.

When first approaching a wine, look at the alcohol content. Red wines with high alcohol content (14.5-16%+) tend to be big, powerful, flavorful wines that are perfect for drinking alone or with very flavorful foods (e.g., rich, juicy steak). Lower alcohol red wines are more elegant and subtle in their flavors, thereby drinking best only when paired with appropriate foods.

For white wines, a lower alcohol content (e.g., 9-12%) usually indicates a high level of residual sugar seen in sweet wines. Very high alcohol white wines (e.g., 14%+) may indicate a dry wine that is out of balance as white wines generally do not have the strength of flavors, acidity, and tannins to counter the alcohol.

The type of varietal considered with the region the wine comes from gives a sense of what flavors can be expected from the wine. If there is a wine you currently like, then choose a wine made from a similar varietal (e.g., pinot noir) and the same region (e.g., Russian River Valley, CA) made by another producer. Most likely you will like this new wine while also learning from the differences you detect comparing the wines.

Other information such as types of barrels used (e.g., French vs. American oak, new vs. 2nd use), time in barrel, and bottle aging, all give you more information about the wine. As you drink more wine and relate the information you read on the label with the flavors in the wine, you will develop an internal guidebook that can help you choose wine in a liquor store or restaurant.

Although reviews and scores are useful in choosing a fine, the best guide is your own drinking  experience. No one is a better critic of what you may like than you are.

Sincerely,

Barry P. Chaiken, Proprietor

Chaiken Vineyards

info@chaikenvineyards.com

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Rats in the Cellar!

Friday, April 15th, 2011

With the Malbec harvest in full swing, there is no shortage of Private Vineyard Estate owners here in The Vines’ bodega to help us turn their grapes into wine. Currently, we are hosting “Cellar Rats” from Canada, Ecuador and the USA who are eagerly absorbing every last bit of knowledge available from our team of winemakers, wine consultants and sommeliers.

Part of my role at The Vines of Mendoza is to help the Cellar Rats find their way around the winery and guide them through the vinification process. At the moment, we are keeping busy with grape sorting, barrel stirring, punch-downs, pump-overs, and fermentation monitoring. Even with all of the work to do, we still find time to enjoy drinking wine in the sun and take pleasure in the view of the Andes Mountain Range.

Some Cellar Rats have made special requests to partake in The Vines’ wine education programs lead by Wine Director Mariana Onofri. The first course explains how to assess a finished wine, and touches on the varietals that Argentina does best. The second course covers grape assessment in both the vineyard and the laboratory. The third course teaches the winemaking process and includes plenty of tank and barrel tastings. Furthermore, it discusses how to best serve wine and possible wine faults. While smelling foul fragrance oils representing wine faults might sound unpleasant, it is surprisingly great fun.

It is a great pleasure to share the full winemaking process, and our collective knowledge, with the Cellar Rats. Soon, they will all be winemakers in their own right; and their newly expanded wine expertise will only ensure to them that we at The Vines of Mendoza are taking the best care in producing their wine.

About the author: Lindsay Trivers is a Sommelier at The Vines of Mendoza , in the most recent chapter of her world-wide wine discovery tour. She has worked extensively throughout Canada , New Zealand and Australia , developing her palate and working vintages along the way. While here, in Mendoza , she will be living and reporting on life at the bodega (winery), plus the happenings from the tasting room and cellar. Stay tuned to The Vines of Mendoza Blog for vintage updates, wine tips and reviews, to find out how our guests are keeping busy, and much, much more.



Harvest Update: Here Comes the Malbec!

Wednesday, April 6th, 2011

Merlot macerating
The 2011 vintage has been a steady, controlled process thus far at The Vines of Mendoza Private Vineyard Estates (PVE).

Over the last month and a half we have harvested, in order, Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay, Torrontés, Pinot Noir, Tempranillo and Merlot. This fruit equates to approximately 15% of our planted vines.

