Peters Family Winery
2005 Pinot Noir, Sonoma Stage Vineyard(Sonoma Coast)
In a previous review of this winery’s 2004 Cabernet Sauvignon, Gardner Vineyard (Sierra Foothills AVA) I may have slighted the winemaker, Douglas Peters, by suggesting that God did all the work. That’s foolish, of course; if HE had wanted to be a winemaker, HE wouldn’t have assigned the job to Noah.
Upon tasting this 2005 Pinot Noir from the foggy, windswept, downright cold Sonoma Stage Vineyard south of Petaluma, I am rethinking my opinion of Mr. Peters. This wine is a far cry from some of the bold extracted and alcoholic Pinots (somehow!) now coming from the Sonoma Coast AVA. Oh, to be sure, the winemaker here worked like a Noah-beaver at extraction… a month of maceration and skin fermentation, manual punching down the cap. And what did he get from all that effort at “extracting” from nature’s skimpy raw material…? A barely-past-rosé garnet colored, splendidly perfumed, geranium and red cherry infused, satisfactorily grippy, beautifully balanced wine that is probably what you’d get from Chablis, if red was legal in them parts. This is reverent Pinot winemaking in the tradition of David Bruce and Gary Farrell. Not made in heaven; but heavenly, nonetheless!
Reviewed March 25, 2008 by Roger Dial.
Other Awards & Accolades
Editors' Selection - Appellation America (March, 2008)
Other reviewed wines from Peters Family Winery
Peters Family Winery 2004 Cabernet Sauvignon, Gardner Vineyard (Sierra Foothills)Roger Dial 2/20/2008 |
Peters Family Winery 2002 Cabernet Sauvignon, Gardner Vineyard (Sierra Foothills)Catherine Fallis 5/22/2007 |
Peters Family Winery 2004 Chardonnay, Sangiacomo Vineyard (Carneros ~ Los Carneros)Catherine Fallis 11/30/2006 |
The Wine
Winery: Peters Family Winery |
The ReviewerUnder various hats (winegrower/maker/negotiant/writer) Roger Dial has been tasting wine professionally for 40 years. He regards varietal and regional diversity as the best virtues of wine, and is ever-suspicious of the quest (by producers and critics, alike) for “universal greatness”. His tasting regime is simple: Is the wine technically sound? Is it interesting? Warning: he’s a sucker for all aromatic varieties. |