Wines

Sesti

Tuscany (Montalcino)

Sesti

The Sesti estate consists of 102 hectares (254 acres) of land, of which nine hectares are planted to vineyards. The rest is given to olive groves grazing or woodland. 
The vineyards are in the enviable position of being on the southern slopes of Montalcino, where some of the most prestigious Brunello comes from.

Sesti

 

Duemani

Tuscany

From the very beginning Duemani has followed the principles of biodynamic farming and since the 2004 harvest their estate’s production of grapes proudly carries the certification of organic and Demeter certified biodynamic. The Duemani winemaking philosophy embraces the use of the most natural practices available. To this end they do not use cultured yeasts or other oenological additives, preferring instead to allow fermentation to take place using the naturally-occurring yeasts already present on the grapes. They add a minimal dose of sulphur during the bottling stage for hygienic purposes and to aid against oxidation.

One of their top priorities is the cleanliness of their winery and every individual fermentation and aging container. Duemani employs a strict regimen of cleansing practices in order to prevent bacterial contaminants from entering the working environment. All oak barrels are sterilized with steam, hot water, ultraviolet light and often shaved down to ensure total disinfection. 

Duemani


Revana Family Vineyard

Napa Valley

Revana Family Vineyard

Located in the heart of Napa Valley, Revana Family Vineyard is a vineyard and winery estate focused on producing world-class Cabernet Sauvignon. In 1997, while visiting the Napa Valley, Dr. Revana discovered a small parcel of prime vineyard land just north of the town of St. Helena. He immediately sensed the property’s potential. The area was already known for producing some of the world’s most sought after Cabernet Sauvignon, and the property’s gravelly soils, sloped pitch, and excellent exposures seemed perfect for growing grapes. Studies of the soil composition confirmed that it was an ideal location for premium Bordeaux varieties. His next step was to build a team that could implement his vision.

Revana Family’s vineyard management philosophy is based on quality and sustainability. Attention to detail in the vineyard, low yields and the exclusive use of organic compounds for vine nutrients and pest control result in wines of great quality and a vineyard that will provide the highest quality grapes for many generations.

Planted in 1998, the Revana Family vineyard is comprised of nine separate blocks totaling nine acres. There are seven blocks planted with Cabernet Sauvignon clones, one block of Cabernet Franc and one block of Petit Verdot. Clone 337 and Clone 7 were selected for Cabernet Sauvignon. Clone 332 of Cabernet Franc and Clone 2 of Petit Verdot were specifically chosen to provide layers of complexity in the finished wine.

Revana Family Vineyard

 

Hentley Farm

Barossa Valley

Hentley Farm

In the 1990s, Keith and Alison Hentschke undertook extensive research with local Barossa Valley winemakers and soil scientists, aiming to find out where the best red wine grapes were believed to be produced. Their research pointed them towards the red brown soils in Western Barossa, and the quality of red wines already being made in the area confirmed the selection of Seppeltsfield as their preferred area. Keith used an old 1950s soil map of the region to strategically locate parcels of land, and after a number of years acquired Hentley Farm; an old 100 acre vineyard and mixed farming property on the banks of Greenock Creek in Seppeltsfield. 

Keith took a thorough farming approach in planting the vines, with the view that getting things right in the vineyard was the essential first step before he could even consider making wine. In the early 2000s, the estate was extended with the purchase of the neighbouring Clos Otto block, and the first Hentley Farm wines were released in 2002.

Hentley Farms see themselves as ‘winegrowers’ and their winemaking accentuates characteristics of the vineyard from vine to bottle. Therefore, they use more of a minimalist approach throughout the winemaking process, allowing the wines to ‘make themselves’. This involves techniques such as limiting acid and sulphur additions, and no use of fining or filtration.

Hentley Farm

 

Eos Estate Winery

Paso Robles

Eos Estate Winery

Eos was initially built and owned by the Arciero family, who are still one of the largest wine-grape growers in the appellation. The winery opened in 1985, and was modeled after the monastery of Monte Cassino in Italy. In October 2010, the winery was acquired by the Foley Family Wines, a family run organization.

Eos Estate Winery

 

Sattlerhoff

Styria

Sattlerhof is located south of Gamlitz in a village called Sernau. The farm has been in the family since 1887 and today Sattlerhof is devoted totally to the culture of pleasure with wine playing a central role.

Willi Sattler has been responsible for the cultivation of wine since he was 22 years old. Sattlerhof wines have earned the respect of many wine-lovers and the international wine community. The combination of tradition and innovation plays a uniquely important role in quality at Sattlerhof. Tradition means a natural and intensive management of the vineyards, while incorporating the vintner’s vast knowledge of the idiosyncrasies of the terroir and the vines. 

Sattlerhof

Stonyridge Vineyard

Waiheke Island, North Island

Stonyridge Vineyard

Organic practices

Stonyridge Vineyard is a world-renowed Cabernet-blend winegrower, located on the beautiful island of Waiheke, near Auckland, New Zealand. Stonyridge was conceived and operated with the sole intention of making world-class Bordeaux-style red wine.

They are dedicated to producing the finest Cabernet blends in the world (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petit Verdot), combining traditional winemaking with meticulous organic viticulture.

Insecticides have never been used at Stonyridge and herbicides have not been used since 1988 when they purchased their first German tractor-mounted undervine weeder. Their vine-disease-protection program is limited to non-systemic fungicides (copper and sulfur). They are organic growers, but because of an allergy to bureaucracy they refuse to be certified by an agency. 

 

Bodegas Peique

Bierzo

Bodegas Peique

Peique Wine Cellars are made up of a small group of family associates (Peique Family), with whom they dedicate themselves to cultivating, producing and ageing quality red wines. They have always lived in the area surrounding the cellar and have owned the vineyards from long ago and have produced wine for three generations. 

The wine cellar and the vineyard are located in the heart of the viniculture area of Bierzo region, in the warm village of Valtuille de Abajo. 

Bodegas Peique

Quinta Nova de Nossa Senhora do Carmo

Douro

             

Quinta Nova de Nossa Senhora do Carmo is located in the sub-region of Cima Corgo, in the Douro Demarcated Region - the birth place of some of the most well known wines in the world. Against rugged slopes, a river bathed arid and inhospitable banks. In times gone past, onto them rolled shimmering stones, which were discovered to be gold (ouro). Thus the name of the river was born: Douro (lit. River of Gold). It is here that vines have been born and wine has been made from as far back as Roman times. Since then, this local pursuit has been continued and expanded – the slopes were shaped into terraces – populations from the Roman castles were used and the growing of cereals and vines was encouraged in the slate earth, unsuitable for other crops.

Quinta Nova de Nossa Senhora do Carmo is one of the most beautiful Quintas (estates) in the Douro, and it is an example of the true nature of the valley. In this place the history lies in the terrain, in the aromas and in the knowledge of the men who have kept it alive generation upon generation. 

 Quinta Nova de Nossa Senhora do Carmo     

   

Four Vines

Paso Robles

No restraint. No fear. That simple credo sums up the winemaking philosophy of Christian Tietje, Four Vines founder and rogue winemaker with an in-your-face passion for big reds.

 

He founded Four Vines in his garage-cum-surf shack with not much more than determination, a love of Zinfandel and a kick-ass idea:  he wanted to make four “killer zins” from the four top appellations for old vine Zinfandel grapes:  Napa, Sonoma, Amador and Paso Robles.  Four Vines exploded onto the scene with “Maverick,” “Sophisticate” and “Biker.”  Each wine reflects the unique flavors, structure and character imparted by terroir, a reflection of the soil, air, water and surroundings in which the grapes were grown, while also showing the bold, fruit-forward, food-friendly style that would become Christian’s trademark.  Sultry, velvety Syrahs came next and Christian moved to Paso Robles to build a winery and immerse himself in the wild western frontier of California-grown Rhone varietals.  In Paso, Chris went native.  He dove head first into the surf of nearby Cayucos (a local break is aptly named “Killers”) and into the juice of the big red grapes that thrived in the heat of this valley (in nearby Kiler Canyon he planted Tempranillo, Syrah, Mourvedre). 

