Thursday, September 29, 2011

J’s Tasting Room Stands Among the Best in the West, by Kasey Wilson of The Dish


Tasting Temptations
Sonoma’s J Vineyards takes the guesswork out of food pairing
Wine Access - The Dish, by Kasey Wilson
October / November 2011

At J Vineyards, food and wine go hand-in-hand.  J’s tasting room stands among the best in the West.

The winery’s owner, Judy Jordan, has been a Sonoma pioneer in her efforts to create an elegant food-and-wine experience for visitors. Touting both sparkling and traditional Burgundian still wines, Jordan offers guests a luxurious take on Sonoma County hospitality.

Judy Jordan, J Founder & President

In 1996, she purchased the former Piper Sonoma winery in Healdsburg, in the heart of California’s Russian River Valley. A few years later, in 1999, she opened J Vineyards’ tasting room. Going beyond basic wine tastings, staff  members offered small food items to complement each wine, showing how what’s in the glass marries with what’s on the  plate.

Eight years ago, Jordan hired Mark Caldwell as executive chef. His job: to create a variety of “ahhh-inducing” dishes to partner with her wines.

Mark E. Caldwell, J Executive Chef

The Signature Bar in the tasting room has art as cool as its bubbly. It’s backed by an impressive 18-by-24-foot, floor-to-ceiling, metal-and-glass installation by Napa Valley artist Gordon Huether. It’s washed with acid and mineral dusts to give it the warm hues of copper. Embedded in it are sparkling nuggets of glass lit by fiber optics, evoking the bubbles in a flute of sparkling wine.

J Signature Bar

On weekends, an enhanced tasting is offered in the Bubble Room, overlooking the gardens and lily pond. As part of this experience, Caldwell prepares several courses to go with a half-dozen wines, all served in the luxuriously appointed salon. Jordan believes Caldwell’s cooking is a perfect match to J’s wines; both wines and dishes have balance, elegance and subtlety.

J Bubble Room

“There’s a lot of experimentation and playing with flavors at J,” says Caldwell. “I reduce down sparkling wines to  make different vinaigrettes, or to make a sauce for oysters on the half shell; or I’ll marinate strawberries in a reduction of our rosé and mint. I’ll also pour sparkling wine on dessert, so it foams up at the last second.”

His experimentation has led to one answer to the ongoing challenge of pairing asparagus with wine. “What I’ve learned,” says Caldwell, “is that steamed asparagus brings out a metallic flavor with wine. If you sauté or roast asparagus, it caramelizes, and shows nicely with the earthiness of a pinot noir.”

His impeccably wine-friendly recipes vary from succulent lobster-shellfish cakes with saffron aïoli (paired with J  Cuvée 20 and the 2009 California Pinot Gris), to chilled carrot-curry soup (see recipe; best with the 2008  Chardonnay and J Vintage Brut). He uses two ’08 pinots — the Russian River Valley, and the Nicole’s Vineyard — in a  reduction to accompany pan-roasted beef sirloin. Even sweets are deserving of pairings, with a dessert of citrus olive-oil cake with rose petal parfait matched to J Brut Rosé.

With an owner intent on upholding gracious wine country hospitality and a chef crafting unforgettable wine and food pairings, J’s tasting room stands among the best in the West.

Chilled Carrot-Curry Soup Recipe
 Photo by Lenny Siegel

Here, Mark Caldwell shares his recipe for a silky, Madras curry-spiked carrot-curry soup. It’s wonderful chilled, but can also be served warm.

2 Tbsp. butter
1 large onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 lb. young fresh carrots, scrubbed then chopped
1 bay leaf
3 Tbsp. Madras curry powder
1 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
1 can (14 oz/398ml) unsweetened coconut milk
3 cups chicken stock


In a heavy medium-sized saucepan over medium heat, melt butter. Add onions and garlic; cook until onions are softened, but not browned, about 5 minutes. Add carrots and 1 tablespoon of curry powder and cook for 5 minutes. Add bay leaf and chicken stock. Bring to boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer soup for 15 minutes. In a small saucepan over medium heat, heat olive oil. Add remaining 2 tablespoons of curry powder and cook, stirring for 1 to 2 minutes.

Stir in coconut milk and cook until thickened, about 10 minutes.

