The picturesque Blue Mountain vineyards are perhaps just two miles east of the equally picturesque vines at Noble Ridge Vineyard & Winery.
However, the terroir in the Okanagan Falls region is remarkably complex and that can be illustrated by recent releases from both wineries, including two Pinot Noirs. The Noble Ridge wines suggest the site is hotter than Blue Mountain ’s vineyard. As well the winemaking style is quite different.
If this were France , growing those varieties in such close proximity would seldom happen. But this is the Okanagan. There are no rules on where to plant varietals. Viticulturists are free to do that they think will work. Eventually, the consumers will decide what has worked.
I don’t think these four wines will resolve the argument, however. None of them disappoint.
Noble Ridge Pinot Noir 2010 ($25 for 568 cases). In style, this wine is darker and more muscular than the Blue Mountain . Noble Ridge says it will age gracefully another five or six years. I would not hesitate to leave it even longer. The grapes for this wine, after a cold soak on the skins, were fermented cool in stainless steel. The wine then was racked into French oak. It aged there a year and then spent another two years aging in bottle before release. The wine begins with aromas of cherry and raspberry, leading to a medley of red fruit flavours against an underlying earthiness. The wine benefits from being decanted. 89-90.
Noble Ridge Meritage Reserve 2009 ($30 for 538 cases). This is 80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Sauvignon – and from one of the Okanagan’s best recent vintages. The wine was aged 15 months in French and American oak (40% new) and then bottle aged 14 months. I would be surprised much is still available because this wine picked up two golds and two silvers in competition last year. It is a bold, satisfying red, beginning with aromas of black cherry, vanilla and spice. That leads to flavours of black cherry, vanilla, chocolate and coffee. The long ripe tannins give it accessibility now as well as ageability. 91.