Roederer Estate L’Ermitage 1993 (Archive)

Reviews

92 Points

Wine Enthusiast November 1, 1999

What is California’s best sparkling winery and wine? I vote for Roederer Estate and its prestige cuvée, L’Ermitage. When all of the Champagne houses were buying land in Napa to establish California outposts, Champagne Louis Roederer settled in cool Mendocino County. With its toasty, hazelnut flavors, L’Ermitage is closest of all the American sparklers to Champagne.

Overview

Founded in 1982, Roederer Estate is nestled in Mendocino County’s fog-shrouded, Anderson Valley. As the California property of Champagne Louis Roederer, Roederer Estate builds upon a centuries-old tradition of fine winemaking. The premium grape growing region’s proximity to the Pacific ocean gives rise to a gentle cycle of warm days and cool nights, allowing grapes to mature slowly on the vine and develop full varietal character.

Among the very few California sparkling wine houses that only sources estate-grown fruit, Roederer Estate is also meticulous about all its farming decisions. The winemaking process begins with in-depth knowledge of the Estate soils to introduce open lyre trellis system or high density plantation, extends to the decision to farm vineyards organically and biodynamically, and finishes by painstakingly tracking grape maturity to achieve perfect balance at harvest.

L’Ermitage, Roederer Estate’s special Tête de Cuvée, is a sparkling wine made only in exceptional years from pre-selected, estate-grown grapes. Carrying on the tradition of Champagne Louis Roederer in France, Roederer Estate produces its sparkling wines in the traditional French méthode traditionelle and adds special oak-aged reserve wines to each blend. L’Ermitage debuted with the 1989 vintage.

Winemaking

Roederer Estate wines are made with juice from just the cuvée pressing; no première or deuxième taille is used. The concept of the vintage L’Ermitage is the same one that is used in Champagne: Only the best of the vintage is selected. These are exceptional wines that create a noble blend that allows for longer aging, which produces a fine wine with elegance and finesse.

Tech

Appellation: Anderson Valley, California, United States

Varietals: 56% Chardonnay, 44% Pinot Noir – 4% aged reserve wine, vintage 1989

Titratable Acidity: 0.86

pH: 2.98

Residual Sugar: 14 g/L

Cases Produced: 5,700 750ml cases

A bottle of L’Ermitage 1993

Tasting Notes

Deep gold color; decent fizz for a wine of that age. Toasty, tart citrus, caramel, still fairly young. Medium bodied and layered. Fine fruit depth and crisp aftertaste.

Latest tasting done on April 2009.