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      Publisher: D'Vari Entertainment Group (Deg.Com Communications) Editor: Marisa D'Vari
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     Zeitgeist of Napa Valley Terroir

by Marisa D'Vari

     "Delicate and delicious!" declares the haughty French hostess of a BYOB tasting party for wine professionals in NYC, sipping a wine from Bordeaux. "Especially when you contrast it to the California wine," she snips, rudely pointing at my award winning Napa Cabernet Sauvignon, standing forlorn on the table.

     As a native Californian, such was my crude awakening to the inherent prejudice against California wines on the East Coast. Many upscale wine stores carry very few California wines, and of that do, you'd rarely see Napa Valley wines advertised in email newsletters or recommended by the staff.

      Why this predilection for French wine? One lingering reason may be that it's hard to beat a millennium of savvy marketing, a branding campaign so strong and global even the famous 1976 blinding tasting event between California and French wines in Paris (in which noted experts chose a Napa Cabernet as the winner) failed to generate the expected reversal of thinking.

     Yet true oenophiles (or anyone who appreciates a flavorful, richly nuanced glass of wine) understands and appreciates the value of wines from California's Napa valley in contrast to wines from France. In a word, this "value" is born out of Napa's unique terrior.

     Great wine depends on great grapes, which requires suitable soils, climate, and weather conducive to producing a ripe, disease-resistant crop. The topography of Napa's Valley with its glorious mountains protects vineyards from wind, and its warm, rain-free summers allow the grapes to continue to ripen on the vine until harvest, without fear of a rainstorm trashing them to the ground. Yet to me, it's Napa's unique soils that help produce opulent, complex wines with exciting nuances of texture and flavor.

     Consider, for example, the diverse soils and award winning wines of Diamond Creek Vineyards. Al Brounstein, its late founder, started in 1977 with a 70-acre parcel of land on Diamond Mountain and smuggled vine cuttings from two premier cru properties in Bordeaux. Long before the concept of "micro-climate" and artisinal wines were popular, he identified three unique vineyard blocks by the differences in soil structure (gravel/sand, volcanic ash, red/brown color) and climate (ranging from sunny and warm to cold and shady). After experimenting with winemaker Jerry Luper, they soon discovered which soils and microclimate produced the best varietals.

     Because of its volcanic activity and changes in sea level over the past few million years, Napa Valley soil is inherently rich, but sometimes drainage can be a barrier for producing the best wines possible. At a recent lecture in Manhattan, James Kennedy, one of the world's premier tannin chemists, spoke about a case study in Napa in which he helped a vineyard produce a more balanced (and award winning wine) simply by working within the vineyard to improve irrigation techniques.

     While many top Napa wines are now selling at spectacular prices, the terroir is such that even modestly priced wines offer the consumer a tremendous value in terms of quality and taste. While studying for my Wine and Spirits Educational Trust (WSET) exam, I forced myself to order many French Bordeaux, Syrah, and other varietals from restaurant wine lists in anticipation of familiarizing myself with them for the requisite blind tasting portion of the exam. Due to budget constraints, French varietals I was able to order in the $60 - $70 dollar range were either watery, unbalanced, had high acidity, or other fault one can only surmise was a result of the weather conditions of that unfortunate vintage year.

     While suffering through overpriced bottles of watery French Syrah or acidic Bordeaux, I fantasized about the succulent Napa reds, rich and full-bodied, reflecting the reliable sunshine and mineral rich terroir beckoning at me from the wine list.

     Philosophers who wax nostalgic on the subject of wine and terrior often suggest that terroir encompasses more than just the climate, soil, and topography of an area. I interpret this to mean the zeitgeist of a place is also reflected in its terrior. So when I sip a wine from the Napa Valley, I'm also tasting the pioneering spirit of the place and sensing the vision experienced by Robert Mondavi and others who saw the potential for Napa to become the premiere wine producing area of the world.

     And that taste also extends to the vision of chefs such as Thomas Keller, artisanal purveyors of cheese, honey, and bread, and sustainable farmers whose exuberant passion and limitless creativity put Napa on the map. Not just as a superior wine making region, but a place where individuals, the climate, and the land truly become one.


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Napa Valley Terroir


A Vine Story
Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape
1994 - 2008 (c)Deg.Com Communications - All rights reserved
contact mdvari@deg.com for reprints
Story@AWineStory.com
Deg.Com Communications New York, NY
Please email for a phone appointment 212 823 6256 M-F 9-5
Copyright FAQ at http://www.loc.gov/copyright/