Pour coconut-curry mixture into soup and stir well.  Purée (in batches) in a blender until smooth. Adjust seasonings to taste.  Cover and chill thoroughly, at least 2 hours. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

J Wine Match: 2009 J Vineyards Viognier, Hoot Owl Vineyard

 



 

Monday, September 19, 2011

J Harvest News from our Winemaker, Melissa Stackhouse, Monday, September 19, 2011


Harvest Update by Melissa Stackhouse, VP of Winemaking
Monday, September 19, 2011
With The Cooler Weather, We Wait

I walked through Nicole’s Vineyard early last Friday, tasting fruit that’s slated to be picked over the next few weeks. With the foggy, cool mornings, we’re running a bit behind schedule while Mother Nature warms up.

Nicole's Vineyard

I had the same thought about our Bow Tie Vineyard, located on Westside Road. The clusters are still a couple of weeks from ripening. The vine canopy looks healthy, and the 10-day forecast is for 85-degree daytime temperatures. It’s a Pinot Noir winemaker’s dream forecast.

Bow Tie Vineyard

I should be ecstatic. And I am. But my adrenaline was so revved up during our sparkling wine harvest, which at this point is 80% complete, there’s a part of me that wants to charge forward. 

Full disclosure…I’m an impatient soul. I do understand the importance of long hang-time and the maritime influences that can sometimes bring the harvest to a grinding halt.  I do appreciate and expect a slow ripening, the respiration of acid, waiting for that phenolic ripeness of the grapes seeds, and above all, cheering on those intense flavors we’ve come to expect in our wines.  I’m so excited to get my hands on these beautiful grapes that it’s difficult for me to wait on Mother Nature.

As with every harvest, I have no control. The pace is never in our hands and it unfolds differently each year.  I have no doubt this will be an extraordinary year for Russian River Valley Pinot Noir grapes, but this waiting is killing me!

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

J Vineyards & Winery Barrel Room Video!

J Vineyards & Winery Prepares the Barrel Room
for the Pinot Noir Varietal Wine Harvest!

 
Melissa Stackhouse, J Vineyards & Winery VP Winemaking

J Barrel Room YouTube Link:

Founded by Judy Jordan in 1986, J Vineyards & Winery is an independently owned Sonoma County winery.  The winery kicks off its 25th Anniversary celebration this year on Saturday, September 17, 2011.  To learn more, or to join the J Wine Club, go to www.jwine.com.

Monday, August 29, 2011

J Harvest News from our Winemaker, Melissa Stackhouse (8/29/11)!

Melissa Stackhouse, J Vineyards & Winery VP of Winemaking

The 2011 harvest is now underway for sparkling wine and I'm thrilled to be part of the J winemaking team. I’m also excited about becoming well-versed in the nuances of sparkling wine production.  At J, however, the future is all about varietal wine.

So far the weather has been steady and predictable. Just enough fog in the evening and early morning to moderate the pace of ripening, and just enough sun and heat during the day to move the sugar levels in the right direction.

A faint aroma of the first fermentations is now wafting through the cellar. The winemaking and vineyard teams are out in the vineyards monitoring the grapes, focused on the weather forecast to ensure our decision-making is tethered to sound information. The next couple of weeks will be very busy.

As for varietal
Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, we’re expecting to start picking for the Russian River Valley Pinot Noir in about two weeks, assuming the weather cooperates! Our Chardonnay destined for the Russian River Valley blend is expected to ripen by mid-September. 

The most magical thing about harvest is the twists and turns as we go through it.  We don't have a crystal ball to tell us what the weather will be like, or what sort of vintage this will be. A good friend mentioned once that if there was such a thing as a crystal ball, we'd be making crystal balls rather than wine.  My response to that was, maybe, but it wouldn't be as fun!

Founded by Judy Jordan in 1986, J Vineyards & Winery is an independently owned Sonoma County winery.  The winery kicks off its 25th Anniversary celebration this year on Saturday, September 17, 2011.  To learn more, or to join the J Wine Club, go to www.jwine.com.

Friday, August 26, 2011

J Vineyards & Winery Harvest Celebration Video!

Check out our J Vineyards & Winery Harvest Celebration YouTube video featuring Founder & President Judy Jordan blessing the grapes. Special bonus feature, the crowning of Melissa Stackhouse—Queen of Winemaking.

