Clos Pepe Newsletter
Post Harvest Edition
January/February 1999
Great Harvest!!
Okay--so youre not interested in El Nino any more. Thats understandable.
Every wine newsletter that arrives details the effect of weather on the 1998 grape crop.
Im happy to report that besides changing our leaf-thinning and modifying our powdery
mildew program, El Nino had very minimal effects on our 1998 Harvest, which was a smashing
(crushing?) success in every way. Our harvest was pushed back nearly three weeks by cool
Summer weather--but a longer hang-time for the fruit really increased the
floral phenolic compounds in our Chardonnay. This longer ripening period made for some
special wines in 1998. Clos Pepe harvested 21.5 tons of Chardonnay from 13.6 acres between
October 7th and October 13. No tractors tipped, no pickers lost fingers, and
the buzz around the Valley was that our (rookie) fruit looked pretty damned good for such
a difficult year. The fruit was a beautiful golden color, and averaged about 24.5 Brix
(roughly percentage of sugar) and with a very low pH (3.0-3.2) As Jim Clendenen of Au Bon
Climat commented--these are very Burgundian numbers--high acid, strong
structure in the 1998 wines. Ten tons of Davis-4 Clone Chardonnay were delivered to the
Hitching Post/Au Bon Climat/Qupe facility, three tons of Wente Clone Chardonnay to the
Longoria crush platform, and a little over eight tons of Dijon 76 and Wente Chardonnay
were delivered next door to Babcock Vineyards and Winery. Pictures of harvest are
available for viewing at www.clospepe.com. Single Vineyard wines from 1998 Clos Pepe fruit
will be available from Hitching Post and Babcock Vineyards, to reserve these wines keep
reading.
A Handy Conversion Table:
1 ton of grapes produces (roughly)
2 barrels of finished wine.
A barrel of wine is 55-60 gallons,
or 24 cases, or 288 bottles of wine
1998 Babcock Clos Pepe Vineyards Chardonnay. Order Today (or
else!!)
On December 30, 1998, the Vigneron, LAgent and the Viticulturist in Residence
(Steve, Cathy and Wes respectively) journeyed deep into the hallowed cellars of Babcock
Winery with Bryan Babcock to do blending trials of the 1998 Babcock Chardonnay Clos
Pepe Vineyards. The wine, which has yet to undergo malolactic
fermentation, tasted fantastic. Very intense, good citrusy flavors with a nuance of
tropicality, strong structure, and a bit of gravelly minerality. This wine, at
this stage, is more like a fine Chablis than a standard California Chardonnay. The final
blend will be 25% new oak and 75% neutral oak, which should showcase the fruit
and Bryans mastery of the varietal. Want some? Two-hundred cases will be produced,
and almost 30 cases have already been reserved. The wine will retail for between $25 and
$30 a bottle. To reserve your case (or bottles), call Wes at 805-735-2196, or email him at
weshagen@thegrid.net or visit www.clospepe.com and he will set everything up. You
wont have to pay for the wine until it is delivered or picked up. The wine will be
released in Sept.-Nov. 99 and is expected to sell out before Spring 99.
Have YOU visited www.clospepe.com ?
Our vineyards official website, www.clospepe.com has been visited by over 2000
wine lovers in the past two months. The site is designed to educate and entertain. If you
like the newsletter, youll love the website. Features include: a picture gallery, a
pictorial virtual tour of a whole years farming and winemaking, reviews
of local wines currently in distribution, an archive of past newsletters and inquiries
Ive received, our wine growing philosophy, and a place to ask questions or order
wine. The Vigneron is paying big bucks for this, so come take a look.
Electronic Newsletter
If you have email, you can reduce the number of stamps Wes has to lick (which is
terrible for his sensitive palate) by signing up to receive this newsletter
electronically. This current newsletter is sent out with hyperlinks to a bunch
of harvest pictures and interesting images unavailable to the unwashed, non-technological
masses. Sign up for the Electronic Newsletter by emailing the Viticulturist at weshagen@thegrid.net .
Clos Pepe Wines--
1996 Syrah (Thompson Vineyard): Deeply colored and saturated with masculine
Syrah flavors--peppers, game, dark fruits. 4 Cases Made.
