• Southern Jersey wine (Pt 3)

    From Dan the Man@dan708@yahoo.com to alt.food.wine on Tue Dec 12 18:05:49 2023
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.wine

    This third installment of my four-part series on wines from Southern New Jersey involves Willow Creek Winery. The three bottles I picked up are clearly not cellar dwellers; indeed, none has a vintage date! They were all pleasing enough in their own way.

    Wilde Cock (red blend)
    Translucent maroon color, blackberries and black cherries dominate the nose and palate. Off-dry blend of Cab Sav and Tempranillo.

    Wilde Cock Prestige (rose)
    Pale peach color, aromas of lemon & cherry with flavors of cumquat, cherry, and honeydew. Just a touch sweet.

    Malvasia Bianca Outer Coastal Plain
    Golden color, nose of pears & tart apples, lemon-mead-grapefruit palate, finished dry.

    Part four will appear some time in '24.
    In the meantime, have a great holiday season, one and all.

    Dan-O (did I really buy these wines in August??)
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  • From dalewilli...@gmail.com@dalewilliamsmidrun@gmail.com to alt.food.wine on Wed Dec 13 07:52:36 2023
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.wine

    On Tuesday, December 12, 2023 at 9:05:51rC>PM UTC-5, Dan the Man wrote:
    This third installment of my four-part series on wines from Southern New Jersey involves Willow Creek Winery. The three bottles I picked up are clearly not cellar dwellers; indeed, none has a vintage date! They were all pleasing enough in their own way.

    Wilde Cock (red blend)
    Translucent maroon color, blackberries and black cherries dominate the nose and palate. Off-dry blend of Cab Sav and Tempranillo.

    Wilde Cock Prestige (rose)
    Pale peach color, aromas of lemon & cherry with flavors of cumquat, cherry, and honeydew. Just a touch sweet.

    Malvasia Bianca Outer Coastal Plain
    Golden color, nose of pears & tart apples, lemon-mead-grapefruit palate, finished dry.

    Part four will appear some time in '24.
    In the meantime, have a great holiday season, one and all.

    Dan-O (did I really buy these wines in August??)
    Thanks Dan, this is not on Cape May but elsewhere in Southern NJ I assume? Happy Holidays!
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  • From Mark Lipton@notpil@eudrup.ude to alt.food.wine on Wed Dec 13 11:10:40 2023
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.wine

    On 12/12/23 9:05 PM, Dan the Man wrote:
    This third installment of my four-part series on wines from Southern New Jersey involves Willow Creek Winery. The three bottles I picked up are clearly not cellar dwellers; indeed, none has a vintage date! They were all pleasing enough in their own way.

    Wilde Cock (red blend)
    Translucent maroon color, blackberries and black cherries dominate the nose and palate. Off-dry blend of Cab Sav and Tempranillo.

    Wilde Cock Prestige (rose)
    Pale peach color, aromas of lemon & cherry with flavors of cumquat, cherry, and honeydew. Just a touch sweet.

    Malvasia Bianca Outer Coastal Plain
    Golden color, nose of pears & tart apples, lemon-mead-grapefruit palate, finished dry.


    Interesting that the Malvasia Bianca is the one dry-finished wine as
    it's the only one of those grapes that I think might benefit from
    off-dry vinification. It's not surprising, though, that most of those
    wines have residual sugar: so many tasting room workers will tell you
    tales of people who say "I want a dry wine" only to soon follow that up
    with "Oh, that's too tart/sour!"; when they're served an off-dry wine
    they respond "Now that's a good dry wine!" Sugar sells, especially in a society acculturated to godawful-sweet sodas.

    Mark Lipton

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  • From Dan the Man@dan708@yahoo.com to alt.food.wine on Thu Dec 14 09:26:28 2023
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.wine

    On Wednesday, December 13, 2023 at 10:52:39rC>AM UTC-5, dalewilli...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, December 12, 2023 at 9:05:51rC>PM UTC-5, Dan the Man wrote:
    This third installment of my four-part series on wines from Southern New Jersey involves Willow Creek Winery. The three bottles I picked up are clearly not cellar dwellers; indeed, none has a vintage date! They were all pleasing enough in their own way.

    Wilde Cock (red blend)
    Translucent maroon color, blackberries and black cherries dominate the nose and palate. Off-dry blend of Cab Sav and Tempranillo.

    Wilde Cock Prestige (rose)
    Pale peach color, aromas of lemon & cherry with flavors of cumquat, cherry, and honeydew. Just a touch sweet.

    Malvasia Bianca Outer Coastal Plain
    Golden color, nose of pears & tart apples, lemon-mead-grapefruit palate, finished dry.

    Part four will appear some time in '24.
    In the meantime, have a great holiday season, one and all.

    Dan-O (did I really buy these wines in August??)
    Thanks Dan, this is not on Cape May but elsewhere in Southern NJ I assume? Happy Holidays!
    Hi Dale,
    This producer is also in Cape May.
    The last installment will be about Turdo Vineyards, a winery in a nearby township that is owned/operated by a native Italian couple.
    I think I'm saving the best for last!
    Dan-O
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  • From Dan the Man@dan708@yahoo.com to alt.food.wine on Thu Dec 14 09:30:58 2023
    From Newsgroup: alt.food.wine

    On Wednesday, December 13, 2023 at 11:10:43rC>AM UTC-5, Mark Lipton wrote:
    On 12/12/23 9:05 PM, Dan the Man wrote:
    This third installment of my four-part series on wines from Southern New Jersey involves Willow Creek Winery. The three bottles I picked up are clearly not cellar dwellers; indeed, none has a vintage date! They were all pleasing enough in their own way.

    Wilde Cock (red blend)
    Translucent maroon color, blackberries and black cherries dominate the nose and palate. Off-dry blend of Cab Sav and Tempranillo.

    Wilde Cock Prestige (rose)
    Pale peach color, aromas of lemon & cherry with flavors of cumquat, cherry, and honeydew. Just a touch sweet.

    Malvasia Bianca Outer Coastal Plain
    Golden color, nose of pears & tart apples, lemon-mead-grapefruit palate, finished dry.

    Interesting that the Malvasia Bianca is the one dry-finished wine as
    it's the only one of those grapes that I think might benefit from
    off-dry vinification. It's not surprising, though, that most of those
    wines have residual sugar: so many tasting room workers will tell you
    tales of people who say "I want a dry wine" only to soon follow that up
    with "Oh, that's too tart/sour!"; when they're served an off-dry wine
    they respond "Now that's a good dry wine!" Sugar sells, especially in a society acculturated to godawful-sweet sodas.

    Mark Lipton
    Indeed, while the Malvasia had no date on the bottle, their website mentions 2020, so maybe this was intended to be a more "serious" wine.
    It was certainly the most complex of the three.
    And yes, sugar is certainly sought after by rookie drinkers; one producer here in eastern PA said their Concord and Niagara sweeties are their best sellers.
    It reminds me that the first bottle I ever bought as a much younger man was a White Zin that I wouldn't touch with a ten-foot corkscrew, now!
    I guess many of us grow out of that.
    Dan-O
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