Melissa Stackhouse & Judy Jordan


J Harvest Celebration Video Link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3gobdWVbyI

Friday, August 19, 2011

J Vineyards & Winery Begins Harvest on Monday, August 22, 2011!


Wineries prepare for harvest to begin next week
By CATHY BUSSEWITZ
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

JOHN BURGESS/Press Democrat
John Erbe, a viticulturlist with J Vineyards & Winery, 
checks the sugar levels of pinot noir grapes on Thursday.
Erbe believes the Healdsburg winery will start the harvest on Monday morning.

There’s excitement in the air as winemakers across Sonoma County hurry through final preparations, or catch their last bit of rest, before the onslaught begins.

The North Coast grape harvest is expected to kick off next week, several weeks later than normal as a result of cool spring weather that slowed the maturation of the region’s $1 billion grape crop.

Melissa Stackhouse, Winemaker with J Vineyards & Winery

“I have the pre-harvest butterflies a little bit, and a general sense of hope that you have before harvest,” said Melissa Stackhouse, winemaker for J Vineyards & Winery of Healdsburg. “Because who knows, it could be really stellar. Harvest unfolds as we’re going through it, and that’s the nice mystery about it.”

In the wee hours of Monday morning, grape pickers will set out at J Vineyards to begin picking pinot noir and chardonnay grapes used to make sparkling wines.


The winery expects to harvest about 20 percent fewer grapes than normal this year, spokesman George Rose said. Rains in June simply knocked the flowers off the vine, so there were fewer berries in each cluster, he said.

“Our winemaking team definitely is gearing up for what they like to refer to as war,” Rose said. “It’s a very grueling process.”

Despite the cool temperatures, vineyards in Alexander Valley and Dry Creek Valley have accumulated about five or six more days of warm temperatures than the same time last year, said Nick Frey, president of the Sonoma County Winegrape Commission.

“We’re going to have the long hang time that winemakers want for flavor depth, but I think we’re in a better position than last year,” Frey said.

The lighter crop is making some grapes ripen faster on the vine, said Chris Bowen, vineyard manager for Hunter Farms in Sonoma Valley. With fewer grapes, the sugar produced by the leaves makes its way inside the grape faster, he said.

Bowen estimates Hunter Farms will start picking pinot noir grapes for sparkling wines in the middle or end of next week for Gloria Ferrer Caves & Vineyards.

“I’m hopeful that we don’t have another harvest like last year, because last year was just slam-bang. We had no letup,” Bowen said. “It would be nice if things went smoothly. They never do.”

Bowen is expecting to harvest about 25 percent fewer pinot noir grapes than an average year. Chardonnay grapes don’t look quite as bad, and some of his merlot and cabernet grapes look good, while others don’t.

To the west in the Russian River Valley, Iron Horse Vineyards is poised to start picking grapes for its sparkling wines in about 15 days, based on the sugar content of the grapes, winemaker David Munksgard estimated.

“It’s kind of like crystal ball-ing right now,” Munksgard said.

When J Vineyards starts picking, Munksgard can practically set a clock and assume Iron Horse’s grapes will be ready for picking within a week or two.

Iron Horse is racing to get bottling done now so it can hopefully give the crew a long weekend off before the madness of harvest begins.

“There’s all kinds of obstacles in your way, but at the end of the day, after all the agonizing and worry about the harvest, it’s suddenly here,” Rose said.


Copyright © 2011 PressDemocrat.com — All rights reserved. Restricted use only.



Monday, August 15, 2011

Featured Club J Members "Ingrid Korgemagi & Bob Lillie"



FEATURED MEMBERS

What Ingrid & Bob Have To Say About J Vineyards & Winery!

“Sharing a fun photo of my friend Tara and I enjoying J Brut Rosé this summer at Lake Cumberland, Kentucky. We visited J last May and did a very thorough tasting with Ron Clark (Mr. Suspenders) and enjoyed the wine and the company so much that we joined the Wine Club!  J was the most memorable of the trip, primarily because of Ron.  We are looking forward to coming out again for a visit to J!”

- Ingrid Korgemagi & Bob Lillie


Ingrid Korgemagi & Tara Sheff
Enjoying J Brut Rosé on Lake Cumberland, KY


J NV Brut Rosé 


How long have you been a J Club Member?

