DuPuis Wines, Pinot Noir Estate Anderson Valley (2020)

50215046976b64051a482
Producer
DuPuis Wines
Category
Wine - Still - Red
Grape
Pinot Noir
Region
California, United States
Subregion
Mendocino County
Appellation
Anderson Valley

Product Description

Our small lot of estate fruit produced a wine with lifted floral and dried pine needle notes to the dark red fruit aromas. Expansive on the palate with a minerally edge to the red fruit flavors that finishes with bright acidity and talc like tannins.

Producer Description

During my stints working in the Northern Rhone Valley and Burgundy, I picked up the nickname Puis, meaning “well” or “wells.” It’s an older spelling of the word, and I was in France to learn about the old world style of winemaking, so the name fit. After this time in France, I returned to California to start Copain Wines. I spent two decades as its winemaker, enjoying success as the company grew and thrived. But always those sunny French vineyards were in the back of my mind. A couple years ago I was able to finally return to those roots. I relocated with my family to a 40 acre mountain estate high above Boonville in Anderson Valley, where we built our small winery in a dilapidated barn and planted seven acres of Pinot Noir. It’s truly a dream come true—living on our estate, above our winery, tending our vines and our wines ourselves, and savoring every moment. We’re calling this new undertaking DuPuis Wines, since du puis means “of wells.” This new brand is purely from ME—working beside our sole employee in the vineyard and winery, with timely added help of my wife, Kate, and our family when duty calls. All of our wines are purely sourced from Anderson Valley with the sole vision of continuing to explore, nurture, and elevate the greatness that exists in this valley. I have stripped away the use of any new wood in order to further showcase the purity of fruit and unique attributes possessed by each of our vineyards. I am confident the resulting wines will deliver a more pure and precise expression of Anderson Valley.