Oct 06 2008
Pacific Rim Winery-Wine in Washington
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J.J. Prum 2006 Graacher Himmelreich Auslese - Riesling White Wine
J.J. Prum 2006 Graacher Himmelreich Auslese - Riesling White Wine
White Wine by J.J. Prum from Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, Germany. Very rich, but at the same time well-structured and not at all fat. Very good interplay between floral flavors, mineral acidity and citrus aromas. This Auslese is still less developed compared to the Sp?tlese, but will improve remarkably when opening further in the course of the next years. Great aging potential. Serve this refreshing wine slightly chilled, as an aperitif or, especially when more mature, in combination with seafood and poultry, but also red meat and even fresh fruits. It is also an exciting match for Western style or Asian and Pacific Rim cuisine. Aromas of rose, slate and smoke segue into lime and peach flavors in this elegant, stately white. It’s crisp and transparent, with precise balance and a classic Mosel profile. Long, mouthwatering finish. Drink now through 2035. - Wine Spectator

Pacific Rim 2007 Daunenhauer Vineyard Riesling - White Wine
Pacific Rim 2007 Daunenhauer Vineyard Riesling - White Wine
White Wine by Pacific Rim from Willamette Valley, Oregon. It is always interesting and challenging to make a Riesling from a very different climate such as the wet and cool Willamette Valley. Because of the climate conditions, we have decided to pick the grapes for this wine early (at about 19 Brix) and craft the wine in a German Kabinett style. The wine shows intense notes of apple, honey and grapefruit. This is a sweet wine with an incredible acidity and low pH . making it taste quite dry for its Residual Sugar. The wine has the potential to age for 30 years (if you are patient enough). Try this wine with some dry fruits, some cheeses (goat cheeses are best), ice cream would also work wonders. This would also make a great aperitif. The alcohol is 8.8%, acid is 0.84%, pH is 2.81 and Residual Sugar 5.2%
Pacific Rim 2007 Dry Riesling - White Wine
Pacific Rim 2007 Dry Riesling - White Wine
White Wine by Pacific Rim from Columbia Valley, Washington. To make our Dry Riesling, we pick our grapes relatively early (21-22.5 Brix). The Riesling juice is fermented at cold temperatures for 30 days and then aged in stainless steel tanks. We leave our dry wines sur lie (which means that we keep the wine on the yeast lees to increase the mouthfeel of the wine) post fermentation for five months and we stir the lees once or twice a week. We use no oak and no malolactic on this wine it’s as pure and unmanipulated as it gets. For our Dry Riesling, we blend 20% of German Riesling wine selected by Johannes Selbach in the Mosel region to 80% of our Columbia Valley Riesling. The German Riesling lends great depth and acidity, as well as low alcohol. The wine is crisp, dry and lush with flavors of citrus, jasmine and minerals. Our Dry Riesling is endlessly versatile and harmoniously complements the world’s most vibrant and flavorful cuisine from Asian to European to a wide variety of seafood, cheeses and cold meats
Pacific Rim 2007 Solstice Vineyard Riesling - White Wine
Pacific Rim 2007 Solstice Vineyard Riesling - White Wine
White Wine by Pacific Rim from Yakima Valley, Washington. This is a small crop from old vines planted in 1972 . hand picked and fermented with its native yeasts. The grapes are more exposed at Solstice making the wine rich in phenolics. The wine shows notes of peach and kiwi with a very subtle and delicate nose. This is a solid wine with broad shoulders on the palate and some pear and lemon flavors. The masculinity of this wine comes from a high phenolic content combined with a 13.5% ethanol and a 1.14% Residual Sugar. For all this, the wine is not sweet and shows perfect balance. The wine is truly cellar worthy and will age for a very long time (10 plus years).
Pacific Rim 2008 Gewurztraminer - White Wine
Pacific Rim 2008 Gewurztraminer - White Wine
White Wine by Pacific Rim from Washington. Our 2008 Gewurztraminer is crafted from Washington and Oregon grapes. The fruit from these two regions possesses different yet complimentary characteristics, producing a balanced, more expressive and complex wine. We often put the juice and the grape skins in contact to extract and unleash the exquisite Gewurztraminer aromas locked in the skin. The juice is then cold temperature fermented over 20 days. We do not use any oak and do not put the wine through malolactic fermentation. The wine is crisp with a slight residual sugar of 1.7% with flavors of lychee, melon and tangerine. Our Gewurztraminer is an exceptional match with spicy Indian food, lemon chicken and blue cheeses.

