Browse using the new Vinous website now. Launch →
Printed by, and for the sole use of . All rights reserved © 2015 Vinous Media
Napa Valley’s Extraordinary 2016 Cabernet Sauvignons
BY ANTONIO GALLONI | DECEMBER 14, 2018
Napa Valley enjoyed an extraordinary vintage in 2016. The bottled 2016s are every bit as viscerally thrilling as they were last year when I tasted them from barrel. Best of all, 2016 is a captivating vintage from top to bottom, with a bevy of stunning wines for every palate and budget, as well as a number of bottles that are destined to become icons.
Proprietor Bruce Philipps, Winemaker Françoise Peschon and Vineyard Manager Mike Wolf made one of the epic wines of 2016 at Vine Hill Ranch
Last year I wrote that “The 2016 Cabernet Sauvignons are gorgeous wines endowed with striking aromatic intensity, nuance and depth. Over time, the wines have fleshed out beautifully. The 2016s have decidedly dark flavor profiles similar to 2013 and 2014, but softer curves and more voluptuousness than either of those two vintages. In other words, the 2016s are similar to the 2013s, but with much softer tannins, or the 2014s, but with more textural depth and immediacy. Perhaps most importantly of all, the wines are incredibly delineated in the way they speak to the essence of site. Put simply, at this stage, 2016 is second only to 2013 among the top vintages of this decade so far” in my article Brilliance in Napa Valley: The 2016 & 2015 Cabernets. A year later, I feel the same way, except I am even more excited about the overall quality of the vintage.
A lineup of colorful labels at Behrens Family Winery
A Little Background…
For some reason, this year I am a bit reflective about Napa Valley and how much it has changed in recent years. To be sure, the fires last year were a pretty strong reminder of how fragile life can be. But I have also been thinking about a lot about The Wine Advocate’s 40th anniversary, and how important a mentor Robert Parker was to me during an earlier part of my career. In late 2010, Bob asked me to take over reviewing Napa Valley wines at TWA. It was the first time Bob had given one of his key regions to another reviewer, and therefore a pretty significant moment. Bob gave me a lot of advice then and later in 2011 and 2012, when we tasted and visited estates together. But one thing stuck in my mind. Bob told me I would have a very hard time keeping up with the pace of change. He was spot on. As I look at the list of wineries in this article (Parts 1 & 2), I am astounded that roughly 20% of them did not exist when I started reviewing Napa Valley wines! Many others were just getting off the ground.
Harvest at Montelena, Calistoga
And yet, that pace of change is part of what makes Napa such an exciting region. When I did my first big tasting trip, I replicated Bob’s itinerary down to the last detail. Sixteen days of non-stop tastings, broken into about six days of large-scale comparative tastings and ten days of estate visits. I soon realized that was not enough. This year, I spent 24 days tasting in Napa Valley, almost all of them dedicated to winery visits and only a few to comparative tastings. That is on top of the week I spent tasting young 2017s from barrel this past spring, another ten days dedicated to research on our maps project and several additional days to taste and re-taste wines in my office.
Alex and John Kongsgaard, seen in their cellar on Atlas Peak, made a range of superb 2016s and 2017s
Looking Ahead to 2017
A discussion of the 2017s inevitably brings up a wide range of emotions, and frankly, a level of angst I have not seen in Napa Valley since 2011. Back then, winemakers were stressed out about unusually cool, wet conditions in most parts of the valley and a wide range of other maladies many had never seen before, including fast-spreading botrytis in red grapes. Two thousand seventeen was, of course, a totally different animal. After a very wet winter, temperatures soared and stayed higher than normal. Some weather stations recorded more than 30 days with temperatures over 100 degrees. A brutal heat spike around Labor Day was both longer and much more dramatic than predicted. The outbreak of several devastating fires in October, in the middle of harvest, wreaked havoc on a scale never seen before.
Mayacamas today. The table is in the same location as the table where I always reviewed the wines, while the little alcove that remains once housed a small collection of older vintages
Although 2017 will be mostly remembered for the October fires, the heat and specifically the one around Labor Day is a much bigger marker in the wines, as I have written before. Winemakers and viticulturists watched as Brix levels actually receded, something that is extremely unusual. Some estates harvested, others waited, and some of the very early pickers already had grapes in the cellar. And then, of course, the fires happened. Wineries equipped with generators and other technology were able to work through the worst of it. Some facilities were crippled from an operational support, and wines were compromised. In other cases, winemakers took quite a bit of personal risk to make their wines, but using much a more artisan and rudimentary manual approach than is the norm today.
