2012 Syrah Coastview Vineyard

Wine Details
Place of Origin

United States

Gabilan Mountains, Central Coast

Color

Red

Grape/Blend

Syrah

Reviews & Tasting Notes

00

Drinking Window

2017 - 2027

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Proprietor Bradley Brown presented a wide range of wines from vineyards in the Santa Cruz and Gabilan mountains. The bottled wines have come in pretty much where I imagined they would. In addition to the bottled wines, I also tasted a handful of wines from barrel that are scheduled for imminent bottling. Unfortunately I did not taste the Frenchie's, as all the unreleased vintages are still in barrel. As I have written here before, Big Basin has gone through a radical style change in recent years. It wasn't that long ago that these wines were inky, deep and super-concentrated. Today, the wines are much more restrained in style. Most of the reds are done with a portion of whole clusters, while neutral oak is much more prevalent throughout the range than new barrels. However, I feel that Big Basin hasn't yet firmly established a house style. That is especially evident in the 2014 Pinots I tasted, all of which are light and lacking in depth today, even for wines made in this style. Some of what I tasted might be attributable to a very early harvest that started in late August, three weeks ahead of 2013, itself an early harvest. However, my instincts say that the desire to pick at lower sugars may have been pushed too far. Of course, time will be the ultimate judge. While seeking balance in wines is a positive, the very word 'balance' denotes a point of equilibrium, not of excess.

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Drinking Window

2015 - 2022

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Big Basin proprietor Bradley Brown began his career as an apprentice of John Alban, so it is hardly a surprise that the early Big Basin wines reflect that influence. Over the last few years, Brown has made a pretty radical shift towards a much lighter style of winemaking. Picking dates have moved up and the overall emphasis today is on freshness. Neutral oak is favored over new barrels, while the use of whole clusters, especially in Pinot, is on the way up. It isn't exactly clear to me yet where Brown and Big Basin will ultimately end up in the stylistic spectrum but it is obvious the wines are quite different in style than they were just a few years ago. At the same time, both 2011 and 2012 are lighter vintages, so vintage characteristics can't be discounted. In 2011 getting full ripeness was very difficult, while in 2012 generous yields resulted in mid-weight wines that are open, supple, but that at times lack structure.

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Drinking Window

2014 - 2024

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Proprietor Bradley Brown crafts some of the most compelling, small-production artisan wines in California's Central Coast. With each passing year, the wines are more refined and polished, making Big Basin one of the most dynamic up and coming wineries in the state. The 2012s are the most promising young wines I have tasted from Big Basin. Harvests have moved up slightly, the use of whole clusters is up and there is more attention to cooperage, all of which bode well for the future. As always, the approach at Big Basin emphasizes native fermentations and malos with extended macerations and only moderate amounts of new oak. Brown felt a few of the Rhone-variety wines need a few additional months in bottle, so I will report on those wines after the summer.