Full Review

Stokelan Estate Winery

Stokelan Estate Winery
2022 Simla Red Blend, American

Pair this wine with:
Beef Vegetables

Category: Bordeaux Red Varietal Blend

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 12.9% RS: .3%
87 Points
Silver Medal
Highly Recommended
$35

Stokelan Estate Winery
2022 Simla Red Blend, American

Pair this wine with:
Beef Vegetables

Category: Bordeaux Red Varietal Blend

Date Tasted:
Country: USA
Alcohol: 12.9% RS: .3%
Ruby color. Curious aromas of spice box, cherry nougat, menthol tobacco and cigar leaf, and coffee syrup with a slightly chewy, soft, dry medium body and a tingling, charming, medium-length butter roasted nuts, cigar box, sweet cherry, and tobacco finish with medium tannins and heavy oak flavor. Big and bold with generous vanilla and charred wood notes frame a soft tannin filled red cherry, spice and cigar box flavored Bordeaux varietal blend.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: New World & Quaffable
Aroma Aroma: spice box, cherry nougat, menthol tobacco and cigar leaf, and coffee syrup
Taste Flavor: butter roasted nuts, cigar box, sweet cherry, and tobacco
Sweetness Sweetness: Dry
Enjoy Enjoy: Now-3 years
Recipes Pairing: Beef Bourguignon, Steak & Potatoes, Beef Stew
Bottom Line Bottom Line: Big and bold with generous vanilla and charred wood notes frame a soft tannin filled red cherry, spice and cigar box flavored Bordeaux varietal blend.

The Producer

Stokelan Estate Winery

The Producer
50 Eayrestown Road
Medford, NJ 08055
USA

Bordeaux Red Varietal Blend

Wine Glass Cabernet.jpg
Serve in a Cabernet Wine Glass
The greatness of red wines from France's Bordeaux region can be largely attributed to the art of blending. There are six red varieties that can be used in a Bordeaux red: Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Carmenere and Malbec (this last is rarely seen anymore in Bordeaux).

The reason for blending several grapes to craft the final wine is for greater complexity as well as elegance. Each grape has various characteristics and can attribute special qualities to the final wine. Cabernet Sauvignon is powerful and tannins, while Merlot has lighter tannins, while Cabernet Franc has a spicy, peppery quality to it. Blending these grapes together will round out all of these qualities; sort of a "the whole is greater than the sum of the parts" rationale.

This principal of blending is used in many regions besides Bordeaux, especially in California, were the blends are often given proprietary names, like Opus One, Insignia, and Quintessa. US blends of Bordeaux varietals may also be labeled, in addition to their proprietary name, by the designation of Meritage if they are approved and licensed by the Meritage Alliance.

Blending in Bordeaux is common not only on the prestigious wines from historic estates that cost hundreds of dollars per bottle, but also on the lighter-styled wines that are priced in the mid-teens. Aging potential can often be directly linked to the price of the wine, from three to five years to three to five decades.

Pair these wines with most red meats, games or roasts.