Today, however, we are functioning at full force as the Malbec harvest commences. Malbec is our most abundant grape varietal, planted in 60% of our vineyards. Further to that all of these grapes will need to be collected, sorted, crushed and inoculated in just one week.

The remainder of our fruit, Cabernet Franc, Syrah, and Cabernet Sauvignon is on schedule to be harvested in the third and fourth weeks of April. This makes up the remainder of our fruit, with the exception of a few plots of less common varietals that equate to less than 1% of our total plantings.

This is what we, the staff and PVE owners at The Vines of Mendoza, have been waiting for all year. Bring it on, Malbec!
A clean winery is a happy winery



Bochas and BBQ

Sunday, April 3rd, 2011

Bochas Balls

Tuesday was a tough day of work at The Vines of Mendoza, not only for the staff but the visiting Private Vineyard Estate owners attending wine camp.

After a busy morning amongst the vines, and getting grape-sugar-sticky in the bodega, we settled into a long, lazy asado (traditional Argentine BBQ) in the shade. Following a fabulous carne rich meal, a few of us tried our hand at the game, bochas.

Bochas, while not the most commonly played sport in Argentina, is a tradition here. You may be more familiar with its other names; bocce ball or pétanque. It also has similarities to lawn bowling, shuffle board and curling, minus the lawn, sticks and ice obviously.

The competitive, Malbec fuelled teams were quick to pick up the rules of play and immediately went to work developing their strategies and ball-tossing form.

I consider myself an athletic enough person, but I can honestly say that I contributed next to nothing to my teams success. Fortunately I was paired with The Vines architect, Mauricio Rodrigez, who used his mathematical genius and home-court advantage to ensure that we only lost by a little bit.

Thank you to the visiting Private Vineyard Estate owners who made the day so much fun. We look forward to a bochas rematch soon!
Get lowIt is all about the back spin

Mauricio demonstrates how a seasoned professional tosses a ballAnd I demonstrate how a complete amateur throws a ball

About the author: Lindsay Trivers is a Sommelier at The Vines of Mendoza , in the most recent chapter of her world-wide wine discovery tour. She has worked extensively throughout Canada , New Zealand and Australia , developing her palate and working vintages along the way. While here, in Mendoza , she will be living and reporting on life at the bodega (winery), plus the happenings from the tasting room and cellar. Stay tuned to The Vines of Mendoza Blog for vintage updates, wine tips and reviews, to find out how our guests are keeping busy, and much, much more.



Another day at Wine Camp

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Tuesday was another beautiful day in the Uco Valley, perfect for Wine Camp with a big group of Private Vineyard Estate owners!



Wine Camp is in full swing

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Wine Camp is in full swing. Check out the fun we’ve been having at our bodega (winery) with the visiting Private Vineyard Estate Owners



Wine Camp is in session

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

I am happy to report that Cosecha (the harvest) has begun and while we are waiting for the big bad reds to finish ripening, the white wine grapes are coming off the vines. Harvest is also one of the favorite times of year for the Private Vineyard Owners to visit.

For PVOs interested in dirtying their fingernails in the vineyards, The Vines of Mendoza holds an annual wine camp over March and April. This experience will shatter any expectations we have about the romantic life of a winemaker. Wine camp is going to outline what is actually entailed in vinification (winemaking process), and that includes hard labor.

Depending on what stage of maturity or point of vinification the grapes are at wine camp activities can include picking, laboratory assessment, sorting, tasting wine from the barrel, and wine blending. During wine camp Private Vineyard Owners can also take part in seminars, designed to give a full understanding of the wine from the vine to your glass.

At wine camp, though, we do just enough work to learn and appreciate winery processes. While it is important for everyone to understand vinifiaction, we need to have some fun too. With this in mind, the day has been broken up with horseback riding, drinking local wines, and a long, lazy asado (Argentine BBQ), all set in full view of the Andes Mountains.

