Aging Oregon Pinot Noir

Last week I had the opportunity to taste a 1994 - 2007 vertical of Chehalem’s Reserve Pinot Noir. I have had some of those wines individually and tasted smaller verticals, but this was the first time I had tasted through them all. It was instructive. It definitely challenged conventional wisdom about what makes a “good” vintage.

Since 1994, there have been a number of “great” vintages in Oregon according to the press. Let’s compare Wine Spectator, Robert Parker’s view of the vintage and my experience with Chehalem’s Reserve Pinot:

Vintage WS Parker DRS (Chehalem Reserve)
1994 92 92 *+ Tight, sharp and tannic.
1995 81 76 ** Simple.
1996 87 83 ***+ Wow, nose.
1997 84 87 ***+ Gorgeous nose. Tight. Leathery.
1998 92 89 ** Nice aromatics.
1999 93 92 * Youthful nose. Prune. Very tannic.
2000 91 86 *** Leather with tannin.
2001 93 85 **** Funky. Red fruit. Pretty.
2002 96 92 *- Disappointing.
2003 88 88 * Stewed black fruit. Ok.
2004 94 86 ** Big bramble. Big mid palate. Weighty.
2005 93 85 ****? Bramble and red/black fruit.
2006 92 93 *? Dark cherry. medicinal.
2007 84 - 87 84 ***+? Big red fruit. Primary, but wow.

It seems that I am not on the same wavelength as Harvey and Robert, particularly on the older vintages. A great Oregon Pinot to me is one, I guess, from a so-called lack-luster vintage that has 5+ years of age. In my view, the “great” vintages: 1994, 1999, 2002 and, by extension, 2006, are for drinking within the first couple of years, before the alcohol and tannin takes over the fruit.

I am going to finish off my 2002 - 2004s and 2006s. The 2005s, 2007s and eventually 2008s are going to sit for a long time.

Of course, this is only one set of data-points and might not apply equally to all producers, all AVAs, etc. But I think it is a good starting guide. I am not convinced at this point that most producers lower-end bottlings will have the longevity of the higher-end stuff (this is the “Reserve” after all), but I am not sure. It could be that, in a cool vintage, there is too much underripe fruit in the non-reserve stuff but perhaps not.

We also did a 1996 - 2007 vertical of the Ian’s Reserve Chardonnay. More on that later…

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