Not to be left entirely out of the white wine conversation, Christian created an equally bold statement in white. Naked Chardonnay was the first no-oak chard introduced in California, inspired by Christian’s love of food and past work as an aspiring chef. Today Christian Tietje continues to push the limits of full-contact winemaking.The Port wine is a fortified red or white wine made by a traditional method, consisting in stopping the by adding grape brandy.

Four Vines

 

Quinta do Castelinho

Portugal (Douro)

Castelinho Vinhos was created in 1990, and has become of the biggest producers exporting directly form the Douro Demarcated Region. 

The excellence of Castelinho wines has been recognized in most prestigious national and international wine competitions. The estate has been untouched by the town development over the years and continues unchanged to this day as a typical Portuguese vineyard estate devoted to the production and ageing of Port wine, striking a happy balance between tradition and modernity.

Quinta do Castelinho

L’Oustal Blanc

Languedoc (La Livinière)

Organic Practices

 

"Claude Fonquerle and his oenolgist Philippe Cambie earned their stripes in Chateauneuf du Pape, and in 2002 began to vinify in Minervois. The wines – like their labels – are flamboyant, almost over-the-top, and utterly striking." - David Schildknecht, Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate

 

The ambition pursued at L’Oustal Blanc is to make wines using indigenous varietals (carignan, cinsault, grenache, syrah) which remain oriented towards fruit, finesse, purity and complexity.  Although based on these varietals, the area of Châteauneuf du Pape may come to mind, it is this domain’s fascination with the wines of Burgundy which remains the driving force behind their philosophical approach.

Situated in Minervois’ finest subregion of "La Livinière", following a natural method of agriculture and winemaking is likely the winery’s most important ambition. The vineyards enjoy a maritime climate because of their proximity to the Mediterranean sea, and therein lie an ideal ecosystem. At “La Livinière”, there is no mildew, and no parasites of the animal kingdom (vine moth, leafhoppers, cochilis, etc…).  The only viticultural concern is powdery mildew, which with extreme vigilance in vegetative phase, can be perfectly controlled with careful sulfur treatments.  The winery follows organic principals and does not use any additives or "doctor" the wine in any way.  These are "natural wines."

 

L’Oustal Blanc


Le Cadeau Vineyard

Willamette Valley

Le Cadeau Vineyard

Josh Raynolds from Steven Tanzer’s International Wine Cellar, writes: ”Tom and Deb Mortimer bought this high-altitude vineyard on Parrett Mountain close to Newberg in 1996 and after almost two years of brush- and rock-clearing had a soil scientist/researcher tell him that he had four distinct terroirs, each of which was capable of producing a different expression of pinot noir. “Being a wine geek,” Mortimer told me, “I couldn’t resist the chance to have four different wines made.” Taking it a step further, he also decided to have each block made by a different winemaker; in past vintages his wines have been made by the likes of Harry Peterson-Nedry (of Chehalem), Josh Bergstrom, Sam Tannahill (A to Z) and Isabelle Dutartre (De Ponte and 1789). Mortimer gives the winemakers free rein so it isn’t easy to nail down a particular style here aside from noting that the wines have been of consistently high quality from the outset.

Le Cadeau Vineyard

E. Pira e Figli de Chiara Boschis

Piedmont (Barolo)

E. Pira e Figli de Chiara Boschis

“The vivacious Chiara Boschis has infectious energy and enthusiasm. Her wines display the same vibrancy and fantastic tension, refined by a feminine touch. In the last few years she has been reducing the amount of new wood used in the cellar, from 100% in the ‘90s and early 2000s to more moderate levels (approaching 50% for the Via Nuova Barolo in 2009), a welcome change in my view. The purchase of a fully south-facing 4ha parcel of vines in Monforte d’Alba called Conterni (1 ha each of dolcetto and barbera as well as 2 ha of nebbiolo for Barolo) will add to her limited production and provide the opportunity to produce another Barolo cru. The grapes from this parcel were formerly sold to Luciano Sandrone for his Barolo Le Vigne vineyard blend, so you can be sure that the vines were well tended to and yield top quality fruit. Boschis is currently in the process of selecting an agent for Canada, with plenty of suitors lining up for the privilege.” John Szabo, MS

 

E. Pira e Figli de Chiara Boschis

Cantina del Pino

Piedmont (Barbaresco)

Cantina del Pino

Domizio Cavazzo was the director of the Royal Enological School in Alba from 1888 - 1913. When he arrived he surprised everyone by purchasing land and making his home in Barbaresco. The noble families expected he would reside near the more famous estates in Barolo. He purchased the Ovello vineyard and began making wine. For the first time the wine made from the nebbiolo vineyards surrounding the village was called Barbaresco. For the people of this area it was a huge compliment. Cavazzo was very charismatic and an outspoken supporter of the farmers in the Langhe.  My great grandfather purchased the vineyards after Sig. Cavazzo prematurely died and his family moved to Torino. The Vacca family has been here ever since.

 

Cantina del Pino

Gamba Vineyards and Winery

Sonoma County

Gamba Vineyards and Winery

Gamba Vineyards and Winery rests on gently rolling benchland  above the valley floor in the beautiful Russian River Valley Appellation of Sonoma County, California, nestled among over century old Zinfandel vines. The Estate Vineyard, planted in 1900, is dry farmed, and maintained with labor intensive, organic, traditional hand farming methods. Naturally low yields, together with desirable soils and microclimate, allow Gamba to produce old vine Zinfandel wines of exceptional flavor and intense varietal character.

Gamba Vineyards and Winery

Hidden Bench

Ontario (Beamsville Bench)

Hidden Bench

Organic

Hidden Bench Vineyards and Winery is an artisanal winery dedicated to producing internationally recognized, superior wines made exclusively with estate grown fruit from the Beamsville Bench VQA sub-appellation. Hidden Bench is quality focused and terroir driven whose varietal focus is Pinot Noir, Chardonnay and Riesling. The Hidden Bench team apply sustainable best practices in the vineyard and at the winery to reduce the impact of their footprint on the environment, their neighbours and society as a whole.  They use environmentally sound practices and products wherever possible in the making and marketing of their wines.

Harald Thiel and family founded the winery in 2003 and are passionate that great wines are created in the vineyard where their winemaking starts. Their philosophy includes sustainable practices coupled with a tremendous amount of hand labour permit them to keep their vines in balance. Furthermore, they strongly believe that clean fresh fruit produces superior wine and, as such, they individually bunch sort all of their white wine varietals and bunch sort and then individually berry sort all of their red wine varietals. This approach focuses on less is more with the gentle handling of the wine and patience throughout the winemaking process. 

Hidden Bench

Livio Felluga

Friuli (Collio)

Livio Felluga

Sustainable

This family-owned winery is one of the historic estates of Friuli, Italy, founded in the 1950s. The Felluga family has been making wine for five generations, with the mantra that “premium-quality wine is made first in the vineyard and then in the cellar”. Their vineyard management philosophy is one of sustainability - “low environmental impact integrated pest management” and most of the vineyards share a similar soil type of Marl and sandstone flysch of Eocene origin. The first year of production in the Friuli estate was in 1956, when Livio Felluga purchased a few hectares of vineyard at Rosazzo, now considered one of the finest wine zones in the region. Today, the Livio Felluga estate has 160 hillside hectares under vine, with an annual production averaging 750,000 bottles, exported all over the world. Livio, now 95 years old, still helps his children (Maurizio, Elda, Andrea and Filippo) continue the family winemaking tradition.

Vignamastre

Tuscany

The Vignemastre project started in 2005 when two winemakers, Filippo Artini and Dario Parenti from Le Uve, created a concept winery of their own.  This winery would have great value as a focus, while looking out for the environment and being true to the grape itself.  The wine would need to express the varietal aromas of the grapes from which it was made, with no use of oak barrels, as they often make wines look alike.  These factors limit the impact on consumer health, because of low sulfite levels in the wine, and on the environment, as no trees were cut down to make barrels.