Ingrid & Bob: Since May 2010!


What do you like best about Club J?

Ingrid & Bob: Getting J Wine Club shipments sent to our friends in Ohio, Jim & Tara Sheff (also J Wine Club Members), as wines can’t be sent to Kentucky, and most J wines are typically not available here in Kentucky retailers, which is sadly most of the J product line.
J Vineyards Nicole's Pinot Noir

What is your favorite J Wine & Food Pairing?

 Ingrid & Bob:  My personal favorite is the Nicole's Vineyard Pinot Noir with basically anything. My husband Bob makes excellent homemade pizza and we'll pull out a bottle for pizza or to accent any other great meal with friends.  Being avid boaters, there can be a J Wine paired with appetizers before dinner. 

We have really enjoyed the Vin Gris with homemade Applewood smoked pork chops.


J Vineyards Vin Gris

            
Special Interests you would like to share about you?

Ingrid & Bob:  We are avid boaters, tech junkies, and consumers of good food and wine, both at home and on trips cross country.  It's not uncommon for us to go out with close friends and have a four hour dinner as the focus of our night out!

To inquire about becoming a Featured Club J Member, please contact Elisa Brennan at elisa@jwine.com, or visit our J Tasting Room and the Wine Specialists will be happy to obtain your feedback and photo.


We look forward to seeing you featured on the J Vineyards & Winery Facebook Fan Page!









   

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Bubble Lady - Judy Jordan has built J Vineyards and Winery into a top-name sparkling wine house, Press Democrat, July 23, 2011




Bubble Lady


Judy Jordan has built J Vineyards and Winery into a top-name sparkling wine house


By VIRGINIE BOONE FOR THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Published: Saturday, July 23, 2011 at 3:00 a.m.



SCOTT MANCHESTER / For The Press Democrat
With J Vineyards sparkling wine in hand, Judy Jordan, Founder and President of J Vineyards & Winery and second generation vintner, during her 50th birthday party cruise on the San Francisco Bay on the Empress of Sausalito motor yacht on Saturday night June 11, 2011.

Judy Jordan was only 25 when she leveraged the resources and knowledge of her dad, Jordan Winery founder Tom Jordan, to launch her own sparkling wine house, J Vineyards & Winery.  A geology graduate and college tennis star out of Stanford, she settled on the Russian River Valley as her base.

“If I were talking to the 25-year-old who started this company and I remember enough about her, she was spicy and spunky,” Jordan recalled. “At that time I really believed that nothing could get in my way, and I was so passionate about sparkling wine and about geology and about the Russian River Valley.”

Recently 50, she's still at it, having turned J into a marquee name in Sonoma County and a popular bubbly brand across the country.  Along the way, she has survived floods and down markets, winemaker changes and a move into varietal wines.  As a single, very much working mom, she is also raising two kids, Nicole and Robert, now in their teens.

“What I didn't know at 25 was how many times I was going to run up against walls and how many times you think you're on a certain path and are sure that's the right path and bam. You hit a wall,” she said.

 Judy Jordan, 1987

“And how often, with a big sore on your head, you move back from it and go, okay, that hurt, and finding how to get around that wall and finding a path that works.

“I'd say, don't get so wrapped up in the emotional swings.  Now what I know is, you get through it. Sometimes it has not been a pretty landing, but I have ended up on my feet.”


Emotional swings indeed. The ambient lighting in Jordan's winery office gives off an air of calm, as does the soft-spoken, deliberate Jordan, tall and still athletic with blonde, short-cropped hair.

So singularly committed to making sparkling wine, Jordan still is mired in a business that's not always joyful.  She is committed to a product that's expensive to make and subject to the weather, market fickleness and a never-ending parade of competitors and Johnny-come-lately trends in taste and price.

J  Sparkling Wine

“You either continue to make smaller quantities at very high quality and you position your wines that way, which is what we choose to do,” she said, “or you make a lot of wine.  After 25 years we're all-American, high-quality from Russian River Valley vineyards, but we also like to think of ourselves as fun, as joyous and attainable.”

Adaptation has been key.  In the last year Jordan has hired former Kendall-Jackson public relations king pin George Rose to take on J's communications needs.  She also has lured winemaker Melissa Stackhouse away from La Crema to make J's sparkling and varietal wines, starting this harvest.  She takes over from Jordan's personal friend George Bursick, who wanted to go back to consulting.

