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Eifrig Cellars LLC

David Eifrig
 
February 15, 2022 | David Eifrig

Bored Apes Descend Upon Dry Creek Valley

The Captain’s Cabernet is for Apes who believe life gives us choices and opportunities even if we’re bored to death.

We took the last of our 2014 we'd been saving for a special occasion... wine from our private cellars, and shared it with members of the Bored Ape Yacht Club... this is an adventure meant for royalty.

The wine is a vibrant purple, with multiple layers of legs: the initial short fat slow ones segue to long narrow silky lines over a few minutes. We love the aromas of sweet cedar, notes of cola, blueberry, and French herbs. A wisp or two of chocolate and dark cocoa waft above the glass for ages. 

The taste of blue fruits cocoa and cola notes glide to a lip smacking elegance. While the oak and terroir of Dry Creek Valley are delicately featured within the palate of fruits, acids, and polyphenols. Drink now and be bored.

The art work on the bottle is an official NFT... Enjoy!

Doc

 

Time Posted: Feb 15, 2022 at 10:51 AM Permalink to Bored Apes Descend Upon Dry Creek Valley Permalink
David Eifrig
 
August 16, 2021 | David Eifrig

2018 Reds Released

For Friends and Fellow Wine-Lovers,

Today we happily released our 7th Cabernet from Dry Creek Valley and our second Merlot from Dry Creek Valley.

Once again the wines are perfectly balanced.

The Merlot will eventually compete with any of the great Right Bank wines. Just more modern!!

Yes, I made these wines with my own hands and, of course, with the help of some of the best winemakers in America. 

Today there are just 213 cases of the Cabernet and 71 cases of the Merlot, so please don’t miss out…

The provenance of the wine is the same: Dry Creek Valley.

The Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot grapes were grown in the DCV, on a small plot farmed by a good friend of mine – Jim Ricci. The wine was aged for 2 and a half years, in mostly new French oak (remember, the mix is a secret!). Finally, the wine is bottle-aged until the day you open it.

We're happy to give discounts for those buying regularly...

Thanks for sharing in a dream, and here's to our health, wealth, and a great retirement,

Doc

Time Posted: Aug 16, 2021 at 10:53 AM Permalink to 2018 Reds Released Permalink
David Eifrig
 
November 25, 2020 | David Eifrig

Founding Member Release

Dear EC Founding Member,

The fires of 2017 prevented us from picking our grapes from Dry Creek Valley at Ricci Vineyard. Sadly, there will be no Merlot or Cabernet from that area this vintage. However, I am doing a 2017 Alexander Valley Cabernet Sauvignon.

Look, we’ve sold out of our first five vintages of Cab Sauv from Dry Creek Valley: and our 6th, the 2016 is nearly gone. The Merlot sold out in months.

I hope you’ve grown to appreciate the difference in each vintage. It’s because the product is alive; between the grape, the weather, the soil nutrients, and even the French oak and coopers that toast the barrels, it’s been fun for me to share each year's form.

The folks helping me craft these small batch wines (so far we’ve made 90 to 190 cases each time) bring decades of grape growing, winemaking, barrel crafting and plain old enthusiasm to the undertaking.

One of the things I’m most proud of is that we actively refuse to use fruit flavorings, preservatives, and strange chemicals with long frightening names. This is something not true with many big name Cabs these days. I hope I never stop using great grapes, yeast, wood, and fire.

If you’re getting this email, you’ve bought one of the first 6 vintages and with that, as promised, your price is still good for this wine, from a different region.

The latest grapes came to us by chance and was fortuitous.

So, back to the wine story... Two weeks before the 2017 fires, friends of mine offered some extra Cabernet from the world renowned Alexander Valley. The AV Cab had fermented and was in barrels when the fires started over in Dry Creek Valley. And since it was just a little experiment, after all I was planning on making tons of the Dry Creek Valley Cabernet, I only bought enough grapes to make around 60 to 65 cases...

Phew, since we decided to NOT pick our own 2017 Dry Creek Valley fruit because of smoke taint, I feel lucky.

And you should too.

The 2017 Alex Valley Cab is still in barrel and is tasting spectacular... but it's so limited in quantity that I'm first offering it up to Founding members only, and as a future... which means you'll have to trust me that within the next months we'll bottle it and send you bottles of a rare and fantastic Eifrig Cab; one from a different piece of land in Northern California - the famous Alexander Valley...

I'm expecting to sell out the entire production, so don't delay.