 

Le Cheval Fou

Rhône (Hermitage)

Bio-dynamic vineyards

The tiny French appellation of Hermitage is regarded as the most prestigious appellation in the northern Rhône, the southeastern region of France that makes some of the world’s best Syrah.  With vineyards owned by John Schwartz (Amuse Bouche, PharoahMoans), this tantalizing wine marks the launch of the first-ever, American-grown Hermitage wine in France.  This authentic Hermitage was produced in cooperation with legendary winemaker Michel Chapoutier from 100% biodynamically farmed and vinified syrah grapes.

Le Cheval Fou

Petra

Tuscany

Petra

Petra is located in Suvereto, inside the Tuscany Maremma area, in San Lorenzo Alto. The estate spreads over 300 hectares and has vineyards, woods and olive-groves growing on it, suggesting a magic landscape almost fading away against the shining surfaces of Tirreno Sea.

In 1997 Vittorio Moretti and his daughter, Francesca, founded this small boutique winery. They created a spectacular winery with a contemporary structure designed by the famous Swiss architect Mario Botta, who also designed the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Petra

Kuehling-Gillot

Rheinhessen

Kuehling-Gillot

Certified Organic

The winery Kuehling-Gillot has been in viniculture since the 18th century. Today they not only own one of the best sites on the Rhine terrace, but they can also claim a true architectural gem: a garden similar to a park, with its renowned pavilion (which also decorates their labels) and reception halls and a vinothèque offering unequalled opportunities.

For generations women have been in charge at Kuehling-Gillot. This has also not changed in the 21st century. Since 2002, Carolin Spanier-Gillot, has been the manager of the winery. She graduated in wine-growing engineering, and was the co-founder of the association of young winegrowers “message in a bottle”, and involved in the women network “vinissima”. According to some she is a whirlwind among German woman winegrowers.

Kuehling-Gillot


 

Galante Vineyards & Winery

Carmel Valley

Galante Vineyards & Winery

Organically Grown

The Galante family has a long history in the Monterey area. Owner Jack Galante’s great grandfather, J.F. Devendorf, was the founder of the town of Carmel. J.F. later built the Pine Inn, and the prestigious Highlands Inn.  In 1969, Jack’s parents purchased a 700-acre cattle ranch in the rustic Carmel Valley. While still maintaining a working cattle ranch, the Galantes, in 1983, began growing premium grapes on their property, specializing in Cabernet Sauvignon.  In 1994, Jack Galante decided to build a winery and use some of his grapes to produce ultra-premium estate bottled wines.  Today. Galante is recognized as one of the premier Cabernet Sauvignon producers in Monterey County.

The Galante Vineyards philosophy is to grow the finest grapes possible and let the fruit express itself in the wine.  Since all of their grapes are estate grown, each bottle of wine they produce embodies the characteristics of the unique region, exhibiting the natural flavors that are born from the land.

Galante Vineyards & Winery

 

Marcel Deiss

Alsace (Haut-Rhin)

Certified Biodynamic - Demeter

Domaine Marcel Deiss is located in the beautiful Bergheim, and was established in 1947 by the grandfather of the current owner, Jean-Michel Deiss. Marcel Deiss is one of the leading producers in Alsace, focused on terroir wines that have been organically farmed for over 20 years and biodynamic since 1998. Jean-Michel with oenologist Marie Helene Cristofaro carefully look over their vineyards by ploughing rather than using weed killer, utilizing natural compost, planting grass between the vines and harvesting by hand.

Marcel Deiss wines are unique in Alsace as they are not labeled by varietal but are labeled by the specific vineyard. This allows the unique characters of each vineyard to express itself in each wine. Deiss seeks to express each wine with three factors: the grape variety, the vintage and the terroir.

“Just about any French vineyard owner will talk terroir given the opportunity, but no one argues the case for terroir more passionately than Marcel Deiss.” Robert Parker

“Jean-Michel Deiss has been growing some of the finest wines in Alsace for more than a quarter century and with them – as well as with his passionately articulate discourse – capturing the imagination and affection of wine enthusiasts world-wide. But the bearded sage of Bergheim is never satisfied, and beginning in the late eighties, he began to completely re-think his wines and means of truly embracing his terroirs. The result was new acquisitions and plantings to achieve (beginning a decade ago) single-vineyard, field-blend bottling the likes of which had scarcely been seen in Alsace for the better part of a century, and to certain of which the governing authorities have recently been persuaded (perhaps as much by Deiss’ metaphysics of terroir as by the profundity of his vinous results) to grant the status “Grand Cru.” Wine Advocate, February 2008

Marcel Deiss

 

Rudi Pichler

Wachau

Rudi Pichler

The Pichler family has been involved with viticulture in the Wachau for many generations. The main building at Wösendorf, first documented in 1575, was in their possession in 1884. In 1904, the small agricultural farm was taken over by Johann Pichler, and was passed to Rudolf Pichler Sr., who in turn passed it on to his son, Rudolf Jr. Rudi III who took over the reigns in 1997. Currently, they operate 12.5 hectares of vineyards, with grapes from an additional 3 hectares utilized through contracts with other vintners. Grüner Veltliner represents 65% of their vineyards, with Riesling totaling 30%, and the remaining 5% made up of Weißburgunder (Pinot blanc) as well as other varieties. All of these are vinified in the Wachau quality categories of Steinfeder, Federspiel and Smaragd.

Rudi Pichler

 

Loimer

Kamptal

Loimer

Certified organic (Lacon Institute), in conversion to Biodynamic

Although Fred Loimer has joined the ranks of Austrians best wine producers, he still is for many an undiscovered secret! Year after year, he impresses with his benchmark Grüner Veltliner and Riesling, which reflect high quality as well as the terroir and special microclimates of the Kamptal. When it comes to producing wine, the cool climate is certainly one of Fred Loimers biggest challenges. In Spring 1998 Loimer purchased the former cellar of Castle Haindorf, which is located on the outskirts of Langenlois and offers ideal climatic conditions for the aging and storing of high-quality wines. 

Loimer

 

Saint Jean du Barroux

Rhône (Côtes du Ventoux)

Saint Jean du Barroux

Organic and bio-dynamic farming

The wines of Saint Jean du Barroux are romantically created by winegrower and oenologist Philippe Gimel, a former pharmacist who uses organic and bio-dynamic farming practices in the vineyards.  All grapes are hand picked and de-stemmed by hand.  Le Barroux is a little Provencal town next to Beaume de Venise and in between the Dentelles de Montmirail and the Mont Ventoux. Saint Jean du Barroux is a wine that presents the terroir of its origin in the best way. The wine doesn’t imitate but showing the unique soil, the underground and the climatology of the hill which brings a differentiation in grape variety and then the wines. The great mineral composition in the wine well expressed these differences.

Saint Jean du Barroux

 

 

Domaine des Martinellles

Rhône (Hermitage)

Domaine des Martinellles

A wine-producing estate that has been in the family for 3 generations and is now managed by Aimé and Pascal Fayolle. A little over 20 hectares are planted with Hermitage, Crozes-Hermitage and Saint Joseph appellations in the Northern Cotes du Rhône.  Their vineyards lie across four different areas: Les Murets, Les Dionnières, La Beaume and Les Pierrelles. The vineyards are south-facing. Syrah is grown on the areas of stony brown sand and marsanne is grown on the areas of loam and red clay. The vineyards are mainly located on hillsides, which makes it difficult to use machinery, especially for the harvest which is still done by hand. 

In the 1970s, the winery buildings surrounded the family’s cellar.
In 1998, a new underground cellar and a vatting room were built.
A new extension is to be built soon, to house a pressing room and a storage room for palox boxes and bottles.

