Corx Wine Bags Blog

2May/11Off

Taste of Pearl

Hi.  My wife and I attended the Taste of Pearl on Pearl Street in Boulder on Sunday.  In general, it was a good event.

Here are my ratings:

I would certainly go again next year!

Cheers!

-Kevin

Event Details:  http://www.boulderdowntown.com/events/taste-of-pearl

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

29Apr/11Off

Oregon wineries, Wines and Wine Country

Great resource on Oregon wine regions.

Enjoy!

-K

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http://www.winesnw.com/orhome.html

Oregon wineries are generally small and decentralized within each official wine region of the state.  They are often winemaker- or family-owned. Most Oregon wine regions lie in valleys between the southern Cascade Mountains that run through the stateThe Red Hills of Dundee in Oregon's Willamette Valley appellation and its Coastal Range to the west.

The northwest portion of Oregon wine country is celebrated for its cool-climate grape varieties, including Pinot Gris, Riesling, Chardonnay, and especially Pinot noir.  The Southern Oregon appellation (AVA), starting south of Eugene, includes the Umpqua Valley AVA, the Red Hill Douglas County AVA, the Applegate Valley AVA and the Rogue Valley AVA, all located in the southwestern portion of Oregon State.  These regions, along with the vineyards of the Columbia Gorge AVA, are generally higher, much warmer and significantly drier than those of the northwestern quadrant of Oregon State including the Willamette Valley AVA.

It wasn't until early 2005 that the Southern Oregon appellation (AVA) was federally authorized as a macro viticultural area, encompassing the previously authorized regions of the Umpqua, the Applegate and the Rogue Valleys.

The rich variety of  "micro climates" in southern Oregon (as well as in the Columbia Gorge AVA at Oregon's north central border) provide distinctive vineyard locations capable of nurturing high-quality Bordeaux and Rhone grape varieties, as well as French Burgundian varieties such as Pinot noir and Chardonnay.   The Columbia Gorge appellation, located on both the Oregon and Washington sides of the Columbia River, was authorized as an official American Viticultural Area (AVA) for both states in June 2004.

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

27Apr/11Off

Chateau Ste. Michelle Horse Heaven Vineyard Sauvignon Blanc 2009

This Columbia Valley Sauv Blanc can be found on deal through out the year at $12-13.

Enjoy!

-K

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winemaker's notes:This Sauvignon Blanc from our Horse Heaven Vineyard delivers aromas of citrus and green apple with lively herb spice notes. We used partial stainless steel fermentation to preserve the Sauvignon Blanc's vibrant varietal character and fresh, crisp quality. For me, this wine represents the classic Washington style of Sauvignon Blanc with a crisp citrus character and a soft mouthfeel.

critical acclaim:

"In 2009 this single vineyard offering includes 11% Semillon, It has wonderful texture, and a mix of light herbal flavors that run through a gamut from celery to lemongrass and up into tart citrus fruit. The acidity is generous but not searing;it penetrates but never overpowers. A quintessential food wine."

90 Points

Wine Enthusiast

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

25Apr/11Off

Jess Jackson dies at 81; developer of Kendall-Jackson wine brand

Whether you like JK or not, Jess Jackson built an empire!

Cheers!

-K

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← Back to Original Article

Jess Jackson dies at 81; developer of Kendall-Jackson wine brand

Jess Jackson, who died Thursday at 81, was a San Francisco lawyer who became a skilled wine merchant and titan of the industry. In recent years, Jackson owned winning racehorses, including Rachel Alexandra.

April 22, 2011|By Jerry Hirsch, Los Angeles Times

Jess Jackson, a man who knew how to pick winners, whether they were thoroughbred racehorses or vineyards, died of cancer Thursday at his wine country estate in Geyserville, Calif. He was 81.

Jackson was a wine industry visionary who developed the Kendall-Jackson brand, which popularized premium wines for the mass market and helped make the chardonnay varietal a household staple.

Friends and business associates described Jackson as a classic entrepreneur who had three distinct, successful careers, first as a San Francisco attorney and then as a skilled wine merchant whose 14,000 acres of wine grapes are among the largest private vineyard holdings in America. In recent years, Jackson became a winning racing horse stable owner.

He spent millions of his wine profits building Stonestreet Stables and buying thoroughbred horses at auctions.

