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Your Weekend Wine: The Daily Ration

The Daily Ration, available for purchase EVERYDAY in the tasting room. Half Gallon of Goodness to set the weekend off right!

Some of you have expressed reservations about opening our wines for some of your friends who may have questionable palates. So we thought we would provide an option that everyone can sit around and enjoy no matter what day it is or how many other bottles have been opened.

Available for tasting on Thursdays & Fridays in the tasting room.

$25 Jug $20 Refills (Bring Your Jug Back and Save)

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JC Cellars Vineyard Partners

Jeff Cohn’s winemaking philosophy begins with sourcing prime fruit from exceptional vineyards. After more than 15 years in the industry, Cohn’s experience working with some of California’s top vineyards, including Rockpile Vineyard in the hills of Sonoma County, Fess Parker Vineyard in Santa Barbara County and Stagecoach Vineyard in Napa Valley, allows him to source only the finest fruit for JC Cellars. He prefers vineyards with steep rocky terrain, which produce distinctive fruit, resulting in wines with immense concentration and complexity.

Throughout the year it is a priority for Cohn to keep in close communication with his growers, enabling him to gain an enhanced understanding of each vineyard’s distinct profile and ultimately craft a wine the achieves both his own and the grower’s vision.

There are many different training systems throughout the world, but in California the main types are head, cordon and cane. Usually four seasons of growth or more are required to train a young vine properly.

HEAD TRAINING

The vine has the shape of a small upright shrub, with a vertical trunk 1 to 3 ft high that supports arms spaced around its head.

CORDON TRAINING

The trunk of the bilateral, horizontal cordon rises vertically to about 8 to 12 inches below the lower wire of the trellis, and then divides into two branches that extend in opposite directions along the lower wire to within about 10 inches of the adjacent vines.

CANE TRAINING

The shape is similar to that of head-trained vines, except that the head may be fan shaped in the plane of the trellis and only two or three arms on each side of the head are usually needed.