If you have not heard of Meyer Family Vineyards, here is a bit of background. In 2006 JAK Meyer and his family purchased a small 1.62 ha vineyard on the Naramata Bench and in late 2008 they purchased a 6.9 ha property in Okanagan Falls. From these two small vineyards, they produce less than 2000 cases from mature 14 year old vines. Their wine maker, Chris Carson spent eight years in New Zealand, California and Montrachet (Burgundy, France). He especially loves the heartbreak grape, Pinot Noir. He is a graduate of Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand with his Bachelor of Viticulture and Oenology. Chris has in my opinion very good experience in the New World (NZ) style of producing Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, as well as the Old World, working in the famous Montrachet area. (BTW, in the pronunciation of Montrachet, do not pronounce the letter ‘t’.)
As I have been doing in other sit-down tasting reviews, where I can control the timing of the tasting, I taste the wines two times. The first time is shortly after opening the bottle, and the second time is 1-2 days after the initial tasting, so I can see if or how the wine has changed with exposure to air.
The first wine for this review is the Meyer Family Vineyards McLean Creek Road Vineyard Chardonnay 2009 ($35). This vineyard is located in Okanagan Falls, which is south of Naramata in the Okanagan. The vineyard slopes slightly to the south and is slightly warmer than their Naramata vineyard, which in theory should make for riper, more tropical fruit aromas and flavours in this wine. Medium lemon colour in the glass. It has a youthful nose with medium intensity of aromas. Tropical fruit, citrus, vanilla, butter and yeasty aromas. On the palate it is medium plus in body, dry on the palate, smooth mouth feel, with medium plus flavour intensity. For flavours I picked up tropical fruit, citrus, vanilla, honey, butter, oak and almonds. On the second day of tasting, I also noted dried fruit flavours as well. There was a hint of spice on the finish with quite a long length. This is a very elegant wine. Not too oaky. Good fruit. It is ready to drink, but can be aged for a few years.
The last chardonnay is the top tier wine from Meyer Family Vineyards; their Micro Cuvee, Old Main Road Vineyard Chardonnay 2009 ($64.90). According to MFV, “…this is the most complex, balanced, textured Chardonnay wine made of three barrels selected from their “Old Main Road” vineyard. This wine was put together to age and will reward cellaring. The new oak component is identical as the Tribute Chardonnay (33% new French oak) but at this stage the oak is more pronounced than in the Tribute. The new oak component will integrate with the fruit components wonderfully with time in the cellar. The remaining two barrels consisted of a one year and two year old French oak barrel…” This wine is a deep lemon colour. Medium intensity aromas that show some developing characteristics. Tropical fruit, apple, yeast, oak, vanilla, butter and honey aromas. It is dry on the palate with medium plus level of acidity. Very pronounced flavours and quite full bodied. Citrus, tropical fruit, dried fruit, oak, vanilla, butter, honey and some minerality. Lots roundness in the mouth, but has that higher level of acidity to balance it out. There is a tiny hint of spice. The oak is very integrated with the wine. It’s there in the background. I rate this as an outstanding wine and can be aged for further complexity.
If you would like to order any of the above wines, I reviewed, here is the Meyer Family Vineyards online order form link.
The previous two reviews I did for Meyer Family Vineyards are:
Meyer Family Vineyards 2008 vintage
Meyer Family Vineyards 2006 vintage
If you would like to find out more about Meyer Family Vineyards, please visit their website. Enjoy!