Jackson was co-owner of Curlin, voted Horse of the Year in 2007 and 2008. He also co-owned Rachel Alexandra, the filly that won the Preakness in 2009 and also was voted Horse of the Year.

And whether he was dealing in the horse or wine business, Jackson became known as an innovator unbowed by the conventional wisdom in businesses.

In 2009, he decided to have Rachel Alexandra skip the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita over concerns about the Arcadia track's synthetic surface, referring to artificial surfaces as "plastic" and provoking a debate about the surfaces.

He was a vocal critic of special distribution laws that in many states require wine to pass through the hands of distributors, increasing consumer prices.

Jackson even challenged industry giant E.&J. Gallo Winery over trademark issues. He lost a legal battle over whether Gallo's Turning Leaf label too closely imitated the autumn-toned look and feel of his Kendall-Jackson brand.

Wine broker Bill Turrentine remembers meeting Jackson at a wine tasting in Santa Rosa decades ago. At the time, quality wine was sold by region. The label on each bottle would feature a geographic appellation such as Napa Valley that was the primary characteristic pitching the wine. But Jackson believed he could make flavorful and consistent wines by blending the same variety of grape grown in different regions.

"I remember thinking that this was another guy who better keep his day job as an attorney in San Francisco. The idea that you could charge a premium price for a bottle of wine that just said California on it was absurd," Turrentine said.

Jackson proved him wrong.

The rich, full-flavored chardonnay that Jackson's winery developed had just a touch of residual sugars that made it popular with yuppies and baby boomers just starting to discover quality wine, said wine industry consultant Jon Fredrikson of Gomberg-Fredrikson & Associates.

Jackson priced the wine about a dollar more than his other popular wines at the time, giving him better profit margins and funds to expand.

"He really believed this was a great model and said this was an opportunity that you could drive a truck through," Fredrikson said.

It launched Jackson into a busy acquisition spree.

"From about 1985 to about 1994, he was able to buy wonderful properties at very good prices, often below market," said Fredrikson, who often scouted the vineyards for Jackson. "There was a lot of risk there, but Jess had one commanding advantage over his competitors. He was a real estate lawyer who was very smart and knew how to get deals done."

Jackson wandered into the business as a weekend farmer after he bought an 80-acre pear and walnut orchard in Lakeport in rural Lake County in 1974 as a weekend retreat from city life and converted into a vineyard.

"I was attracted by the lifestyle. I wanted to get away from law and become a farmer," Jackson told The Times in 2007.

That first holding morphed into the larger Kendall-Jackson Winery (Jane Kendall was his first wife), and the winery's Vintner's Reserve Chardonnay became one of the top-selling wines in America. He produced his first bottle of wine under the Kendall-Jackson label in 1982.

"The original business plan was to break even at 50,000 cases, but we kept growing," Jackson said.

Jackson was intensely proud of the vast holdings he acquired in prime wine regions, including Mendocino, Sonoma, Napa, Lake, Santa Barbara and Monterey counties. He relished giving visitors tours of the acreage via private helicopter.

Jackson would explain how most of the vineyards are on mountains, ridges, hillsides and bench lands. These are all areas that drain well and add to the quality of the wine.

"The vines need to struggle to find nutrients. That way it concentrates on ripening the fruits. You don't want lots of water in the roots. That just creates more growth of leaves," Jackson said.

His wine empire included Jackson Family Wines, featuring higher-end specialty labels such as Freemark Abbey in Napa Valley, La Crema Winery in Sonoma County and Byron in Santa Barbara County.

Jackson said the success of the wine business allowed him and second wife and business partner Barbara Banke to plunge into horse racing.

Jackson is survived by Banke, his children Jennifer Hartford, Laura Giron, Katie Jackson, Julia Jackson and Christopher Jackson, and two grandchildren.

A one-time longshoreman and police officer who put himself through UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall law school, Jackson said he liked the racing business "because I like to compete." Born Feb. 18, 1930, in Los Angeles, he was raised in San Francisco by his accountant father and schoolteacher mother during the Great Depression.

Associates said Jackson was a gabber who came up with ideas but often left the implementation to his staff, sometimes to their exasperation.

"He was very outgoing and loved to talk," said Turrentine.

When Jackson was doubling as an attorney in San Francisco and as a vintner, he would often stop by Turrentine's office on his way to Lakeport late on Friday.

"There were many Fridays when he kept me from getting home for dinner on time," Turrentine said.