Domaine des Martinelles 

Roagna

Piedmont (Barbaresco)

Roagna

"Luca Roagna is one of the most promising young winemakers in the Langhe. Low yields, late harvests, long macerations and extended periods of oak aging are the rule at this traditionally-minded estate. Historically Barolo and Barbaresco were left to macerate on the skins until around the Christmas holidays, a practice unheard of today but still followed here. The normal bottlings of Barolo and Barbaresco typically see around 50 days of maceration while the selections may see as many as 75 days. The wines then undergo a lengthy sojourn in oak which allows them to develop the tertiary notes that the estate seeks. The wines spend an additional year to year and a half of bottle age before being released. I have mixed feelings about the long oak aging the estate prefers. In some cases the wines have the stuffing to stand up to extended periods in oak, but in other cases I can’t help thinking the wines would retain more fruit and freshness if they were bottled earlier. The wines are also very delicate and don’t respond well to sudden movement or temperature changes immediately prior to serving. I have had my best luck letting them gradually warm from cold cellar temperature and opening them several hours before serving. Readers who appreciated traditionally made wines should be sure to put Roagna on their radar screens." Antonio Galloni, The Wine Advocate.

Roagna

Winemakers, Alfredo & Luca.

Nevis Bluff

Central Otago, South Island

Nevis Bluff

The world’s southernmost wine region is found in Central Otago, New Zealand, in the same 45 degree latitude as top winegrowing regions in France.

From one of Central Otago’s best known high country sheep stations owned by the Cook family, to a boutique vineyard planted under the prominent Gibbston Valley landmark from which it takes its name, Nevis Bluff is one of Central Otago’s original pinot producers. They gained instant recognition with their first commercial vintage and have since enjoyed top accolades and excellent reviews. An eight hectare vineyard was planted in 1993 and from those beginnings they have grown their vines dedicated to providing superior Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris with consistent quality. 

As well as harvesting the grapes from the original vineyard in the Gibbston Valley, their grapes are also sourced from L’Attitude Vineyard, based in the Cromwell basin. This top quality vineyard is planted to Pinot Noir, Pinot Gris and Riesling, ensuring excellence in grape quality and the ability to blend wines from two geographic sub regions.

Nevis Bluff

 

 

 

F.X. Pichler

Wachau

F.X. Pichler

"F.X. Pichler is the Chateau Latour, Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, Zind-Humbrecht, Sandrone and Helen Turley of the Wachau." Robert Parker Jr., The Wine Advocate, 2002.

This fifth-generation family winery started around 1928 when Franz Pichler started to rigorously select Gruner Veltliner clones by focusing on small-berried grapes.  These produced lower yields, yet afforded higher extracts and tighter aromas and flavours.  Pichler is proud of their single-vineyard sites because the authenticity of their wines is individually based on each site.  It is primarily the steep mountainous terraces from the 12th and 13th centuries, which produce mighty wine, exhibiting a delicate, dainty opulence. 

The Wachau is a cultural landscape that was officially documented by the admission of the 36-kilometer long riverside between Melk and Krems as a "Cultural World Heritage" by UNESCO.  The Wachau is the only region in Austria that identifies specific styles of wine by using the terms Steinfeder, Federspiel and Smaragd.

F.X. Pichler

Nittnaus

Burgenland

Nittnaus

The Nittnaus family has been cultivating wine in Gols, Austria’s largest wine village, located 50 km south east from Vienna, for 300 years.  The warm Pannonian climate and advantageous geological conditions provide ideal preconditions for producing wines of outstanding quality.  The family winery has been operated by Hans and Christine Nittnaus since 1986.  Their shared love of wines, dedication, and innovation has made these wines win numerous awards at national and international competitions.

Nittnaus

Ciu Ciu

Le Marche

Organic Practices

The Ciu Ciu’ estate started in 1970 as a very small, family owned winery with “quality” and “respect of the land” as its core philosophies.  Although the winery has grown considerably over the years, these philosophies remain the same.  The winery and vineyards are situated along the rolling hills of the countryside in Le Marche’s Offida region.  This area is considered the heart of Rosso Piceno Superiore, Falerio dei Colli Ascolani and Offida DOC wines regions.

A great deal of attention has been spent in the last decade to the pursuit of premium quality wines, and the wines continue to improve.  One main tenet that has been consistent at Ciu Ciu is that fine wine is made in the vineyard, not in the cellar.  You must start with quality grapes to make quality wine.

Lanciola

Tuscany

Lanciola

Azienda Agricola Lanciola is situated just outside of Florence on the rolling hills of Impruneta, near Pozzolatico, in the “Colli Fiorentini” production area.  It isimmersed in the tuscan countryside among olive-groves, cypress trees and vineyards. The estate totals 80 hectares, 40 hectares of which are planted to vine, with the remainder devoted to olive-groves.  The estate has enjoyed an illustrious past: in Medicean times, it belonged to the noble Ricci family.  These owners were responsible for setting up the estate’s early farming and winemaking activities. The goal of the present owners, the Guarnieri family, has been to been to maximize the use of the land.

The estate’s vineyards, formerly called “Terre dei Ricci”, now produce ‘‘Terricci”.  This wine is an IGT (Indicazione Geografica Tipica) red table wine made principally from large berry Sangiovese Grosso and Cabernet Sauvignon grapes.  The estate also makes “Ricciobianco “, a Chardonnay based white wine, Chianti Colli Fiorentini, Vinsanto, “‘Riccionero”, which is 100% Pinot Noir, and a top quality Extra Virgin Olive Oil.

In Greve, in the heart of the Chianti Classico area, the Azienda Agricola Lanciola owns 14 hectares, 10 of which are devoted to specialized vineyards with optimum south-west exposure, on particularly favorable soil, at an altitude of approximately 300 meters. In addition to Sangiovese, the vineyards are planted to Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Canaiolo and Colorino grapes.

Lanciola

Schiopetto

Friuli (Collio)

Schiopetto

Azienda Agricola Mario Schiopetto is one of the oldest wine estates in the Collio area. The Schiopetto family has been in the wine business for three generations, and started when Giorgio Schiopetto (Carlo’s grandfather) passed on to his son (Mario) his love of good wines.  This passion would eventually give him the title as founding father of modern wine Azienda Agricola Mario Schiopetto is one of the oldest wine estates in the Collio area. The Schiopetto family has been in the wine business for three generations, and started when Giorgio Schiopetto (Carlo’s grandfather) passed on to his son (Mario) his love of good wines.  This passion would eventually give him the title as founding father of modern wine making in Friuli.  Before turning to wine making, Mario traveled to Germany and France to explore the quality wines made in their famed wine cellars.  It was German technology, blended with French finesse that enabled him to realize his dream. Mario learned the art and refined methods of making excellent wines, but skill and know-how, even when applied with passion, are not always enough. They must be painstakingly adapted to a different environment and climate, more specifically a different region with a unique terrain, like the one in the Collio Goriziano area. Self-taught and gifted with exceptional intuition, Mario Schiopetto launched into the wine business in 1965, and Schiopetto was one of the first wineries in Friuli to ferment in stainless steel vats, keeping wines fresh and crisp.  Today, the estate is run by Mario’s three children: Maria Angela, Giorgio and Carlo, and owns more than 75 acres of vineyards surrounding the former residence of the Bishop of Gorizia, in Capriva del Friuli.

“A brilliant producer, Schiopetto is the reference point for just how flavorful, perfumed, and compelling dry whites from Friuli can be. Mario Schiopetto continues to satiate the olfactory sense and palate with his extraordinary offering. While not cheap, they are the most compelling tank-fermented and aged dry whites made in north-eastern Italy. Possessing abundant flavors that build incrementally in the mouth, they are dazzling wines that I can’t recommend highly enough.” Robert Parker

“Legendary pioneer of Collio, with a 20,000 cases production base. Excellent his Sauvignon, Pinot Blanc and Tocai DOC, as well has his ensemble wine known as Blanc des Rosis. The new IGT wines are elegant and generous, with wines from both the area of Collio and Colli Orientali.” - Hugh Johnson, Wine Atlas 2007****

2009 Winery of the Year  - Wine & Spirits Magazine

Schiopetto

Giorgio, Maria Angela and Carlo

Poggio al Toro

Tuscany (Maremma)

Poggio al Toro

Organic practices

Poggio al Toro is located in one of the most isolated areas of Tuscany, 5-6 miles away from Murci, a very little town in the Morellino di Scansano appellation area. The owner, Vincenzo Ciaceri comes from a family famous in Rome for founding high class hotels (Haessler, Eden) and graduated in philosophy studying in Rome and increasing his knowledge and skills at prestiguos Wagner College.

