Many thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Winetex for hosting a wonderful evening in Houston last night. As noted, Mrs. Winetex sleuthed-out a delightful restaurant, with friendly / knowledgeable staff, and great food... all in front of a cozy fireplace! (Mrs. Winetex even imported some Minneapolis weather to make me feel at home!).
Stemor: FYI, the Cristom in Memphis was a '99 Marjorie. An RP 94, I believe. Nonetheless, I prefer the lesser rated Jessie, and in this case the '98 was much more approachable / round than the Marjorie we tried. This is most certainly one of my top 5 OR pinots, and it consistently lands there. Winetex has nicely reviewed the wine.
To my thinking, the wine that I will closely watch evolve is the '99 Chehalem Stoller Best Barrel. This was a big, rich, earthy pinot-- uncharacteristic of the usually fruit forward Stoller vineyard wines. It was too young, but I sense great things lurking below the surface. Very extracted and concentrated without being "gooey" or overripe. It needs another couple of years to come into its drinking window.
The wines were selected with the thought of showcasing a range of Oregon pinots of different vintages against a top offering from California and Burgundy. The Rochioli was a disappointment, and as I sit here typing and drinking the remnants, I find it better than it was last night (plus I haven't had 5 other wines first!), but it isn't nearly as good as its reputation. The Burgundy was a distinctive wine, and I'm sure in a few years it will be an even better wine, but overall, all three Oregon wines showed very well... and at a cost generally 40% less than the California and Burgundy.
As for trusting a grower to comment about his own fruit: Forget it; they are not trustworthy!

Stemor: A minor geographical correction... Black Hole Vineyard is located on the south end of Parrett Mountain. It is across the Willamette Valley to the east from the Dundee Hills. The soils are substantially more rocky and shallow than the Dundee soils. The nearest producers are McKinlay and Chehalem's Corral Creek vineyard, although both have notably different soil profiles.
It would be nice to not have to worry about distribution. I think the best way to ensure this is to: a) Make really good, distinctive wine; b) Sell it at a very reasonable price; c) Don't make too much of it. I'm hoping to do all three.
Cheers and thanks again Winetex & Mr. Winetex.