Palate

We find a range of flavors here, my favorite of them the dark fruits like blackberry and cassis. The fruit is followed by a selection of spices that range from cinnamon to nutmeg.

Growing Conditions

Grapes for this wine come from our home ranch parcel that sits between the Left Bank vineyard at 400-600 feet elevation, and the AME parcel at 800 feet elevation. The soil
here is a mix of basalt that has been broken down to scree, then combined with both gravel and clay. This provides the vines with ample water during the growing season, but naturally restricts nutrient uptake which serves to control the vigor of the vines.

Winemaking

We hand-harvested the grapes for our Neyers Ranch bottling of Cabernet Sauvignon. The grapes were destemmed at the winery—but not crushed—then pumped to a stainless steel fermentation tank and slightly chilled. We don’t add cultured, laboratory yeast to ferment our wines, so the native yeasts began to work on the fourth or fifth day. We circulated the must twice daily for about 30 minutes in the morning and again in the evening, and kept up that schedule for a full month. At the end of 30 days or so, the tanks were drained and the saturated pomace pressed in our three-ton Bucher
tank press. The new wine was settled for 48 hours, then racked to 60-gallon French oak barrels. We typically use 30–40% new oak to age our Neyers Ranch Cabernet
Sauvignon. After 18 months in barrel, the wine is given a final racking, then bottled—unfiltered and unfined.