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Judge Palmer, Cabernet Sauvignon

Sonoma County, United States 2016 (750mL)
Regular price$42.00
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Judge Palmer, Cabernet Sauvignon

As is the case in any market, wine prices have a way of finding their levels. If you buy a lot of wine, you probably have a good idea of what you’re going to pay across different categories. Our job, of course, is to find the anomalies—like today’s structured, soulful Cabernet Sauvignon from a pair of talented artisans in Healdsburg, California. 
The simplest way to present the 2016 Judge Palmer “Vintage Select” Cabernet is to say that, if I were tasting it blind, I’d be expecting to pay $75-$100 for it. Not $42. Further, this wine isn’t simply “a lot” of wine for the money: When it comes to California Cabernet Sauvignon, you can expect full-throttle ripeness and a generous helping of expensive oak at an even lower price point; what’s much harder is finding one that has the kind of mineral, soil-expressive savor that makes it feel not like some lab-engineered “beverage” but like a genuine wine of place. We want to taste that dark, unctuous Cabernet fruit, we want that layered texture, but we want to taste a little of the dirt, too—in this case the gravelly, loamy soils of Sonoma County. Winemakers Palmer Emmitt and Michael Scorsone have given us all that at an uncommonly reasonable price—so yes, of course it’s up here on SommSelect, ready for our savvy subscribers to snatch up. How could it not be?
Emmitt and Scorsone operate out of a small facility in Healdsburg and produce two labels: Judge Palmer, a Cabernet-focused line named for Emmitt’s grandfather, and Domenica Amato, a more eclectic assortment named for Scorsone’s grandmother. In each case, the key element is impeccable vineyard sourcing and minimal-intervention winemaking: Although Judge Palmer counts some of Napa’s most prestigious growers among its partners—including the Beckstoffer To-Kalon and Stagecoach vineyards—today’s “Vintage Select” bottling shines a light on Sonoma County. The wine combines fruit from three sites, with about 65% of the blend hailing from the Ellis Alden Vineyard in the Alexander Valley. Situated at about 1,500 feet elevation in soils of gravel and volcanic rock, the Ellis Alden site supplies Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot, with more Cabernet coming from the Estate Vinegrove vineyard in Dry Creek Valley. Finally, there’s a dollop of Malbec from the Blau Vineyard in Knights Valley.

The 2016 Vintage Select is 90% Cabernet Sauvignon with 5% each Petit Verdot and Malbec, aged 24 months in 30% new French oak. The supporting varieties help land the wine at the darker, meatier end of the flavor spectrum, with a nice core of cassis and graphite summoning memories of serious Left Bank Bordeaux from the likes of Pauillac and Margaux. In the glass, it’s a nearly opaque purple-ruby moving to magenta at the rim, with explosive aromas of blackcurrant, fig, Damson plum, licorice, tobacco, pencil lead, and an assortment of baking spices. It is full-bodied and firmly structured, and while the oak component lends that warm spice note, there’s also a compelling bass note of turned earth, smoke, and crushed gravel. There’s some real tannic backbone and lots of freshness to balance the opulent fruit, and with time in a decanter (30 minutes at least), more of the wine’s earthy savor begins to shine through. It’s delicious to drink now, but I think the real sweet spot for this wine will be a few years from now, and if you can hold out until then, its 10th birthday should be something special. Serve it in Bordeaux stems at 60-65 degrees and let yourself be dazzled by the amount of complexity, refinement, and soul-satisfying power you scored for a little over $40. Alongside a well-charred ribeye, or some short ribs, or even a big-flavor vegetarian option like the attached, this will be lights-out delicious. 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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