ヴォルカニック・ワイン・アワード | The Jancis Robinson Story (ポッドキャスト)

California's artisan vignerons

2002年12月31日 火曜日 • 5 分で読めます

I'm publishing this article having been inspired by some current tasting notes on Sean Thackrey's wines in purple pages. It originally appeared in the Financial Times in July 1998, in those innocent days when the World Trade Center and its exceptional Windows on the World restaurant were in their different ways highlights of the Manhattan landscape. The hippie wine operation referred to at the end of the article by the way is Wing Canyon on Mount Veeder, available for a song from the Oakville Grocery Store, or at least it was when I was last in there.

Andrea Immer, the extremely bright young sommelier at New York's Windows on the World restaurant, looked around the Napa Valley from the lunch table we shared overlooking it. 'It's going to be so difficult to tear myself away from this wilderness,' she sighed.

Now I have heard California's most famous, most lavishly groomed wine region described as many things, but wilderness is far from the first word that springs to mind for this playground of the rich and thirsty – unless, I suppose, you spend your life on the 107th floor of the World Trade Center as Andrea does.

In fact northern California's wine country is so smart, so coveted, and so artfully tarted up, that only those with a fortune to spare can afford to buy into it nowadays. Of all the wine regions of the world, it is the only one so sophisticated that preserving the bucolic charms of farming country is a conscious but perennial struggle.

This used to be a valley of orchards and simple homesteads. It was not that long ago that it was possible to turn left off Highway 29 in August. Not that long ago that it was quite difficult to find a decent meal in Napa, let alone Sonoma. And it was only seven years ago that Arthur Schmidt's property was sold. Arthur would have known the old prune orchards.

Arthur was born in a small clapboard house just behind Mustards Grill (smoked salmon with white corn and chili pancake, Mongolian pork chop, crispy onion rings, great margaritas). He lived there, in the middle of the family vineyard, all his life. By the time Sean Thackrey first offered to buy his grapes, in 1986, he was already so old that Thackrey was worried about his insistence on helping with the harvest.

'He had some great old real Syrah vines, just what I wanted, interplanted between a strange mixture of Chenin Blanc and Petite Sirah that he used to sell to Charles Krug for their bulk red and white. We had to tie a ribbon on each Syrah vine so we knew what to pick. I bought two tons. It was all I could afford. The next year I bought a bit more. Every year I had to go and persuade him to accept a higher price for his grapes.

'All he had was a single light bulb, an iron bedstead and a table. And there he was, surrounded by all that yuppie trash.' Thackrey is no fan of the Napa Valley today. 'Wine equals real estate there. It's all I can do to drive through. I just go to get grapes.

'Once when I went to visit Art, his cousin was there. I asked Arthur how far he'd ever travelled. 'Oh, quite a bit', he said. 'North to Ukiah, west to Santa Rosa, east to Sacramento, south to San Francisco'. As I left, his cousin took me aside. "Don't believe that business about San Francisco," he said. "He was just in hospital there once".'

Sean Thackrey's famous whinny comes into play here, as he tells me about the man who indirectly, through the quality of his grape growing, propelled him into the fickle limelight of the Californian wine scene.

'Arthur's grapes suited my winemaking style perfectly. And that was the problem'. His wine caused such a stir that the latent quality of Arthur's vineyard became common knowledge. The 1991 was to be the last vintage they shared. The Schmidt property was put on the market by Jean Phillips, a local real estate agent who farmed vines in her spare time. (A year later she would bottle some wine under her own label, Screaming Eagle.) Arthur died soon after the family smallholding was sold to Clark Swanson, a banker who had decided to invest in the Napa Valley the money he had inherited from his family's TV dinner business.

Thackrey is of an intermediate generation. A youthful-looking 55-year-old, he is no plutocrat. He was an art dealer and has applied the same confidence in his own taste to making wine in the most extraordinary way I have ever seen. He owns not a single vine, except for two rather straggly, abandoned specimens in the backyard of his cabin in Bolinas, an artists' colony on the coast of Marin county, 90 minutes' drive from Napa, that is so insistent on its privacy that road signs are systematically uprooted.

He simply buys seriously interesting grapes, brings them back to Bolinas in a rackety old truck, and proceeds to turn them into wine in the open air (or possibly shaded by a tarp, or some handsome old Monterey pines) guided initially only by the ancient oenological texts he collects.

The 'I've just bought a nice Pliny from Quaritch' that he greeted me with would have seemed the height of pretension on anyone else's lips. As would his immediate segue into Roland Barthes' pensées on facial cleansers. But Thackrey is simply a charming and erudite eccentric – and there are not many of them in Napa. Especially not ones who believe taste and not science is what winemaking is all about.

'I helped out a friend not long ago, very much a techno winemaker. We'd been pressing for two days when it occurred to me that there was something odd. We hadn't tasted a single drop. If chefs were trained the way winemakers were trained, you'd never eat out,' he assured me.

