Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting

Ridge – a California exception

• 5 min read
Image

This is a longer version of an article also published in the Financial Times.

See full tasting notes on Purple pages.  

California wine can be frustrating for those of us who live outside the United States. Thanks to recent swollen crops and plummeting sales of California’s many ambitiously priced wines, there is a glut of good wine – much of it finding its way into keenly priced bottles carrying a plethora of negociant labels.  American wine buyers are currently spoilt for choice in the $10-$30 a bottle range.

But in California’s major export markets such as the UK, practically all we see are the cut-price likes of Blossom Hill, Gallo’s cheaper lines, Sutter Home and Turner Road. Clusters of smarter California wines can be found lingering on posh restaurant wine lists around the world bearing vintages that attest to a wave of enthusiasm on the part of a past sommelier, or a particularly favourable exchange rate, but they tend to sell painfully slowly. While the California economy was booming, it sheltered high-end producers in the golden state from the harsh reality that their wines are overpriced compared with international competition. With such a vast and long-buoyant domestic market on their doorstep, few California wine producers put much effort into exporting.

But in these leaner times, many of the California wine operations that are not backed by a large fortune are suffering badly. They are not helped by the limited options available within the confines of America’s highly regulated distribution system. Direct shipping to consumers can be severely restricted, and the diminishing number of distributors tend to represent too many labels to give any but the most powerful enough attention. 

Then there is the question of style. It has become routine for California’s red wines, and some of the whites, to notch up alcohol levels of 15% and above, their colour ‘enhanced’ not unusually by a shot of a grape concentrate such as Mega Purple. 

Napa Valley Cabernets, arguably California’s signature wines, have come to be picked later and later, by winemakers apparently terrified of the slightest hint of herbaceousness or tannins with any chewiness to them, so that they typically taste sweet, strong, and so smooth that they can be more like cocoa than the archetype of Cabernet-based wine, red bordeaux.  Not necessarily bad, but certainly not the most digestible or food-friendly style of wine. 

One California winery provides a particularly obvious exception to all these generalities. Ridge, perched 900 metres above the Pacific on the San Andreas fault on a ridge above Silicon Valley south of San Francisco, has been producing appetising, claret-style wines for half a century now, and has built up a faithful international clientele. Its top wine, Monte Bello, made from their finest Bordeaux grape varieties grown in the 19th-century vineyards around the 1886 redwood winery, is modestly priced by California standards, while the second, earlier-maturing wine labelled Santa Cruz Mountains Estate is a steal. The average alcohol level of these wines over the last 10 years has been just over 13%.    

Paul Draper, Ridge’s CEO and head winemaker, visits the UK, Ridge’s most important export market, at least once a year, but also travels widely in the rest of Europe. What may help Ridge wines’ appeal to the British, apart from the relatively moderate pricing, is Ridge’s steadfast adherence to traditional winemaking techniques and a style that is unashamedly modelled on that of the Bordeaux first growths, with the twist that Draper and team favour well-seasoned American oak above barrels imported from France.

Ridge_founders A small group of wine writers and wine merchants gathered in California last week to celebrate Ridge’s half-century and Draper’s 40 years on the ridge (where he lives). These anniversaries are approximate.  It was in 1959 that Ridge’s wooden barns and ancient vines began to be recuperated by a a small group of Stanford scientists (see picture) who decided to indulge in low-tech winemaking as a weekend hobby. By the 1960s they were producing small amounts of highly ambitious wine and at the end of the decade decided to hire a full-time winemaker, inspired by a trial lot of wine Draper had made while working for the Peace Corps in Chile. The still robust Monte Bello 1970 was Draper’s first solo vintage. The more fragile 1971 performed well at the famous Judgment of Paris France v California tasting in 1976 and was the overall favourite in the re-run 30 years later.

Since 1986 Ridge has been owned by the Japanese pharmaceutical company Otsuka but you certainly wouldn’t know it. The Ridge team is still more like a group of inspired academics than anything remotely corporate. Formal oenological training is eschewed. Draper claims that his wine training was tasting the great wines of Europe and remains suspicious of anyone inculcated with winemaking orthodoxy.  ‘We have to retrain anyone who arrives with an oenology degree', he maintains.  Current winemaker Eric Baugher is a microbiologist who came to Ridge in 1994 via a graduate project in its surprisingly high-tech lab. At Ridge wine is made by blind tasting, tasting and tasting again. 

When we arrived at Ridge for the celebrations, our first task was to taste two samples of the 2008 Monte Bello blind and decide whether the one with an additional 9/10 of one per cent of first press wine was superior to the sample without. That night, with a fine though non-flashy dinner at Marché in nearby Menlo Park, we sipped a dozen vintages of Monte Bello back to 1968, the only wine of the lot that was less than magnificent. 

Lytton_lunch

The following day we moved en masse to Sonoma, centre of operations for Ridge’s other great speciality: old-vine Zinfandel, as shown in one of the Lytton vineyards above.  Above we are, enjoying lots of different 208s with lunch at Lytton Springs winery (where the rather puzzling picture below was taken, Draper halfway down the table on the right). Typically, when it was discovered that this variety, long associated with California, had its origins in Croatia, Ridge’s head viticulturist David Gates, who has been at Ridge since 1989, went there to see for himself. 