In the end, it was no surprise that Jackson could succeed in multiple fields, his friends said.

"Somehow great entrepreneurs see the future and have the guts to go for it," Fredrikson said. "Jess continually did that."

jerry.hirsch@latimes.com

Times staff writer Eric Sondheimer contributed to this report.

Los Angeles Times Articles
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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

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22Apr/11Off

Will removing the air from an opened bottle of wine make it last longer?

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/food-and-wine/wine/ask-a-wine-expert/will-removing-the-air-from-an-opened-bottle-of-wine-make-it-last-longer/article1993936/

THE QUESTION: Will removing the air from an opened bottle of wine make it last longer?

THE ANSWER: Unequivocally, yes. Oxygen spoils a wine the way it spoils many unprotected foods, such as a peeled apple. Flavours in an uncorked wine always develop nicely after a few minutes or hours. But most will eventually degrade. After a day or two, most half-finished bottles, even when resealed, start to taste less than pleasant, not as crisp or fruity as before. There are various options to keep your wine fresh. Some liquor stores sell canisters of inert gas, equipped with a thin, straw-like flexible nozzle, that acts as a heavier-than-air blanket. Before resealing the wine with the cork or screw cap, squirt a few shots of the gas into the bottle. One popular brand, which sells for about $15 to $18, is called Private Preserve. One can is good for up to about 100 uses. Another option is to decant the leftover wine into a smaller bottle, say, a half-size wine bottle, eliminating or minimizing the air pocket above the liquid. There’s another trick that Archimedes would applaud, too. If you’ve got a bunch of spare, and clean, marbles handy, drop them, one by one, into the half-empty bottle. The volume of the round spheres will displace the liquid until it reaches back up the neck, eliminating the air pocket. Of course, you’ll have to strain the wine with some sort of sieve when you go to pour it back out. See, that high-school physics class wasn’t as useless as you thought it was going to be.

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

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21Apr/11Off

Great Article on Wine Accessories

Cooking Tools: Bottle-Top Wine Accessories

By WILSON ROTHMAN
Wilson Rothman Nuance wine finer and aerator.

Wilson Rothman is the features editor of Gizmodo.com.

Last weekend, I tested a trio of cheap bottle-top wine accessories with two friends, Addison Richards, a certified sommelier and the wine director of the Wild Ginger restaurant in Seattle, and Noah Musler, an avid wine collector. (I consider myself an enthusiastic amateur.) The three of us have different levels of wine knowledge, but we all fall squarely into the target demographic for the following products. So I ordered them up on Amazon, and we gave each one a fair taste.

Wilson Rothman

The Gizmo: Soiree wine aerator, the “premier In-Bottle Wine Decanter”
$25 list price; $19.55 on Amazon.

The Claim: “Soirée eliminates the dollars, hours, and dishes involved in traditional decanting.”

It’s a glass bulb that you stick right into the mouth of the bottle. You pour the wine through it, and as it gurgles through the globe, it aerates. It’s beautiful to watch, and there’s no question it aerates wine if you hold your bottle completely upside down, as the instructions suggest. But Addison immediately saw the flaw in this. “The design encourages sediment to leave the bottle,” Addison said. Sure enough, it was no match for the 2005 Bordeaux we tested it on–sediment littered each glass.

The big sales pitch for aerators is that they take the place of the traditional decanter. For the test, I chose Soiree instead of another more popular one, the Vinturi, which seems like a more sophisticated option, but it also looks messier, costs twice as much and doesn’t offer the convenience of being positioned directly on the bottle.

The Verdict: Not worth it, Addison said.

Wilson Rothman

The Gizmo: Nuance wine finer and aerator: “the ultimate decanting experience.”
$30 list price; $29.95 on Amazon

The Claim: “Non-drip wine pourer; fine strainer; cork and winestone filter; wine aerator.”

Living up to its name, the Nuance is the subtlest of the gadgets we tested out. It’s a long slender cone that dips into the bottle, revealing only a black nozzle. It’s many holes produce a gentle slurping sound that Addison labeled “acoustically pleasing.” The Nuance is the device whose claims are easiest to support: In addition to aerating, which Noah felt made the test wine “more expressive, a little more open,” it was clearly screening sediment.