Melissa Stackhouse, J Vineyards & Winery Winemaker

“What appealed to me about coming to work for J is Judy's offbeat sense of humor and sharp independent streak,” said Rose.  “She brings a sense of fun and a uniquely all-American spirit to the winery that, when mixed with hard work, brings out the best in people.”


Stackhouse is happy to get back to making more artisanal pinot noir and chardonnay, noting that “Judy is very focused on producing world-class varietal wines from her 10 Russian River Valley estate vineyards.”

 J Sparkling, J Vineyards Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, J Pinot Gris

In the early days, the wines were made in an old, ramshackle prune processing barn without indoor plumbing and a leafy roof.  In 1995, it flooded under five feet of water.

The first release, a 1987 J Vintage Brut, came into the market in 1991 at about the exact moment the Gulf War in Kuwait began.  Jordan and her team pounded every strip of pavement across the U.S. to sell 4,000 cases in 32 cities.

Sales eventually added up, and Jordan was able in 1997 to buy the Piper Sonoma winery, another sparkling producer, on Old Redwood Highway south of Healdsburg, where J still sits.  Included in the deal were 118 acres of vineyards in the Russian River Valley.

J Vineyards & Winery Entrance

Jordan now owns 10 vineyards laced throughout the Russian River Valley, leveraging one to get another one and paying off debt as she went so she could be ready to grab more vineyard land.

“I do believe things go in phases,” she said.  “That's the great opportunity in life, to re-invent and re-engineer yourself to be relevant for new times.  It's very important to stay relevant and avant-garde.”

Convinced of sparkling wine's ability to pair with a wide range of food, Jordan was among the first in Sonoma County to devote a part of J's tasting room to food and wine pairing, starting in 1999.  The Bubble Room remains popular.

J Bubble Room Experience

Now she's pushing forward with J pinot noir, chardonnay and pinot gris to further make that point.  After all these years, she doesn't want to have all her eggs in the sparkling wine basket, stressing that she likes and needs diversity.

“I had a midlife crisis a few years ago, a teenage crisis because I wasn't quite midlife yet.  Midlife is at 60, I hear,” she joked.

“I purchased this winery back in 1997, and it was a very big deal for me.  I put a little bit of money down and had to pay it off with lots of debt and (was) mortgaged up the wazoo.  It forced me to make the decision in the early 2000s, what did I want to be when I grew up? A big sparkling wine house or did I want to be high quality?  I chose the latter.”

Her decision to broaden has been challenging because people often tell her that if you're a sparkling wine house you're not capable of being a quality pinot noir or chardonnay house.

J Barrel Room
Producing High-Quality Pinot Noir & Chardonnay

“I'm very competitive by nature, and I'm like, okay, says who?” Jordan countered.

Her brother John agrees.  He is CEO of Jordan Vineyard and Winery, the Alexander Valley winery started by their parents, Tom and Sally Jordan.

“Judy has always been fiercely independent and unafraid to approach the business in her own way,” he said.

Ultimately Jordan is proudest of the fact that her kids have witnessed her evolution.

J  Vineyards Pinot Noir

“It's a joy to have built a business as a single mom and have my kids see what that's like, to go through the ups and the downs,” she said.

“I've been scurrying around and scurrying around the last 25 years, and now I feel this is home, I can settle down.”

SCOTT MANCHESTER / For The Press Democrat
Judy Jordan, Founder and President of J Vineyards & Winery and second generation vintner, tries on the captain's hat on the Empress of Sausalito motor yacht during her 50th birthday party cruise on the San Francisco Bay on June 11.


CELEBRATE J's ANNIVERSARY
A celebration of J's 25th Anniversary will be held September 17 at the winery's Visitor Center and Bubble Room, in tandem with the winery's annual harvest event.  The festivities are from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will feature specialty food producers and tastings of past, present and future J wines.  Admission is $55, which includes a commemorative glass and culinary creations by J's Executive Chef Mark E. Caldwell.

To purchase tickets in advance, call 431-5430.  http://www.jwine.com

Virginie Boone is a freelance wine writer based in Sonoma County. She can be reached at virginieboone@yahoo.com.