Picking some Sangiovese

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Tomorrow is bottling day for the AHC winemaking class. I foolishly volunteered to print the labels for the whole bottling, which is roughly 1500 bottles, meaning over 2000 labels printed right here in my office.

 

There are five different wines being bottled, in varying blends that I'm sure will be adjusted right up until the last minute. The situation is even more complicated since John Beck (one of the alpha males of this group) and myself (formerly an outsider but now heading for co-alpha status) each have financial interests in the wines. In fact John and I have some degree of propriety over 3 of the 5 wines (all red) that are left to bottle.

 

I never meant to buy wine grapes or anything like that during my initial school year. But after 3 weeks of the winemaking class we still didn't have a line on grapes, excepting the possibility of some pinot noir and chardonnay grapes from a home (as Norm calls them "vanity") vineyard. And even that wasn't certain.

Norm assured us that even if we couldn't get grapes we could always get bulk juice and make wine from that. I found this even more distressing, as the fact Norm mentioned made the threat of no grapes seem very possible. Low end, man! Making wine from bulk juice sounded like a cruel distortion of real winemaking.

 

I had made friends with a nice surfer dude guy named Josh from Arroyo Grande in the class and one day after the bad grape news we were commiserating about the bulk juice downer. Josh had already taken the intro class the previous semester; in one of those friend of a friend of a friend scenarios I suddenly had a line on some Sangiovese grapes.

 

It turns out that a class member from that class had taken on management of Vandale, a vineyard planted 98% to Sangiovese (there are some whites but I was told they didn't work out. They were intended to coferment with the sangio). Bruce Vandale, a multi-million dollar retired yacht maven had died recently and his widow needed someone to see the current crop through.

 

Bruce Vandale had a love of Chianti (I think both the region and the wine) for much of his adult life. It was his dream to grow his own grapes and make a Chianti style wine. Bruce, by all accounts a terrifically nice guy, enjoyed tremendous success in San Diego County during the eighties boom years and did well enough to buy a 5 acre estate just outside Los Olivos, tucked away in a beautifully rustic neighborhood that still featured cows and goats as well as grapes.

 

3 acres of the Vandale Estate were turned into a vineyard. It's actually 2.8 or so but Bruce fudged it so he could get into the Vintners Association (vineyards must be at least 3 acres to be in).

 

 

At some point the Vandales retired and moved to the Santa Barbara estate. Bruce Vandale became the full time vineyard manager (although it sounds small, 3 acres is plenty for one person). He really was living his dream. He later started his own wine label (estate Sangiovese only of course), and employed Bruno d' Alfonso to make the wine. Bruno has been a fixture in SB wine circles for a very long time: he was the winemaker during the Sanford glory years and now has 2 labels of his own. There were some years without a Vandale Sangiovese, and Bruno took the groups those years and made diBruno Sangiovese, which of course was markedly similar to the Vandale brand (Bruno still makes this wine but I believe he stopped using the Vandale grapes some years ago).

 

The last vintage of Vandale Sangiovese was 2005 I believe, but you can still find it some wine lists in the area. I like to order it due to my relationship with that vineyard and it rarely disappoints. It also rarely enlightens, being what I would call a reliable red food wine. My roommate Tony in Solvang however, thinks DiBruno Vandale Sangiovese is a landmark SB County wine. So there you go.

 

So Chris had taken on the vineyard management of Vandale. And it looks like they had some extra grapes to sell. And we might be able to buy them. Josh didn't have any real details so we left it at that until he knew more. Alfredo had told us that we could make our own wine within the class, so we felt we were in as far as facilities.

 

I floated away from our talk, completely psyched up. I thought the idea of buying my own grapes was about the best twist in events I could imagine. Two hours ago I was hearing about bulk juice and now not only were grapes in hand, but I could own a piece of the raw material.

 

Now, despite my absolute youth and naiveté regarding the inside of the wine industry I knew enough to realize that a tiny vineyard with a commercial track record that suddenly had plenty of extra grapes had some problems going on. Especially with a virgin vineyard manager, over-confident after sailing through the introductory wine class at Alan Hancock College; it was the best class he ever took in his life, he later told me. Although at this point all I knew about him was that he had been in Josh's class.

 

An unexpected thing happened right after our conversation. The class suddenly started getting grapes. Lots of grapes. Through the steadfast cajoling of Alfredo and Norm some of the local vineyards had agreed to donate grapes to the class (hey, it makes a nice tax write-off)

 

First up was the vanity vineyard, formally known as Mary Jane's Vineyard. Mary Jane had donated grapes to the school for years; in return she got a few cases of wine, a good deal all around.

 

 

Mary Jane's is out on the remote side roads between Buellton and Lompoc, a wild and beautiful area that has managed to still remain mostly empty of people. Many of the ranches and farmlands are now being planted to grapes.