Also, please send me a return email, simply earmarking the amounts you’d like, so you don’t get left off the RESERVE list. Again, I’ve made only 65 cases of 2017 Cabernet, this will go quickly.

Here's to your health, wealth, and a great retirement,

de

Time Posted: Nov 25, 2020 at 8:00 PM Permalink to Founding Member Release Permalink Comments for Founding Member Release Comments (1)
David Eifrig
 
September 9, 2019 | David Eifrig

2016 Eifrig DCV Cabernet - Public Release

For Friends and Fellow Wine-Lovers,

Today we happily released our 6th Cabernet from Dry Creek to you... the 2016 Dry Creek Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve.

Perfectly balanced. This marks the sixth vintage from Eifrig Cellars.

Yes, I made these wines with my own hands and, of course, with the help of some of the best winemakers in America. My DCV Cab from 2016 is first being made available to those folks who purchased from me before. This is sure to sell out too, like all the rest.

Today there are less than 200 cases so please don’t miss out…

This vintage we tried something unique... we married my love of old school Cabernet Sauvignon… something that reminded me of Napa winemaking in the 70's and 80's, with everything I love about French Bordeaux blends with Merlot in the mix. This is the kind of wine that competes with any wine at any price. Guaranteed.

It's also exactly the kind of wine I love to drink. Again, this is the first Eifrig Cabernet with Merlot added (although only a touch).

The provenance of the wine is the same: Dry Creek Valley.

The Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot grapes were grown in the DCV, on a small plot farmed by a good friend of mine – Jim Ricci. The wine was aged for 2 and a half years, in mostly new French oak (remember, the mix is a secret!). Finally, the wine is bottle-aged until the day you open it.

The wine is a dark purple, and more dense than the 2014. The clarity is brilliant, almost diamond like. The legs are incredibly complex and multiple layers and levels. 

The wine tastes and swishes red and blue fruits with hints of cola and wet forest with baking spices. The after taste is gorgeous, and goes on and on and on. After an hour in my glass I sense caramelized cherries.

The prices are approxiamtely as follows:

- $115 per single bottle plus shipping

- $650 or less, depending on your state taxes, for a 6-bottle case (shipping included) and

- $1,200 or less, depending on your state taxes, for a 12-bottle case (shipping included)

We're happy to give discounts for those buying regularly...

Thanks for sharing in a dream, and here's to our health, wealth, and a great retirement,

Doc

Time Posted: Sep 9, 2019 at 9:00 AM Permalink to 2016 Eifrig DCV Cabernet - Public Release Permalink
David Eifrig
 
May 2, 2016 | David Eifrig

My First Blog Post

Dear Atlas Members

I’ve got an exciting announcement… And, as a fellow Atlas member, I wanted to make sure you heard it first. This is one of my proudest accomplishments. And if you’ve ever read any of my work, you know I wouldn’t waste your time with an e-mail I didn’t feel was worthwhile.

Today marks the release of the first two vintages from Eifrig Cellars.

Yes, I made these wines with my own hands and of course with the help of some of the best winemakers in America. As of today, my Eifrig Cellars Dry Creek Valley Cabernet Sauvignons from 2009 and 2012 are available only to Atlas members. Many of you have heard me talk about these wines… And several of you have even had a chance to taste them.

This has been a labor of love for me over the past 10 years. This isn’t a business for me (yet). My goal has never been to make money or “scale up” to produce mass quantities. Rather, I wanted to recreate an old school Cabernet Sauvignon… something that reminded me of Napa winemaking in the 70's and 80's. Those wines beat their Bordeaux contemporaries in blind tastings over and over. Why, because this is exactly the kind of wine I love to drink. It's the wine I'd want to be served if i was at your house.

I’m incredibly proud of what we’ve created. Our grapes are grown in the Dry Creek Valley on 5 acres of ancient riverbeds. The wine’s aged for two or three years - depending on the vintage - in barrels. I used mostly new French Oak but the exact mix is my secret. We also bottle-aged the wine for at least a year or two, like the great Riojas of Spain.

Both vintages came from the same process but they’ve turned out to be very unique wines. The weather each year, different picking times, and other immeasurable factors lend each their own character. Fortunately, both are, if I may say so, superb. Here’s the breakdown from my notes:

The 2009 Vintage: Perfectly balanced, approachable and easy drinking. In fact, in several blind tastings this past year it regularly beat $150 - $300 Bordeaux and Napa Cabs.

