The wine is a beautiful ruby red color; aromas rich with ripe red fruits and baking spice. On the palate, black and red currants, dark cherries, and a touch of cracked pepper finish with fine-ground tannins and a lively acidity. Pair with red meat, cheese and charcuterie, or simply by itself!
The blend is 50/50 Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah. The Cabernet Sauvignon was sourced from the Particelli Vineyard in St. Helena and the Syrah is from our family’s ranch, Shifflett Ranch and Vineyards, in Oak Knoll where we’ve been grape-growers for over 40 years. The Particelli soil is a base of gravelly loam with river deposits from the neighboring Napa River. The soil for the Syrah from Shifflett Ranch is bale clay loam, Estrella River clone (a descendant of cuttings from the famous Hermitage vineyard in the northern Rhone) planted on 110R.
Winemaking Notes
“In my winemaking, I concentrate on ushering the vintage into the bottle with minimal inputs. I am a strong believer in showcasing true varietal characteristics and a strong sense of place. To me, wine is made in the vineyard and as such needs to be celebrated and honored. A restrained use of oak helps me to encourage balance in the wine without overpowering any of the other aspects.” – Jeffrey Shifflett
Specs
Vintage: 2014
Blend: 50% Cabernet Sauvignon, 50% Syrah
Appellation: Napa Valley
Vineyards: Cabernet Sauvignon from the Particelli Vineyard in St. Helena, - Syrah from Shifflett Ranch and Vineyards in Oak Knoll
Barrel Regime: Aged in 25% new French oak for 21 months
86|87 Wines is the debut label of Caroline and Jeffrey Shifflett, a brother/sister team and 4th generation of a Napa-Valley grape growing family. Jeffrey is responsible for production; after many harvests in the cellar, he pivoted to focus on farming, now managing the family’s 120 acre property in the Oak Knoll district of Napa Valley and making 86|87 wines on the side. Caroline is responsible for building relationships throughout the United States and managing the daily sales efforts on property.
Available States
AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IN, IA, KS, LA, ME, MD, MA, MN, MO, MT, NE, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY
How much more are you saving by buying a full case?
(Note: Tax & Shipping not included in savings calculations)
2014 86|87 Wines Proprietary Red Blend - $70 = 26.91%
So curiosity piqued when I read the write-up here. I met and visited Jeffrey a few times back when he was working on the Shifflett Estate project. It was always a pleasure. Definitely some good chops behind this but can’t say I ever heard of 86|87. Dug up this old article for a little background:
Also if you are familiar with William & Mary Wine Company Cabernet Shifflett Vineyard this is where their cab is sourced. William being Will Segui from Rivers-Marie and Mary his wife who is another of Jeffrey Shifflett’s sisters if I have it right.
@kaolis Hi there! We’re actually the son/daughter of Jeffrey Shifflett, 4th generation Shifflett Family, Will is our cousin-in-law! My brother Jeffrey Jr. is now the vineyard manager for the family property, making our wine on the side. If you try it, let us know what you think!
Hi there! We’re actually the son/daughter of Jeffrey Shifflett, 4th generation Shifflett Family, Will is our cousin-in-law! My brother Jeffrey Jr. is now the vineyard manager for the family property, making our wine on the side. If you try it, let us know what you think!
Interesting name choice. I think I would have called the place 96|97. Although, if I were the one making the wine i’d probably end changing the name to Overpromised|Underdelivered.
@char2na 86|87 actually stands for our birth years, and our origin in the wine industry as 4th generation Napa Valley grape-growers. I think if you tried the wine you’d actually see that it over-delivers for the price point.
@8687wines Wow, under 40 with a winery is crazy impressive! Well done! Will have to give it a try. And just to be clear, I was only talking about the wine that came out of my own hypothetical 96/97 winery when I said over-promised. A Mr. Beer kit that I bought on the old site is the peak of my fermentation experience.
I received the golden ticket for the 86|87 Red Blend. Amazingly, this was sent to me in June and I’ve been longingly staring at it for two months (almost to the day) waiting to taste. Finally received the word it was going up today.
As I have never heard of this winery, it was exciting to try something new. The bottle had no mention what made up the blend, merely that the alcohol was 15%. Wow. Let’s see what’s in store.