Confined_space

Most California Zinfandel is massively proportioned, with flavours ranging from jammy through berries to porty.  But Ridge’s single-vineyard Zins are unusually restrained, structured, refined and complex.  Again over dinner, at the Healdsburg Hotel’s Dry Creek Kitchen this time, we tasted a dozen Ridge Zinfandels back to a Lytton Springs 1973, the only wine over the whole two days that seemed to show any sign of age. Zin needs higher alcohols to show its character but, in contrast to the current California norm, most of these wines were  in the 14-15% range.

In the bowels of the Monte Bello winery, goatee’d, 74-year-old Draper had told us portentously, ‘high alcohol is the choice of the proprietor. It is not dictated by global warming.’  It is probably just as well that he lives in such relative isolation.

Some Ridge favourites

Chardonnay Monte Bello 2006
  From $39.99 and £34.75 

Santa Cruz Mountains Estate 2006
  From $32.99 and £28.49

Monte Bello – virtually any vintage
  From $89.99 and £79.99 

Geyserville and Lytton Springs Zinfandel – almost any vintage
  From $24.95 and £23.49

See full tasting notes on Purple pages and also Ridge – high tech, low tech and The original Monte Bello

Wählen Sie Ihre Mitgliedschaft
Mitglied
$135
/Jahr
Über 15 % jährlich sparen
Ideal für Weinliebhaber
  • Zugang zu 294,691 Weinbewertungen und 16,077 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
Inner Circle
$249
/Jahr
 
Ideal für Sammler
  • Zugang zu 294,691 Weinbewertungen und 16,077 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
Professional
$299
/Jahr
Für Weinprofis (Einzelnutzer)
  • Zugang zu 294,691 Weinbewertungen und 16,077 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 25 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Gewerblich
$399
/Jahr
Für Unternehmen in der Weinbranche
  • Zugang zu 294,691 Weinbewertungen und 16,077 Artikeln
  • Zugang zu The Oxford Companion to Wine und The World Atlas of Wine
  • Frühzeitiger Zugang zu den neuesten Weinbewertungen und Artikeln, 48 Stunden im Voraus
  • Gewerbliche Nutzung von bis zu 250 Weinbewertungen und -punkten für Marketingzwecke
Bezahlen Sie mit
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Abonnieren Sie unseren Newsletter

Erhalten Sie die neuesten Beiträge von Jancis und ihrem Team führender Weinexperten.

Mit dem Abonnement erklären Sie sich mit unserer Datenschutzerklärung einverstanden und stimmen zu, Updates von unserem Unternehmen zu erhalten.

More Gratis für alle

Ungrafted monastrell vines in Jumilla
Gratis für alle 4 June 2026 In advance of the 2026 Old Vine Conference on June 8, we’re republishing this overview of our...
Institute of Masters of Wine logo
Gratis für alle As our Sam Cole-Johnson and 216 others prepare to take the MW exams next week, we look back at the...
The Bull interior
Gratis für alle Great wine and pie in the Shires. Charlbury is pretty much the first stony outcrop of the Cotswolds that you...
Capsules-congés
Gratis für alle A look at Anglo-French love through the lens of wine. Plus a guide to the UK’s fine-wine traders. A shorter...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Fernando Mora MW and Mario López of Bodegas Frontonio
Verkostungsberichte A close look at three of Zaragoza’s most important projects. Above, Fernando Mora MW (left) and Mario López of Bodegas...
Acered vineyard
Verkostungsberichte In celebration of Aragón’s entry into the upcoming World Atlas of Wine , Ferran explores the wines of Zaragoza. Above...
Alexandre Delétraz's (Cave des Amandiers) vineyards in Valais @ Leif Carlsson
Verkostungsberichte Red, white, young, old – there’s no shortage of diversity or deliciousness available in Swiss wines. You just need to...
Mt Ararat overlooking vineyards
Verkostungsberichte Reasons to drink more Riesling; best buys; and far-flung finds – highlights from a month of tastings. Above, Mount Ararat...
Dar Sinclair, Tangier
Unverblümte Meinungen Foreign parts feature heavily this month, including the villa above overlooking Tangier. But that’s far from all. I hope you...
Sally Abé of Teal
Nick über Restaurants An exciting new addition to the East London restaurant scene. Above, Sally Abé. Everything is on the small side at...
Niepoort rabbit illustration
Weine der Woche A traditional, versatile and inexpensive white port that is both dry and sweet – and doesn’t take itself too seriously...
Chianti Classico Collection 2026 banner
Verkostungsberichte Two notoriously difficult vintages, with very different outcomes. The image above, from Collezione Chianti Classico 2026 in Florence, is courtesy...
Weininspiration wöchentlich direkt in Ihr Postfach
Unser Newsletter erscheint jede Woche und ist für alle gratis
Mit Ihrem Abonnement erkennen Sie unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen an.