At the end of the 90’s he decided to invest in a property in Maremma in the Morellino di Scansano appellation area. The particular climatic conditions (rare rainfalls, height, constant wind touching the vineyard) allows them to pick grapes at the desired tannic, aromatic and sugar ripening point, usually mid-late October. Once picked, the grapes are transported to the cellar where they are treated very gently to extract all the fruit potential with limited pump overs and frequent use of punch downs in the controlled temperature steel tanks. Wines are aged in big oak Slavonian casks and 5 hectolitre tonneaux in different proportions in timings according to the wine.  The wines are made by Filippo Artini & Dario Parenti.

Poggio al Toro

PharoahMoans Winery

Paso Robles

PharoahMoans Winery

PharoahMoans is a joint venture between John Schwartz, owner of Amuse Bouche Winery in Napa Valley, and Chef Bryan Ogden, recipient of the James Beard Award for best restaurant 2003. With their combined 35 years in the wine and food industry, they have teamed up with renowned French winemaker-gone-Californian Stephan Asseo, owner of L’Aventure Winery on the Central Coast. Asseo has been praised by Robert Parker for "producing creative and adventurous wines that possess singular personalities as well as loads of potential for both near-term drinking and long-term aging." Their mutual objective was to create the best Syrah in California under the Paso Robles appellation. They have spared no expense, from farming to the bottle, to bring you a truly remarkable wine.

The name PharaohMoans pays tribute to the birthplace of wine - and plays with the term "pheromones", which of course is the hormonal influence behind a variety of sensory patterns, including consumption of very fine wines.

PharoahMoans vineyards are located in Paso Robles Wine Country, centrally located between San Francisco and Los Angeles along California’s Central Coast. With a greater day-to-night temperature swing than any other appellation in California, distinct micro-climates, diverse soils and a long growing season, Paso Robles is a unique wine region blessed with optimal growing conditions for producing premium and ultra premium wines.

PharoahMoans Winery

 

Amuse Bouche Winery

Napa Valley

Amuse Bouche Winery

Video

Collectible wine and collectible art come together to create Amuse Bouche Napa Valley Merlot, a joint wine venture with Heidi Barrett and John Schwartz. This Pomerol-style Merlot/Cabernet Franc blend is made from some of the best grape sources in the Napa Valley. Amuse Bouche wine aspires to rival its greatest cross-Atlantic counterparts, such as Chateau Petrus and Chateau Le Pin.

As winemaker for several of the hottest cult wines in California, and referred to by TIME magazine as “The Wine Diva of Napa”, Heidi Barrett is always looking for new challenges. Heidi explains, “We have created Amuse Bouche wine, a limited edition, superb Pomerol style wine with the added value of limited edition art that is available to consumers through a variety of channels.” Since 1988 she has developed a stellar client list of super and ultra-premium wineries. She is currently winemaker for Jones Family, Barbour Vineyards, Paradigm Winery, Showket Vineyards, Lamborn Family, and two newcomers Lynch and Revana Family Vineyards. Past clients include Screaming Eagle, Grace Family, Vineyard 29, Hartwell/Grace, and Oakford Vineyards. In addition to these clients, she does a limited amount of consulting work for Diamond Creek Winery and Niebaum-Coppola (Rubicon) where she works with their winemakers to further improve their wines.

Merging art with our wines was something of a philosophical decision. The former can be enjoyed indefinitely, enduring for many lifetimes. Wine collectors may revel in the subtleties of a vertical collection; but in the end, ‘fine wine is the only true art that must be destroyed in order to be fully appreciated.’ We strive to offer you the pleasures of both art forms.

Amuse Bouche

Duca di Casalanza “Duchea”

Veneto

The estates origins go back to 1821. The head of the family, Baron Federico Bianchi, after having followed the whole of the "cursus honorum" in the Austrian army, was named Marshal of Franz II of Hapsburg’s empire and in 1815, whilst at the head of the Austrian army, defeated Gioacchino Murat, who had been named King of Napoli in 1807 by Napoleon Bonaparte. After the victory which brought Ferdinando di Borbone to the throne of his forefathers, the new King of Napoli in recognition of the great strategist and his saviour, honoured Marshal Bianchi, already Baron of the Empire, with the title of Duke of Casalanza.

In 1821, having withdrawn with great honour from military life, Federico Bianchi bought the vast holding on the outskirts of Venice from the Venetian banker, Angelo Papadopoli, in the town of Mogliano Veneto, to dedicate himself to an ancient passion, that of vine growing and wine production. Since then, six generations of his noble successors have contributed to bringing the estate to a level of prestige which is a reference point for the whole Trevisan Name, in respect of the family’s tradition and of the continuous research into quality which has always distinguished their history. All of this can be demonstrated fully when one sees the new training systems and cellar required by the actual Baron Federico Bianchi.

Duca di Casalanza

Guicciardini Strozzi

Tuscany (San Gimignano)

Guicciardini Strozzi

The Guicciardini Strozzi estate can boast over 1000 years of history; their most important vineyard, Villa Cusona, is dated 994.  The famous personalities and the political and economic influence of the Strozzi and Guicciardini families, linked at various times by blood relationships, have left their mark not only on Tuscany, but also on Italy and Europe. Another famous ancestor is Lisa Gherardini del Giocondo, better known as “La Gioconda” or “Mona Lisa”, painted by Leonardo da Vinci, and whose family is still represented by the fifteenth generation of descendants. More on the family history.

Around 1850 the construction began of the great wine cellar with underground galleries. At the beginning of the 1900s Francesco Guicciardini, the husband of Luisa Strozzi, Mayor of Florence, Minister of Agriculture and then of Foreign Affairs (1906 – 1909) made Cusona a model estate of national importance.

The current owners are Count Robert Guicciardini and Prince Girolamo Strozzi, assisted by the latter’s wife and by his daughters Natalia and Irina. For decades Prince Strozzi has been President of the Syndicate of Vernaccia, as well as the tireless promoter of this DOCG, the first white wine in Italy to obtain this recognition. He pursues with equal energy the long tradition of a family whose name is intrinsically linked to San Gimignano, in particular to Cusona.

Guicciardini Strozzi

The Toronto Star article

Il Carnasciale di Bettina Schnabel Rogosky

Tuscany

“Il Caberlot” and its baby brother, “Carnasciale” are the only commercialized wines in the world that are made from a unique clone of Cabernet Franc discovered four decades ago, named “Caberlot”.

The romance of the Il Caberlot starts in the 1960’s when Remigo Bordini discovered a very unique clone growing in Veneto. The clone was a mysterious genetic mutation of Cabernet Franc but had characteristics of Merlot grapes, the Caberlot was born. Remigo joined forces with Bettina and Wolf Rogosky (Wolf passed away in 1996) to start planting this unique Caberlot in 1986, on less than an acre. The Rogosky’s were so excited about their new found varietal, that they decided as a sign of positive energy to plant a bottle of Sassicaia under the first Caberlot vine.

These wines are hand bottled in magnums and up until 2005 they were only available in small quantities in a few restaurants in Florence and Paris. With the limited production of only 1000 magnums for 13 vintages, the Il Caberlot has become one of Italy’s most sought after wines with cult status in Europe.

Peter Schilling, Bettina Rogosky and Bernard at VinItaly 2008

 

Dei

Tuscany (Montepulciano)

Dei

In 1964, Dei, Maria Caterina’s grandfather, bought the first vineyard on the estate, the beautifully positioned Bossona vineyard.  This vineyard is gorgeous for its perfectly southwestern exposition to the sun and well drained soil.  Her grandfather planted the estates first vines here, which today produce the famous Vino Nobile di Montepulciano Bossona Riserva.

In 1973, Alibrando Dei bought Martiena, another piece of land of 20ha surrounding the estate’s marvelous villa built in the late 19th century, and restored during the 1930s by famous Italian architect Piacentini.  The Villa is a few minutes outside of the historic town  of Montepulciano, surrounded by a lush, green park planted to magnolias and old cypress trees.

