story published in the Santa Barbara News-Press on 7/14/16
“You’re
bottling Sybil when you’re bottling pinot noir,” winemaker Rob DaFoe tells me
as we sip. “And you’re constantly asking yourself, ‘When will she surrender?!”
DaFoe is
talking about a wine grape he loves, of course, all while candidly comparing it
to the psychiatry patient whose bout with multiple personalities famously became a 1970s TV miniseries starring Sally Field. It’s a newfound realization for DaFoe: that
pinot noir undergoes myriad transmutations in its infancy. “And if you taste all the time to see what’s
happening, you’ll go mad,” he says.
Rob DaFoe at the Easy Street Wine Collective, 90 Easy Street, Buellton |
Those changes
in young pinot – during fermentation and barrel aging and even in bottle – can
happen day to day, and they're what DaFoe has come to understand as the wine’s
intrinsic evolution.
As
winemaker, “you have to trust what you’ve done, that’s the bottom line,” he
adds.
I say that
these are newfound discoveries for DaFoe because working with Burgundian grapes
– pinot and chardonnay – is indeed a new venture for
him. It’s his new label, called Rake, as
in a ne’er-do-well scoundrel. The name
was inspired by a Townes Van Zandt song that’s “hauntingly poetic and
terrifying at the same time,” according to DaFoe.
But DaFoe
has already made an indelible mark on the Santa Barbara winemaking scene with
Bordeaux varieties, cabernet sauvignon in particular. I first met DaFoe about 10 years ago, when
the pro snowboarder-turned-photographer-turned-filmmaker won acclaim with a movie
about making wine, called Ground to Glass.
That intimate documentary, which featured on-camera sit-downs with more
than 30 wine industry stars and which premiered at the Santa Barbara
International Film Festival in 2006, was also a creative seed for the man
behind the lens. By 2009, DaFoe had
launched the Tanner DaFoe label with friend Jeff Tanner and the wines –a
fascinating blend of intuition, knack and good fortune, for sure – were knockouts. The 2011 cabernet blew my socks off – “a remarkably luscious, rich, elegant wine
where flavors and tannins converge in harmony,” I wrote last year. And four vintages of Tanner DaFoe wines –
2009 through 2012 – have garnered between 90 and 93 points from Wine Spectator,
among the highest for any Bordeaux wines from Santa Barbara. (The 2013s are currently in
barrel.)
Then, one day, DaFoe became intrigued by
rosé. “It wasn’t really a fit,” for the Tanner DaFoe label, he says. So Rake was
born.
DaFoe is still making cabernet and
cab-based blends under Tanner DaFoe; priced between $75 and $110, they’re
sourced from a secret vineyard on the eastern end of the Santa Ynez
Valley. Similarly, the magic behind Rake
is driven by location. In 2013, DaFoe
got access to the four-acre Destiny Vineyard in Los Alamos, a 50-50 planting of
pinot and chard. “The soils are
very clay-like, with a fair amount of sea fossils – perfectly suited for Burgundian grapes,” says the winemaker.
Indeed, if rosé was the genesis for his
new project, DaFoe has heeded the call well.
The 2014 Rosé of Pinot Noir ($20) is bracing, lively and fresh. The acidity is vivid, while the fruity
nuances of the pinot grape shine through.
He pours next a sample of his yet-to-be-bottled 2015 rosé, which smacks
of Provence, with watermelon and raspberry aromas, a clean roundness on the
tongue and spicy pop mid-sip. Delicious. And because it’s what sipping rosé tends to
inspire, our conversation soon drifts from wine to heady ideas about history,
women and life.
I am sipping with DaFoe at the Easy
Street Wine Collective in Buellton, a small tasting room that Rake shares with
the Cordon label, by DaFoe’s winemaker friend, Etienne Terlinden. Both men, along with a handful of other
boutique producers, work out of the winery that abuts the intimate tasting
space.
We taste the 2014 Rake Chardonnay ($30) next,
which is bouncy and animated, with limestone and grapefruit notes on the palate,
and with a subtle nuttiness in the finish.
And we end with the 2013 Rake Pinot Noir
($35), with a perfumed nose – black cherries and dark berries – and a clean,
supple mouth feel. The wine was bottled
only in February, but balance is predominant.
“Every time I taste this, different parts are more dominant and others
are more subdued,” DaFoe tells me, harkening back to his Sybil reference. But “I’m finding that pinot develops way
better in bottle anyway,” he adds. So, certainly, the future for Rake looks bright.
Rake Wines are currently available through the Easy Street Wine Collective tasting room, which is open for public tastings on weekends, as well as Wine + Beer at the Santa Barbara Public Market, Corks 'n Crowns in Santa Barbara's Funk Zone and Pierre Lafond Market in Montecito's Upper Village.
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