For the age it was holding up very well! — 5 years ago
Nice wine, affordable price! — 7 years ago
Bloody good. It had to be as it cost the price of a small duchy.
I have a whole bottle of this greatness with me. Not a good idea.
Taste is sort of dry, not sweet and not bitter...all in equal mix. Taste of lots of stuff. It's been through different cask apparently. Bourbon, Madeira, Port...
Lovely aroma. Doesn't come to hit you right back. — 7 years ago
Fruity, crisp and clean with notes of lime zest. I love that the grapes are either from King Estate's organic and biodynamic vineyard or other sustainably-farmed vineyards. I'm a fan of Pinot Gris and I like this wine a lot. At $15 it's a great value. — 8 years ago
2.8% ABV. Solid choice when you have to do your taxes that afternoon. — 8 years ago
Absolutely love — 9 years ago
Wonderful earthy, farmy nose, smells old world. Very fresh and clean with bursting light dark fruit flavorz! — 9 years ago
Great intense fruit, dense Color. — 10 years ago
2016 is $13 at Costco. Very clean and smooth. Pretty light and not tons of flavor. — 5 years ago
My favorite rose this year. — 5 years ago
Big wine with nice grip. Thx Chuck! — 5 years ago
Little bit of fizz to let you know it's alive — 7 years ago
This vintage was from the Jon Vincent winery. It has cocoa notes. One can see why it was award winning. — 8 years ago
20 year-old Pinot Gris? Yes indeed, and from Ed King's own collection. This exceedingly rare 1995 King Estate Oregon Pinot Gris, in flawless condition with no visual signs of oxidation—still perfectly lemon yellow with a clear rim, with mature yet exceedingly lovely notes of caramelized apple, poached pear, furniture lacquer, and later, on opening, marzipan and granulated honey. In the mouth, the acidity is surprisingly intact, vivid, and lends framework to orchard fruit tinged with walnut skins. On a side note, King Estate is currently conducting research to try to figure out why it is that their Pinot Gris ages so well. This and the other vintages I've been lucky enough to taste held up admirably upon opening, and indeed, improved over the course of the evening. Certainly, bottles like this present a compelling argument for the ageability of Oregon Pinot Gris. Sample — 9 years ago
Same complexity as many Bordeaux blends but just made up of one often ignored varietal. Dark but lush. — 9 years ago
One of my favorites! Had at Flemmings the first time. — 11 years ago
V16. Smokey, toasty, soft nose. Juicy black berry fruit. Slightly tart, earth and oak finish. Well balanced. — 5 years ago
53 syrah, 21 grenache, 12 petit sirah, 8 tannat, 7 mourvedre....SO FUCKING GOOD — 5 years ago
Dumb to start with but as it list it’s chill it opened up to become a soft peach, textural, tongue wrapping delight. — 5 years ago
Bright red and black fruit, cinnamon, and sweet baking spices, with well integrated smoke and cedar. Backbone is the perfect name for this more structured, bold Oregon Pinot. — 7 years ago
better than OK :) — 7 years ago
Better as it warmed up — 7 years ago
Easy drinking, smooth. — 8 years ago
Pretty amazing for.a 2001. Held up really well. Strong cherry notes with a smooth finish. Drops off a little at the end, but very enjoyable. — 9 years ago
Wine from Jenna — 9 years ago
From what remember it was good 2012 — 10 years ago
Andrew Belzer
last had this about 4 years ago, quite different but still holding strong! dried apricots, honeysuckle, damp slate, pear, and honeycomb. lots of acid and life left! will definitely continue to age gracefully — 4 years ago