It’s no secret that I like my wine, but when drinking hard liquor or making a cocktail, vodka is my spirit of choice. I was introduced to Re:Find Distillery when co-owner Monica Villicana kindly sent me a sample of her Re:Find Barrel Finished Vodka. (Click the link to read the full review. SPOILER ALERT: It’s awesome). So, when I made my pass through Paso Robles, home to Re:Find Distillery, I had to pop in and see this operation from the inside.
Tag: Paso Robles wine
Winery Review: Barton Family Wines & Grey Wolf Cellars
Four-legged friendly, fabulous wines, and food. When traveling through wine country, that last bit is pure gold. Well, you can get all three with a stop at Barton Family Wines & Grey Wolf Cellars, conveniently located right off of Highway 46 in Paso Robles.
The super casual tasting room is owned and operated by Joe Barton who’s carrying on the Grey Wolf Cellars family business, one his father, Joe Sr., started back in 1994. Today Joe (Jr.) has turned that family business into a family legacy, offering more wine types in his humble farmhouse-turned-tasting room than many major players in the area. To accommodate, he’s even created a secondary label, Barton Family Wines, which include wines of personal interest to Joe and are, admittedly, for the more discerning palates.
Barton Family Wines and Grey Wolf Cellars remains a boutique operation, producing just around 5,000 cases annually. That boutique feeling translates to the visit — there’s enough space at the bar to get one-on-one attention with your host, and enough seating, inside and out, to just hang out on your own. And with such a large library of wines, there’s something suitable to every tastebud.
The variety and quality of the wines are a testament to Joe’s winemaking philosophy. He’s a winemaker first — though he does have 7 acres of vines planted around his 15 acre property, he sources a most of his fruit from vineyards throughout the AVA. This way, he says, he can offer the full “Paso Robles expression.”
Whether a Barton Family Wines exclusive or a Grey Wolf Cellars daily drinker, each of Joe’s wine have a clear sense of time and place.
- WHAT TO TRY:
- Unlike many winemakers you’ll meet in the area, Joe’s palate much prefers white wine. And, as a self-proclaimed foodie, he has a solid line of white wines with enough form and structure to stand alongside a hardy meal. Be sure to try the uncommonly planted Chenin Blanc (under the Barton Family Wines label) — smooth in texture, yet light and lofty on the tongue, there’s a thing line of acidity that culminates into a lively, tart, and tangy finish. For something with a little more body (or for red wine drinkers who think they don’t like whites), the classic Rhone blend of Marsanne, Rousanne, and Viognier (called “Sentinel” under the Grey Wolf Cellars “Grey” label) will provide a funky, nutty aroma with a cool, but creamy palate, and a solid finish that speaks of dusty earth and brambly branches.
- Classic Rhone blends are all over Paso Robles, but very few wineries offer single varietal bottlings of each ingredient. Joe’s got them all. If available, ask to try some of the more “obscure,” “blending” varietals like his 100% Counoise and his 100% Tannat (both under the Barton Family Wines label) — it’s a great way to appreciate those often “secret” ingredients in Rhone and Bordeaux-style blends.
- INSIDE INFO: Remember that food I was talking about? Barton Family Wines has a full menu (read: you can show up here hungry and expect more than a cheese platter), courtesy of Barton’s Kitchen Window run by local chef and family friend Jeff Weisinger. All meats — from the tri-tip to the tuna is slow-smoked to perfection. Enjoy paninis, quesadillas, or the house specialty, Paso Mac & Cheesesteak. Me and Joe? We like the simple Baby Spinach Salad complete with toasted almonds, dried cranberries, blue cheese crumbles topped with succulent smoked chicken.
Thank you to Joe for hosting me on my visit to Barton Family Wines & Grey Wolf Cellars. For more information about the winery, the wines (and food), to plan your visit or purchase wines online, please visit the Barton Family Wines website.
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Winery Review: Kukkula – A One-Man Wine-making Show
One of the best things about visiting a boutique winery is being able to meet and greet with the proprietor, the vineyard manager, or the winemaker. The best thing about visiting Kukkula is you can meet all three because all those roles are each filled by founder Kevin Jussila.
Kevin, whose professional background is in business money management, has always been an agricultural enthusiast — an enthusiasm that transformed him into a hobbyist winemaker. In 2003 he decided to turn that hobby into a parallel career path (Kevin is still in the corporate business game), purchasing his 80-acre property off of Chimney Rock Road in the Adelaida hills of Paso Robles. ” In December of 2004 we moved to the Central Coast and started to build the dream,” Kevin says. And he means this literally. An avid architect enthusiast, Kevin’s are the hands that built both his family home and his current tasting room — both of which sit atop his beautiful estate vineyards.
Hearthstone Estate 2013 Montepulciano
I’d never heard of Hearthstone Estate until I was approached to taste their wines. Imagine my surprise when, upon opening the package, a bottle of Montepulciano was staring right up at me. I don’t think I’ve ever seen, let a lone tasted, a California Montepulciano. I discovered — and fell in love with — the varietal when eating my way through Italy on my honeymoon. I know to those more versed in Italian wines, Montepulciano may seem like an everyday “bulk-buy” type wine, but to me it bottles the beauty I think of when I think of Italian culture — forza, forte, y la bella vita. What I’m saying is that this wine had a lot to live up to…
Zenaida Cellars Syrah 2014
I’m trying to plan a trip to Paso Robles. When I finally get there I know one of my first stops has to be Zenaida Cellars. They have killer Rhone-style wines — just check out their flagship red blend Fire Sign. But I think one of the main indicators of a truly stand-out Rhone-style winemaker are his or her take on the individual components: I want to know that the G, the S, and the M can stand on their own. Today I present to you the S of Zenaida Cellars — the 2014 Zenaida Cellars Syrah.