2007 Salinia “Heintz Ranch” Syrah

You’re Gonna Love This Syrah; Or, You Really Won’t

Sonoma's Russian River

I struggled with the title of this one a bit. The fact of the matter is that this syrah, from winemaking couple Kevin and Jennifer Kelley of the NPA, is something I liked quite a bit, but I could see how many would not.

Ain’t that the fun part about wine?

Salinia is the Kelley’s micro-winery with a bit more of a traditional place in the wine world than the Natural Process Alliance. For one, Salinia wine comes in glass bottles. The purpose and driving force behind Salinia seems to be pretty different. While NPA wines are all about process (and the extraction of the winemaker from it in many ways), Salinia wines are all about terroir. The specific vineyard sites, and the general location in Sonoma’s Russian River Valley near the town of Occidental, CA, are chosen for what they bring specifically to the wines.

The thing is, that can’t be all there is to it. Terroir is important, obviously, but other wineries source grapes from Heintz Ranch, and I can’t believe they taste quite like this.

In the glass, the ’07 Syrah offering from Salinia is ruby at its core, but lightens to almost-clear, muted pink at the edges. The nose on this wine is stinky (in that way I oh-so-love) with pickle brine, manzanilla olive, and pimento pepper.

On the palate is more of the same. There is good tannin structure here, and as the wine has just been released, it’s entirely possible that with a few years’ time, it will taste nothing like this, but for now: olives. Manzanilla, kalamata, and olive brine. This is like the wine world’s version of a dirty martini.

It’s different, it’s interesting. It’s stinky in a fun, drinkable way. It really tastes very natural, very un-screwed-around-with, which is a complement in and of itself.

Verdict: B+

(photo: Flickr user clkohan / CC BY-NC-ND)

  • http://norcalwingman.com Norcalwingman

    Interesting, stinky olive pickle brine… I had a Shiraz last night and really didn't care for the nose on it… I don't think it was stinky olive pickle brine though… at least yours was drinkable.

    Cheers
    Brian

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  • http://notesfromthecellar.com Steve Paulo

    For me, more than drinkable. But I can see a lot of people getting turned off by the flavor profile here.

  • http://twitter.com/TheNPAhardy Hardy Wallace

    Steve-

    Thanks for the write up on this.

    Just a clarification- The purpose of Salinia and The NPA are the same at their cores- make great wine and don't get in the way of the land. The difference, the NPA is meant for immediate consumption, Salinia to age gracefully.

    Only two labels get Heintz Syrah- Salinia and Heintz Ranch (which Kevin is also the winemaker for)- More wineries get Heintz Chard– Heintz is much different from a lot of CA Syrah– Heintz fruit struggles for ripeness (not just in conversation/ in marketing, but it truly struggles on the vine)- This block fights for 22brix and through that, a lot of other flavors remain present- the olive, brine, pastrami rind (ahhh yeah!), etc…

    For those searching for big fruit, expressions of Syrah- Heintz is not the place. Rather, this place is the blues- It is the dirty struggle that makes this what it is. And like the blues, it may not be for everyone… If it were, we probably messed up somewhere along the lines… ;)

    Thanks for the great notes Steve!

  • http://notesfromthecellar.com Steve Paulo

    And thank you for the clarification and background, Hardy!

  • http://twitter.com/TheNPAhardy Hardy Wallace

    No prob Steve- But I agree, this juice is not what most peeps expect from CA Syrah… But if they don't like it- They get my karate!!!!! ;)

  • http://twitter.com/TheNPAhardy Hardy Wallace

    Steve-

    Thanks for the write up on this.

    Just a clarification- The purpose of Salinia and The NPA are the same at their cores- make great wine and don't get in the way of the land. The difference, the NPA is meant for immediate consumption, Salinia to age gracefully.

    Only two labels get Heintz Syrah- Salinia and Heintz Ranch (which Kevin is also the winemaker for)- More wineries get Heintz Chard– Heintz is much different from a lot of CA Syrah– Heintz fruit struggles for ripeness (not just in conversation/ in marketing, but it truly struggles on the vine)- This block fights for 22brix and through that, a lot of other flavors remain present- the olive, brine, pastrami rind (ahhh yeah!), etc…

    For those searching for big fruit, expressions of Syrah- Heintz is not the place. Rather, this place is the blues- It is the dirty struggle that makes this what it is. And like the blues, it may not be for everyone… If it were, we probably messed up somewhere along the lines… ;)

    Thanks for the great notes Steve!

  • http://notesfromthecellar.com Steve Paulo

    And thank you for the clarification and background, Hardy!

  • http://twitter.com/TheNPAhardy Hardy Wallace

    No prob Steve- But I agree, this juice is not what most peeps expect from CA Syrah… But if they don't like it- They get my karate!!!!! ;)