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Martin Ray planted
Pinot Noir at Mount Eden in 1945. The
budwood came from Paul Masson's original
vineyard near Mount Eden. Because Masson
was a good friend of the Louis Latour
family of Burgundy, it is likely the
selection came from one of Latour’s
finest vineyards and was brought by
Masson to California during the 1880s.
The faith Ray demonstrated in this
difficult red wine variety, at a time
when America had little appreciation of
fine wine, was remarkable. Today, Pinot
Noir vines occupy seven acres of our
estate vineyard and typically yield a
meager one to one-and-a-half tons per
acre. |
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Pinot Noir is the
first variety harvested at Mount Eden,
kicking off the vintage season. Using
natural yeasts, fermentation is
conducted in small open-top fermentors
and extends ten to fourteen days, with
the must punched down by hand. The new
wine is immediately put into 75% new and
25% one-year-old French Burgundy
barrels. It matures for eighteen months
before being bottle unfined and
unfiltered. Nothing is added; nothing is
taken away. |
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Due to the soils
in the vineyard, the Estate Pinot Noirs’
elegant, transparent style is more
Burgundian than Californian, emphasizing
wild strawberry, earth, blueberry and
dill varietal characters. Cellaring the
wine from five to twelve years pays
handsome rewards. |
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