 

The class descended onto Mary Jane's (I got lost on the way actually); her vineyard had a spot of mildew: nothing like the school vineyard but still discouraging. I wrote it off as marginal quality at the time we picked the grapes and tasting it since then has not changed my mind. In fact of all the wines made in class, this is the one that is never discussed. Nor has anyone ever expressed an interest in owning any. Nope. It's all going back to Mary Jane. As I said, a good deal for her.

 

The whole vineyard was about an acre, split between pinot noir (40%) and a combination of Pinot Grigio and Chardonnay, Since more than 10 class members showed up we finished in 45 minutes. My kind of grape picking.

 

I had picked grapes before and I have to say it's my least favorite part of the wine producing process, I have promised myself that I will be willing to take part in any aspect of winemaking as necessary except picking grapes. It's no fun and hell on your back. And boy can it get hot in those vineyards. Little did I know what fate awaited me at Vandale.

 

There were real wineries on board now in winemaking class. We picked Buttonwood Merlot a few weeks later. We received, practically gift wrapped, a ½ ton each (or was it a ton?) of chardonnay and pinot noir from North County Vineyard. Delivered! Both North County and Buttonwood are established commercial operations (fun fact; I'm drinking some of the class's North County chardonnay at this moment). When the grapes from North County arrived I thought they were beautiful. Impeccable, Immaculate, pristine. Wow. The pinot grapes looked perfect.

 

In the midst of this endless grape bounty the Sangiovese plan suddenly reemerged. Josh informed me that we could get in on it. The deal was $500 for a ½ ton. 50% off the list price! The proviso was that we would have to harvest the grapes (3, er 2.8  acres worth. Again I must stress that it's a lot bigger than it seems when all the labor is strictly handmade).  The mysterious Chris would work alongside us and of course supervise the festivities.

 

Despite my deep dislike for picking grapes (at the time it was deep dislike; it's now beyond that), it sounded great. We'd end up with at least a barrel's worth, we could make it ourselves after hours and I could actually point to My Own Wine right out of the gate.

 

 

 

 

 

I went to Norm to discuss the Sangiovese venture with him. He expressed severe reservations about the endeavor and debunked some of my ideas immediately. First off, Josh and I would not have access to the facility to carry out our own mad scientist project. Secondly and corollary, any wine made at the facility would have to involve the whole class. My feeling was that he was not hot on my venture, and did not share my excitement about the Sangiovese project.

 

The Sangiovese plans were made: we would rendezvous at the Vandale Estate at 6:00 and pick pick pick. At the end of it all Josh would go home with the grapes and deliver them to the class the next morning, where we'd all crush them in the school's cute and petite red Italian crusher/destemmer. Joining Josh, Chris and myself were classmates journalist Laurie and Terry, a nice guy who liked to remain involved in an unobtrusive way. We all were in the Friday morning viticulture class and since we'd all had enough of slaving in the mildewy vineyard it was an easy call to cut class and pick some Sangiovese.

 

There is not much romance to picking grapes. It's backbreaking work, farm labor at its most basic. I woke up at 5:30, staggered into the kitchen in Solvang and managed to make enough coffee to get me out the door and towards the vineyard. The Vandale place is about 15 minutes from my former digs in Solvang; during the drive I swigged coffee and cranked hard rock. Amazingly I showed up ready to go to work, gleefully riding that first crush of a really strong coffee high hitting when you wake up really early.

 

It was still dark when I showed up and fairly chilly. It was so dark I had no idea where I was, as I had pulled into a long driveway with no sign of activity. I called Josh and he instructed me to drive to the end of the driveway and park in front of the garage; the vineyard began where the garage structure ended.

 

I parked the car in the darkness and finally made it top the vineyard, where my 3 classmates and a few others were milling around. There were a few flashlights available but it seemed to me it was too dark to pick grapes. Bad planning guys. I felt grateful I was a little late. It finally got light enough a few minutes later and we hit the vineyard. There are actually 3 vineyards (plus a really dinky 4th one with the bad white varietals), all planted to the Sangiovese piccolo clone (used in Chianti). This first vineyard is on relatively level ground compared to the other two but it does have a decided slope to it.

 

We hit the vines. I met Chris and would speak to him frequently the rest of the day, he was (and I'm sure still is) in the wine biz big time, starting as a high end tour guide (he boasted to me about flying sheiks in on helicopters from Los Angeles direct to the wine country), and had since expanded into wine distribution (Chris distributed some very respectable brands and was apparently doing well) and had even invested into a very high end vineyard operation - Rio Vista in the Santa Rita Hills. The Santa Rita Hills appellation came from nowhere 10 years ago to quickly becoming the top pinot noir appellation in the county. It's quite a phenomena and the reputation is deserved. Chris was a minority owner in the Rio Vista venture and did not actually do any work there.