The cork had a slight stain, no sediment. Upon pop 'n pour, a nice ruby red color and as I swirled and waited… and waited… and still waited, no legs. Odd. Initial scent was alcohol. Very strong, no other scent. First taste, same. No discernable flavors. I waited about 20 minutes before I tried again. Swirl, no legs. Smell – plums, possibly cherries, maybe a hint of vanilla? Taste – much better. I could now taste the fruit, but not overwhelming, and the alcohol had mostly dissipated. I took a few more sips and thought to myself that this must have Cab mixed in the blend.
Poured another small glass to taste with food. We had prime filet, shrimp in a garlic butter sauce, baked potatoes, and caprese salad with pesto. Here is where I found it interesting. It was delightful with the pesto and shrimp, but turned terribly bitter and almost undrinkable with the steak. The steak was cooked on charcoal and seasoned with only salt and fresh cracked pepper. Perhaps it was the charcoal that made the pairing a mismatch. I tried it again and still the same bitterness came though. The pesto and shrimp brought out a smoothness. I recorked the bottle and saved it for day 2.
On day two, I poured a large CM glass (those suckers can hold some wine!), recorked the remainder of the bottle, and passed it on to my fellow casemate, @james for him and his lovely bride to taste as we all social distanced.
Day 2: I swirled and still no legs. Scent was similar, but maybe more vanilla. I’m not picking up any peppery spice. Taste – similar to day one, but the flavors have blended together and seem like a cohesive unit. Cherries, and still plum. Nothing was overpowering. I think this is better on day two. Today was pasta with a red sauce and pork. That was lovely. Tried it later with pepper jack cheese and that was a big no go. Nice on its own; no food required.
Day 3: I had just enough for a few sips so I poured into a bottle and let it sit overnight. Took one for the team this morning and went through the ritual again. Swirl, no legs. I’m still shaking my head. Scent – plums and cherries; more vanilla. Taste – this is where it has lost some of its oomph; slight astringent taste. Would recommend to drink over two days.
My overall impression is this needs air upon initial opening. The profile is very smooth and soothing, like comfort food or a blanket in a bottle. I could be making that up, but that was how it made me feel when I drank it. This would be nice on a cold winter evening or after a long day regardless of the temperatures outside (it was 100 here yesterday and I thoroughly enjoyed it!). The wine is dry with no hint of sweetness, but didn’t suck the moisture out of my mouth. Not fruit forward. It left me wanting another sip. My first thought on day 1 was this would be a good wine for non-red drinkers and red drinkers alike. As I have hundreds of bottles thanks to @winedavid49, I’m not interested in cases of everyday drinkers as the black tie/special occasion wines have now become my everyday drinkers. After day 2, I decided this was something I wanted in the cellar. It’s not Rushmore (anyone for a clue…), but I really enjoyed the flavor profile later on day one and on day two. This is nice at the case price and I’m in. Thank you Alice, WD, and 86|87 for the opportunity to labrat. It was worth the wait!
@chefjess Thanks for the thorough taste and glad you enjoyed the wine! I agree with you that after some bottle age it does open up nicely after some time. We love this wine with or without food, glad it provided the same pleasure for you!
@8687wines
Thank you for the opportunity to labrat. Seeing as I really enjoyed this now, what is the aging potential?
I definitely sensed the Cab (Cab is my favorite) as that was my initial thought after tasting and prior to seeing the blend listed here, but I didn’t sense any of the pepper I typically associate with Syrah, even on the finish. The wine did have a long finish. Was that the addition of the Syrah?
William and Mary cabs are some of my favorite cabs right now and I have been buying for a few releases, Shifflett is great cab fruit! And you/your family are doing a great job growing it. My question is why blend in syrah?
Glad to hear you’re a fan of what we’re growing. We’re proud of the work we do in the vineyard and the cellar! We love the Syrah for its color and body as well as its balance of fruit and spice. Not your typical blend but working with what we had available!
@8687wines@klezman@ScottW58 Yes indeed! I finished my last bottle about a year ago and it was delicious. Cameron Hughes also had that juice in a lot after the original winery went under.
