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Bradley Brown

Harvest: Steady as She Goes

by Laura Ness - HerVineNess on October 9, 2011

092711104025The threat of rain does interesting things to winemakers and vineyard owners. The lucky ones got fruit just ripe enough before this past week’s rains and were able to make hay as the sun shone. Others rolled the dice, knowing the seeds aren’t crunchy, the skins are still too tough and the flavors are interesting, but not necessarily wine-worthy.Right now, it looks like they bet well, as we’re in for warmth and breezes right through this coming weekend. However, they’ll be spraying for mildew if the chance of rain they’re forecasting for tomorrow, Columbus Day, materializes.

This time of year, if it rains just a wee bit, and then dries out with good breezes and a modicum of warmth, then life will be fine. But if Mother Nature throws a true hissy fit, and dumps a boatload, followed by malingering bouts of wailing and wetness that lasts for a few days, well, then mildew can rear its ugly head and the whole opera takes a decidedly dour turn, with wringing of hands and gnashing of teeth.  When The Fat Lady sings, it might not be a happy song on her outsized lips. So, we await with earnest hope a fond return to the balmy breezes and brilliant summer sunshine that once graced our fair land, before Autumn came to town. We can only hope that the harvest will actually be a good one, when all is said and done.092911110629

100311142855Meanwhile, in other parts, some vineyards in the Santa Cruz Mountains were lucky enough to have abundant warmth just in advance of the latest trauma, and were frantically picking everything they could over the weekend. Burrell School got all the chardonnay in, usually reserved for three picks over the course of a few weeks, in just two days, literally getting the very last bunches off just before the rains came on Monday afternoon. It was an occasion worth celebrating with fine champagne, but there’s no rest for the weary, as they spent the next day with blow dryers trying to keep mildew from setting up on the hanging merlot and petit verdot grapes that are well short of the sugar levels that would turn them into something not resembling vinegar.

Fall06RRWinemaker Bradley Brown of Big Basin Vineyards, managed to get the Lester Family pinot  from Corralitos in before the last rain, and hopes to pick Woodruff pinot, an older vineyard in the same region, later this month. He didn’t seem too concerned: “The older vine pinot noir, at Woodruff Vineyard, is always later, towards the end of October, but I’m not worried about it. A little rain won’t hurt old vines, because their roots go way deep, they’re not going to uptake on rain that only penetrates a couple of inches into the soil. Old vines seem to shrug off weather impacts more readily.” The estate syrah grapes (left), in Boulder Creek on the way to Big Basin Park, will probably be the last in.

In Livermore, the sauvignon blanc and semillon has all been picked, as well as some of the chardonnay. The reds are languishing, though, and it’s a good things yields are low, as this will at least hasten ripeness with the sun showing its shiny countenance once more.

Steven Mirassou (La Rochelle & Steven Kent) reports that all those varietals have been harvested from the Ghielmetti vineyard in Livermore, where he reports that the crop is overall quite light, especially for the reds. He’s also brought in pinot from two vineyards in Monterey, McIntyre Vineyards and Soberanes, as well as pinot from Londer in Anderson Valley. Chardonnay has been gathered from Dutton-Morelli Lane in Sonoma and from Rosella’s in the Santa Lucia Highlands.

merlotBSSept11

But all the sun in the world isn’t going to help my pathetic tomatillos. I had to laugh at Morgan winemaker/owner Dan Lee’s reaction when I asked how his were doing – he has a little garden in the Double L vineyard in the Santa Lucia Highlands, which he fondly calls “Lee Family Farm,” and I remembered he had a tomatillo plant there last year. “Oh, they’re pathetic! They’re dinky!” he replied, shaking his head. And I thought  I was the only one who had tomatillos the size of tuppence instead of silver dollars. Or, for those of you who are monetarily bereft of experience with coinage, they’re the size of red hots instead of Oreos. They’re barely worth taking the rather outsized hulls off. It’s like a two-year-old swimming in one of Barbra Streisand’s full length mink coats. But they are certainly tasty little morsels, as the mice have found out. I’m finding those papery enclosures in some very strange places these days.

All in all, the 2011 harvest thus far is an elevator that doesn’t quite get to the top floor. Or, as my father-in-law would say, it’s a few sandwiches shy of a picnic. Here’s to Indian Summer!

