Description
Silver Oak Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2016
The 2016 vintage was an exceptional growing year across all our vineyards, despite being the fifth consecutive year of drought in the Napa Valley. Ideal weather conditions from spring through summer created the backdrop for a vintage with a lot of potential. Mild temperatures during ripening presented plentiful fruit and provided an environment for steady and smooth development of flavors and aromatics. We saw early fall rain in October, shortly after the last of our fruit from Jump Rock Vineyard came into the winery.
The expressiveness of this vintage’s generous crop resulted in a beautiful and plush wine with good balance and nice integration of tannins.
Our 2016 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon is comprised of 78.9% Cabernet Sauvignon, 15% Merlot, 3.5% Cabernet Franc, 2.3% Petit Verdot and 0.3% Malbec. In early 2017, the final blend was transferred to American oak barrels from our cooperage, The Oak, where it aged for 24 months. Of these barrels, 84% were new, providing a layered expression of bay leaf, coconut and vanilla to our wine. Blending before barrel aging—a signature of our winemaking style—allows blends to be based on the inherent qualities of their vineyard components before oak influence. Vintage to vintage, the resulting Cabernets emerge integrated and ready to drink upon release.
Silver Oak Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon features a deep ruby red color, is an opulent wine with notes of cassis, ripe raspberry, toasted coconut and shiitake mushroom. This wine has a rich entry, depth through the mid-palate, great structure without being heavy and exceptional length on the finish. Fresh cherry flavors balanced with floral notes and a subtle hint of black pepper add a beautiful complexity. Plush tannins lend to its ageworthiness. Given proper cellaring conditions, this wine will show beautifully through 2040.
Silver Oak Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon Notes To Your Senses:
- APPEARANCE: Deep ruby red
- AROMA: Cassis, ripe raspberry, toasted coconut and shiitake mushroom
- TASTE: Rich entry, depth through the mid-palate, great structure, fresh cherry flavors balanced with floral notes and a subtle hint of black pepper add a beautiful complexity
- FINISH: Exceptionally long and lingering
- ABV: 14.5%
- PAIRING: Steaks, braised beef or roasted lamb
Cabernet Sauvignon:
The style from California is still a trademark today. The concentration of fruits produces rich, lush wines. It’s the highest selling and most popular in the country. While that’s not all, it is the most planted wine grape in the world. So, if this is a new product you’re wondering about, give it a try, it’s a popular and most loved grape for wine!
This well-crafted wine is an offspring of Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon Blanc. It’s higher levels of an aroma compound, Methoxypyrazine makes it noted for the aromas of green peppercorn, black currant, and black pepper. This compound is due to the excessive growth of the leafy part of the vine.
Don’t beat yourself down if you’ve ever thought it tasted close to a glass of Merlot. They are closely related and it’s difficult to even tell the difference for many!
Now, let’s get to the best part of Cabernet Sauvignon, the profile. Since it’s grown in a wide range of climates and regions it has a variety of flavors. Cabernet is a full-bodied red wine with dark fruit flavors.
The taste resembles fruits like black cherry, black currant, and blackberry. Oak is usually incorporated for 9-18 months. It has a medium acidity and medium Tannin. Generally, the ABV is between 13.5-15.5%.
Since Cabernet is a complex and layered wine, the food pairing best for this would be high-fat foods. Charred burgers, mushroom pizza with tomato sauce or a juicy, big ribeye steak, or even braised short ribs.
Red Wine:
Bringing out the best aromas and flavors of red wine can be achieved through the correct storage of temperature, generally between 50 to 55 degrees. Of course, this is a general rule of thumb as it depends on the grapes used when producing wine. There are so many health benefits due to the tannin. Procyanidins are a type of condensed tannin that is found in green tea and dark chocolate. Speaking of health young red wines are better than old as they have more tannin. However, as red wine ages, they become lighter. Very old wines are translucent and pale.
Vitis vinifera originating from Eastern Europe makes up most of the common varieties of red wine. The aromas of red wine come from grapes only. Cherry, berry, jam, and herbs are all from fermented grapes and wine aging in oak barrels. Pretty simple for such a rich, complex, and tasteful wine!
Master Sommelier Little Known, Big Facts:
- The color of wine depends on the fermentation extracts using skin, like Red wine as compared to white wine, leaving the skin behind
- The oldest bottle of wine dates back to A.D. 325; it was found in Germany inside two Roman sarcophaguses
- The worst place to store wine is usually in the kitchen because it’s typically too warm, in refrigerators, their warmest setting can be too cold
- Richer heavier foods usually pair well with richer, heavier wines; light wines pair with lighter foods
- Generally, a vintage wine is a product of a single year’s harvest, not when the wine is bottled
- A “dumb” wine refers to the lack of odor while a “numb” wine has no odor and no potential of developing a pleasing odor in the feature
- If a server or sommelier hands you a cork, don’t smell it, look for the date or other information ( mold, cracking, or breaks)
- Tannin is a substance that tingles the gums when you indulge your palate with a sip of wine, it’s an excellent antioxidant
- Smell is by far the most important sense when it comes to drinking wine
- Wine was first developed in Mesopotamia, not France
- French wines are labeled following the soil on which they are produced, not according to the grape used
- When chilling wine, adding salt to ice will cool it down faster
Warnings:
You must be 21 or over to purchase this product
Instructions:
Serve chilled or at room temperature
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