@8687wines@ScottW58@jhkey@klezman
Justin Savant is a perennial Cab/Syrah blend that I have always enjoyed although it is usually 2/3 Syrah. It does seem to be somewhat uncommon to have just those two varieties in a red blend.
Adding to the rattage from @chefjess (thank you so much!) – Danielle and I did enjoy the Day 2 8687, and also noted the plum and possibly vanilla, but not overpoweringly. Danielle at first taste thought it was a little tart then gave a pleasant “mm!” seconds later, haha. I do like a nicely aged, not-so-fruit-forward red and I’d say this blend did not disappoint. Legs made their appearance for me and I thought I could even see some bricking.
Saved a bit to sip later with some tortellini soup made with home grown garden veggies that somehow became more tortellini than soup, but what I found that I was really missing was another glass
I’m assuming it would be insanity to ship wine to Texas in August. Tell me why I’m wrong. I’ve seen some good deals but keep having to pass because of the heat.
@tread401 I recommend diverting shipment to a UPS access point near you whether or not you will be home. Had a case shipped recently with huge problems. Very long story very short, it sat on a hot truck in Texas Fri-Monday. Box came beat up - even the styrofoam inside was busted up a little. Wine was warm to the touch but doesn’t taste cooked.
@chipgreen
Thanks, and looks like I missed the area by quite a few miles!
Macedonia is a nice area, and my oldest son lives just to the north, in Chagrin Falls, but I seldom get over that way, anymore. His wife likes whites, and I have some put back for her, but also liked the Wellington’s I used to have around; I miss those myself!
Time to buy some of that Grenache they have offered today, I just wish they offered in 4’s, 6’s, and cases. Three is never enough, unless it is bad, and fortunately that almost never happens here, with the great variety and selections that they make.
2014 86|87 Proprietary Red Wine, Napa Valley
Tasting Notes
Winemaking Notes
Specs
Included in the Box
Price Comparison
$456.00 at 86|87 Wines for 12x 2014 86|87 Proprietary Red Wine, Napa Valley
About The Winery
Available States
AZ, CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, ID, IN, IA, KS, LA, ME, MD, MA, MN, MO, MT, NE, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY
Estimated Delivery
Monday, August 31st - Tuesday, September 1st
86|87 Wines Proprietary Red Blend
3 bottles for $64.99 $21.66/bottle + $2.67/bottle shipping
Case of 12 for $189.99 $15.83/bottle + $1/bottle shipping
2014 86|87 Wines Proprietary Red Blend
How much more are you saving by buying a full case?
(Note: Tax & Shipping not included in savings calculations)
2014 86|87 Wines Proprietary Red Blend - $70 = 26.91%
So curiosity piqued when I read the write-up here. I met and visited Jeffrey a few times back when he was working on the Shifflett Estate project. It was always a pleasure. Definitely some good chops behind this but can’t say I ever heard of 86|87. Dug up this old article for a little background:
https://napavalleyregister.com/business/napa-native-forsakes-law-to-press-his-luck-with-winemaking/article_a5206a78-59db-52b7-b63e-384bb4268672.html
Also if you are familiar with William & Mary Wine Company Cabernet Shifflett Vineyard this is where their cab is sourced. William being Will Segui from Rivers-Marie and Mary his wife who is another of Jeffrey Shifflett’s sisters if I have it right.
@kaolis Hi there! We’re actually the son/daughter of Jeffrey Shifflett, 4th generation Shifflett Family, Will is our cousin-in-law! My brother Jeffrey Jr. is now the vineyard manager for the family property, making our wine on the side. If you try it, let us know what you think!
@8687wines Ok, got it! Thanks for the clarification. Loved riding around for the property tour
Hi there! We’re actually the son/daughter of Jeffrey Shifflett, 4th generation Shifflett Family, Will is our cousin-in-law! My brother Jeffrey Jr. is now the vineyard manager for the family property, making our wine on the side. If you try it, let us know what you think!
Interesting name choice. I think I would have called the place 96|97. Although, if I were the one making the wine i’d probably end changing the name to Overpromised|Underdelivered.
@char2na 86|87 actually stands for our birth years, and our origin in the wine industry as 4th generation Napa Valley grape-growers. I think if you tried the wine you’d actually see that it over-delivers for the price point.
