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Morgan

Morgan Winery was one of the first to establish themselves under the Santa Lucia Highlands AVA which was granted status in the early 1990’s. It was 1996 when Dan and Donna Lee invested in 65 acres of property near the Monterey Bay to plant their vineyards. However when the Morgan vineyards were first planted the soil was not in its optimal condition. They decided to enhance the land with organic nutrients and in 2001 they became the first Certified Organic vineyard in the Santa Lucia Highlands. While some Syrah, Riesling and Pinot Gris is planted, the bulk of Morgan wines are produced from Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes. Morgan’s Double L vineyard is their pride and joy and the origin of their flagship Pinot Noir and Chardonnay wines. These wines are consistently at the top of our Morgan wine ratings. The proximity to the Monterey Bay provides a cool, nighttime fog protecting the vineyard plantings while the warmer days can elicit wonderful fruit and acidity from the grapes leading to well balanced and elegant wines. Take a look below for our full compilation of Morgan wine reviews.

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Showing 41 thru -49 of 154
91
points

Morgan 2003 Rosella’s Vineyard Chardonnay (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  1. $35
You can smell the minerals in this tight, compelling wine. It has an aroma suggesting cold metal, even a touch of diesel, floating above the guava, pineapple, nectarine and peach flavors. Smoky oak and zesty acidity help make this Chard very complex and satisfying.  — S.H.  (12/15/2005)
91
points

Morgan 2003 Double L Vineyard Chardonnay (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  • Cellar Selection
  1. $35
This single-vineyard Chardonnay impresses for its taut structure and promise of aging. It’s totally dry, and beneath that slate and metal is a core of ripe yellow peach. Fans of blowsy Chards will find it spare, but if you like Chablis, you’ll love the complex, stony minerality. Hold until 2007.  — S.H.  (12/15/2005)
91
points

Morgan 2005 R&D Franscioni Vineyard Pinot Gris (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  • Editors' Choice
  1. $16
This brilliant PG has just a bit of older French oak on it, which adds softening cream, but the wine would be great even without it. The flavors of citrus zest, grapefruit sorbet, melons and figs are enormously rich and strong, and perfectly balanced by crisp acidity and a vibrant minerality leading to a dry, clean finish. What a great price for a wine of this stature.  — S.H.  (11/15/2006)
91
points

Morgan 2006 Highland Chardonnay (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  1. $26
Those familiar with Morgan’s more expensive Chardonnays, such as the Double L (which comprises 55% of this blend) will find true value in this regional wine. It shows similar power and authority in a showy, Chablis-style wine whose acidic, minerally structure frames intense citrus and oak flavors.  — S.H.  (2/1/2008)
91
points

Morgan 2007 R&D Franscioni Vineyard Pinot Gris (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  • Editors' Choice
  1. $17
Morgan’s been on a roll the last couple of years, now that they’ve figured out how to make this wine from fruit grown in a cool part of the Highlands. Aged in older oak barrels, the wine shows no wood at all, but has a creamy softness that modifies the crisp lemon, lime, grapefruit, pear and wildflower flavors. This is one of the best Pinot Gris in California.  — S.H.  (10/1/2008)
91
points

Morgan 2007 Metallico Un-Oaked Chardonnay (Monterey)

  • Editors' Choice
  1. $22
Morgan has been a real pioneer in the unoaked Chardonnay movement, and when the wine scores, it scores big. Consider this a run-scoring triple. It’s totally dry, very acidic (officially, 7.13 g/L, for the statistically-minded) and austere, with a hard edge of minerals. What fruit there is suggests tart green apples and white nectarines. Believe me, you won’t miss…  — S.H.  (12/15/2008)
91
points

Morgan 2008 Double L Chardonnay (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  1. $36
Ultra-rich and decadent, Morgan’s 08 Double L shows its signature tropical fruit, apricot and mineral flavors, accented with the smoky vanilla, buttered toast and caramel from toasted oak, and brightened with acidity. Although it’s dry, it’s oozing in glycerine and honey. Will not age, so drink up.  — S.H.  (11/1/2010)
91
points

Morgan 2001 Rosella’s Vineyard Chardonnay (Santa Lucia Highlands)

  1. $34
Tropical fruit flavors explode in honeyed richness, thrilling the palate with sweet mango and nectarine, but beautiful acidity makes it crisp and clean. Loads of oak, too. Defines this cool-climate appellation for Chardonnay in its pinpoint balance of acid to fruit.  — S.H.  (2/1/2004)
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