No Neil Young jokes, thank you very much
The “Harvest Moon” is the closest full moon to the autumnal equinox. Your ancestors would have known all about it! But you didn’t listen to them, because old people are boring. That’s why you’re not only ignorant about the harvest moon, you also don’t know anything about your family history, or how to fix stuff, and instead your cerebral storage is at capacity with junk you found more interesting, like the complete lyrics to the GI JOE cartoon theme song, including the spoken part in the middle about “its purpose: To defend human freedom against Cobra.”
The harvest moon is named, of course, for the “har-vest,” a sleeveless hunting garment once worn by frontiersmen pursuing autumn game to feed their families. Traditionally made of bear fur—or “bar har,” in frontierspeak—the har-vest was both a practical piece of outerwear and an important symbol of its wearers’ hunting prowess. Though no one wears har-vests anymore, they live on in our lexicon: Hunters still talk of “harvesting” deer in the fall, as well as the importance of our Constitutional right to bare arms.
It is appropriate that Harvest Moon Estate and Winery would take their name from this important but largely forgotten piece of historical Americana, as they, being wine folk, are all into heritage and what-not. They grow, produce, and bottle their stuff in the Russian River Valley, which a lot of people think was named for the Russian-American Company that explored it, but which actually derives its name from the springtime mountain snow melts, during which the swollen river is “rushin’.”
Two of the Harvest Moon wines in this case pay tribute to the river in their names, the 2008 Estate Russian River Valley Pinot Noir (two bottles) and the 2006 Russian River Valley Zinfandel (two bottles). Harvest Moon’s whole deal is that wines from their neck of the woods can hold their own with any Pinot Noir or Bordeaux variety in the world. That being the case, why wouldn’t they name-check their home river valley right there on the label, right? Personally, we hate it when drink-makers play sneaky with their names, trying to front like they’re from somewhere they’re not. For example, did you know AriZona iced “tea” is actually from Woodbury, New York? For real.
There’s no such shenanigans going on with these Harvest Moon wines. They’re Californian and proud. In fact, this whole case is like a love letter to Sonoma County, written in wine instead of ink. Now, you might say: “That’s an expensive waste of wine, writing love letters with it! And probably not even particularly legible! They would have been much better off writing their letter with a regular old ball-point pen!” And you may be right about that. But you are also apparently an idiot, because there is no LITERAL love letter, we were trying to be poetical, obviously, duh.
Anyway, in addition to the Pinot and the Zin, this case comprises two bottles each of Harvest Moon’s light-bodied, bone dry 2010 Estate Dry Gewurztraminer, their 2009 Sonoma County RandyZin, the 2008 Dry Creek Cabernet Sauvignon and the 2008 Sonoma Harvest Proprietary Blend, a perfectly balanced red wine for the dinner table.
Wine, as the Harvest Moon Estate gang knows, can be a great vehicle for learning about history, culture, and the natural world. Slug a bit of the Pinot, and meditate on the Mendocino County forest fires of 2008, the haze from which filtered the sunlight that grew these grapes, lengthening the ripening period. Or kick off your shoes, drain a glass of the RandyZin, and you’ll gain a better understanding of that seemingly paradoxical, fun-yet-substantive, casual-yet-ambitious California character. Or drink both bottles of the Gewurztraminer some evening by yourself, and learn something new about how the human excretory system works.
But then again, maybe you won’t. Maybe you’ll just swig these precious potables like so much grape-ade, since you’re obviously one of these people who regularly misses opportunities for horizon-broadening.
You know what? Why are we even wasting time sharing our wisdom and experience with you? Resume searching for clips of “Small Wonder” on YouTube, you obviously don’t care about real culture. We’re starting to wonder if maybe this Harvest Moon case is just wasted on you.
Of course, you could always prove us wrong. You could order and consume a case of your own, and show us that in fact it is you who are wasted on it.
Features
- Varietal: 100% Russian River Valley Estate Gewürztraminer
- Vintage: 2010
- Production: 275 cases
- Brix at Harvest: 22
- Alcohol: 13%
- Residual Sugar: .062
- Vintage & Varietal: 100% 2008 Russian River Pinot Noir
- Production: 308 cases
- Average brix at harvest: 22.4
- Alcohol: 13%
- Residual Sugar: .036g/100ml
- Vintage: 2006
- Varietal: 100% Russian River Valley Zinfandel
- Production: 650 cases
- Technical Data: R.S. = less than .07 g/100 ml;
- pH = 3.28;
- Alcohol: 14.4% by volume
- Varietal: 80% Zinfandel 10% Syrah, 8 % Sangiovese & 2% Petite Sirah
- Vintage: 2009
- Production: 625 cases
- Bottled: December 15th &16th 2010
- Residual Sugar: .031mg/100 ml; VA .065g/100 ml
- Alcohol: 14 %
- Varietal: 100% Dry Creek Cabernet Sauvignon
- Buchignani Vineyard
- Vintage: 2008
- 310 Cases produced
- Brix at Harvest: 23.3
- Alcohol: 13%
- Residual Sugar: .015%
- pH: 3.45
2008 Sonoma Harvest Proprietary Blend
- Varietals: 2007 Sonoma County; 33% Cabernet Sauvignon, 20% Syrah, 20% Merlot, 20% Cab Franc and 7% Petite Sirah
- Vintage: 2008
- Average Brix at Harvest: 23.2
- Alcohol: 13%
- Residual Sugar: .040 g/100ml
- pH: 3.39
Specs
2010 Estate Dry Gewurztraminer2008 Estate Russian River Valley Pinot Noir
2006 Russian River Valley Zinfandel
2009 Sonoma County RandyZin
2008 Dry Creek Cabernet Sauvignon
2008 Sonoma Harvest Proprietary Blend
Specs
2010 Estate Dry Gewurztraminer2008 Estate Russian River Valley Pinot Noir
2006 Russian River Valley Zinfandel
2009 Sonoma County RandyZin
2008 Dry Creek Cabernet Sauvignon
2008 Sonoma Harvest Proprietary Blend
Vendor Details
Harvest Moon Estate & Winery
- Founded:
- 2000
- Owners:
- The Pitts family
- Location:
- Russian River Valley, CA
Harvest Moon Estate and Winery was founded on growing, producing and bottling world-class Russian River Valley wine in a balanced, elegant style. Our premise is that Russian River Valley Zinfandel can be just as layered and complex as any Pinot Noir or Bordeaux variety in the world and receive the same respect. The Pitts family has grown quality grapes in the Russian River Valley since 1976. In 2000, son Randy reverse migrated from San Francisco back to Sonoma County to assume the farming responsibilities at the family's modest nine-acre ranch. In conjunction with lessons on farming by his Dad and a few viticulture/enology courses at the local junior college, Randy made a barrel of homemade Zinfandel off the ranch's back block which turned out exceptionally tasty. Quickly concluding that properly farmed and judiciously fermented, Zinfandel has great capabilities of being California's own wine nobility. The growers-turned winemakers birthed their inaugural vintage in 2002 and look forward to making their Zinprint on the winescene for decades to come.
We proudly invite you out to the Estate tasting room and winery to experience the next echelon of full-service Sonoma County wine country!
Sales Stats
- Speed to First Woot:
- 6m 49.000s
Purchaser Experience
Purchaser Seniority
Quantity Breakdown
Percentage of Sales Per Hour
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