Photo: Quails' Gate winemaker Nikki Callaway
The most recent six-wine release by Quails’ Gate Estate
Winery are all from the superb 2016 vintage.
The British Columbia Wine Institute summed up the vintage
this way: “Early spring heat started off an excellent growing season which was
slowed down by a cooler start to the summer and an extended fall season; it all
adds up to an excellent 2016 vintage.”
“Harvest started early on the morning of September 6 for
Quails’ Gate Winery, with picking of MarĂ©chal Foch from the winery’s property
on Boucherie Road in West Kelowna,” BCWI reported. “Winemaker Nikki Callaway
said this year’s harvest was seven to 10 days ahead of previous vintages. ‘I
think it is an exciting vintage,’ she said.”
Several factors made the vintage as good as it proved to be.
To begin with, the winter of 2015/2016 was relatively mild and the vines came
through it without any bud damage.
Secondly, BCWI noted that it was “an atypical spring with
extremely warm weather that provided more Growing Degree Days (GDD) in April
than any other April in the last 19 years. Budbreak was the earliest on record,
as much as six weeks early in some areas, and was followed by early flowering,
about two weeks ahead of normal.”
BCWI added: “GDD remained ahead of any other year with
temperatures reaching the mid to high 30s until the week of June 19 when the
weather changed.” The temperatures were moderate, but ideal for vine growth,
until a more typically warm August arrived.
Without the blistering heat that often occurs in July and
August, grapes matured more gradually, retaining good fruit flavours and
natural acidity.
The bonus for the growers: the early spring and the benign
growing conditions delivered tonnages of healthy grapes that were larger than
expected. There are bountiful volumes of 2016 wines. Quails’ Gate, for example,
has been able to release more than 10,000 cases of its estate Chardonnay – and
that does not count the volumes of reserve Chardonnay.
“Because of the early heat, veraison came about two weeks
early for some, but was reported as protracted,” BCWI said. “Unlike summers
past [or unlike 2017], forest fires were not an issue for grape growers” in
2016.
The vintage was not entirely trouble free – none ever is –
but, for the most part, it gave winemakers the tools to make first rate wines.
And Nikki’s wines do the vintage proud.
Here are notes on the wines.
Quails’ Gate
Chardonnay 2016 ($22.99 for 10,600 cases). This is the wine for those who
lean to unoaked Chardonnay. Most of the wine was aged in stainless steel. A
small portion was aged in older oak to add texture, mouthfeel and just a subtle
note of oak. The wine is crisp and fresh, with aromas of citrus and apple
leading to flavours pf apple and nectarine. 90
Quails’ Gate Stewart
Family Reserve Chardonnay 2016 ($39.99 for 2,345 six-pack cases). This wine
was fermented in French oak barrels (new and used),where it went through
malolactic fermentation and regular battonage (stirring of the lees). The wine
begins with appealing buttery aromas mingled with notes of oranges. On the
palate, the texture is rich, almost creamy, with flavours of tangerine and ripe
nectarine. The intensity of the flavours increased as the wine warmed in the
glass. 93.
Quails’ Gate
Rosemary’s Block Chardonnay 2016 ($44.99 for 685 six-pack cases). This
wine, along with the Richard’s Block Pinot Noir, are premium small lot wines
available just at the winery. The grapes are from the two best blocks of
Chardonnay in the vineyard. They get the full treatment: whole-cluster pressed
into new and older French oak barrels. The wine was fermented in barrel where
it went through full malolactic fermentation and was aged 11 months on the
lees. It was stirred regularly. One word describes the memorable wine: rich.
The wine begins with complex aromas of citrus, ripe peaches, cloves and toasted
almonds. The layered flavours include ripe apple, butter, and tangerine. Bright
acidity balances the power of this wine, leaving a lingering and refreshing
finish. 94.
Quails’ Gate Pinot
Noir 2016 ($26.99 for 5,450 cases). This wine was aged 10 months in French
oak, long enough to polish the silky texture without imparting noticeable wood
to the intense red berry aromas and flavours. Medium-bodied, the wine has good
length and a long finish. 90.
Quails’ Gate Stewart
Family Reserve Pinot Noir ($49.99 for 2,208 six-pack cases). The style of
this wine leans less to the power of the Richard’s Block and more to elegance.
It begins with aromas of plum, cherry and spice that lead to dark cherry
flavours on a firm palate. Still youthful, the wine, which was aged 10 months
in French oak, should be decanted to immediate consumption. The better idea
would be to lay it down. It should peak within a decade. 92.
Quails’ Gate
Richard’s Block Pinot Noir 2016 ($54.99 for 652 six-pack cases). Nikki went
to considerable lengths to produce a great wine. Each of the four clones – 115,
667, 777 and 828 – was fermented separately in stainless steel with both
indigenous and cultivate yeast strains. The lots were blended and aged in
French oak for about 11 months. The dark colour in the glass signals that this
is a powerful wine. It begins with aromas of black cherry, plum and spice. The
rich palate delivers flavours of plums and dried cherry with classic notes of
savoury, forest floor flavours on the finish. With its intense flavours and
structure, this wine will keep getting better as it ages until it peaks in about
10 years. 95
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