@8687wines Wow, under 40 with a winery is crazy impressive! Well done! Will have to give it a try. And just to be clear, I was only talking about the wine that came out of my own hypothetical 96/97 winery when I said over-promised. A Mr. Beer kit that I bought on the old site is the peak of my fermentation experience.
I received the golden ticket for the 86|87 Red Blend. Amazingly, this was sent to me in June and I’ve been longingly staring at it for two months (almost to the day) waiting to taste. Finally received the word it was going up today.
As I have never heard of this winery, it was exciting to try something new. The bottle had no mention what made up the blend, merely that the alcohol was 15%. Wow. Let’s see what’s in store.
The cork had a slight stain, no sediment. Upon pop 'n pour, a nice ruby red color and as I swirled and waited… and waited… and still waited, no legs. Odd. Initial scent was alcohol. Very strong, no other scent. First taste, same. No discernable flavors. I waited about 20 minutes before I tried again. Swirl, no legs. Smell – plums, possibly cherries, maybe a hint of vanilla? Taste – much better. I could now taste the fruit, but not overwhelming, and the alcohol had mostly dissipated. I took a few more sips and thought to myself that this must have Cab mixed in the blend.
Poured another small glass to taste with food. We had prime filet, shrimp in a garlic butter sauce, baked potatoes, and caprese salad with pesto. Here is where I found it interesting. It was delightful with the pesto and shrimp, but turned terribly bitter and almost undrinkable with the steak. The steak was cooked on charcoal and seasoned with only salt and fresh cracked pepper. Perhaps it was the charcoal that made the pairing a mismatch. I tried it again and still the same bitterness came though. The pesto and shrimp brought out a smoothness. I recorked the bottle and saved it for day 2.
On day two, I poured a large CM glass (those suckers can hold some wine!), recorked the remainder of the bottle, and passed it on to my fellow casemate, @james for him and his lovely bride to taste as we all social distanced.
Day 2: I swirled and still no legs. Scent was similar, but maybe more vanilla. I’m not picking up any peppery spice. Taste – similar to day one, but the flavors have blended together and seem like a cohesive unit. Cherries, and still plum. Nothing was overpowering. I think this is better on day two. Today was pasta with a red sauce and pork. That was lovely. Tried it later with pepper jack cheese and that was a big no go. Nice on its own; no food required.
Day 3: I had just enough for a few sips so I poured into a bottle and let it sit overnight. Took one for the team this morning and went through the ritual again. Swirl, no legs. I’m still shaking my head. Scent – plums and cherries; more vanilla. Taste – this is where it has lost some of its oomph; slight astringent taste. Would recommend to drink over two days.
My overall impression is this needs air upon initial opening. The profile is very smooth and soothing, like comfort food or a blanket in a bottle. I could be making that up, but that was how it made me feel when I drank it. This would be nice on a cold winter evening or after a long day regardless of the temperatures outside (it was 100 here yesterday and I thoroughly enjoyed it!). The wine is dry with no hint of sweetness, but didn’t suck the moisture out of my mouth. Not fruit forward. It left me wanting another sip. My first thought on day 1 was this would be a good wine for non-red drinkers and red drinkers alike. As I have hundreds of bottles thanks to @winedavid49, I’m not interested in cases of everyday drinkers as the black tie/special occasion wines have now become my everyday drinkers. After day 2, I decided this was something I wanted in the cellar. It’s not Rushmore (anyone for a clue…), but I really enjoyed the flavor profile later on day one and on day two. This is nice at the case price and I’m in. Thank you Alice, WD, and 86|87 for the opportunity to labrat. It was worth the wait!
@chefjess Thank you so much for lr’ing and for your patience in hanging onto that bottle. Interesting how it changed up with the diff. foods.
@chefjess Thanks for the thorough taste and glad you enjoyed the wine! I agree with you that after some bottle age it does open up nicely after some time. We love this wine with or without food, glad it provided the same pleasure for you!
@8687wines
Thank you for the opportunity to labrat. Seeing as I really enjoyed this now, what is the aging potential?
I definitely sensed the Cab (Cab is my favorite) as that was my initial thought after tasting and prior to seeing the blend listed here, but I didn’t sense any of the pepper I typically associate with Syrah, even on the finish. The wine did have a long finish. Was that the addition of the Syrah?
