Rosenblum has always appealed to me because of it’s focus on Zin and it’s extensive lineup of vineyard-designate wines. I saw this Petite Sirah on the shelf a while back and the vineyard name struck a chord with me (see below), so I picked it up. Let’s check it out.
Producer: Rosenblum Cellars
Grapes: 100% Petite Sirah
Appellation: Redwood Valley, a relatively cool climate zone within the Mendocino AVA.
Vineyard: Rhodes Vineyard — 60 year old, dry-farmed and head-pruned vines
Vintage: 2005
Winemaking: Aged in 60% French, 40% American oak.
Alcohol: 13.8%
Price: $20-25
My tasting notes: The first thing I smelled when I stuck my schnoz in the glass was salted peanuts! Not an aroma I was expecting. (I love salted peanuts, by the way.) I also pick up some tobacco and sweet oak aromas. Not a ton of distinct fruit on the nose. There’s fruit there, but seems cloaked in a layer of dust or something. In the mouth, this wine starts off with tart blueberry fruit and morphs a bit toward pomegranate and tart cherry. The fruit has that old vines intensity, but the wine feels thin on the palate and it finishes with dry tannins – I feel like I’m chewing the skins of the grapes.
Overall impression: Despite the thinness of the fruit, I think this is an alright bottle of wine. Not the “life of the party” style of many Petite Sirahs, but there is something appealing in the balance of this wine for me. B-
Free association: My alma mater…
More info:
CellarTracker reviews (mean: 87)