And what about the wines? Leaving aside wines that are clearly smoke-tainted, I found much to like in the 2017s. In fact, where the wines are sound, 2017 has the potential to be better than 2015, a year where many wines are penalized by harsh tannins. In tasting, the 2017s show very ripe red-fruit flavor profiles. But what is fascinating is that the 2017s also have bright acids and more tannin than normal, a combination that is highly unusual. But there is also a great deal of uncertainty around smoke taint. A number of producers chose not to show 2017s, as they are still working on blends. That is certainly understandable. Needless to say, it will be interesting to see where things stand a year from now. For the time being, I can say I like the best 2017s quite a bit. For a more in-depth discussion of growing conditions and smoke taint, readers might want to revisit my article 2017 Napa Valley – First Impressions.
Maya Dalla Valle, Andy Erickson and Naoko Dalla Valle turned out a group of absolutely stellar 2016s
I tasted most of the wines in this article in September and October 2018, with additional tastings in my office. Because of the very large size of this article, we have divided coverage into two parts, the second of which will be published next week. There is no qualitative difference between estates covered in Part One or Part Two, in fact many top Napa Valley estates are featured in next week’s installment.
You Might Also Enjoy
Vinous Napa Valley Vineyard Maps
Multimedia: On the Road In Napa Valley - Harvest 2017
Multimedia: On the Road In Napa Valley - Harvest 2016
Sonoma & Napa Valley Supplement 2018, Antonio Galloni, July 2018
2017 Napa Valley – First Impressions, Antonio Galloni, June 2018
Sonoma’s Stellar 2016s, Antonio Galloni, April 2018
Sonoma Preview: January 2018 New Releases, Antonio Galloni, January 2018
Brilliance in Napa Valley: The 2016 & 2015 Cabernets, Antonio Galloni, January 2018
Show all the wines (sorted by score)
- Abbot's Passage
- Abreu
- Accendo Cellars
- Ackerman Family Vineyards
- Adamvs
- Adler Deutsch Vineyard
- Ad Vivum
- Alejandro Bulgheroni
- Alpha Omega
- Amici Cellars
- Amizetta
- Ampère
- Amuse Bouche Winery
- Anderson's Conn Valley Vineyards
- Antica Napa Valley - Antinori Family Estate
- Arcudi
- Arietta
- Arrow & Branch
- Ashes & Diamonds
- Aubert
- Au Sommet
- Axios
- AXR Winery
- Azur
- Ballentine Vineyards
- Barbour Vineyards
- Barlow Vineyards
- Barnett Vineyards
- Barrett & Barrett
- Beaulieu Vineyard
- Behrens Family Winery
- Bella Oaks
- Bell Wine Cellars
- Bench Vineyards
- Benessere
- Beringer Vineyards
- Bevan Cellars
- Blackbird Vineyards
- Black Stallion Estate Winery
- Blank
- Blankiet Estate
- Boeschen Vineyards
- Bond
- Bougetz Cellars
- Bounty Hunter Rare Wine
- Brand Estate
- Brion
- Bryant Family Vineyard
- Buccella
- Buehler Vineyards
- Buoncristiani Family Winery
- B Wise - Brion
- Cade
- Cakebread Cellars
- Canard Vineyard
- Cardinale
- Carte Blanche
- Carter Cellars
- Casa Piena
- Caspar Estate
- Castello di Amorosa
- Caterwaul
- Celani Family Vineyards
- Cervantes
- Chappellet
- Chateau Montelena
- Chimney Rock Winery
- Christopher Tynan Wines
- Clark-Claudon Vineyards
- Cliff Lede Vineyards
- Clos Du Val
- Clos Pegase
- Coho
- Colgin
- ¿Como No?