1997 Pinot Noir (Mission Vineyard, Santa Maria):
Awesome fruit, bright wild cherry meets great intensity--a touch of mintiness and
balanced French oak. L.A. Fair Gold Medal. 23 cases produced.
1997 Cabernet Sauvignon: (Knights Valley/San Luis Obisp.)
Intense currant, blackberry flavors with some herb, leather and tar notes. Orange
County Fair Best of Show--Red. 48 Cases produced--24 still in barrel.
Personalities:
Young Hagens Show Great Promise as Winemakers
The next generation of winemakers at Clos Pepe are in training. According tothe
Viticulturists plan, the Hagen girls (daughters of Rob and Stacy Hagen) will have 15
crushes under their belts when they turn 21 and become legal
consumers. Jennifer seems to have the superior palate, and had to be whisked out of the
winery when she couldnt restrain herself from taking tastes out of the press bucket.
According to Jennifer, the 1998 Cabernet Sauvignon should be yummy. Stacy
Hagen felt that the wine was tasting pretty good out of the press. Mom was very kind to
allow the girls to break child-labor laws and pull on the press handle a few times. Nicole
was glad to have a turn as well, and performed her first crush duties admirably.
Rosa Knows the
Good Stuff by Nose
Rosa has become a wonderful vineyard dog in the past six months. Even though she
ignores rabbits and gophers, preferring to pursue birds or the Fed-Ex guy, weve
become rather attached to her and her high-spirited hijinx. Scottish Border Collies are
often cited as the smartest breed in the world--and I dont doubt it.
Rosa has a few burgeoning talents: her ability to catch a frisbee at top speed, her
ability to stare intently (usually at those with food) with the most alert, precocious
honey-brown dog eyes Ive ever seen, and her uncanny potential as a wine-taster. She
loves grapes any way she can find them. Shell eat them fresh, a few days old,
fermented, or in the form of wine. Interestingly enough, she accompanied me almost
twenty-four hours a day during crush--driving, picking, crushing, pressing...and she ate
the grapes that fell out of the truck, then out of the fermenting bin, then after they
were pressed. She participated personally in the process, and so I find it rather natural
that she enjoys a good taste of wine whenever she can find it. And find it she does. One
day after five hours of hand-pressing 1998 Pinot Noir, I had to get Rosa to the vet. I
looked a fright in my crush clothes, and Im sure everyone at the vet thought I was a
disgraceful, unrepenetant drunk--but a pet-lover all the same. Rosa had never been more
calm and well-mannered at the vet. I was asked to hold Rosas muzzle as she was
probed and prodded, and got a good whiff of alcohol. I asked the doctor to smell, and he
confirmed the embarrassing truth. My dog was drunk. She had been sneaking around to the
compost pile where we dump the pressed grapes and she had been eating them. In true
Scottish fashion, Rosa handled herself well at the vet, did not wobble or get sick. I
asked the vet whether a little wine would be advisable for her every day, as a
preventative measure for her heart. He said that a very small amount couldnt
hurt--so now I give Rosa her medicine each day with three or four droppers full of red
wine. It helps the pill go down smoothly, and after a hard morning in the field, Rosa
deserves a pleasant nap--thinking of warmer days and ripe grapes waiting to be discovered
.
Vigneron's Page
By Steve Pepe
(The following three articles were penned by Steve Pepe, the Vigneron of
Clos Pepe)
HE CAN TALK THE TALK
HE CAN WALK THE WALK
HE CAN GROW THE GRAPES
Our faithful readers will recall that at this time last year, Clos Pepe became
self-sustaining. Our former viticulturist, rightfully respecting the market and wanting to
provide for his family, had decided that Clos Pepe was too small and left for other
opportunities. The Vigneron, who had been fired many times in his career , embraced this
as an opportunity. However, LAgent who had never been reprimanded, let alone
let go hearkened to her roots and prayed for divine intervention. Little did the
Vigneron and LAgent realize what providence had in store.
