2007 Quivira Wine Creek Ranch Mourvèdre

Pure Dry Creek Valley Mourvèdre

2007 Quivira Wine Creek Ranch Mourvèdre

Have you ever had a pure varietal mourvèdre wine? I don’t think I had until this one.

Mourvèdre (a.k.a. Monastrell and Mataró) is a common grape in both Spanish blends (as Monastrell) and as a main ingredient in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and CdP-style wines (usually called “GSMs”). But finding it made as a pure 100% varietal wine is a bit more difficult.

I think, after tasting this, I know now where some of the rusticness of GSMs comes from: it’s the “M.” I’ve had plenty of 100% (or dominant 85%+) grenaches and syrahs, from all over the place (France, Spain, California, Washington, Australia) and not one ever felt “rustic” to me. Syrah is bold and powerful; grenache, supple and gorgeous—when done well, of course.

Mourvèdre, on the other hand, is rustic. It’s the Gerald McRaney to grenache’s Jameson Parker. Although McRaney was kind of like syrah, too. Whatever, this is a discussion for another time, anyway.

So, given mourvèdre’s usual place as a blending grape, what does a 100% mourvèdre taste like? Did I mention this is also a certified Biodynamic wine?

In the glass, the wine has a ruby red core that fades to pink edges. On the nose is that rusticness I was talking about: a hint of fruit (cherries and blueberries) but mostly earth, dirt, and chalk, with a hint of barnyard that some freaks like me enjoy, and some non-freaks (maybe like you) might not.

The wine is light-bodied, and crisper than its shade in the glass would lead you to believe. The wine is exceptionally balanced: a bit of biting acidity, some supple, soft tannins, and its not-low 14.7% ABV all come together to sit on a three-way playground see-saw, and no one falls down. The herby-vegetal cherry bush thing is here that I sometimes find in cabernet franc, but it’s nice and subtle. Way more cherry than bush, as it were.

I think I need to find more 100% mourvèdre.

Verdict: B+

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    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Wine Lovernews and Ben Simons. Ben Simons said: RT @stevepaulo: New Notes: Pure Dry Creek Valley Mourvèdre http://j.mp/9kKAw8 <-Love me some Mourvèdre [...]

  • http://twitter.com/vinegeek Jim Wilkerson

    I am a huge Mourvèdre-head. I haven't had the Quivira in years, but have wanted to include it in my Mourvedre Monday series. Sounds like a good bottle.

    I love the Gerald McRaney line, btw.

  • http://twitter.com/vinegeek Jim Wilkerson

    I am a huge Mourvèdre-head. I haven't had the Quivira in years, but have wanted to include it in my Mourvedre Monday series. Sounds like a good bottle.

    I love the Gerald McRaney line, btw.

  • http://www.suburbanwino.com suburbanwino

    Tobacco is one of the telltales of Mourvèdre, I'm told. And while I agree that Copenhagen and Kodiak are very rustic, Skoal is the smokeless tobacco choice of the refined gentleman.

    Skoal is the Pinot Noir to Copenhagen's Mourvèdre, one may say…

  • http://notesfromthecellar.com Steve Paulo

    Glad you approve, Jim. You're the wine blog whateversphere's resident mourvèdre expert, after all!

  • Eric

    Are you sure “rustic” isn’t a euphemism? I had Castano’s 2008 100% Monastrell from Bottlerocket in New York and was offput by the inherent taste of the grape. I’m not surprised it’s almost always in a blend. Can add some tartness when mixed with Syrah. Wouldn’t go back to it, for sure.

  • http://notesfromthecellar.com Steve Paulo

    Eric, I absolutely admit the “rusticness” is not for everyone. If you read through other reviews on the site, you’ll see I like the aroma of cat’s piss in my Sauvignon blanc, and I use “barnyard” and “horse blanket” as positive descriptors.

    To each their own! :)