Thursday, August 13, 2009

Wine Wanderers #3

Elliston 2005 Pinot Blanc

The Mutant of Sunol

There is a little winery ocated on a 3-acre parcel just a couple of miles shy of the sleepy little town of Sunol, located west of the Livermore Valley AVA. An elegant, though somewhat austere, 3-story, 17-room, 18th-century neo-Romanesque manse is situated at the top of the estate, a few meters from the entrance gate. This is the Elliston Estate, a graceful structure complete with portico and columns, and built with walls from 32-inch sandtone. The Estate was completed in 1890 by Samuel Ellis, who became San Francisco's chief of police in the late Victorian era (note that this was the first successful police department, replacing the earlier vigilante squads that were maintaining "law and order" in post-Gold-Rush San Francisco). Later, the Estate became a sanitarium, but then was purchased by the Awtrey family in the late 1960s and restored to its original state in the 1990s. Elliston Winery now creates a mutant.

The mutant in question isn't a slobbering Quasimodo-esque monstrosity from a shlocky 1950s movie that goes terrorizing a local village, nor is it something you'd see from the pages of Marvel Comics. It's the Pinot Blanc Grape: somewhat of a rogue varietal that sometimes grows as a kind of ugly duckling amidst the Pinot Noir or Pinot Gris varietals. It resembles the Chardonnay Grape, but lacks the flavor qualities. Elliston's mutation grows and glows on the nearby Buttner family estate.

Pinot Noir can be genetically unstable, and, can occasionally bear a cane of white fruit amidst the black ones. Pinot Blancs were used in the creation of Burgundy and Champagne blends though today, they are not widely used as such. The Pinot Blanc is now popular in the Alsace region of France, in the Baden viticultural region of Germany, in Northern Italy, and in California.

What distinguishes the Pinot Blanc from the Chardonnay is its tangier, nuttier flavor. We uncorked a bottle of the 2005 Elliston Pinot Blanc during an especially sweltering late afternoon, last week. DeAnne was recovering from a fever-ridden night. Tired of the countless cups of Jasmine tea and the numerous glasses of orange juice she had been emptying down her gullet through the earlier part of the day, we decided on a lighter-bodied, sweeter wine - one that had a little tang to it. The Pinot Blanc was perfect. The wine is almost completely translucent, resembling yellow-tinted water. The sight belied the taste, however: the fragrant bouquet contained strong elements of oak, honey and vanilla. The tart apricot and apple tickled our noses and tongues. When the wine warmed it, the taste mutated a bit more to the temperature, growing into something, bigger, bolder,and smokier.

We paired the Pinot Blanc first, with a mild Brie. Strangely, the cheese brought actually sweetened the wine (a pleasant surprise), and wiped out the tartness. Then we paired it with a Gruyere. We assumed the strong Gruyere would crush the lighter characteristics of the Pinot. The combination, however, was a very pleasant sweetness - a kind of subtle fruit and sugar combo that resembled candied fruit (and pleasant, too, because obviously, DeAnne's head cold was subsiding).

But the strangest part was that the candied fruit flavor lingered for some moments after, and it was almost as if our taste was affecting our sense of smell, because everything breath we drew seemed sweet. We double-checked our mouths to make sure they suddenly hadn't mutated into snake tongues.

Nope. Sweet.

Elliston 2005 Pinot Blanc retails for $12-$13. Elliston Produces a small harvest every year, so it's hard to find unless you visit the winery. The next new release is their 2006 Pinot Blanc -which will be released later this year.





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