The recent releases from East Kelowna’s SpearHead Winery
provide an early glimpse of the 2019 vintage, at least in the North Okanagan.
The verdict: looking good for what was not an easy year for
growing grapes. Of course, this may be a skewed example: Grant Stanley, the general
manager and winemaker, is superbly experienced and has a good team working with
him.
At last year’s National Wine Awards, SpearHead earned a
seventh ranking among the top 10 small wineries and a sixteenth ranking among
the top 25 wineries in Canada. Good wine is to be expected from SpearHead.
Two of these wines are made with Pinot Noir. Grant once
remarked, when he was the winemaker at Quails’ Gate, that he thought about Pinot
Noir “80% of the time.”
SpearHead, which is a winery he joined several years ago,
specializes in Pinot Noir (and does a good job with Riesling, Pinot Gris and
Chardonnay). Some 80% of the winery’s 15 acres is planted with Pinot Noir. SpearHead
also contracts more Pinot Noir elsewhere in West Kelowna and in Summerland.
This is one of the few wineries making a white Pinot Noir and
it was Grant’s idea. He had to deal with grapes from young Pinot Noir vines
that, because of the youth of the vines, did not make the cut for SpearHead’s
regular Pinot Noirs. Those grapes, however, are excellent for making delicious,
fruity whites.
If memory serves, 2019 is SpearHead’s second vintage of white
Pinot Noir. There is now a following for the wine.
Here are notes on the three releases.
SpearHead Riesling 2019 ($21 for
579 cases). This is a delicious wine but consider laying it down until we are
done with self-isolation. The aromas and the flavours are still restrained but
the upside is considerable. It has aromas and flavours of lemon and lime with a
hint of minerality and the promise of developing light notes of petrol. 90.
SpearHead White Pinot Noir 2019 ($25 for
437 cases). The pale hue of the wine is misleading. There is good weight and
lots of flavour. It begins with aromas of apple and honeydew leading to
flavours of peach and melon. A quarter of a bottle overlooked for several days
in the refrigerator was even fuller in texture and flavour, suggesting this is
also a wine with which to celebrate the end of self-isolation. 90.
SpearHead Pinot Noir Rosé 2019 ($22 for
553 cases). The appeal of this wine begins with the vibrant hue in the glass
(in my view, the ideal rosé colour, achieved with a 48-hour cold soak on the
skins). The wine begins with aromas of strawberry and raspberry, followed by
flavours of strawberry and cranberry. The finish is dry. 90.
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