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Big Basin Spring Celebration Unfurls Budding Beauties

by Laura Ness - HerVineNess on April 16, 2011

At the annual Big Basin Vineyards Spring Release Celebration last weekend on Memory Lane in Boulder Creek, everything was harmonious: the weather (Gods and Goddesses), the music (Scott Law), the artwork (Matt Lane), the jewelry (Octavia), the food by Chef Desiree Ledsome (awesome pulled pork sliders, grilled lamb and pita, fabulous rosemary grilled fingerling potatoes, endless chevre and Lamb Chopper cheese tray), and yes, the wine. The wine! Thanks to the well-farmed vines and the amazing things winemaker Bradley Brown and assistant winemaker, Lindsey Otis, do with the resultant fruit. At this winery, the vineyards truly rule.
The Rhone vines at the Big Basin estate winery were just beginning to spring forth in all their verdant glory, the Grenache the first to take the plunge, while the Roussanne seemed to have a better handle on the forecast: “I see rain. That’s ok, you go ahead and bloom. I’m just going to cool my heels here til mid-month.” And thus, Roussanne remained tight-lipped and tight-budded, while the Grenache was eagerly unfurling its leaves to bask in the warm spring sun.
Meanwhile, in the cellar, the new wines Bradley has just released are bursting with vitality, and in some cases, with genuine warmth.
The new [...]

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Santa Cruz Mountains: Pinot Paradise, Indeed

by Laura Ness - HerVineNess on March 16, 2011

You could say I am besotted with Pinot. It is without doubt, for me, like the Holy Grail of varietals. I know it’s out there: the perfect, Platonic ideal of Pinot. Keats wrote about it when he said “A thing of beauty is a joy forever.” I’ve had so many Pinots, so many forgettable. So many overwrought, overrated, overextracted, overoaked, overripe: over and over and over. It’s like a woman whose lips have been botoxed to clowndom.
That’s the problem. Why do so many winemakers think they need to take this lithe and wonderful grape and beat it into extracted submission? Leave it the heck alone. The still, small, unadulterated voice of Pinot is what I long to hear, but it’s been drowned out by too much oak, too much extraction and too much handling. Ok, you guys who like that style are well-served, in fact, over-served. There’s more of it on the market than ever. And I’m here to tell you there’s quite a bit of it coming out of the Santa Cruz Mountains, where you’d think the opposite style would be predominant.
Nope. At a recent blind tasting of Pinots held at Burrell School Vineyards high in the Summit area [...]

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Meet the Winemaker Friday & Saturday, Sept10 & 11

by Laura Ness - HerVineNess on September 10, 2010

Winemaker Bradley Brown will be pouring at the brand new Big Basin Vineyards tasting room in Saratoga from 3pm til 6pm on Friday and Saturday, Sept 10 & 11. Come see the beautiful town of Saratoga and enjoy some of the finest mountain wines in the appellation.
Bradley will be previewing the 07 Coastview Syrah from the nosebleed high vineyard in the Gabilan mountains overlooking the entire Salinas Valley. this is an extraordinary wine and perfect for the crisp, cool days of Fall that are rapidly approaching.
Come by and enjoy a glass of some of the best Pinot around and some truly sensational Syrahs, and say hello to Bradley, Samantha and baby Kiran.

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Saratoga Adds New Wine Tasting Room

by Laura Ness - HerVineNess on August 18, 2010

Opening Day for the new Big Basin Vineyards Tasting Room in downtown Saratoga on Big Basin Way is Thursday, August 19th at 11am. A ribbon cutting ceremony is scheduled for 4pm, followed by a reception at  Sent Sovi. The tasting room will remain open til 6pm.

Big Basin Vineyards Tasting Room
14598 Big Basin Way, Suite B
Saratoga, CA 95070
Summer Hours, May – September:
Open 11am-5pm, Thursdays, Sundays and Mondays
Open 11am til 7pm, Fridays & Saturdays
October – April Hours:
Friday-Monday 11am-5pm
Big Basin Vineyards has been producing highly acclaimed Rhone wines since its first vintage in 2003. It was named one of the top 100 wineries in 2008 by Robert Parker Jr., who enthusiastically noted the “Impressive Syrahs.” Wine Spectator Magazine cited Big Basin as one of ten “Promising new producers” of Syrah in California. With the 2006 harvest, proprietor and winemaker Bradley Brown began producing single vineyard Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot Noirs, again, to critical acclaim.  The Estate vineyard is located in Boulder Creek, on the way to Big Basin State Park, on the site of a vineyard originally planted in the 1880s. Today, the organically farmed vineyard is planted to Grenache, Syrah and Roussanne. Winemaker Bradley Brown sources premium fruit from select vineyards in [...]

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