As functional as it would be during regular uses, both Noah and Addison hit on the same possible problem: clogging. “I’ve seen plenty of crud in the Cabs and Bordeauxs I’ve let sit around,” Noah said. Addison agreed. “I could easily see pouring a bottle and watching it stop halfway through the process. If you’re home alone, that’s one thing, but if you’re tableside, that’s a disaster.”

The Verdict: “I’d say that works a fair bit,” Noah said. Addison agreed, though he said he would never use it on a vintage Port.

Wilson Rothman Ravi wine chiller.

The Gizmo: Ravi wine chiller: “the instant wine refresher.”
$40 list price; $24 on Amazon

The Claim: It’s “a revolutionary concept that will cool your wine to the ideal temperature instantly and will keep working for more than an hour after you take it out of the freezer.”

Think of this like sticking an ice-cream maker on the top of your wine bottle. Of course it’s not freezing the wine, but the device, which is stored in the freezer, rapidly chills the liquid that passes through it. If you hold your thumb over the valve control, you can slow the flow of wine, making it extra cool. I imagine that, if you spent a lot of time with it, you could get good at pouring at different temperatures. We didn’t get that good at it, though the wine, a 2007 Cotes-du-Rhone rosé, came out pleasantly cooler than it went in. I was the first to say that I liked it, and Noah agreed that it was fine. Addison thought it would disappoint at least some wine drinkers. “Is this cold enough for the cruise ship crowd that just came in from Miami? No.” And then he pointed out, well, a bigger issue, it’s ridiculous size. “It looks like a rocket launcher,” he said. “I’m embarrassed for that thing,” Noah said.

The Ravi Web site seems to suggest that this is meant more for reds than for whites in need of icing down. If it weren’t for the fact that it can only pour seven glasses per hour (and needs to be constantly stored in the freezer), it might have actually been useful in lower-end restaurants that have a hard time keeping reds properly cool, or have a habit of pouring wine into glasses warm from the dishwasher.

The Verdict: It works but at best it’s too cumbersome, and at worst it really only helps the ill-prepared. Who really has trouble keeping wines cool? Noah likes to drink his white wines at the temperature they come out of his storage room. “The only time I chill wine is when I just bought it.”

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

DCSIMG

13Apr/11Off

A to Z Pinot Gris 2009 – 88 Pts

Classic Oregon Pinot Gris at a great price!  A great buy at $13.

Cheers!

-Kevin

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winemaker's notes:

The 2009 A to Z Oregon Pinot Gris shimmers in the glass with pear, ginger, almond and vanilla aromas. Juicy, bright and succulent on the attack, this wine showcases flavors of tangerine, melon, pineapple and wet stone. The wine is framed by ripe acidity giving classic Oregon Pinot Gris proportions and lift to the richness. The long finish slides effortlessly from the mid-palate with lingering impressions of tantalizing, pure, intense fruit.

critical acclaim:

"Light and spicy, with nutmeg and clove overtones to the peppery citrus flavors. Drink now."

88 Points

Wine Spectator

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

11Apr/11Off

White Burgundy—Perfect for Spring!

Our friends at Liner &  Elsen have put together at great white burgundy sampler case.

Read below for the full description.

Cheers!

-Kevin

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http://www.linerandelsen.com/

The sampler contains four bottles of each wine.........175.00

2008 Domaine de Montlaville, Mâcon-Villages, Burgundy, France

There’s a purity, a balance – a joie de vivre – in this bottle!. A lovely lemon gold in the glass, Montlaville’s Mâcon-Villages casts aromas of fresh baked bread, limestone-clay soil, lemon oil and smoke. Broad on the attack with Chardonnay’s signature butter and hazelnut notes, the Mâcon-Villages tightens mid-palate to lash the tongue with its smoky limestone soil undercurrent. Bracing acidity frames the wine’s rich fruit, and the soil signature makes the wine a total joy to drink.

2009 Pierre Vessigaud, Mâcon-Fuissé, Le Haut de Fuissé, Burgundy, France

Brilliant lemon gold in the glass, the first whiff is of flinty minerality followed by lemon zest and grapefruit. The high-altitude vineyard also imbues the wine with terrific acidic cut, which lifts the wine’s buttery lemon curd fruit and makes the Mâcon-Fuissé extraordinarily food friendly. Hints of white tea, malt, green melon, hazelnuts and flint greet the palate before the flinty limestone terroir and bracing acidity help the wine to finish fresh, complex and extraordinarily food versatile.