He makes up his wines, basically two dense and briary blends, Orion and the very slightly less opaque Pleiades, exactly as a chef would create a sauce. A little bit of this, and one barrel of that... In old sheds with sagging roofs he still has barrels sitting there in the Pacific breeze from many years ago. 'I'm almost out of the 1991 Taurus, but it was lovely for blending. I never throw anything away until I'm absolutely sure I'm not going to use it.'

Thackrey was not the only oddball I met last May. I met another paysan-vigneron, a Mr Hippie, who actually owns and lives on some vineyard in the Napa Valley itself, having managed to buy some bare land just before prices and restrictions soared. He makes great wine too. 'But you haven't been written up by the American wine critics yet, have you?' I asked, puzzled. He knocked his gnarled knuckles on the tasting table. 'So far, so good,' he grinned. I would not dream of blowing Mr Hippie's cover, except to say that keen FT readers have already been given the chance to buy his wine.

Orion 1994, which will probably be ready to drink in about 2024, is £29.99 at Oddbins Fine Wine.

この記事は有料会員限定です。登録すると続きをお読みいただけます。
スタンダード会員
$135
/year
年間購読
ワイン愛好家向け
  • 288,859件のワインレビュー および 15,877本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
プレミアム会員
$249
/year
 
本格的な愛好家向け
  • 288,859件のワインレビュー および 15,877本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
プロフェッショナル
$299
/year
ワイン業界関係者(個人)向け 
  • 288,859件のワインレビュー および 15,877本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
  • 最大25件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
ビジネスプラン
$399
/year
法人購読
  • 288,859件のワインレビュー および 15,877本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
  • 最大250件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
で購入
ニュースレター登録

編集部から、最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。

プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます。

More 無料で読める記事

Australian wine tanks and grapevines
無料で読める記事 この記事はAIによる翻訳を日本語話者によって検証・編集したものです。(監修:小原陽子) 世界は不要なワインであふれ返っている...
Meursault in the snow - Jon Wyand
無料で読める記事 この困難なヴィンテージについて我々が発表したすべての記事。発表済みのワイン・レビューはすべて こちらで見ることができる。写真上は、レ・グラン...
View over vineyards of Madeira sea in background
無料で読める記事 しかし、偉大な酒精強化ワインの一つであるマデイラは、この特別な大西洋の島での観光開発にどれほど長く耐えられるだろうか...
2brouettes in Richbourg,Vosne-Romanee
無料で読める記事 イギリスの商社による2024年ブルゴーニュ・アン・プリムールのオファーに関する情報。写真上は、ヴォーヌ・ロマネのリシュブール・グラン...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Aerial view of various Asian ingredients
現地詳報 Part five of an eight-part series on how to pair wine with Asian flavours, adapted from Richard’s book. Click here...
Vineyards of Domaine Vaccelli on Corsica
現地詳報 Once on the fringes, Corsica has emerged as one of France’s most compelling wine regions. Paris-based writer Yasha Lysenko explores...
Les Halles de Narbonne
テイスティング記事 しばしば過小評価されがちなこの産地の眩しいほどの多様性を示す99本のワイン。 パート1は昨日掲載された。 ラングドック白ワイン –...
September sunset Domaine de Montrose
テイスティング記事 タムはそう考えており、それを証明する赤ワインの推薦が200本近くある。2部構成のレビューの第1部。 ラングドック白ワイン – 未来への展望と...
Vietnamese pho at Med
ニックのレストラン巡り ニックが、イギリス人には欠けているがフランス人が豊富に持っているものについて語る。それはフランス料理のことではない。 今週は、BBCの『ザ...
South Africa fires in the Overberg sent by Malu Lambert and wine-news-5 logo
5分でわかるワインニュース フランスの有機栽培における銅含有殺菌剤禁止措置の最新情報も含む。上の写真は南アフリカのオーヴァーバーグ(Overberg)の火災で、マル...
A bottle of Bonny Doon Le Cigare Blanc also showing its screwcap top, featuring an alien face
今週のワイン この男を知る必要がある 。 23.95ドルまたは21ポンドから(2023ヴィンテージ)。 ボニー・ドゥーンについて言及すると...
Wild sage in the rocky soils of Cabardès
テイスティング記事 ラングドックのブドウ栽培の要を探る。 ラングドックの白ワイン – 未来への展望も参照のこと。 「ついてきて!」私は彼の後を追い、枝をかわし...
JancisRobinson.comニュースレター
最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。
JancisRobinson.comでは、ニュースレターを無料配信しています。ワインに関する最新情報をいち早くお届けします。
なお、ご登録いただいた個人情報は、ニュースレターの配信以外の目的で利用したり、第三者に提供したりすることはありません。プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます.