At The Grey in Savannah — 8 months ago
Demands food — 2 years ago
Virtasant/Antica Terra wine blending — 3 years ago
Rich cherry and cassis lovely finish and balance. — 5 years ago
Great wine. Will definitely buy again — 6 years ago
Good balanced, good aftertaste of this wine blow you away. Purple color reminds young Saperavi or liquid consistency in the glass, or gouache concentrate.
Small tannins, low acidic, becoming elder would be jam.
Grapes from Old vines and maceration applied. rye croutons, smoked salami in the nose. — 6 years ago
Smell blackberry and plum, Taste raspberry, blackberry. Fruit forward. Dry mouth at the end.
— 4 months ago
Sooo yummy. Darker on the nose, but light and sweet on the palate - like cucumbers or powdered sugar or melon. — 5 years ago
Smooth, lightly fruity, dry (but not too dry) — 6 years ago
Very good. Young. Mourad. — 5 months ago
Italian red blend… pairs well with chicken Marsala — 6 months ago
Antics Terra Collective Tasting. A dark, brooding pinot from a hot year in Willamette, full of bramble, dark blackberry, saline, blueberry pie filling. Super dry with big tannins. Unique and one of a kind. — 10 months ago
2015: Outstanding Aglianico. Dominated by gobs of darker red fruit earlier on before picking up tertiary leather and graphite flavors. Rich and mouth coating and already drinking well, but clearly will get increasingly complex over time. $50 on Delectable. — 4 years ago
Very smooth. Little peppery. — 5 years ago
Spicy and fruity! Very good! — 6 years ago
In physics, the Coriolis force is an inertial force that acts on objects that are in motion relative to a rotating reference frame.
In wine, Coriolis is a Willamette Valley Pinot Noir from Maggie Harrison's Antica Terra.
The back label says "The mathematical expression for the Coriolis force appeared in an 1835 paper by French scientist Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis, in connection with the theory of water wheels. This wine takes the name Coriolis and with it the symbol of the water wheel: a manifestation of the conversion of free-flowing energy into useful forms of power. One hundred percent of the profits from the sale of this wine are donated to charity. In this way this wine supports the conversion of ideas into powerful actions that serve a greater good."
One of those charities is Phil Knight's Cancer Challenge, so I guess you could say this wine is helping to cure cancer. If that's not reason enough to drink it, the wine is drop dead gorgeous. Opens with wild fruit purity of cherry, red currant and even then pushes towards raspberry, which leads into a salty minerality that plays really well off its subtle floral and citrus tones. While it's loaded with tart fruit and even citrus acidity, it finishes with length and exceptional silkiness, a testament to its balance. Beautiful. — 6 years ago
Emma Dominguez
Deep rich red/purple color, mild notes of plum, fruitier than other reds I’ve had. I really liked it — 4 months ago