The stunning 2011 Pinot Noir Arrendell Vineyard was cropped at 0.5 tons of fruit per acre. Planted in 1975 with the California Heritage clone of Martini, the fruit from this site often struggles to ripen fully, and is rarely harvested before Halloween. However, the quality makes these 38-year-old vines produce a gorgeously rich wine with blueberry, black raspberry, cherry, incense and a hint of damp forest floor. Complex and medium-bodied with loads of fruit, good acidity and sweet tannin, this is a sultry, exotic, classic Pinot Noir to drink over the next 5-6 years. It achieved 14.5% natural alcohol.
One of the most impressively run wineries in the Russian River AVA is the Hartford Family Winery, where proprietor Don Hartford is backed up by winemaker Jeff Stewart as well as all the resources of the Jackson Family Vineyards. These are Burgundian-styled Chardonnays and Pinot Noirs, and their Zinfandels are All-American, full-throttle, pedal-to-the metal efforts that are consistently at the top of their class. The Chardonnay sites tend to be cool climate, to the point that in some harvests there is a risk of not being able to bring in ripe fruit. Production levels for these beautiful Chardonnays range from a low of 268 cases for the Four Hearts to over 700 cases for the Stone Cote. The Pinot Noirs experience the same upbringing, being aged around 16 months in French oak, with the percentage of new barrels ranging from the mid-40% to just over 50%. The wines are bottled unfined and unfiltered, and even in a challenging vintage such as 2011, the alcohols can range from the high 14% to 15.2%. Production varies from a low of 200 cases to a high of 2,500 cases for the Lands Edge Vineyard Pinot. Hartford has always made incredible Zinfandels. It’s a credit to the Jackson family, and Jess Jackson’s son-in-law, Don Hartford, that although a number of brilliant winemakers have worked at Hartford, the consistency of these wines has been sensational. Every one of them comes from vines planted by Italian immigrants in 1905 and 1906, and most of the vineyards have a portion planted with what the Californians call mixed blacks, such as Alicante, Petite Sirah, Carignan and other red grapes.
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