The 2009 is drinking near flawlessly and balanced with everything a Cabernet can be: perfectly purple with “legs” that slide down the glass for minutes, hours even. The aromas of milk chocolate, dark fruits – plums and blueberries, soft oak tannins - hints of cinnamon, sandalwood create an ethereal finish that amazes even the non-red wine drinkers in your life.

Seriously, this wine has already converted several wives of friends who NEVER drink red wine – that’s how balanced this wine is. In fact, this wine pairs much better with a quiet night, a few friends, and food.

It’s notably different from… The 2012 Vintage: A wonderful marriage of fruit and barrel notes harmonizing, with a robust mouthfeel, and structure fit for bone-in rib-eyes. And I must confess, I think the 2012 is nearly flawless. Don’t believe me? Ask Porter. He said it’s the best wine he had in all of 2015… And if you’ve ever been to dinner with Porter, you know he does not shy away from dropping serious money on wine.

However, the 2012 is almost too big for a simple steak dinner. I'm not even sure you can drink this without food; it's so big, backboned, and tight. With the 2009, you’ll want to cuddle. With the 2012, you’ll want to get up and swing an ax.

But here’s the challenge with these wines… I didn’t make much. Because both vintages were made in very limited quantities - about 100 cases of each - I'm worried you won't get any...

Like I said, this is a labor of love. I’m not in this for the money. But I want to be able to share my amazing experience crafting these wines with as many other true wine lovers as possible, for as long as possible.

So here’s what I’m doing… If you order either of my Cabernets, I promise that no matter what price my future vintages go for, you can pay today’s price for your own case. I will lock you in for today’s low price for at least the next decade. (We’ll have the right to limit order sizes though, based on the production that year.)

It’s a handshake and commitment between us. You buy my first wine release. I’ll reward you when you come back for more. By the way, Porter thinks these wines will become a lot more valuable in the years to come. I don’t know if he’s right or not. I buy wines to drink, not to invest. But if so, I’ll be able to charge dramatically more in the future than I’m charging today.  But like I said, if you buy either of my wines today, you’ll lock in today’s price for any vintage of Eifrig Cabernet I create over the next decade.

And keep in mind: For right now, this offer to lock in today’s low price is good only for my fellow Atlas members and a few Alliance folks I poured these wines for in Florida. As a fellow Atlas member, I want to give you first shot because I’ve met so many of you in person.

I fully expect this offer could come close to selling out all of my production. If it doesn’t I will open it up to some of my other readers, one week from today. So if you are interested.Here’s the deal. Today you can order either Eifrig vintage for: $110 a bottle, (plus shipping), $600 for a 6-bottle case (shipping included) or $1,200 for a 12-bottle case (shipping included).

Again, this is not a business. We’re not setting up a website or distribution through a store. If you'd like to purchase these wines, here’s what you need to do… First, send me an e-mail stating: which vintage you'd like and how many of each. Feel free to combine both vintages in your case. I’d recommend a 50/50 split. 

The e-mail address is simple:    eifrigcellars@gmail.com

- Second, please send a check along with a note stating which vintage you'd like and how many of each (or put it on the check’s memo line).

- On the note, please list your preferred shipping address, a phone number where I can reach you, and an e-mail address to confirm the transaction.

- Remember to include a check made out to Eifrig Cellars LLC. And send it to the winery at:

Eifrig Cellars, LLC

3451 Airway Drive Suite C

Santa Rosa, California 95403

I wasn’t kidding when I said I wanted to do this ‘old-school’. Like I said, there’s no way to predict this type of thing, but Porter thinks these wines could become cult favorites and eventually fetch thousands of dollars apiece.

Who knows… It's possible. The wines are definitely good enough. I have no doubt about that. But it’s hard to predict which wines will develop a cult following. As you can see, I’m excited about my pet project. I’m back and forth between the East Coast and Napa about once a month these days.

I wanted to share this news with you right away... because who better than my fellow Atlas members to share in the best things life has to offer. And remember, for the next week, this offer is only available to my fellow Atlas members and a few folks I poured these wines for recently in Florida. But one week from today, if there’s any wine that is still not spoken for, I’m going to open this offer up to some of my other readers.

The point is, you have to act fairly quickly if you want to participate.

Here's to our health, wealth, and a great retirement,

de

David Eifrig Jr., MD, MBA

Time Posted: May 2, 2016 at 11:40 AM Permalink to My First Blog Post Permalink Comments for My First Blog Post Comments (1)