“Assets of the Blind Trust are kept under wrap and seal”, says the neck of Laughing Stock Vineyards’ “just trust us” bottle. And so they are: while at first glance you will not find any mention of what grape varieties make up this wine, and while the bottle tells you that the grapes in the blend change every year and never remain consistent, if you make good use of your corkscrew and fully remove the foil covering the top of the bottle, the mystery blend is revealed. Since this is absolute genius marketing (and most of the fun involved in buying this bottle), I’m not going to spoil the surprise for you, other than to say that (1) the grapes involved are three of the five that go into Bordeaux wines in France (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec, Petit Verdot) and (2) the ’09 Blind Trust mix is heavily weighted in favour of one of the five. And it ain’t Petit Verdot.
Wine Review: 2009 Laughing Stock Blind Trust (Red)
19 01 2012Comments : 3 Comments »
Tags: 2009, blind trust, canadian wine, laughing stock, laughing stock vineyards, okanagan wine, red, red wine, wine blog, wine review
Categories : Wine Reviews
Wine Review: 2009 Laughing Stock Syrah
28 09 2011On my trip to the Okanagan earlier this month, one of the things I was most looking forward to was my visit to Laughing Stock Vineyards, producer of my favourite Canadian red wine of all time and restorer of my faith in (at least some of) my homeland’s wine industry. We made the trek out to Naramata, located just northeast of Penticton along the shoreline of Lake Okanagan, on a gorgeous late summer day and I was lucky enough to meet LS owner/vineyard manager Cynthia Enns and get a guided tour of the property, which sits on a west-facing slope with an incredible view overlooking the Lake. I was even luckier that the tasting room still had some of the 2009 Laughing Stock Syrah in stock, which I’d been dying to try, partly because LS had made me think that good Canadian reds were an actual possibility, partly because I generally just love Syrah, and partly because I had never seen this particular wine anywhere in Alberta, giving me (in my head, anyway) a chance at a provincial exclusive. I bought a couple bottles to take home, and tonight was the first taste trial. Since the last Canadian Syrah I had before this one smelled and tasted like tomato soup, this had nowhere to go but up. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: bc wine, laughing stock, naramata, okanagan wine, Syrah, wine reviews, wine scores
Categories : Wine Reviews
Wine Review: 2009 Laughing Stock Chardonnay
11 07 2011In case my constant compulsive pumping of Riesling didn’t already tell you this about me, I’m not much of a Chardonnay guy. I’m not an active hater, but I can generally take it or leave it, and it’s definitely not where my eyes go on a white wine list. I find most oak-aged Chardonnays to be a bit of a blunt instrument, tasering the taste buds into submission with a lumberyard of wood (often accompanied by crazy high alcohol) and overwhelming the sense of delicacy that I think the best white wines possess. Conversely, I find most unoaked Chardonnays to be, well, extraordinarily boring: Chardonnay is a fairly neutral grape by itself, without any intense flavours, and with no oak providing backup vocals it can lack the layer of intrigue that it sorely needs. Of course, this dreary portrait doesn’t apply to all Chards out there (Burgundy fans, put down your pitchforks — I can’t afford your wines anyway), but it covers more of them than it should.
But leave it to my (now official) favourite Canadian producer to walk that difficult middle ground between extreme oakiness and mind-numbing neutrality. Coming off the extremely strong showing of their signature red blend Portfolio back in May, the Okanagan’s Laughing Stock Vineyards kept the PnP love fest going with their 2009 Chardonnay, which struck a perfect balance. The LS label info alone gave me high hopes, for two reasons. First, the alcohol level was only 13.2%, not a percent and a half higher like some New World Chardonnays; since all the alcohol in wine comes from the sugars in ripe grapes, this non-astronomical alcohol level means that the grapes weren’t crazily overripe when they were fermented, which in turn means that the resulting wine likely won’t be overly full and will likely retain some much-needed acidity. Second, instead of being aged in small oak barrels for a long period of time (usually a year or more), the LS Chardonnay was actually fermented in oak and then aged in larger oak barrels called puncheons (the bigger the barrel, the less surface area contact with the wine and the less flavour imparted) for only 5 months. As compared to strictly aging in oak, barrel fermentation generally results in more controlled, better integrated and softer oak flavours being imparted into the wine, all good things for someone easing their way into oaky whites. This is why more information on wine labels is always better than less! Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: 2009, canadian wine, chardonnay, laughing stock, okanagan wine, white wine, wine reviews, wine scores
Categories : Wine Reviews
Wine Review: 2007 Laughing Stock Portfolio
12 05 2011Attention-grabbing headline: This is the best bottle of Canadian red wine I’ve ever had.
This wine has everything going for it: great back story, great marketing, great product. Laughing Stock Vineyards is located in (on?) the Naramata Bench, one of the most prestigious and quality-driven areas of British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley wine region. The winery’s name comes from the fact that its two proprietors both once had successful careers in the financial/investment sector before giving them up to pursue their vinicultural dreams, thus opening themselves up to failure and ridicule if things didn’t go well (note: if you want to win my heart, make your winery name a pun). Their cleverly-designed bottles reflect their past lives, and they’re not just empty packaging for what’s inside — the juice lives up to the allure of its container. Read the rest of this entry »
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Tags: 2007, best canadian red wine, bordeaux blend, bordeaux grapes, british columbia wine, canadian wine, laughing stock, naramata bench, okanagan wine, portfolio
Categories : Wine Reviews





