Ken Wright Carter Vineyard

Ken Wright Cellars Carter Vineyard Pinot Noir

WHY WE LOVE IT

  • The label, created by David Berkman, depicts the profile of the basalt-filled vineyard site.
  • The Carter Vineyard is west-ward facing on a hillside at 325 ft of elevation

Varietal Composition: 100% Pinot Noir

Elaboration: Each vineyard, further separated by clones, is hand sorted, fermented in small 1 1/4 ton open vat fermenters until dryness, then pressed and aged separately. The wine is aged in 100% French oak barrels for about 1 year. Each single vineyard designated Pinot noir is made with the same approach so the consumer can truly taste the place in which it was grown.

Tasting Notes: Fruit focused. Darker blue & black fruits of cassis, blackberry & dried blueberry supported by firm acidity and moderate tannins

PRESS

2015 – 93 Wine Enthusiast | 93 Wine Spectator

2016 – 93 James Suckling | 93 Wine Spectator | 95 Wine Enthusiast “Editors’ Choice”

2017 – 92 Wine Spectator

2021 – 94 Wine Spectator

PRODUCER BACKGROUND

The seed for a career in wine was planted squarely in Bourbon country of Lexington, Kentucky. While waiting tables to put himself through school, Ken was exposed to fine wines from regions around the world. The passion became avocation when Ken left the Bluegrass State to attend enology and viticulture classes at UC-Davis. Eight years were spent winemaking for Ventana Vineyards, Chalone and Talbott Vineyards in Monterey County of California’s central coast.

Friends from the Willamette Valley piqued Ken’s interest in the region when they would visit, and a trip to the Dundee Hills in 1976 convinced him that this was where the finest Pinot noir in North America was being grown. In 1986, with family, belongings and 10 barrels in tow, Ken moved to McMinnville and started Panther Creek Cellars.

His concept of focusing on vineyard-designate bottling began during those years at Panther Creek and was cemented as a core philosophy in 1994 when Ken Wright Cellars was founded in historic downtown Carlton. Ken now makes a single vineyard bottling from 13 vineyard sites in the Northern Willamette Valley. Given his appreciation of sense of place, it was a given that Ken would contribute to the locations and industry near and dear to his heart. Instrumental in organizing the six new American Viticultural Area (AVA)’s in the Northern Willamette Valley that define in detail the distinct growing areas within the region, he wrote the proposition for the Yamhill-Carlton AVA and served as the association’s first President.

PRINT REVIEW SHELF TALKER
PRINT REVIEW SHELF TALKER (2021 – 94 Wine Spectator)