For the first twenty years, Alibrando sold his grapes to local wineries.  In the 1980s, the family decided to try vinifying their own wine, in hopes of becoming wine  producers themselves.  In 1985, they rented an ancient wine cellar in Montepulciano, and without any technical assistance, bottled their first Vino Nobile di Montepulciano.  In 1989, Galileo Dei, Maria Caterina’s father, started to build what is today’s wine cellar, a modestly sized, but practical and functional wine cellar located at the end of the villa’s driveway, surrounded by the vineyards. Today, the family has embarked on a large project to build a new winery, where the cellars will be deep underground, with tasting room and gallery-like windows on the main floor, overlooking an open and expansive outdoor amphitheatre.  

In 1991, Maria Caterina quit her career of singer and actress to dedicate her time to her family’s estate and vineyards.  She is now the face and brand ambassador of Azienda Dei, and has also recently released a full length album featuring cover songs of varying styles.


Azienda Dei

   

Accadia

Le Marche (Serra San Querico)

Organic vineyard practices

The company was founded in 1983 and in 1991 part of the land was converted into a vineyard. Having come into contact with an expert agronomist, the idea soon came to plant a white Verdicchio grape vine to make the classic and superior versions of the Verdicchio dei Castelli di Jesi. At the same time the black grapes of Montepulciano, Sangiovese and Lacrima vines were also planted for the production of Rosso Piceno. This collaboration then led to the optimal organization of the vineyard and the cellars and later to the choice of the rootstock and the plant clones, the selection of the most suitable equipment for the management of the vineyard and for the pressing and storage of the wine.

Sottimano

Piedmont (Neive)

Sottimano

Organic

Video

“I can’t think of too many properties that have made such huge strides in quality as Sottimano has. Recent bottles of the 2001 and 2004 Barbaresco Pajore revealed an enormous leap in elegance and finesse. Fortunately, Sottimano’s entry-level wines are every bit as delicious as their Barbarescos, so readers won’t need to mortgage the house to drink great wines from this producer. I know I am starting to sound like a broken record, but these are truly exceptional wines at this level, or any level for that matter.” Antonio Galloni, August 2008, Wine Advocate.  

The Sottimano winery was founded in 1974 by Maggiore Sottimano in the Cottá area, a very highly reputed area for Nebbiolo grapes. Since then, Mr. Rino Sottimano the owner has developed the estate by buying other prestigious vineyards: Currá, Fausoni, Pajoré and, more recently, Basarin. Currently, the family cultivates an average of 13 hectares and the production is divided into five “crus” of Barbaresco: Currá, Cotta, Fausoni, Basarin and Pajoré,one Dolcetto “Bric del Salto”, one Barbera “Pairolero” and one dry Brachetto , called “Maté”. The company produces an average of 60,000 bottles.

Particular attention is given to the cultivation of the vineyards; in this way, through very low yields, it is possible to produce structured, full bodied wines, which can be aged for several years. Since 1990, the vines have undergone only natural processes ,with no use of pesticides, artificial fertilizers or diserbants; the traditional diseases, that normally afflict the vineyards, are treated using eco-friendly products. The application of these products is kept to a minimum and they are used only if necessary. During the vinification, they don’t use selected yeasts and the wines are bottled without filtering or fining.

Sottimano

Deltetto

Piedmont (Canale)

Deltetto

Video

Since 1953 The Deltetto family has produced high quality wines in the areas of Langhe and Roero. The family business is located in Canale and was established by Carlo Deltetto, who began the activity, always respecting nature and the great wine tradition of Piedmont. Since 1977, after his studies on oenology, Carlo’s son, Antonio (together with his wife Graziella, their son Carlo, and their daughters Cristina and Claudia), has run the business, trying to respect his father’s aim.

The production is varied and complete, including the traditional red wines such as the Roero Braja, the Barolo Sistaglia, the Barbera “Rocche delle Marasche” and the Barbera Bramè. With regards to the white wines, the Arneis San Michele, the Arneis Daivej and the Favorita Sarvai are produced and have found their best habitat in the Roero area.

In the last few years The Deltetto family has had many a success, such as with the Passito Bric du Liun, a top quality wine obtained from Arneis grapes, and the production of bubbles through the classic method “champenoise”. This production began with the Extra Brut Millesimato and was then completed with the Brut and the Rosè, wines which combine two of the most famous vines, Nebbiolo and Pinot Nero. Thanks to acknowledgements for the D.O.C.G. 2005 harvest, these wines are now considered to be amongst the most important in Italy.

Deltetto

Left to right Claudia, Antonio, Carlo senior, Graziella,
Cristina and Carlo jr.

Domaine de Vauroux

Burgundy (Chablis)

Domaine de Vauroux was created in 1956 by the Tricon family. In 1972 they started farming the first grapevines. Throughout its evolution the Domaine has successfully combined modern and traditional approaches, particularly in relation to its winemaking practices. Apart from their know-how and their traditions, the estate’s forebears have passed on to Domaine de Vauroux one of the oldest winegrower’s huts in the region (made from volcanic lava) which dates from the 17th century. This vineyard is now holding over 30 hectares. Since 1999 Oliver Tricon has been managing the estate in the family tradition.

The vineyard is located around the village of Chablis on slopes whose south-east and south-west exposure to the sun is ideal. The marly limestone soil, with a high Kimmeridgien content gives our wines all the characteristics of a guenine Chablis. The single grape-variety used is the Chardonnay: the vines grow in harsh conditions, since the soil is very stony and dry.

Château Lagarette

Bordeaux (Premières Côtes de Bordeaux)

Château Lagarette

Certified Organic (Ecocert) and Certified Biodynamic (Demeter)

Although Château Lagarette can trace its roots back to 1850, the estate has been the property of the Minvielles family since 1998.  For several generations, the Minvielles have been winegrowers and coopers settled in the Camblanes villages.  Yvon is a sociologist, publisher and University Professor whose interests lie in the biodiversity of the vine.  Olympe is dedicated to the wine making process, and has all the necessary patience and attention required to make a great wine. Their four hectares of vineyards, which date back to the Roman times, surround the castle, which was a former hunting lodge of the Duke of Epernon in the 15th century.  Widely exposed to the various winds (the secret of Lagarette wines), the vineyard is composed 70% of very old vines (Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Malbec), and the remaining 30% of recent plantings of Cabernet Franc.  The soil consists of quaternary gravels, limestone, clay, quartz and sand. 

The wine making philosophy at Château Lagarette has always been to protect the land by respecting the natural balances between its mineral, vegetal and animal components.  The decision of whether to grow their grapes organically was never a question discussion for Olympe and Yvon.  They believe that the use of pesticides is either a consequence of lack of education, or a deliberate spoiling of ecosystems, motivated by immediate gains.  Wine is always the result of a unique conjunction between man and nature, and is a condensation of wine growers’ and wine makers’ knowledge accumulated through the ages.  The respect of places and times, the observance of biological rhythms, observation, patience and attention are the milestones of their practices. Organic since 1998, Biodynamic since 2003.

Olympe                                     Yvon

Château La Grolet

Bordeaux (Côtes de Bourg)

Château La Grolet

Certified Organic (ECOCERT) and Certified Biodynamic (Demeter)

Château La Grolet is one of two châteaux owned by the Hubert family. Jean-Luc Hubert and his wife Catherine have brought life back into this noble XVIII century house.  They are committed to natural viticulture and enhancing the biodiversity of their vineyard to protect the old vines. All vines are hand pruned and hand harvested to insure the grapes stay intact.

Organic Farming

Weed killers are banned and products used to treat the vines are limited to sulphur and bacillus thuringiensis. The vines are only fed with natural fertilizer, rock powder, organic compost and green fertilizer. The vineyards are controlled by the certifying agency AB ECOCERT.

Insects help to reduce the use of fungicides including copper widely used in Organic Agriculture. The strategy focuses on maintaining the biodiversity involving the auxiliary predators of vine parasites. Indirectly, the greater level of biodiversity, the lower the doses of treatment required.

