Wine Diary: Mawby Vineyards Sex Sparkling Rosé NV

Okay, how could you not pick this wine for Valentine’s Day? The name has all the subtlety of a sledgehammer, but there should be no miscommunication between you and your date. I’ve wanted to carry this wine at work for a long time, just to hear my co-workers say things like, “The chef recommends Sex tonight,” or, “Have you tried Sex? It’s really good.” It’s the joke that never ends.

Beyond the silly immaturity of it all, I’ve wanted to carry a Michigan wine for a while now. It’s easy to look past wines produced in a majority of the United States, most wine press give their attention to what’s produced on the West Coast. As a consequence, people tend to think the local soil and climate are incapable or producing quality wine. It’s a misconception that benefits the established regions and makes it that much harder for the pioneering local winemaker.

Despite all that, Michigan has a growing reputation for producing quality wine, particularly Riesling. I haven’t had a lot of wine from from the state, but nothing so far has disappointed me. Before the site overhaul last summer, I previously had a review of a Riesling from Left Foot Charley that I enjoyed, but of all the Michigan producers, I’ve dealt with Mawby the most.

For about a year we were selling a sparkling wine from this same line, M. Lawrence Green, at the Chopping Block. I even wrote a blog about it on the company site, encouraging people to try local wines. When I heard they had a sparkling rosé called Sex, I knew I wanted to try it… after all, I’ve heard really good things about it.

Mawby vineyards founder, Larry Mawby, planted his first grapes in the mid-seventies. Growing up on a farm, he always knew he would be working in agriculture to some degree. While traveling through Europe, he was inspired by the vineyards and wine of Burgundy in France. Upon returning home, he set his mind to producing wine in his home state of Michigan. Today Mawby is a small vineyard that produces Pinot Noir, Vignoles, Pinot Gris, Regent, Riesling, Chardonnay, and Pinot Meunier. They also supplement their harvest by acquiring additional grapes from other vineyards in Michigan, Washington, and California, which is a pretty common practice, though Mawby seems more transparent about it than most vineyards.

According to their website, the M.Lawrence line of wines is an artistic endeavor to express music through wine. Sex is described as a “Fleshy Top-40 Rosé.” It seems pretty obvious to me that if sex was music it would sound like Bill Withers, but I guess everyone has their own opinion.

The wine is a blend of Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Muscat. There’s some great red fruit flavors and enough playful effervescence to make the wine fun, but where it really stood out was in the range of textures I experienced while drinking it, in the beginning it seemed fibrous and juicy like biting into an apple, by the finish it was more dry and mineral. The best word I can use to describe this wine is “Sensual,” literally gratifying to all my senses, which may be the brilliance of naming it Sex.

If you keep track of my blogging, you may recall that I also recommended a sparkling rosé for Thanksgiving. What can I say? It’s a fun style of wine, that’s inoffensive, and food friendly. Plus, how can you pass up on recommending people have Sex for Valentine’s Day. Just call me Cupid… or maybe Dionysus.

sparkling wine Sparkling Rosé gruet wine bottle label

Wine Diary: Gruet Sparkling Brut Rosé

Outside of this site, I also write a monthly wine blog for the Chopping Block. With Thanksgiving coming, I decided to feature a wine off their list as my pick for the perfect Thanksgiving dinner pairing. I settled on their new sparkling rosé, which also works out because I’ve been wanting to find a Pinot Noir to write about for this site, and I can be pretty damn picky about Pinot.

Sparkling Rosé wine bottle label Gruet

I’m both a fan of sparkling rosé and not, it’s easy to drink and non-offensive, but usually because it’s lacking in complexity and sometimes even sweet. It also has the added bonus of pairing nicely with a broad range of food. Also, it’s a great wine to share with your friends who don’t really drink wine and if you have a reputation for being kind of a snob, it diffuses that nicely. However, if your friends are wine snobs, they’ll probably turn their nose up at this and voice their dissatisfaction out of some condescending, elitist, sense of obligation. In short, it’s not right for every situation, but if you want something fun and easy to drink, it’s a solid choice.

Gruet Brut Rosé is produced in New Mexico, just outside of Albuquerque. Their website tells the story of a family of Champagne producers traveling through the area in the early 80’s while on vacation. They were impressed by local wines and saw potential in the region for winemaking, so they decided to expand their operation. In 1984 the younger generation of the family relocated to the United States and by 1989 they released their first vintage.

close-up brut Sparkling Rosé wine

The wine is produced from 100% Pinot Noir grapes. It has an intense raspberry flavor, with hints of ginger, and a very creamy texture. The acidity was bright and it wasn’t overly sweet. I found it to have more complexity than I usually see in this style of wine. Overall, I was impressed, which is is rare for me with rosé, sparkling or otherwise.

Sparkling Rosé gruet brut wine

The word I keep coming back to with this wine is “fun” and I think that be the perfect description. Wine tasting can be a very ponderous and serious activity sometimes, and when you’re trying to coax tasting notes out of a stubborn Bordeaux it can be easy to loose sight of why you’re drinking the wine in the first place. Gruet Brut Rosé is the kind of wine that isn’t going to let you forget you’re supposed to be having fun and I did, at every step of this process, from popping the cork to color correcting my pictures several days, even writing two blogs about it, at no point did this feel like a chore.

A friend from Germany once told me that Americans don’t drink enough sparkling wine and I’ve taken that to heart, trying to fit it into my rotation of wine purchases. I no longer really see it as something to pair with celebrations, but as a celebration itself. There’s something about sparkling wine that’s just fun, and we all use a little more of that in our lives.

Sparkling Rosé wine bottle glass