Stagiaire "It's Dangerous to Go Alone" 2022 Red Wine Sonoma Valley AVA
Stagiaire "It's Dangerous to Go Alone" 2022 Red Wine Sonoma Valley AVA
750ml bottle
12.1% abv
Merlot from the famous Sonoma Mountain site that Nic Coturri’s sourced fruit from back in the day. Farmed by my buddy David that used to be a part of that project. Picked on the early side. Kind of a long story, but just part of the funny magic of harvest chaos. So often winemaking decisions are marketed as divine intervention(but minimal), the dictations of terroir(not real?), or genius. Generally, and in a rather unsexy way, it boils down to scheduling, logistics, and which tank you have available that can fit x tons of grapes in it
Short whole cluster maceration infusion. The free run went into Dangerous’ sibling cuvee Cheeky Bisous which was fleshed out with a splash of Sav Blanc. Here, the press wine was seasoned with a dash of Syrah to broaden and balance things out and add some spice.
A slow fermenter. The yeast went on holiday as soon as the wine went to barrel and it took almost a year to finish up the last bit of sugar. I was never quite certain where the wine was going, and frankly still have no clue, but it feels very good, and people that have tasted through these new wines have been surprisingly(to me) really attracted to this cuvee.
It has the juicy lip smacking acid goodness of the glou with some structure and fruit density to be garde.
Nothing added or removed. No sulfur. Not contract or custom crush.
Stagiaire - the French word for apprentice and what the winemaker I worked for in Jura called me when other local vigneron asked who the hell the guy speaking really bad French was.
The name encapsulates humility, impermanence, and the never-ending pursuit of knowledge and improvement.
Vines are farmed beyond organically (kind of a low bar); I actively pursue thoughtful and regenerative practices instead of recipe farming. Most importantly I want to work with good people that are trying to farm in line with nature, instead of against it.
Vineyards are predominantly situated in a narrow strip of the California coast from Santa Cruz up to West County Sonoma. The confluence of the cold Pacific waters and the elevation of coastal mountain ranges produce real magic.
If we have good grapes, why add anything to them in the cellar?
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