Château La Grolet

Jean-Luc and Catherine Hubert

Château Peybonhomme

Bordeaux (Premières Côtes de Blaye)

Château Peybonhomme

Certified Organic (ECOCERT)

Château Peybonhomme is one of two château’s owned by the Hubert family. Jean-Luc Hubert has worked tirelessly to restore the 19th century Château with the magnificent tower overlooking one of the few the Cru Bourgeois in the Premières Côtes de Blaye. The view from the tower overlooks the pond, the shaded garden and the hillsides are ridged with rows of wine. Château Peybonhomme is located in Bordeaux’s right bank of the Gironde, near Blaye. This organic vineyard is said to be on the best limestone and clay soils of the Cars. Jean-Luc Hubert’s desire has always been to create wines which embody the living memory of the terroir, thanks to the efforts of the people who work the land. Indeed, Jean-Luc Hubert is a viticulturist to whom the history and the life of the vineyard and the estate are a vital ingredient of the wine.

Organic Farming

Weed killers are banned and products used to treat the vines are limited to sulphur and bacillus thuringiensis. The vines are only fed with natural fertilizer, rock powder, organic compost and green fertilizer. The vineyards are controlled by the certifying agency AB ECOCERT.

Insects help to reduce the use of fungicides including copper widely used in Organic Agriculture. The strategy focuses on maintaining the biodiversity involving the auxiliary predators of vine parasites. Indirectly, the greater level of biodiversity, the lower the doses of treatment required.

Château Peybonhomme

Guillaume Hubert                     Jean-Luc and his wife Catherine

J.M. Raffault

Loire (Chinon)

J.M. Raffault

The J.M. Raffault winery is located in Chinon in the central Loire valley, near Tours. The family has been in Chinon since 1693 and as of 1997 Jean-Maurice Raffault’s famous Chinon estate is now run by his son Rodolphe.

The estate is spread over 55 hectares and over 7 districts within the Controlled Appellation Chinon. For this reason, each “cuvée” corresponds to a particular soil. 

Each wine is vinified and aged separately. The maceration period ranges from 15 to 28 days. Rodolphe continues the tradition of aging the Chinons in neutral oak casks that are more than 10 years old. Today, their cellar houses 900 barrels and is the largest in the region. Maturation takes place over 18 months in three huge caves cut into the limestone cliffs, protected from light and at a constant temperature of 56 degrees and 85% humidity. Racking is done from barrel to barrel, in the traditional method, which helps to clarify the wines along with a later fining with egg whites. Wines are left unfiltered, so bottles may throw some sediment with time.

J.M. Raffault

Gatinois

Champagne (Aÿ)

Gatinois

Since the marriage of Nicolas Le Cacheur and Francoise Remy in 1696, three centuries have seen the famous Grand Cru vineyards of Aÿ passed through twelve generations of winegrowers.  Since 1980, husband and wife, Pierre and Marie Paule Cheval-Gatinois have run the winery with the same attention to detail as did their ancestors.  Their goal is to make what Champagne holds as most prestigious: the prized Grand Cru wines from Aÿ.

“A small producer with a high reputation, owner Pierre Cheval can trace back his family line to Nicolas le Cacheur, a vigneron in Aÿ in 1696.  Like many growers today, Gatinois sells part of this production to various houses, but increasingly makes more of his own Champagne.”  “Christie’s World Encyclopedia of Champagne and Sparkling Wines” By Tom Stevenson

Gatinois has long had the reputation as being one of the top growers / producers in Aÿ, a Grand Cru village located in the Montagne de Reims.  Gatinois sits on 7.3 hectares of vines divided into 30 lieudits (named vineyard sites), with an average size of 26 acres.  The names of each of these parcels sign the history and authenticity of the sites:  Chaufour, Cheuzelle, la Croix Coucelles, le Han, Valnon, Vauregnier, Chatillon, Bonotte, etc.

All of the Gatinois holdings are Grand Cru, with 90% planted to Pinot Noir.  Among the Pinot Noir parcels is the now-rare, low-yielding Petit Pinot d’Aÿ clone on which Aÿ‘s reputation was built centuries ago.  The remaining vines are planted to Chardonnay, famous for its complexity and balance.

Reschke Wines

Coonawarra

Reschke Wines

Coonawarra is a unique strip of land situated in the Lower South East of South Australia. The topography is generally flat with some slight undulation on the eastern side. Coonawarra’s mix of well structured and well drained soils, plus cool climate has afforded the region a huge reputation for high quality red wine production. Reschke wines guard the true essence of the Coonawarra. Blending a heritage in the finest Cabernet growing landscape of Australia with a strictly managed vineyard, they allow the Coonawarra to express its distinctive allure. Reschke takes great pride in the attention to detail that sets them apart and brings pleasure to lovers of wine.

The Reschke history and its close relationship with Coonawarra began 100 years ago, with the establishment of a farming and grazing enterprise in the heart of the region and later a Hereford stud. It is cattle-grazing heritage that is reflected in the Reschke logo of the bull. Burke Reschke, forth generation of Reschke’s in Coonawarra, started to develop vineyards on the Reschke estate from what is still primarily a cattle property 1989. The demand for the resultant fruit throughout the nineties was used in some of Australia’s Icon wines. In 1998 a selection of the most outstanding Cabernet Sauvignon parcels was released under the first Reschke label ‘Empyrean’.

The vineyard developments, which have grown to 360 acres, consist primarily of Cabernet Sauvignon, there is also a selection of Merlot, Shiraz, Petit Verdot and Cabernet Franc, all nurtured and cropped particularly low to achieve the highest quality fruit.

Reschke Wines

Loan Wines

Barossa Valley

Loan Wines

Certified Organic

Loan Wines is a small producer located along Tanunda Creek tucked away off of Bethany Road in the heart of the Barossa Valley. The property is a Certified Organic Vineyard where the vines are dry grown, nurtured, hand-picked and hand managed to allow the fruit to tell the story of each season.  Sustainability is fundamental to their philosophy; the management of their property is a very personal hands-on approach, which is defined by organic practices and holistic land management. Richard and Jessica Loan treat each vine treated individually.  They believe that each vine requires individual attention when it comes to pruning, canopy and bunch management, summer pruning and harvesting.

Loan Wines Philosophy

* Hand managed vineyards
* Organically grown
* Organically produced
* Sustainability in viticulture, winemaking
* Allow the fruit and the wines to express unique terroir of our property
* Allow fruit and the wines to express the season
* Allow wines to develop and age in proper underground cellar conditions
* Promote biodiversity by revegetating the creek with native flora and create habitat for native wildlife

Loan Wines

Richard & Jessica (owners) & Bernard

Loan winemakers

Piero Busso

Piedmont (Neive)

Piero Busso

Organic Practices

Video

In the heart of the biggest crù of Langhe (Albesani – Borgese, Gallina and San Stefanetto) there are the vineyards of the family wine farm Busso Piero. Piero’s father founded it in 1953. Piero with the help of his wife, Lucia, his son Pierguido and his daughter Emanuela follows all the phases of production from the vineyard to the winery. The vineyards cover an area 8 hectares , planted 250/300 metres above sea level and they produce an avarage of 35.000 bottles of wines a year.
The unique characteristic of the soil and the ideal facing of the vineyard (south) make it possible to obtain a richer harvest of the component for the production of big wines.  All of these conditions are favourable for the making of a great wine, yet they are not altered by any chemical and industrial compound. Piero’s awareness and approach is nature friendly. In the vineyard they apply the “organic procedure” to minimize the use of chemical products. Their priority is a viticulture respecting the soil, the vine tree, the environment; they brought back traditional methods and organic products in order to re-create and authentic vineyard.

Piero Busso

Nebbiolo Vineyard                         Nebbiolo           Harvest

Calvados Roger Groult

Pays d'Auge

Calvados Roger Groult

Calvados Roger Groult is one of the last remaining traditional, artisan, family-owed Calvados producers.  Most Calvados produced today is done so by large corporations or cooperatives, whereas Calvados Roger Groult is still a family business striving to produce premium quality Calvados.

