The Singular Beauty Of California Field Blends

If you’re a wine enthusiast, you’ve heard it a thousand times – Great wines are made in the vineyard, or, great wines are made in the field. What if that maxim applied not only to the fruit used to make the wine, but also the process by which the wine is made?

When it comes to wines that are made from a blend of grape varieties rather than from a single grape variety, the reality is that the vast majority of those blends are made in the winery, not in the vineyard or the field.

That’s because virtually all of today’s blended wines are made by blending smaller, individual lots of the grape varieties that were grown and fermented separately so that they can later be ‘back blended’ in the winery by the winemaker depending on the taste of the different lots.

Field Blends

The exception to today’s prevalent back blending practices are field blend wines.

A field blend is a wine produced from two or more different grape varieties (sometimes all red or all white, and sometimes both) inter-planted in the same vineyard, then crushed, macerated, and fermented together. In other words, the wine is blended in ‘the field,’ (vineyard) as opposed to being blended in the winery.

Though it is now a rare practice, winemakers worldwide have been doing this for centuries. In times gone by, before the laser focus on grape varieties and rigorous clonal selections, vineyards were planted with different grape varieties due to the scarcity of equipment required for separate vinification. Planting grape varieties provided an inexpensive way to blend wines. Additionally, planting grape varieties with differing ripening schedules was a hedge against Mother Nature’s vagaries and a way to mitigate risk.

With today’s modern technology and extensive chemical analyses, we know that mixing grapes at crush means fermenting grapes have different levels of acid, tannin, and sugar. The process of co-fermenting grapes also allows differing grape compounds to interact and react with one another. That, in turn, changes the rates and types of chemical reactions that take place during fermentation, ultimately resulting in a more complex wine. It’s also worth noting that surviving field-blend vineyards are at least one hundred years old now. That means you also get old-vine fruit complexity and intensity that further complicate a field blend wine’s character.

By contrast, since a single grape variety fermented by itself never gets exposure to another grape, it doesn’t get the chance to broaden and deepen in flavor. For example, when you co-ferment “you get some added perfume characters that are sort of a melange of those grapes together that you don’t get in wines that are blended later,” says Ravenswood founder Joel Peterson, who has been making field blend wines for more than 40 years. The downside to field blends is that caring for these ancient vineyards is very labor-intensive. Additionally, in today’s market, there is tremendous market pressure for vintage-to-vintage consistency, which is not found in field blends. Mother Nature does not repeat herself, nor should her wines in my view.

Field Blends In California

When Europeans immigrated to California, they didn’t bring grapes with them. They worked with Zinfandel which already had a firm footing in the vineyards. The grape was valued for its large crops and resistance to heat, but other complementary grapes were also planted in the same vineyard for the aforementioned reasons. Thus in California, Zinfandel is the predominant grape in old-vine field blend wines.

For me, two top-of-mind examples of the world-class quality of these anachronistic field-blend wines are two field blends from Ridge Vineyards. Though not labeled or necessarily promoted as field blends, the Ridge Geyserville and Lytton Springs bottlings, produced since 1966 and 1972 respectively, have earned more than their fair share of accolades for decades from all corners of the critical world.

In  My Glass

The Bedrock Heritage wine comes from an archetypal old-vine field blend vineyard. It was planted in 1888 by George Hearst (father of publishing magnate William Randolph Hearst). The vineyard is mostly composed of  Zinfandel sprinkled with as many as 30 other grape varieties including Mondeuse, Peloursin, Serine, Tempranillo, Grand Noir de la Calmette and Negrette,  and Bordeaux varietals. There are also small blocks of Mourvedre, Carignane and other mixed-black grapes like Petite Sirah, Barbera and Alicante Bouschet in the vineyard.

The 2012 Bedrock Heritage is composed of 19 inter-planted varieties from the Bedrock Vineyard. It is roughly 55% Zinfandel, 20% Carignane, with the remainder being all the other co-fermented grape varieties (Petite Sirah, Alicante Bouschet, Mourvedre, Grand Noir, Trousseau Noir, Merlot, Cabernet, Syrah, Tempranillo, Castets, etc.).

The wine was fermented on native yeast, manually punched-down and basket pressed. It was aged in 40% new new French oak. The alcohol is 14.8%

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The wine pours translucent ruby color with expansive exotic aromas of kirsch, lavender, Asian spice, cracked pepper and anise. On the palate the wine is medium-to full-bodied with mouth-watering acidity and well-integrated tannins.  This rich, delicious wine shows swirling myriad of flavors including black cherry,  boysenberry, black raspberry, Asian spice, graphite, espresso and licorice with a long finish.  

Conclusion

California field blends historically very much resemble California and American culture in that they’re a hodgepodge, a melting pot of Iberian, French, Croatian, and Italian grape varieties as well as varieties from the Savoie and the Jura. It’s an interesting mix, and the only thing that is truly Californian.  “California field blends are so utterly singular; no place else in the world makes them and they happen to come from our oldest vines in the most interesting spots,” says Morgan Twain-Peterson, MW Owner/Winemaker Bedrock Wine Company.

But all that history doesn’t mean a thing if California’s old-vine field blends don’t produce authentic world-class wines.

Fortunately for field blend libationists they do!

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6 Comments

  1. Thanks, great piece. Want to share that all ACORN Wines are field blends, made from grapes grown in our Alegria Vineyard. The oldest part of the vineyard was planted in 1890, and our Heritage Vines Zinfandel that is made from those blocks contains 15+ varietals.

    1. Martin D. Redmond says:

      Thanks Betsy. I knew you had some field blend wines, but I didn’t know all your wines are field blends! That’s very cool. I’m gonna have to try to visit in 2018!

  2. Nice explanation of field blends with Bedrock Heritage as an excellent example. Good work, Martin!

    1. Martin D. Redmond says:

      Thanks Jeff!

  3. I have to agree with you. Some of my favorite wines tend to be field blends. Working with the crop you have that year is always preferable to having a formulaic approach. cheers!

    1. Martin D. Redmond says:

      Thanks Amber! I hope all goes well with your trip to England!

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