The 2023 Napa Valley Caterwaul Cabernet Sauvignon does not taste expensive in the usual “classic Napa opulence” sense. It doesn’t arrive draped in marketing mythos or polished into submission. Instead, it tastes like someone pulled exceptional fruit up through rich, seasoned earth and left a trace of hardship in the bottle.

The wine comes from a project led by winemaker Thomas Rivers Brown and grape grower Matt Hardin, two names spoken in wine circles with the kind of reverence usually reserved for platinum record producers or vintage guitar technicians. Caterwaul’s reputation rests on an improbable value proposition: wines shaped by vineyards and sensibilities associated with bottles costing several times more. The 2023 vintage feels particularly aware of that tension.
It opens dark and immediate—blackberry, black cherry, and dense dark fruit layered with cocoa and something peaty moving underneath it all. The earthiness recalls the smell of spring rain in a deep forest, where the soil turns not muddy brown but nearly black. Research the wine and you’ll find the usual litany of tasting notes—eucalyptus, violets, baking spice, toasted oak—but reading descriptors feels oddly beside the point.
The 2023 Caterwaul tastes expensive in the older sense of the word: not smooth, but profound. The tannins are substantial without becoming punitive, and the acidity keeps the wine from collapsing into the syrupy exhaustion that plagues so much contemporary Cabernet, especially among mass-produced New World bottlings.
This bottle says something about perseverance. Not merely because of the occasion surrounding it, but because the vintage itself arrived after years marked by smoke, drought, supply chain panic, inflation, and labor shortages. Here is a wine still willing to feel slightly untamed. Yeah, I said it…not flawed, but untamed.
The best Cabernet Sauvignons are the sum of scarred landscapes and terroir rather than engineered flavors. The Caterwaul achieves this beautifully. One sip leans savory and forested; the next turns plush and almost sweet with dark fruit. Leave the glass alone for ten minutes and another nuance materializes. It is a wine that keeps changing its mind—and, in turn, yours.
Online wine culture increasingly reduces bottles to scores and transactions: ninety-four points, sixty dollars, “punches above its weight.” The language has become strangely corporate, as though wine were a quarterly earnings report. Even praise now often sounds AI-generated.
But every so often, a bottle still interrupts the machinery through sheer audacity, resilient fruit, and the conviction of its makers. The 2023 Caterwaul succeeds not by being revolutionary, but by remembering something many luxury wines have forgotten: pleasure becomes more convincing when it contains a little resilience.
And perhaps that is why this bottle resonates so deeply with me now. It was a gift from the woman I love, opened to mark thirty hard years of work—years defined more often by perseverance than by accomplishments. So thank you, sweet girl, for choosing a remarkable 2023 Caterwaul, and for giving me an occasion worthy of both reflection and gratitude.