Pacific Rim Frambroise (375ML) - Dessert Wine
Pacific Rim Frambroise (375ML) - Dessert Wine
Dessert, Fortified & Fruit Wine by Pacific Rim from Washington. The raspberries for our Framboise are from bucolic Mount Vernon, Washington. With majestic Mount Baker in the distance, our raspberries are sourced for Pacific Rim from Mike and Jean’s Berry Farm. The clone, or variety, of the raspberry is grown exclusively for Pacific Rim Framboise–Called the Morrison variety, the raspberry is exceptional due to its low bitterness and abundant flavors. Framboise is incomparable on its own or as a complement to any dessert. The bright raspberry flavors dance on your palate and serve as either a wondrous liquid dessert or complement to your favorite treat. We strongly recommend that you explore with Framboise–savor on its own, pour liberally over your favorite dessert (chocolate cake and cheesecake respond quite favorably) or mix into your preferred beverage (Framboise enhances all manner of cocktails). You can even use Framboise as a filling ingredient in your most excessive dessert recipes.
Wine is made and marketed all over the world nowadays. It used to be that only ‘Old World’ regions such as the wine-making areas of France were perceived to be the best producers here but, nowadays, ‘New World’ regions such as America are producing great quality wines as well. Some of the most famous wine regions include:
* Alsace - the French region of Alsace borders with Germany and is the home to many famous and highly regarded wines.
* Andalucia - this region of Spain is famous for its sherry and its selection of wines.
* Bordeaux - this French region is primarily known for its classic red wines.
* Burgundy - France’s Burgundy region produces some of the best known wines in the world.
* California/Napa Valley - California is held to be one of the brightest stars in the ‘New World’ firmament.
* Cape Winelands - based near Cape Town in South Africa this is now held to be the 7th top ranked wine production region in the world in terms of quantity.
* Champagne - Champagne is the home to the French classic sparkling wine of the same name.
* Hunter Valley - Australia’s Hunter Valley produces all kinds of wines and some highly regarded vintages.
* Loire Valley - this French region is one of the most famous wine-making regions in the world. It is perhaps best known for the white wines it produces but also produces high quality red wines as well.
* Mendoza - based in Argentina, Mendoza has a range of vineyards located by the Andes.
* Oregon - Oregon in the USA has a range of vineyards that produce over 40 different types of highly regarded wines.
* Piedmont - Italy’s Piedmont region produces various highly regarded wines including Barolos and Barbarescos.
* Porto - this Portuguese region is best known for its production of port.
* Rheinhessen - this is the largest wine producing region of Germany. It was once known simply as the home of Liebfraumilch but now produces a variety of highly regarded wines.
* Tuscany - Italy’s Tuscany is probably best known for its Chianti.
Wine in Washington
Washington’s Pacific Rim brand gets rieslings right
PACIFIC RIM brings together several of the critical threads that are weaving the 21st-century Washington wine industry. The brand dates back to 1992, when Randall Grahm — a notoriously wacky California winemaker whose main calling card was his Bonny Doon Cigare Volant (flying saucer) red — introduced a Pacific Rim riesling. It was dry, most unusual for the time, and it was crafted with a mix of grapes from Washington, California and Germany.
Grahm’s interest in Washington riesling hit its tipping point more than a decade later when he decided to radically downsize his Bonny Doon winery and hired Nicholas Quillé to oversee the restructuring. Quillé, who holds degrees in winemaking from the University of Dijon and the University of Reims, along with an MBA from the University of Washington (can you say overachiever?), quickly downsized himself out of a job. Once Bonny Doon had been reduced to a tenth its former size, he began thinking about what to do next.
“I went to Randall and said I thought I could do something with Pacific Rim,” Quillé recalled recently. “It was a 15-minute, Warren Buffett-type conversation. I asked him, ‘Wouldn’t it be nice to have a producer in North America that focuses solely on riesling — someone who would really hang their hat on that grape and take it to a deeper level?’ ”
Grahm agreed to keep the Pacific Rim brand, relocate the winemaking to Washington state and focus almost exclusively on making a full lineup of rieslings. Local partners in the Den Hoed family played a hugely important role, developing a biodynamic vineyard and funding a $5.7 million production facility — stuffed with all the best winemaking toys — that opened in West Richland in time for the 2007 crush.
The first release of the Washington Pacific Rim wines included such innovations as a single-vineyard biodynamic riesling. “The goal,” says Quillé, now the full-time winemaker for the brand, “is to have all the grapes be as close to organic and biodynamic as possible.”
Let’s tally it all up. Washington vineyard expertise and California winemaking credentials. French training and experience. Riesling focus. Biodynamic vineyards and other green inducements, such as a free, biodegradable shopping bag, given away on the Web site (all gone now, sorry). Stitch stitch stitch stitch. It’s no exaggeration to say that Pacific Rim is one of the most thoughtful and timely winery projects to be introduced in this state in at least a decade. And best of all, the wines are excellent, widely available and priced to move.
The brand has grown rapidly. Though 85 percent of the 14-wine total production remains riesling, it also includes a chenin blanc, a gewürztraminer, a raspberry dessert wine and a red blend called Autumnus. Among the new releases for summer are these three recommended rieslings:
Pacific Rim 2008 Organic Riesling ($14) is off-dry, the sweetness perfectly proportionate to the acid, with refined flavors of honey, jasmine and tea. The classy label shows a raised etching of a grapevine with the soil cut away, revealing a trailing root system.