 

Which means, I guess like for all of us, that a man feels the need to get his hands dirty and start working directly with his livelihood and his passion. For Chris, this time around, this took the form of becoming vineyard manager for the Vandale Vineyard. He had taken the intro class at Allan Hancock: the class talked about plant physiology, vineyard techniques, you know, lots of that kind of stuff and so Chris was ready. Since he was an experienced and successful local wine pro he was taken seriously when he offered his vineyard management services to Mrs Vandale; on top of that he was friendly with the family and clearly had a deep affection for the memory of Bruce Vandale. Chris was hired.

 

It can be exasperating. It can be amusing. It can be financially ruinous. But it's almost always interesting. I am talking about the permanent attitude of dilettantes, newbies and winos concerning the ease of getting into the wine producing business and doing well at it. Chris admitted to me at least twice that his partner in Rio Vista had warned him that a three acre vineyard was not as small as it seemed, especially since Chris would usually be going either solo or plus one.

 

And this is exactly how it turned out. The vineyard manager gig had proved to be completely overwhelming to Chris. In addition to his regular jobs he now had to travel out to the Santa Ynez Valley from Santa Barbara frequently (a 45 minute drive).

 

There were many factors that Chris hadn't counted on:

 

Most damaging were the hordes of birds that had attacked those juicy Sangiovese berries. After a significant part of the crop was gone Chris had belatedly put netting on the vines. His description of this chore was very vivid, portrayed as a death struggle between relentless bluebirds, encroaching darkness and Chris wrestling with increasingly heavy and cumbersome netting.

Just pulling the netting back to get at the grapes made him shudder at the memory.

 

There had been problems with the irrigation system. Chris didn't know how to care for a Sangiovese vine; in fact he when he started really knew nothing about at all about managing a vineyard. He had learned quite a lot by the time I showed up for the harvest but those lessons were very hard earned and he was a tired man. Chris was determined to see it through at any cost. I think he felt he owed it to Bruce's widow, who perhaps wanted a vintage that year as a commemorative gesture.

 

 

 

There hadn't been a Vandale-labeled wine in 3 years and Bruno d'Alfonso did not want the grapes. Whether or not this decision had been made on the basis of Chris's appointment as vineyard manager is conjecture but not an unwarranted theory. Bruno did call Chris occasionally with tips on what Chris should be watching and working on. But Chris had to find someone to buy the grapes. This was where Josh and I came in.

 

The first batch (one or two tons) would go to Margerum, a newish and successful winery run by former restaurant honcho Ken Margerum. These would not end up in Margerum labeled wine however - Margerum was making it for a friend privately.

 

The next batch would go to two guys at the vineyard, also presumably promised a discount in return for their picking prowess. They were veteran home winemakers and worked hard at the pick.

 

Josh and I got the third batch, said to be a ton or more.

 

So the Vandale Vineyard, in the span of one short year, had been diminished to a vineyard solely used for home winemaking. There would no wine commercially released from Vandale Vintage 2007. 

 

We proceeded to pick. It was hot slow work. The sun had come out and I was feeling it. By 9:00 or 10:00 the Margerum lot was picked and the Margerum guys took off. We didn't finish Vineyard 1 one until shortly after that. It was time for a break. We agreed to do Vineyard 2 and then break for lunch. I had a haircut appointment at 2:00 which I was grateful for, as it appeared this could be an all day thing. I was already exhausted. We'd been picking for four hours and were 1/3 finished.

 

Vineyard 2 is the steep vineyard. The descent down the vineyard rows is a constant steep downhill. What this means is walking back up the vineyard to dump the gapes in the bins was a grueling uphill (made more strrenuosu by the weight of the freshly picked grapes).The chilliness of the morning was long forgotten and the sun was blazing overhead.

 

Vineyard 2 turned out to be an ordeal, not helped by the effort expended on Vineyard 1. We finally finished, ironically helped by the fact that vineyard yield was so diminished by the birds.

 

It was time for lunch. Standing in the shade submitting our sandwich orders was a certain small pleasure in itself, after toiling in the vineyard.


 

Chris and I made the run into Solvang for sandwiches. We had been invited to eat at the kitchen counter by Beth Vandale. Chris and I returned with sandwiches. Beth brought out a bottle of Vandale Sangiovese. I vaguely felt like I was working on a Tuscan villa 50 years ago, where the owner would bring out the house wine for a communal lunch.

 

The sandwich was delicious, the wine was delicious and there was quite a bit of lingering and wine sipping in the sleek and comfortable Vandale kitchen.

 

It was almost 1:30 by now so I had to leave. I was so tired that I couldn't imagine going out to Vineyard 3, the largest of the three.

 

The haircut felt good, better than a massage.

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