Out of the frozen tundra of Minnesota, the Artist-in-Residence arrived and offered to
run the family farm. But the Artist-in-Residence held the resume of an English major and
had little agricultural experience. Thus, the Vigneron was understandably skeptical of the
putative Viticulturists prospects for success but prudence and
uncharacteristic tact persuaded him to keep his opinions to himself.
Besides being verbal, English majors do read, and the
Artist/Viticulturist/Winemaker-in-Residence devoured the Vignerons wine library. The
Vigneron, in the face of such a thirsty vessel, felt compelled to augment the
Artists consumption of the written word with equal consumption of wine (in
controlled tastings, of course) as well as viticulture classes at UC-Davis.
When the Spring of 1998 arrived with 19,800 pinot noir plants and El Nino, the
Artist/Viticulturist/ Winemaker-in-Residence jumped into the breach. Lo and behold, with
lots of sweat, tears and some blood, the pinot noir vineyard was planted. Then, with nary
a break, the Artist/Viticulturist/Winemaker-in-Residence lovingly succored the chardonnay
vineyard to a full and unexpectedly bountiful harvest in a very trying year.
The Artist/Viticulturist/Winemaker-in-Residence, with help from the Vigneron and
compassion from LAgent, grew some excellent fruit in a very tough year. The proof is
at the wineries Babcock, Hitching Post and Longoria (in alphabetical order
the Vigneron is so politically correct). The Vigneron is anxiously awaiting the next
Summer/Fall, when the wines will be released and he can drink all three together to taste
the difference, if any, the winemaker or the clones make. Undoubtedly, regardless of the
tasting results, the Artist/Viticulturist/Winemaker-in-Residences efforts will be
discernible.
CLOS PEPE FOURTH GENERATION WINEMAKERS
Most of our faithful readers assume Clos Pepe is a contemporary vineyard. However, that
is far from the truth about four generations from it, in fact. When the Vigneron
became a grape grower, it awakened a primordial response in his father and brother to
recount the East Coast Pepe winemaking tradition.
Apparently, the Vignerons great-grandfather along with all of the other
Italians in New Jersey, for that matter, if not the rest of the United States made
wine; the Volstadt Amendment and the WCTC (some of LAgents ancestors)
notwithstanding . Grapes arrived in New Jersey from California in boxcars. The
Vignerons great-grandfather and his cronies would go down to the rail yards and
taste the grapes from each boxcar and argue about which batch was the best. After they
made their selection, they would cart the grapes home, crush and de-stem them by hand,
then ferment and barrel the . Then, in true Italian tradition, the next summer they would
gather and argue over who had made the best wine while consuming copious amounts of each
others winemaking efforts. LAgent has commented more than once that, by her
observations of the Vigneron, this is obviously a genetic trait.
In a meaningful and defining moment, the Vignerons father recounted that one day
when he was a small boy, he came home from school and went downstairs to play in the
cellar. He found it very cold and opened the windows to warm it up. His grandfather came
home after work and went into the cellar to check his wine. He found all of the windows
open and the wine heating in the humid New Jersey summer air. He gave the Vignerons
father a sound paddling before nailing the cellar windows shut.
TRADITIONS
When the Vigneron was growing up, his father always had a glass or two of wine with
dinner from gallon bottles. He kept his wine in the refrigerator and used about one or two
gallons a month. After the Vignerons father retired and his parents moved to the
West Coast, the Vigneron would periodically send them a case or two of Bordeaux, burgundy,
cabernet, Merlot, pinot noir and similar wines. His father was always very appreciative
but generally did not comment on the quality of the wine. On one occasion, the Vigneron
purchased more Beaujolais than he could consume and sent a case or two to his father.
Shortly after, his father called him up and remarked how he and his mother had really
enjoyed the wine with the flowers on the bottle (a George DuBeouf Village Beaujolais). At
that point, the light went on in the Vignerons head. He realized that his father was
still doing what he had done all of his life: after opening a bottle of wine (and having a
glass or two) he would put it in the refrigerator to drink later. While this works great
with Beaujolais, it is not a good strategy for pinots, Bordeaux or burgundy. Consequently,
the Vigneron now sends his father Beaujolais and saves his pinot noir, Bordeaux and
cabernet for other occasions.
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