Harlow Ridge Pinot Grigio 2005 (case)


Item Number: SCCF-036

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $102

Online Close: Dec 1, 2009 2:00 AM EST

Bid History: 3 bids - Item Sold!


Description

Harlow Ridge Pinot Grigio 2005 (case)
$101.70 Case of 6 ($16.95 1.5 Liter each)
Varietal Pinot Grigio: White Wine
Region California: Central Valley: Lodi


Harlow Ridge Pinot Grigio 2005: Wine Enthusiast Balanced and polished, this easy-drinking PG shows the fruit and zest that are driving the variety’s popularity. Crisp acidity offsets ripe pineapple, peach, fig and honeysuckle flavors that finish just a little sweet but very clean. Score: 85. —Steve Heimoff, December 15, 2006.


Pinot grigio is the most popular imported wine in the U.S., with sales accounting for 12 percent of all imported wines. It goes well with seafood, light pasta, and cheese and cracker combinations. Soft cheese goes especially well with Pinot grigio wine - the crispness and acidity in the wine create a mouth-cleansing effect that complements soft cheeses perfectly.


There are about 1,620 acres (6.6 km2) planted in the Central and South coastal areas of California. The Pinot gris from California is often called Pinot Grigio because of its similarity in style to the wine of Italy.


History
Pinot gris has been known from the Middle Ages in the Burgundy region, where it was probably called Fromenteau. It spread from Burgundy, along with Pinot noir, arriving in Switzerland by 1300. The grape was reportedly a favorite of the Emperor Charles IV, who had cuttings imported to Hungary by Cistercian monks: the brothers planted the vines on the slopes of Badacsony bordering Lake Balaton in 1375. The vine soon after developed the name Szürkebarát meaning "grey monk." In 1711, a German merchant, named Johann Seger Ruland (re)discovered a grape growing wild in the fields of the Palatinate. The subsequent wine he produced became known as Ruländer and the vine was later discovered to be Pinot gris.


Until the 18th and 19th century, the grape was a popular planting in Burgundy and Champagne but poor yields and unreliable crops caused the grape to fall out of favor in those areas. The same fate nearly occurred in Germany, but vine breeders in the early 20th century were able to develop clonal varieties that would produce a more consistent and reliable crop.


Researchers at the University of California, Davis, have determined that Pinot gris has a remarkably similar DNA profile to Pinot noir and that the color difference is derived from a genetic mutation that occurred centuries ago. The leaves and the vines of both grapes are so similar that the coloration difference is the only thing that tells them apart.


Pinot gris is white wine grape variety of the species Vitis vinifera. Thought to be a mutant clone of the Pinot noir grape, it normally has a grayish-blue fruit, accounting for its name ("gris" meaning "grey" in French) but the grape can have a brownish pink to black and even white appearance. The word "Pinot", which means "pinecone" in French, could have been given to it because the grapes grow in small pinecone-shaped clusters. The wines produced from this grape also vary in color from a deep golden yellow to copper and even a light shade of pink. The clone of Pinot gris grown in Italy is known as Pinot grigio.


Pinot Gris/Pinot Grigio is usually delicately fragrant and mildly floral with lightly lemon-citrus flavors. Depending upon ripeness at harvest and vinification technique, Pinot Gris can be tangy and light, or quite rich, round and full bodied. Made in an appropriate style, it is one dry white wine that may even age well.

Special Instructions

Item can be picked up at the SCC Foundation Office December 2-18,  Call (707) 864-7177 (S&H NOT available)

Donated by

SCC Business Professor