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Recommendations
Wine
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avid
Bruce was a teetotaling Stanford graduate when he first
learned about Pinot Nior from legendary winemaker Martin
Ray. |
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In the 1980s, he was determined to get to the bottom
of what he calls "the greatest of the four great grapes
of this world-Pinot Nior." His wines found their footing
and became steady and reliable performers. |
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Bruce
went on to become one of the first post-Prohibition
winemakers in the Santa Cruz mountains to advocate
traditional French winemaking practices-even preceding
such pioneers as Dick Graff at Chalone and Dave Bennion
at Ridge. That and his dogged commitment to perfection
later made for an epiphany, and, since then, Bruce's
Pinot Noirs have become benchmarks in California.
It
all started when he founded his winery in Santa Cruz
Mountains in 1964 and began experimenting. He did
strange things like making the powerful red Zinfandel
grape into white wine. He toyed with Petite Sirah,
thinking it was the famous Syrah of Hermitage. Gewurtztraminer
and Grenache came under his gaze. He worked with pretty
much every grape that was available to him.
The
1970s were exploratory, as Bruce made wines from eleven
different California counties. It was during this
phase of his apprenticeship that he zeroed in on the
remarkable differences among varietals.
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But
it wasn't until the 1990s that quality skyrocketed.
From 1994 on, none of his Pinot Niors have scored
less that 90 on the GV500 scale. They've scored similarly
high with winemakers although the national wine critics
are just now beginning to pick up on this explosion
of quality.
Bruce
hasn't achieved this high quality by making tiny lots,
either. He currently has six Pinot Nior labels, with
an average production of 5,200 cases for each one.
Ever marching to his own drummer, Bruce doesn't rely
on any one region, appellation, or vineyard for this
performance. He cherry-picks Pinot Nior from the best
regions of the state and turns the grapes into stunning
wines.
Asked
the secret of his recent success with the traditionally
difficult Pinot Nior grape, Bruce says, "Loads and
loads of mistakes. Years ago we made wine by the seat
of the pants, but eventually we learned from our mistakes
and graduated to understanding the delicate personality
of the Pinot Nior grape. We learned a lot about wine
chemistry and the best region to grow Pinot."
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| David
Bruce Winery is quickly becoming one of the premier
Pinot Nior preoducers in California-- crafting wines
not only of very high quality from several appellations,
but with good availability as well. Above: The
winery was founded in 1964, but only last year was the
super-modern facility built. Above Right: The
winemaking team: From left, Ken Foster, productiion
manager; David Bruce winemaker; Tony Creig, enologist.
Lower Right: Bruce's 1997 Pinot Noir line-up
scored high with the regional winemakers. |
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He
says that any winemaker worth his or her salt wants to make
great Pinot Nior. "If you want to learn how to make wine,
start with Pinot. If you can make good Pinot, you can make
good anything."
And
what, precisely, does he do with all that cherry-picked
fruit to preserve its quality and get in into the bottle?
"I like very warm fermentations," he says. "They give more
complexity. Cooler fermentations give a simpler, Beaujolais
quality."
And?
"Well, I do a lot of foot crushing," he says. Foot crushing
enough grapes to make 40,000 cases of wine? "When I first
started making wine, I foot crushed everything," he says.
"It
was 3 A.M. and I was naked in the vat, stomping away, when
I suddenly realized what I was doing. After all isn't the
winemaker's job to extract just the right amounts of color
and flavoring elements out of the grapes skins, stems, or
seeds, therefore leaving no bitterness. And what is the
most important aspect of a great Burgundy or Pinot Nior?
It's that wonderful velvet texture."
"The secret of great wine is to get every drop of extract
from the grapes, but not a drop too much. It takes four
or five days to foot crush all the grapes; and in that time
you get some carbonic maceration, and the fruit that is
crushed soaks in the juice before the fermentation gets
going. All this adds complexity."
"I just about killed my crew in 1997," he admits. "We foot
crushed every drop of Pinot Nior that year. So now we have
two rotary tanks-the closest thing to foot crushing there
is. The weight of the grapes crushes them. But we still
use foot crushing for our finest wines."
Early in his winemaking career, David Bruce swore that he
would make the finest Pinot Nior ever made. Has he done
it? That's for you to decide. Bruce says that's his commitment,
and that's the drum to which he will continue to march.
David
Bruce Winery is located in the Santa Cruz Mountains near
Los Gatos, California.
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