2008 Syrah Reva Alban Estate

Wine Details
Place of Origin

United States

Edna Valley

Central Coast

Color

Red

Grape/Blend

Syrah/Shiraz

Reviews & Tasting Notes

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This charity event at the Culinary Institute of America last October was special for so many reasons. First and foremost, the tasting and dinner at Press that followed raised over $110,000 for two very worthwhile causes, students in the CIA's wine program and a division of The Mount Sinai Hospital that treats children with terminal cancer. As for the wines, well, they were pretty special, too. The Culinary Institute of America's EcoLab Theater is a dramatic room. Designed as a classroom for cooking demonstrations, the audience is seated amphitheater-style while the presenters are on the ground floor. At times, it can be daunting to look up at all of those people. I did better this year than last year, when I arrived late for my own event! It must have been my Italian genes. By the time I walked into the room, I had spent over a month and a half in California in 2012 alone. During the ten days leading up to this memorable afternoon I had tasted virtually every major Napa Valley wine, many more than once. So, it would have been understandable if the twelve Syrahs I had chosen for the tasting might have suffered in comparison. Instead, the exact opposite happened. I was completely blown away. One after the other, the wines were just drop-dead gorgeous. As my co-host, Karen MacNeil, and I surveyed the wines, I knew instantly it was going to be a great tasting. And it was. Because I usually taste within each region in California separately, I don't often have the occasion to taste one variety across many different appellations. Based on what I heard from the audience, it turns out I am not alone. A number of attendees mentioned how much they enjoyed tasting a wide range of wines from different parts of the state. I felt the same way. I wanted to challenge the audience, and also take some risks. It isn't enough to taste a set of great wines, even when it is for charity. There has to be something more than that. Hopefully something that remains. So I decided to toss out the conventional rule of thumb when it comes to putting wines in flights of going from lightest to richest. I wanted to debunk one of the most common urban myths I often run across; the idea that delicate wines are easily overpowered in a group tasting. In tastings like this, there is often a wine or two that doesn't quite measure up to expectations. On this day, though, all the wines were just fabulous. Frankly, I had a hard time leaving the room. At the end of the afternoon, I could only marvel at the breadth and diversity of the wines we had tasted. For some reason (or reasons) Syrah has never caught on in a big way with consumers. I have heard a number of explanations for that, many of which were discussed during this tasting. There is no low-price, widely available, high quality Syrah in the market a la Kendall Jackson Chardonnay Vintner's Reserve that might turn on wider public, I was told. Others ascribed Syrah's lackluster performance in the market to an incredibly broad range of styles that might be too much for the average consumer to grasp. Fair point. We certainly saw a huge number of unique styles in these twelve wines alone. Some said consumers lack reference points for great Syrahs from France, while the wines of Bordeaux and Burgundy are more familiar. That makes sense, too. But the best California Syrahs need no reference to France, or anywhere else, for that matter. They stand on their own. I also heard that after an initial boom a few years back, Syrah is now overplanted. Not much anyone can do about that, I am afraid, at least not in the near term. Still, it is impossible to miss the central truth. Syrah is one of the most compelling grapes in California. Leaving aside the handful of famous wines that have reached high prices, the vast majority of California's Syrahs remain reasonably priced within the context of the world's great wines. I have no doubt that most, if not all, the bottles in this tasting would sell for two to three times as much if they said ‘Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon' on their labels. Savvy consumers who want to drink the world's best without spending a fortune will want to take a little time getting to know California's top Syrahs.

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"Extended barrel aging is hugely beneficial to the texture of a wine as long as the fruit is up to it," John Alban told me in September."The problem is that some people have watched what others have done, especially Guigal, and tried to copy it, but their wines just weren't built to handle it.You've got to be careful."Alban said that he's very pleased with how grenache has turned out on his estate, noting that the wines tend to be very oxygen-resistant, "which is the opposite of the grape's reputation."He also said that as his vines have matured, he is starting to notice consistent traits in the wines the Alban vineyard produces--"notable chalkiness, which gives a big wine welcome energy."Alban likes the 2011 and 2010 vintages for white wines because they both made wines that have intensity but also freshness and finesse."The 2010 roussanne is probably the most delicate one we've ever made."

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2013 - 2020

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This is a fabulous set of wines from John and Lorraine Alban. Quite simply, I was blown away by what I tasted. As I noted last year, the whites are increasingly made in a more energetic style, not a bad thing as the fruit is already so expressive from the start. Over the years, a similar evolution has taken place with the reds. The inky, black color of the Syrahs is now gone. Today, Alban favors lengthy barrel aging for his top reds, a technique he compares to “braising” in cooking, which requires softer and gentler fermentations at the outset. Beginning around 2006, Alban started doing fewer pump overs and in general encourages longer, slower fermentations. The wines used to go into barrel with some sugar still left to ferment, while today they go in drier than in the past. Over the years, new oak levels have also come down. Most of the current releases are 2008s, a vintage Alban describes as characterized by a spring frost, drought and cloudy days with less heat and sunlight than is typically the case. Readers may want to check out my video interview with John Alban for more on current and upcoming vintages.

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My visit with John and Lorraine Alban and winemaker Glenn Skrabanik was a highlight of the ten days I spent in the Central Coast. I tasted all of the 2008s and 2009 reds from barrel, plus the 2007s from bottle. Those lucky enough to visit the winery won't see barrels ordered by conventional numbers, rather each series of barrels carries the names of thematic categories such as Kentucky Derby winners, Academy Award winners, etc. It is fair to say no one has done more for the Rh?ne Ranger movement in this country than John Alban. First and foremost, the Alban wines have led the way in terms of quality for many years. A founder of the hugely successful Hospice du Rh?ne, Alban has also planted and developed a number of clones that bear his name and that are used widely throughout California. For most of his early years Alban was forced to sell fruit from his property and rent out portions of his winery as a custom crush facility to make ends meet. Amazingly, after all these years 2011 is the first vintage in which Alban is not selling fruit and is vinifying only his own wines. Readers will find no shortage of compelling wines in vintages The 2007s are big, powerful wines that show the opulence and weight of the year. Vintage 2007 was the first of three drought years that followed the generous 2005 and 2006 harvests. Alban gave his three top Syrahs a whopping 44 months in 100% new oak barrels. The 2008s are the product of a season marked by a spring frost. A blast of heat followed over Memorial Day, but the rest of the summer was relatively cool, with little sunlight because of the forest fires that year. As great as the 2007s are, I found myself equally drawn to the 2008s for their greater delineation and complex, multi-dimensional personalities. The 2009s are warm, radiant wines with silky, forward fruit and highly expressive aromatics. The 2008s and 2009s are still in barrel, though, so there is plenty of time to follow their evolution. The 2010 Viognier shows one of the newer directions Alban is moving towards. In 2010 Alban did one irrigation in July to keep the canopy more robust and less deleafing than in the past, plus no batonnage on this wine.