@chefjess No “legs” no problem. Wine tears or legs
https://www.saveur.com/story/drink/what-causes-streaks-of-wine-to-form-on-side-of-glass/
William and Mary cabs are some of my favorite cabs right now and I have been buying for a few releases, Shifflett is great cab fruit! And you/your family are doing a great job growing it. My question is why blend in syrah?
@ScottW58
Glad to hear you’re a fan of what we’re growing. We’re proud of the work we do in the vineyard and the cellar! We love the Syrah for its color and body as well as its balance of fruit and spice. Not your typical blend but working with what we had available!
@8687wines @ScottW58 Wasn’t the old Havens Black & Blue a Syrah/Cab blend, although from Carneros? I’ve quite liked those.
@8687wines @klezman @ScottW58 Yes indeed! I finished my last bottle about a year ago and it was delicious. Cameron Hughes also had that juice in a lot after the original winery went under.
@8687wines
Got it and WTH I will give this a try
@8687wines @ScottW58 @jhkey @klezman
Justin Savant is a perennial Cab/Syrah blend that I have always enjoyed although it is usually 2/3 Syrah. It does seem to be somewhat uncommon to have just those two varieties in a red blend.
Adding to the rattage from @chefjess (thank you so much!) – Danielle and I did enjoy the Day 2 8687, and also noted the plum and possibly vanilla, but not overpoweringly. Danielle at first taste thought it was a little tart then gave a pleasant “mm!” seconds later, haha. I do like a nicely aged, not-so-fruit-forward red and I’d say this blend did not disappoint. Legs made their appearance for me and I thought I could even see some bricking.
Saved a bit to sip later with some tortellini soup made with home grown garden veggies that somehow became more tortellini than soup, but what I found that I was really missing was another glass
@james
Thank you for adding your notes and the pictures. I haven’t had luck with pics in the past (maybe it’s because I’m using my phone?).
@james love the pics! Happy to hear you enjoyed, your meal sounds lovely! Cheers!
@james Thanks for chiming in with some additional rattage.
@WCCWineGirl @chefjess @8687wines Thanks all! Always up to try some
I’m assuming it would be insanity to ship wine to Texas in August. Tell me why I’m wrong. I’ve seen some good deals but keep having to pass because of the heat.
@tread401 I believe everything is going out 2-day so you should be fine! Let us know what you think if you end up getting some
@tread401 2-day UPS, and UPS now allows diverting wine to a normal UPS Access Point location according to some of the regulars here!
@tread401 I recommend diverting shipment to a UPS access point near you whether or not you will be home. Had a case shipped recently with huge problems. Very long story very short, it sat on a hot truck in Texas Fri-Monday. Box came beat up - even the styrofoam inside was busted up a little. Wine was warm to the touch but doesn’t taste cooked.
@TimW @tread401
Just redirected my Jana Sauvignon Blanc shipment to an Advance Auto Parts store.
@chipgreen @TimW @tread401 Slight aromas of Valvoline, has that nice yellow Prestone color to it, however goes down a bit like battery acid.
@chipgreen @TimW @tread401
N. Olmsted, perhaps?
If so, we are very close.
Am in Westlake, doing an old Ben Gun/hermit thing “Got any cheese?” guy.
Not looking for cheese, just think we might be able to split sometimes.
In any event, always look towards recommendations from you and others I trust here, and before.
@CroutonOllie
Macedonia. Feel free to jump in with the rest of the NE Ohio gang when we are working on splits!
@chipgreen
Thanks, and looks like I missed the area by quite a few miles!
Macedonia is a nice area, and my oldest son lives just to the north, in Chagrin Falls, but I seldom get over that way, anymore. His wife likes whites, and I have some put back for her, but also liked the Wellington’s I used to have around; I miss those myself!
Time to buy some of that Grenache they have offered today, I just wish they offered in 4’s, 6’s, and cases. Three is never enough, unless it is bad, and fortunately that almost never happens here, with the great variety and selections that they make.
Cheers, and wish you a great rest of the summer!
@CroutonOllie
Same to you!
Thank you!
Another offer too interesting to pass up!
In for 3, as I still didn’t get around to topping up my goof off account; I really have to address this.