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Hertelendy, Cabernet Sauvignon

California, United States 2015 (750mL)
Regular price$135.00
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Hertelendy, Cabernet Sauvignon

I’ll give the wine critics credit: They get around. When we offered the inaugural vintage of Ralph Hertelendy’s richly layered Cabernet Sauvignon a few years ago—a wine produced in tiny quantities—it arrived at our door already festooned with some big press. 
Now in its third vintage, this wine can rightly be called a critical darling (2015’s “numbers” are especially gaudy), yet despite having all the hallmarks of an elite Napa Valley “cult” wine, its price is relatively modest compared to many of the splashy debuts we encounter around here. In the first two years of its existence, this flagship wine was a Whitman’s Sampler of mountain-grown fruit, not only from Hertelendy’s own estate vineyard but from other select mountain-appellation sites with volcanic soils. In 2015, Hertelendy and consultant Phillip Corallo-Titus (of Chappellet fame) added a dollop of “valley floor” fruit from Oakville to lend yet another layer of sumptuous richness to the equation. The results are impressive, and it’s easy to see why the wine has received so many accolades: It has immense concentration but also freshness and real mineral character; it is ripe but not overly so; and its texture is impossibly velvety and layered. Put this bottle on the table next to most reds and it’s like sending Shaquille O’Neal into a middle-school basketball game—save it for later in the meal, revel in its palate-enveloping richness, and celebrate not having to spend three times as much for the experience. Supplies are limited, so act fast!
Hertelendy references his Hungarian heritage on the wine’s label, which is festooned with a family coat of arms. It’s a nod to his father, who emigrated from Hungary during the onset of World War II, and to his great-uncle, Gábor Hertelendy, farmed vineyards and made wine in Hungary—and stayed on as a farmhand even after the communist regime confiscated his land. Ralph’s trajectory in wine has been considerably less fraught, of course, having started in his parents’ basement in 2006 and continued into some elite territory: In 2014, he purchased his “Rockwell Ridge” estate vineyard, which is perched on an east-facing slope at an elevation of 1,365 feet. It is technically right below the demarcation for Howell Mountain; just 35 feet higher up the slope and it would qualify for the AVA. The vines in the Rockwell Ridge site are mature (20+ years of age), giving Hertelendy and Corallo-Titus their main building block, to which they’ve added fruit from Pritchard Hill, Atlas Peak, the Silverado Foothills, and in 2015, Oakville. That extra blast of valley-floor fruit concentration on the mid-palate complements the volcanic minerality that has always been this wine’s calling card. Just 706 cases were produced.

If one-word descriptors are your thing, here’s one for this 2015: hedonism. As always, it’s a Bordeaux-inspired blend driven by Cabernet Sauvignon (77%) but incorporating all the classic varieties—7% Petit Verdot, 7% Malbec, 6% Cabernet Franc, 3% Merlot. The hand-harvested grapes were sorted twice and subjected to a lengthy maceration to extract maximum flavor and color. The wine was then aged in a mixture of French and Hungarian oak barrels (90% new) for 23 months. In the glass, it’s a brooding, impenetrable purple through and through with ruby reflections highlighting the rim. On the nose, dense and polished black fruits of black cherry, blackberry, cassis, black raspberry, and Java plum harmoniously fuse with an array of baking spices, cigar box, cardamom, star anise, and dark chocolate. On the palate, the wine shows the best of both worlds, having the opulence of a Rutherford valley floor wine with a fresh, mineral finish you so often find in Howell Mountain. The immense concentration of black fruits (and a touch of blue) carries into a lingering finish laced with raw cacao, fresh tobacco and turned earth. Thanks to a distinct level of acidity, this wine doesn’t have the overly sweet, treacly finish that can weigh other opulent Napa cabs down. I foresee this wine coming into its own over the next 5-10 years, but due to its ripe and polished style, drinking now will absolutely delight. I recommend a one hour decant and consuming around 60 degrees in large Bordeaux stems. As I mentioned above, this is a red for the main course or the cheese course—a blockbuster finish to a great meal. The attached recipe has a showstopper quality to it as well, so when it’s time to pull out the stops, you’re ready to roll. Enjoy!
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United States

Washington

Columbia Valley

Like many Washington wines, the “Columbia Valley” indication only tells part of the story: Columbia Valley covers a huge swath of Central
Washington, within which are a wide array of smaller AVAs (appellations).

Oregon

Willamette Valley

Oregon’s Willamette Valley has become an elite winegrowing zone in record time. Pioneering vintner David Lett, of The Eyrie Vineyard, planted the first Pinot Noir in the region in 1965, soon to be followed by a cadre of forward-thinking growers who (correctly) saw their wines as America’s answer to French
Burgundies. Today, the Willamette
Valley is indeed compared favorably to Burgundy, Pinot Noir’s spiritual home. And while Pinot Noir accounts for 64% of Oregon’s vineyard plantings, there are cool-climate whites that must not be missed.

California

Santa Barbara

Among the unique features of Santa Barbara County appellations like Ballard Canyon (a sub-zone of the Santa Ynez Valley AVA), is that it has a cool, Pacific-influenced climate juxtaposed with the intense luminosity of a southerly
latitude (the 34th parallel). Ballard Canyon has a more north-south orientation compared to most Santa Barbara AVAs, with soils of sandy
clay/loam and limestone.

California

Paso Robles

Situated at an elevation of 1,600 feet, it is rooted in soils of sandy loam and falls within the Highlands District of the Paso Robles AVA.

New York

North Fork

Wine growers and producers on Long Island’s North Fork have traditionally compared their terroir to that of Bordeaux and have focused on French varieties such as Cabernet Franc and Merlot.

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