23.4 - 23.7 - Central Coast and Valley, Sierra Foothills, South Coast Flashcards

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1
Q

Describe the size and situation of the Central Coast AVA.

A

Large AVA running from San Francisco to Santa Barbara - 450km long, 95km inland

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2
Q

Name the key moderating influences in Central Coast and give examples of AVAs which are exposed to them.

A

1. Coastal breezes

Monterey - Monterey Bay is has a deep canyon –> afternoon breezes are cold and powerful running through the Salinas River Valley

Edna Valley - just 8km from Ocean with a NW-SE valley to funnel cold air, one of the coolest Californian AVAs

Santa Maria Valley - west-east valley which funnels cool air

2. Altitude

Santa Cruz Mountains - up to 800m ridgeline, cool air slips down in evening so nights are relatively warm

Santa Lucia Highlands - alluvial terraces above Salinas Valley, vineyards planted up to 350m (also cooled by afternoon breeze and fog –> can slow ripening due to closed stomata)

Paso Robles - varied growing environment but some vineyards up to 670m of elevation

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3
Q

Give an example of two AVAs in Central Coast that encompass different growing environments. How do they alter the wine they produce?

A

Monterey - north of valley is very exposed to cool sea breeze –> Pinot Noir, Riesling; inland valley less exposed –> Cab, Merlot, Syrah, Zin; Chardonnay is main planting and grows in both areas

Arroyo Seco - valley floor are exposed to sea breeze –> Chardonnay, Riesling; vineyards in the Canyon are protected –> warmer –> Cab, Syrah, Zinfandel

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4
Q

Describe the growing environment of Monterey. Relate it to the style and quality of wine produced.

A

Climate sometimes powerful cooling influence from Monterey Bay, diminishing inland

Topography largely flat

Soils sandy loam and gravel –> requires irrigation from Salinas River

Grapes varied due to temp differences. Chardonnay is 50% of plantings. Pinot Noir, Riesling near ocean; Cab, Merlot, Zin further inland

Quality flat land and availability of irrigation water –> high vol, inexpensive wines labelled including cross-regional blends

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5
Q

Describe the size, situation and growing environment of Paso Robles. Relate it to the style and quality of wine produced.

A

Size 250,000ha, three times size of Napa –> broken down into 11 sub-AVAs due to varied growing conditions

Situation San Luis Obispo county, directly south of Monterey AVA

Topography valley floor –> mountains 670m

Climate warmer in east further from ocean; Templeton Gap allows breeze to reach further inland to westerly AVAs

Soils Calcareous soil (uncommon in California) + clay allow dry farming

Grapes Mainly black with Cab (40% of total plantings), usual suspects + Rhone varieties

Quality Inexpensive/high vol with some HQ wines e.g. Tablas Creek

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6
Q

How do the AVAs in Santa Barbara county differ from those in the rest of the Central Coast?

What styles of wine are they known for?

A

Transverse Ranges range runs west-east which provides a powerful funnelling effect

Temps are significantly lower + air circulation reduces frost and fungal disease risk

Known for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay with med(+)-high acid, med-med(+) body and high alcohol

Some AVAs also produce Savvy B, Cab, Rhone varieties

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7
Q

Name three notable AVAs in Santa Barbara County. Describe what makes them notable.

A

Santa Ynez Valley cool coastal + warm inland temps incl…

Sta. Rita Hills western edge of Santa Ynez with coolest temperatures + calcium-rich soils –> especially known for PN which can command premium/SP prices

Happy Canyon of Santa Barbara eastern most end, valley turns N-S which blocks ocean influence but altitude moderates –> Cab, Sauvignon, Syrah, Grenache

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8
Q

Contrast the growing environment of the Central Valley with coastal areas.

A

Oceanic influence is greatly/entirely reduced, day time temps 35-40c

Topography is flat throughout much of the valley

Rainfall very low –> vineyards require irrigation

Soil fertile throughout valley

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9
Q

What grape varieties are commonly grown in the Central Valley area. Describe the style of wine for each (5)

A

Colombard neutral white often blended with others and labelled as another variety (only need 75% to label single variety) or labelled “dry white/fruity white”

Chardonnay some RS, med acid, unoaked or oak alternatives

Muscat aromatic simple wines made dry or with RS

Zinfandel either for reds (soft, jammy, oak alternatives) or rose (med pink, med-dry, low alc, med acid, med body, confected)

Merlot med acid and tannin, plummy unoaked or with oak alternative

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10
Q

Name two notable producers in Central Valley.

A

E & J Gallo - largest wine company globally, sells 6.3 mhL

Bronco Wine Company - many brands including Charles Shaw

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11
Q

How is most wine made in Central Valley labelled?

A

“California” - Central Valley nor San Joaquin Valley nor Sacramento Valley have AVAs

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12
Q

How does the growing environment of Lodi AVA differ from Central Valley?

Otherwise, how is it similar?

A

Lodi is exposed to cooling breezes from San Francisco Bay and Sacra-San Joaquin Delta

Similarities…

Climate remains hot and Mediterranean, if less so than the rest of Central Valley

Topography is flat

Free draining sand/clay-loam soils –> irrigation is a necessity

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13
Q

Outline differences and similarities in vineyard management between Lodi AVA and the rest of Central Valley

A

Similarities

Almost vineyards are irrigated due to free-draining soil, high evapotranspiration and low rainfall

Most vineyards pruned and trained to allow for mechanisation –> cordon=trained and VSP (RCP requires more labour)

All grapes planted in CV are also seen in Lodi especially Zinfandel

Differences

Some bush vines especially old vine Zin - sandy soil means no phylloxera

Wider array of grapes from across the world including

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14
Q

Describe the range of price-quality produced in Lodi.

Which sub-AVA is best known for quality Zinfandel?

A

Good-VG, some outstanding priced at inexpensive-premium

Mokelumne River AVA - home to most of Lodi’s old-vine Zinfandel

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15
Q

Where is Clarksburg AVA? Describe its growing environment. Which unusual grapes is it known for?

A

SW of Sacramento, near Lodi

Similar Lodi climate esp. moderating via Delta

Chenin Blanc and Petite Sirah

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16
Q

Describe the key differences in growing conditions between the Central Valley and the Sierra Foothills (3).

A

While both have hot climates with temps 35-40c …

Sierra Foothills moderated by altitude –> plantings up to 1000m in El Dorado AVA

Sierra soil is sandy loam from granite which enables dry farming

Best known for better quality wine esp. old vine Zinfandel (many others planted too e.g. Rhone, Italian, Spanish)

17
Q

Describe the siutation, growing environment and wines of the South Coast.

What challenges has this large AVA encountered?

A

Situation from south of LA to Mexico

Growing environment Warm/hot (latitude) with coastal breeze as moderation

Wines Chardonnay, Cab, Zin, Chenin

Challenges Vineyard land had to compete with development; Pierce’s disease spread in 1990s (but caused refocus on rootstocks and clones designed for quality)