Had a good red wine the other day and now im interested in trying more. Any suggestions from this selection? Thanks 🙏

by ArmoredAngel444

34 Comments

  1. yesiamican

    The marine layer is the best, but for you to also believe that you have to like wines with full cluster inclusion (creates heavy floral and fruity top tones) and minimal oak influence (tastes like vanilla, smoke, or cedar).

    Patz & Hall, Alma Rosa, and Drouhin also good

  2. Milamber310

    Pinot is very terrior driven… so if you like certain regions over the other, I’d explore that way. On that note, I’d be inclined to try that “EQ Granite” Chilean Pinot.

    Sea Slopes is fantastic for under $30.
    CRU SLH Pinot is my pick for under $20.

  3. JamesinSD2002

    Sanford. Grown in a unique microclimate where even each plot of grapes can be different. I can’t see which exact one you have there but all of them have that unique St. Rita Hills magic in them.

    The 39 down on the bottom left corner isn’t that bad either.

  4. DudeTheStallion

    I would go for the Drouhin, Ken wright, and land of saints mostly. Not the meiomi

  5. Patz & Hall has always been solid, however I haven’t had them in a while. They are a big pinot producer, and if they are anything like other big producers, I’d be concerned with their quality over the past 5+ years. There are so many producers in that $30-$40 range where their wine is just garbage now, and I hope Patz doesn’t fall into that category.

    Having said all that, depending on my mood, I’d also consider the Domaine Drouhin. I’m not super knowledgeable on Oregon pinots but generally speaking, they do put out good ones and if you approach this from a cost standpoint, chances are you get a bigger QPR when comparing Oregon/Washington wines to the (high operating costs) in Sonoma/Napa/etc.

  6. Itinerant0987

    Domaine Drouhin is the easy choice, very consistent.

  7. WSET-L4-student-72

    Why is the La Crema on “sale” for $21.29 at the same time as it is offered at “low price” for $18.99?

  8. AliasSydneyBristow

    Alma Rosa- solid winemaker making super juice

  9. GrilledCheeseTn

    ken wright and alma rosa. Each drink well above their price points…. Pinot’s for non pinot drinkers.

  10. prest-and

    Ken Wright gets my vote for the price point

  11. Dangerous-Jacket9553

    I’d go with Domaine Drouhin, Alma Rosa or Ken Wright. All good producers.

  12. Irishsassenach

    I really like Ken Wright or domaine Drouhin (anything Willamette)

  13. Fancy_Truck3426

    I have visited many Oregon wineries and in this display of pinot noir, Dromaine Drouhin and Ken Wright are both excellent options.

  14. the3rdmichael

    Depends on what style you like, personally I would definitely opt for the Drouhin …

    However I would love to try the Chilean EQ Granite also …

  15. sacrelicio

    Personal faves of mine are Underwood (for a cheaper bottle), Cambria (little more expensive) and Ken Wright (a few dollars more than Cambria). But I’ve not had Drouhin, and that seems to be a favorite here.

  16. wayne530

    It doesn’t have the same name recognition as the producers that are already mentioned, but Marine Layer focuses on a cool climate, minimal intervention style that has beautiful aromatics and fresh acidity. The other suggestions are great as well!

  17. Are you on the Monterey peninsula? I’m seeing your local wines

  18. Cooolllll

    Drive 30mins south and let your local pinot producers show you around. I’ll taste you through some barrels if need be. 

  19. Illustrious-Divide95

    Not had all these (I’m based in the UK) but regularly get to taste Dom. Drouhin and I love it.

    Had La Crema a lot but nothing recently, always enjoyed that too.

  20. Land of saints and Joyce are fantastic for $25.

  21. dickcake

    All good suggestions here, just remember that Pinot Noir is very regional. Oregon vs Sonoma/RRV, vs. central coast like the Sta. Rita Hills ones are going to be very different from each other. So definitely pay attention to what you like in the Pinots you’re drinking and consider the region they came from.

  22. Good Lord… Domaine drouhin, but find a wine shop, and go there. This selection hurts.

  23. devoduder

    Some good choices.

    A friend of mine makes Nielson & Cambria and another friend is assistant winemaker at Sanford, all solid wines.

    Alma Rosa is made by Richard Sanford, OG owner of Sanford winery, Santa Barbara county wine legend.

    What store is this, feels like somewhere in Santa Barbara or close by on the central coast.