The seminars are divided into three intensive courses. The first is about understanding a finished wine. We learn what to expect from different grape varieties, about the grapes varieties of Mendoza, and how to describe wine like the pros do. Get ready to taste; while running this seminar for a group of four last week we used 100 glasses! Seminar two, takes an in-depth look at the grape components and what they contribute to the flavor and structure of wine. In seminar three we discover, step by step, the winemaking process, and all about possible wine faults.

Wine camp is a great way for the owners to feel at home in the vines, grow their wine knowledge and get to know the people that will be building their wines for years to come. If you are unable to join us this vintage, we hope to see you soon or for next years Vendimia Festival.



Conference Call | Argentine Wine Sales and Trends in the US Market

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011

Argentine wines are hot right now in the US market and have seen substantial and sustained growth over the last few years. The Vines has invited a few top industry experts, who have seen and dealt with this growth first hand, to talk about the current status of Argentine wine in the US market, how it has changed over the last 10 years and what is in store for the future of Argentine wine brands.

The Vines co-founders Michael Evans and Pablo Gimenez Riili, along with consulting winemaker Santiago Achaval, will be joined by Sharon Sevrens, the proprietor of Amanti Vino which was recently named wine retailer of the week in the Wall Street Journal, and Nick Ramkowsky, the founder of Vine Connections, a wine importer specializing in Argentine wines and Japanese sake.

Join us on Wednesday February 16th at 5pm EST

To register for this call click here

There will be a live twitter chat for questions and comments. (@vinesofmendoza) You can use hashtags #vom and #vomtalk to follow the conversation on Twitter!

We will also record the conversation and share it as a podcast at  www.vinesofmendoza.com.

We look forward to your participation! Saludos!



Bodega Diamandes- New to the Neighborhood

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

The Uco Valley is fast becoming the “IT” place for the best wineries to be in Argentina. If you don’t have a winery located in the Uco Valley, most wineries at least source grapes or have single named vineyards that they own located in this high altitude and stunning valley at the base of the Andes. Amongst the notable names are Andeluna, Salentein, O.Fournier, Monteviejo, Catena’s Adriana Vineyard, Achaval Ferrer’s Altamira vineyard and now the newcomer Bodega Diamandes. The star power alone amonst these wineries is impressive.

Located in the Clos de los Siete group- basically across the street, so to speak, from The Vines Private Vineyard Estates, we are excited to see such an interesting combination of architectural innovation combined with classic winemaking methods. In 2005, the Bonnie, proprietors of Château Malartic-Lagravière (Grand Cru Classé de Graves) and Château Gazin Rocquencourt (Pessac- Léognan) decided to broaden their horizons and seek new adventures. They now have 130 hectáreas and they had their first harvest in 2007.

The winery was designed by prestigious local architects Bormida and Yanzon and recently won best winery architecture for the contest “Best of Wine Tourism in 2011″ organized by Great Wine Capitals.

Their wines are definitely ones to watch for- rich, complex, elegantly crafted AND they have already sold out of their first vintage! They have it all- stunning landscapes, amazing wines, beautiful architecture. Make sure you include this beautiful winery on your next trip to Mendoza and the Uco Valley!

Contact: visitas@diamandes.com

Visiting hours: 9am-6pm only by reservation
Languages: español, inglés y francés.
Bodega DiamAndes
C/Silva s/n 5565 – Vista Flores
Tunuyán – Mendoza – Argentina
Tel / Fax + 54 261 47 65 400



2010 The Vines- A Photographic Year in Review

Friday, December 31st, 2010

2010 is rapidly coming to a close and it has been a very busy year for us in Mendoza at The Vines. We have built phase I of our winery, had our first harvest from our first vineyards planted in 2007, created a new high tech blending lab in our downtown Tasting Room, planted more than 125 acres of new vineyards and now have a family of 85 international vineyard owners as well as many friends, family, Wine Club members and employee’s which have made this all possible.

We decided to highlight some of our favorite moments throughout the year, however, there are too many to count and if we included them all it would probably end up being a feature length film!

We are thankful to everyone who has made this possible and invite you all to come and visit us in 2011!