Pacific Rim 2007 Dry Riesling ($11) is a tart, tangy mix of apple, lemon, grapefruit and pear, full and fleshy, with excellent persistence.
Pacific Rim NV ‘White Flowers’ Brut Sparkling Riesling ($14) is their first bubbly, clean and dry with a suggestion of white flowers and citrus. Not at all yeasty or bready, it’s a refreshing sparkler with a crisp finish.
Located on approximately the same latitude (46ºN) as some of the great French wine regions of Bordeaux and Burgundy, Washington State wine “Touring” country includes 9 federally recognized American Viticultural Areas (AVA’s), commonly known as appellations; three of them share territory with Oregon State. Climates of individual Washington wine regions differ dramatically, being cross cut north to south by the Cascade Mountains.
A variety of climates and soils combine with the long summer sunlight hours of northern latitudes to create prime growing regions, predominantly in the valleys and on the hillsides of areas east of the Cascade Mountain range. Washington wineries benefit from grapes ripening in these areas which experience about two more hours of summer sunlight each day than in California wine regions. Gradually cooling autumn temperatures in Washington also help wine grapes reach full maturity, while maintaining desirable acid levels.
Vineyards on the east side of the Cascades grow 99% of Washington’s wine grapes. Seven of the state’s eight official AVA/appellations are located here — the macro appellation of the Columbia Valley encompasses the smaller Yakima Valley AVA, Red Mountain AVA, Walla Walla Valley AVA, Horse Heaven Hills, Wahluke Slope and Rattlesnake Hills (Washington State’s newest appellation). The Columbia Gorge AVA begins at the western edge of the Columbia Valley AVA and continues west and south to areas along the Columbia River in both Oregon and Washington. Two other emerging regions benefit from the huge rain shadow created by the Cascade Mountains, the North-Central Washington region (often referred to as the Columbia Cascade region) and the Lake Chelan area (AVA application in process).
All totaled, Washington wine regions produce more wine grapes than any other state in the U.S., except California. Wine grapes are now the fourth most important fruit crop in Washington State behind apples, cherries and pears. The following wines are in limited distribution. Look for them when in Washington state.
Spring Barrel tasting is your chance to get a jump on tasting and purchasing some of the best wines in wine country. A visit to the Valley on this weekend will allow you to sample yet-unfinished wines from the barrel.
Barrel tasting allows tasters a sneak preview of upcoming vintages from their favorite wineries. This special weekend in the Yakima Valley features winemakers and cellar staff who are on hand to share insights and answer questions on the winemaking process. Many of the 50 participating wineries make special efforts to enhance the wine tasting experience by adding delicious cheeses, sauces, salsas, and even desserts to the mix along with special tastings and education.
As the oldest wine region, or appellation, in Washington State, Yakima Valley has many small wine towns whose residents enjoy sharing a rural lifestyle with visitors. The region produces a wide array of wine varietals grown in vineyards that range from the Yakima Valley to hillside plantings. The three-day barrel tasting allows visitors and locals to leisurely visit the numerous wineries that have made the Yakima Valley region one of the most interesting and prestigious viticultural regions in the country
Wine is made and marketed all over the world nowadays. It used to be that only ‘Old World’ regions such as the wine-making areas of France were perceived to be the best producers here but, nowadays, ‘New World’ regions such as America are producing great quality wines as well. Some of the most famous wine regions include:
* Alsace - the French region of Alsace borders with Germany and is the home to many famous and highly regarded wines.
* Andalucia - this region of Spain is famous for its sherry and its selection of wines.
* Bordeaux - this French region is primarily known for its classic red wines.
* Burgundy - France’s Burgundy region produces some of the best known wines in the world.
* California/Napa Valley - California is held to be one of the brightest stars in the ‘New World’ firmament.
* Cape Winelands - based near Cape Town in South Africa this is now held to be the 7th top ranked wine production region in the world in terms of quantity.
* Champagne - Champagne is the home to the French classic sparkling wine of the same name.
* Hunter Valley - Australia’s Hunter Valley produces all kinds of wines and some highly regarded vintages.
* Loire Valley - this French region is one of the most famous wine-making regions in the world. It is perhaps best known for the white wines it produces but also produces high quality red wines as well.
* Mendoza - based in Argentina, Mendoza has a range of vineyards located by the Andes.
* Oregon - Oregon in the USA has a range of vineyards that produce over 40 different types of highly regarded wines.
* Piedmont - Italy’s Piedmont region produces various highly regarded wines including Barolos and Barbarescos.
* Porto - this Portuguese region is best known for its production of port.
* Rheinhessen - this is the largest wine producing region of Germany. It was once known simply as the home of Liebfraumilch but now produces a variety of highly regarded wines.
* Tuscany - Italy’s Tuscany is probably best known for its Chianti.




