Prøve GULL - Gratis

2020 Cabernet Intel: Spottswoode

Wine Spectator

|

September 30, 2023

The Napa winery was able to thread the needle, with most of its harvest already fermenting before the smoke rolled in.

- JAMES MOLESWORTH

2020 Cabernet Intel: Spottswoode

This year's California Cabernet report (coming in the Nov. 15 issue) will deal with the difficult 2020 vintage-difficult due to a hot and dry growing season that was then truncated by wildfires in August and September. That latter situation wound up meaning that there are, in fact, fewer wines to deal with, as a majority of Cabernet producers in Napa and Sonoma declassified their crops over smoke taint concerns. As my tastings progress, it seems as if there's barely half the normal number of wines in for review.

Nevertheless, there is more than a handful of producers who managed to get a 2020 into the bottle, including top names such as Salvestrin, Dalla Valle, Zeitgeist, Memento Mori, Favia, Vine Hill Ranch and more (see Wine Spectator.com/articles/keeping-anopen-mind-on-2020). And the venerable Spottswoode is another one.

"Most of the fermentations were done, with barely one-quarter of our fruit still waiting to be processed," says Spottswoode winemaker Aron Weinkauf. "[With fruit] already in the winery, we were able to keep things buttoned up. As long as the fruit is in, and with the tanks off-gassing [fermentations produce CO₂], you won't get infiltration from the smoke outside."

Wine Spectator

Denne historien er fra September 30, 2023-utgaven av Wine Spectator.

Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.

Allerede abonnent?

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

SENSES: IN THE HEART OF WEST SONOMA COAST

A trio of childhood friends are making outstanding Pinots from top vineyards

time to read

5 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

PINOT NOIR ASCENDANT

THE LATE-RUNNING 2023 VINTAGE DELIVERS AGEWORTHY WINES AT THE HEIGHT OF QUALITY

time to read

11 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

COBB WINES: COASTLANDS VINEYARD AND BEYOND

Embracing his parents' dream, winemaker Ross Cobb has elevated their project in West Sonoma Coast

time to read

6 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Lawsuit May Stymie Trump’s Trade War

A federal court ruled May 28 that President Donald J. Trump had overstepped his authority when he imposed sweeping tariffs of 10% on nearly every nation in the world, potentially raising the price of every imported bottle of wine in American stores and restaurants.

time to read

2 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Auction Napa Valley Raises $6.5 Million for Local Youth

By the time the final gavel fell at the 45th edition of Auction Napa Valley, the event had raised $6.5 million for Napa nonprofits that support after-school and summer programs for children. It was a dramatic finish to a weekend of celebration involving dinners with vintners, tastings of yet-to-be-released wines and bidding on unique bottles and lavish travel experiences.

time to read

2 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

ICONIC FOOD & WINE OF ITALY

SIGNATURE DISHES AND WINES TO MATCH FROM 20 REGIONS

time to read

8 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Nicolas Joly and His Loire Valley Wines Remain Outspoken

Nicolas Joly prescribes a simple test to determine whether a wine is “alive.” Leave the bottle open for weeks and taste it every few days or so. If the wine remains unchanged or even improves over time, it is a “true, alive” wine. If not, the wine will become oxidized in a day. “When a wine has received life properly in the vineyard, then oxidation has no power,” Joly says. “We can taste when a wine’s energy has been destroyed by bad farming and then someone used enology in the cellar to ‘create’ the wine.”

time to read

2 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

AVA SPOTLIGHT: ANDERSON VALLEY

While the Sonoma Coast is currently receiving the most attention for Pinot Noir, there are other AVAs in California producing quality versions. Notable among them is Anderson Valley.

time to read

2 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Frescobaldi in Oregon

Napa Valley was the first place Lamberto Frescobaldi considered when his family's wine company, Italy's Marchesi Frescobaldi, went winery shopping in the United States. Frescobaldi studied viticulture and enology at University of California, Davis, in the 1980s, just as Napa was booming. It was an exciting time in California wine and Frescobaldi wanted to be part of it.

time to read

3 mins

September 30, 2025

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Timorasso Stands the Test of Time

Five years ago I wrote about the resurgence of Timorasso (“The Return of a Piedmont Original, columns, Nov. 30, 2020), a traditional Piedmont white grape variety from the hills of the Colli Tortonesi. Thanks to the efforts of local vintner Walter Massa, along with Elisa Semino of La Colombera and others, Timorasso is not only thriving; it has attracted a number of investors from nearby Langhe.

time to read

3 mins

September 30, 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size