Sign In

2008 Penner-Ash Shea Vineyard Pinot Noir

Removed from a professional wine storage facility

2 available
Bid *

Light capsule condition issue; light label condition issue

Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

RATINGS

94The Wine Advocate

...complex bouquet of Asian spices, incense, smoke, underbrush, plum, and black cherry. Layered, sweetly-fruited, and with exceptional volume and balance, this lengthy effort is the most complete and seamless wine in the portfolio.

94Wine Spectator

Ripe, round and complex, delivering black cherry, currant and plum flavors layered with flashes of wet granite, slate and white pepper, which add extra sparkle on the intense, but not dense, structure. Seductive stuff.

93Vinous / IWC

An intensely perfumed bouquet of black raspberry, dried rose, cinnamon and black pepper, plus a hint of anise that gains strength with air. Juicy, seductively sweet and penetrating red and dark berry flavors are lifted by zesty minerality.

REGION

United States, Oregon, Willamette Valley

Willamette Valley AVA was established in 1983, and it is the oldest appellation in Oregon. Oregon’s modern wine industry began in the Willamette Valley in the 1960s when artists, vagabond winemakers, and U.C. Davis oenology graduates looking for new territory started their own, small, off-the-grid wineries. The appellation is the state’s largest, and it extends 175 miles from Columbia River on the Washington/Oregon border to just south of Eugene, near central Oregon. The Willamette River runs through the area, helping to give the appellation a mild year-round climate. There are six smaller sub-appellations within this AVA, but altogether the Willamette Valley has the largest concentration of wineries in Oregon, as well as the majority of the state’s most famous producers. Pinot Noir is king here, followed by Chardonnay, Pinot Gris and Riesling. To most admirers of Oregon Pinot Noir, Willamette Valley offers the most distinctive wine choices in the state.

TYPE

Red Wine, Pinot Noir

This red wine is relatively light and can pair with a wide variety of foods. The grape prefers cooler climates and the wine is most often associated with Burgundy, Champagne and the U.S. west coast. Regional differences make it nearly as fickle as it is flexible.