- Corison
- Corley
- Cornell
- Corra
- Correlation Wine Company
- Coup de Foudre
- Dakota Shy
- Dalla Valle
- Dana
- David Arthur Vineyards
- Davies Vineyards
- Davis Estates
- Decades 5
- Detert Family Vineyards
- Diamond Creek Vineyards
- Di Costanzo
- DMVH (formerly 1510-1520 Diamond Mountain Road)
- Domaine Curry
- Dominus
- D. R. Stephens Estate
- Dunn Vineyards
- Dyer Vineyard
- Edge Wines
- Eighty Four Wines
- Eisele Vineyard
- Eleven Eleven
- Emerson Brown Wines
- Emos
- Empreinte
- Envy Wines
- Etude
- Fairchild
- Farella
- Far Niente
- Favia
- Fisher Vineyards
- Forman
- Frank Family Vineyards
- Frias Family Vineyard
- Frog's Leap
- Fuse Wines
- Futo
- Galerie
- Gallica
- Gamble Family Vineyards
- Gandona Estate
- Gargiulo Vineyards
- Gentleman Farmer Wines
- Gibbs Napa Valley
- Girard Winery
- Gold Coast Vineyards
- Grace Family Vineyards
- Grgich Hills Estate
- Groth
- Hall
- Harlan Estate
- Helianthus
- Helios
- Heritage School Vineyards
- Herold
- Hertelendy
- Hesperian Wines
- Hewitt Vineyard
- Hill Family Estate
- Hobel
- Hourglass
- Hundred Acre
- Hyde De Villaine
- Inglenook
- Jack Winery
- J. Davies
- Jones
- Joseph Phelps Vineyards
- Kale Wines
- Kapcsándy Family Winery
- Kata
- Keenan Winery
- Keever
- Kelly Fleming Wines
- Kenefick Ranch
- Kerr
- Kinsman Eades
- Knighton Family Vineyards
- Kongsgaard
- Lagier Meredith Vineyard
- Lail Vineyards
- Laird Family Estate
- La Jota Vineyard
- Larkmead Vineyards
- La Sirena
- Laz
- Leviathan
- Levy & McClellan
- Lindstrom
- Lokoya
- MacDonald
- Malk
- Marciano Estate
- Mark Herold - Acha
- Mathew Bruno Wines
- Matthew Wallace
- Mayacamas
- Melka Estates
- Mending Wall
- Merryvale Vineyards
- Meteor Vineyard
- Michel Rolland
- Modus Operandi Cellars
- Moone-Tsai
- Mt. Brave
- Myriad Cellars
- Napa Cellars
- Nemerever Vineyards
- Newfound
- Nickel & Nickel
- Oakville Ranch
- O'Brien Estate
- Odette
- Opus One
- O'Shaughnessy
- Outpost
- Ovid
- Pahlmeyer
- Patel
- Patria
- Paul Hobbs
- Paul Hobbs - Crossbarn
- Peirson Meyer
- Pellet Estate
- Perliss
- Philip Togni Vineyard
- Pine Ridge Vineyards
- PlumpJack
- Pott Wine
- Pride
- Promontory
- Pulido-Walker
- Purlieu
- Quivet Cellars
- Quixote Winery
- Raymond Vineyards
- Red Mare Wines
- Retro Cellars
- Rewa Vineyards
- Rivers-Marie
- Robert Craig Winery
- Robert Mondavi Winery
- Rossi-Wallace
- Round Pond Estate
- Roy Estate
- Rudd Oakville Estate
- Rudius
- Rutherford Hill
- Sang-Froid Vineyards
- Scalon Cellars
- Scarecrow
- Scarlett
- Screaming Eagle
- Sean Behrens
- Seaver Vineyards
- Seavey
- Selah
- Sequoia Grove Winery
- Seven Stones Winery
- Shafer Vineyards
- Signorello Estate
- Silverado
- Sinegal Estate
- Sloan Estate
- Snowden
- Sodaro Estate Winery
- Somnium
- Spottswoode
- Staglin Family Vineyard
- Stag's Leap Wine Cellars
- Steltzner
- Stewart Cellars
- St. Helena Winery
- Stone the Crows
- Sunshine Valley Vineyards
- Swanson Vineyards
- Taplin Cellars
- Tayson Pierce
- Textbook
- The Debate
- The Grade Cellars
- The Vineyardist
- Titus Vineyards
- Tobias Vineyards
- TOR
- Tournesol
- Trefethen Family Vineyards
- Trinchero Napa Valley
- Trois Noix
- Tuck Beckstoffer Wines
- Turley
- Turnbull Wine Cellars
- Ulysses
- Unity
- VGS Chateau Potelle
- VHR, Vine Hill Ranch
- Viader Vineyards & Winery
- Vice Versa
- Vineyard 29
- Vineyard 7 & 8
- Vinoce
- V Madrone
- Volker Eisele Family Estate
- von Strasser & Lava Vine Winery
- V Vineyards
- Wallis Family Estate
- WaterMark
- Wheeler Farms
- Whitehall Lane Winery
- White Rock Vineyards
- William & Mary
- Wingspan
- Yao Family Wines
- Yount Ridge
- Zakin Estate Wines
- Zeitgeist