2009 La Soeur, Cadette, Bourgogne Chardonnay, Burgundy, France

A recent addition to Kermit Lynch’s superb portfolio, vineyard owner Jean Montanet has teamed up with Chablis superstar Bernard Raveneau to create a wine of striking elegance and purity. Showing a bright lemon-gold in the glass, the wine offers aromas of lemon oil, vanilla, hazelnuts and limestone minerality. Brisk on the attack with Chablis-like cut, the wine gains weight and texture mid-palate to reveal notes of lemon curd, oyster shells, buttery brioche and a dusty limestone soil signature. Refined and graceful, the wine finishes with further Chablis-like suggestions of flint, limestone and raw hazelnuts.

LINER & ELSEN, WINE MERCHANTS
2222 NW Quimby St.
(off 22nd Ave.)
Portland, OR 97210

503-241-WINE (9463)
800-903-WINE (9463)
Fax 503-243-6706

HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 10am-6pm

© Liner & Elsen Wine Merchants

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.

8Apr/11Off

Evodia Old Vine Grenache 2009

This grenache from Spain has both altitude and old vines...which is a great combo for yummy wine.

At $10/bottle it's a steal!

Cheers!

-K

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Evodia Old Vine Grenache 2009

Grenache

from Spain

red wine
International Wine Cellar 90 point ratingInternational Wine Cellar 90 point rating
ratings pedigree (past vintages):

Price: $9.29
Buy Now
Buy A Case Now
send to a friend send to a friend
Print Cellar Notes print cellar notes
Add to wine list add to wine list
Item No. 108083
red wine style:
Light & Fruity Smooth & Supple Earthy & Spicy Big & Bold
winemaker's notes:Evodia, sourcing fruit from high elevation vineyards in the village of Atea, from the Greek word for aroma.

100% old vine Garnacha

critical acclaim:

"Sexy, high-pitched aromas of strawberry preserves, black raspberry, minerals and pungent flowers. Concentrated but not at all heavy; sweet raspberry and blackberry flavors are lifted by a hint of violet. Very suave, especially at this price; finishes with silky tannins and excellent clarity. No jamminess here, which is pretty rare for inexpensive garnacha. These vines are reportedly planted at 850 to 1,100 meters altitude on slate and are more than 100 years old."

90 Points

International Wine Cellar

6Apr/11Off

Ridge Geyserville 2008 – Yes, It’s That Good!

Ridge Geyserville is probably one of my top 5 zinfandels...period!

Yes, it's $35/bottle, AND it's worth every penny!

Cheers!

-K

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winemaker's notes:Intense purple/blue. Ripe black cherry, blueberry, plum sauce. Gravel/mineral, mint/menthol, oak spice. Full body. Dark bramble fruit, firm acid, plush tannins. Great depth and complexity.

critical acclaim:

"72% Zinfandel; 20% Carignane; 6% Petite Sirah; 2% Mataro. It has never been easy to regard Ridge's Geyserville bottlings simply as Zin, for, as once again is so evident here, they show a measure of depth and a degree of complexity rarely found in wines of the same name. Both rich and refined with sweeping impressions of red and black berries, sweet oak, briar, and just a touch of spiced candy, the wine exhibits remarkable energy and is never other than perfectly balanced. Its polish is sure to tempt many into drinking it now, but it has the pedigree and pieces in place to grow for years"

94 Points

Connoisseurs' Guide

"The 2008 Geyserville Proprietary Red (72% Zinfandel, 20% Carignan, and the rest Petite Sirah, Mataro, and Mourvedre; 14.8% alcohol) exhibits a dense ruby/purple color along with lots of glycerin, blue and black fruits, pepper, and incense. This rich, fleshy 2008 may turn out to be more juicy and succulent than the 2007. It should last for 7-8 years. Range: 90-92 "

92 Points

The Wine Advocate

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About Corx Wine Bags

Corx Wine Bags was founded in 2005 by two friends who had passion for wine.  One of them being a self proclaimed klutz and the other a self proclaimed sewing master, they sought to create the ultimate wine bag.  After several prototypes the “Tre” 3-bottle wine bag was born.  A wine bag of the highest quality that prevents bottles from breaking in transit for those klutz’s out there, while keeping your wines at proper storing temperatures during your trip to your favorite BYOB restaurant, picnic location or bringing bottles home from your favorite winery.   For more information about all of our wine bags please visit us at www.corxwinebags.com.