This family estate, the "Clos de la Hurvanière," lies in the south of Pays d’Auge, in the vicinity of Lisieux.  The same methods of production have been maintained in this family estate, now in its fifth generation.  The apples are selected from the family’s own orchards and those in the immediate vicinity in order to conserve the vintage region.  The orchards are planted on a flint clay covered with fine, silty soil, and yield apples which are sweet, bitter-sweet, bitter and slightly acidic.  After fermenting and undergoing sedimentation for several months, the cider, which now contains some 5 or 6% by volume of alcohol, is distilled over a wood fire in three small stills to obtain the Calvados Pays d’Auge AOC, guaranteeing both its quality and origin.  All products are matured in traditional oak barrels.

Spirits amateurs of the whole World can appreciate those exceptional Calvados that are still produced with old and traditional methods.

Calvados Roger Groult 

Casa de Cello

Minho & Dao

Casa de Cello

Quinta de Cello, situated in the middle of “Entre-Douro e Minho” region, near Amarante, was submitted to a total restructure of its vineyards. Nowadays, 14 ha of vineyards are managed, with the following grape varieties - Arinto, Alvarinho, Chardonnay, Loureiro and Avesso, from which Quinta de Sanjoanne wines and Leiras Mancas wines are made.

Quinta da Vegia is situated in the Dão region, near Penalva de Castelo, with 20 ha of vineyards on gorgeous sites.  Three grape varieties make up the reds - Touriga Nacional, Aragonês (syn. Tempranillo) and Trincadeira Preta – to create the Quinta da Vegia and the Porta Fronha wines.

Member of the Independent Winegrowers’ Association (IWA) whose other members include Luis Pato, Domingos Alves de Sousa, Quinta do Ameal, Quinta de Covela and Quinta dos Roques.  "The IWA of Portugal aims to champion the best native Portuguese grape varieties, though several of the members also embrace international grapes in their wines. Each member produces wines exclusively from his own vineyards, and aims to express the genuine terroir from each Quinta."

Casa de Cello

Bruno Giacosa

Piedmont (Neive)

Bruno Giacosa

 

The work of three generations of vinegrowers has resulted in the passion, knowledge and farsightedness of Bruno Giacosa. An old passion born among the best vineyards of the Langhe territory, in search of grapes to buy, some coming from vineyards successively acquired by Bruno Giacosa himself. The story starts in a simple way, with the native varietals of the Langhe and Roero regions and vineyards cultivated with loving care. It continues with pure, meticulous vinification, with ageing in grand oak barrels and with unforgettable Reserves. But it also includes, naturally enough, the choice not to bottle those mediocre vintages deemed unworthy of vinification. Bruno’s art encompasses passion, love for Nebbiolo and clear judgement but, above all, the utmost respect for his product, its admirers and for the beautiful countryside where he and his family were born and raised.


The Azienda Agricola Falletto Winery comprises twenty hectares of vineyards within the Serralunga d’Alba, La Morra and Barbaresco areas. Nebbiolo and Delcetto vineyards are in the territories of the commune of La Morra, at its highest points some 500m above sea level, with western exposure.  They have been recently acquired by Bruno Giacosa and represent the start of a new viticultural and oenological experience.  The vine growing and wine making processes are followed through with care from beginning to end, culminating with vinification and ageing within thier cellars in Neive.

Bruno Giacosa

Ulithorne

McLaren Vale

Ulithorne

Sustainable practices

‘Ulithorne’ is an old, small family-owned vineyard situated in the premier wine region of McLaren Vale in South Australia. Its hilly, terraced and contoured vine rows overlook the sea, bordering the Onkaparinga River National Park. As custodians of this land, Sam Harrison and Rose Kentish aim to consistently produce exceptional quality wine from over 30 year old vines. Through sustainable vineyard practices, minimal irrigation, low yields, timely harvesting and TLC, Sam and Rose believe that they are providing a platform for the making of great wine.

A low incidence of pests and diseases means ‘Ulithorne’ is managed without any pesticides and only organically registered sulphur and copper sprays to prevent fungal disease. Ulithorne makes their own compost for organic fertilizer and intend to design an under-vine ‘weed slasher’ so full conversion to organics can be achieved. Irrigation is only applied mid summer as a supplement so the vines do not over-stress.  Yields range from 1-3 tonnes per acre depending on the block. Permanent cover crops are sown to increase organic bulk and reduce the need for cultivation. Tractors and vehicles are fueled by bio-diesel to reduce carbon emissions.

Ulithorne
Rose Kentish, winemaker & owner

Nigl

Kremstal

Nigl

Like many quality-minded winemakers, Martin Nigl’s philosophy is that "the wine grows in the vineyard."  He believes that with white wine in particular, the work accomplished in the vineyards is absolutely essential, since wine is unforgiving of the slightest error.  Consequently, Martin meticulously inspects his vineyards nearly every day in order to make crucial decisions about pruning, pest control, watering, thinning out grapes and vintage, all at the appropriate time.  Typical of Martin Nigl’s wines is their crystalline mineral character resulting from the soil of the primary rocks on which the vines grow.

  Weingut Nigl

Monte da Comenda Grande

Alentejo

Monte da Comenda Grande

Comenda Grande is a 750 ha family farm and has been keeping up with the conversion of farming in Alentejo.  Along with the retrieval of some of the barren land with irrigation, the wooded areas (planted to mostly cork oak - Quercus suber) have been revitalised, and 30 ha of vines have been planted at the edges of the property, and approximately 30 ha have been planted to olives.  The idea of planting vines on this land was not a new one, in fact it was a continuation of the estate’s former activities.  About 25 ha of the vines are red grape varietals and 5 ha are white, and they include some of the varietals known to best suit the climate in Alentejo.  These include Trincadeira and Aragonez (red), and Arinto and Antão Vaz (white).  A smaller number of other vines have been planted not only as experimental vines, but also to differentiate the property and create interesting blends.  For red varietals, these include Alfrocheiro, Tinta Caiada, Alicante Bouschet, Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah, and Verdelho for whites.

Comenda Grande Video  - Francisco Pimenta, Comenda Grande’s agronomical engineer, comments on the wine culture of Alentejo as well as the wines of Comenda Grande. 
 
 

Bodegas Hermanos Peciña (Señorío de P.Peciña)

La Rioja Alta

Bodegas Hermanos Peciña (Señorío de P.Peciña)

Sustainable practices

Bodegas Hermanos Peciña is located in the heart of the Upper Rioja, or Rioja Alta, in the Sonsierra Riojana.  This area is ideal for growing vines, squeezed between the summits of the Sierra Cantabria and the banks of the Ebro River.  These combined influences of the Atlantic and the Mediterranean make for a microclimate all of its own, producing unique grapes of a quality that are difficult to match.

Bodegas Hermanos Peciña started in 1992 and now has 50 Ha of its own vines, with an average age of 25 years.  In 1997,the winery began to sell fine aged wines in the categories of Crianza, Reserva, Gran Reserva and Reserva Vendimia.  The grapes are harvested manually and the vineyards are farmed in a sustainable fashion, without the use of any systemic fungicides or pesticides.  The clusters are carefully placed into small crates of approximately 15 kilos capacity so that the grapes do not suffer any pressure and the juice is not crushed out of the berries, which must come into the winery intact.  If the berries were to break and the must escape there could be unwanted fermentation and oxidation.  To avoid this, crates are placed on the gondola and quickly taken to the bodega.  Care is always taken to make the best wine possible.

Señorío de P.Peciña

Peju Family Estate Wines

Napa Valley

Organic

Peju, founded in 1982 by Tony and Herta Peju, is a family-owned boutique winery located in the Rutherford Appellation.  Peju wines are hand-crafted using fruit organically farmed from their Rutherford Estate Vineyard and their sustainably farmed Persephone Vineyard. Travelers to the Napa Valley will enjoy their magnificent 50-foot tasting room tower, pristine gardens and unique food and wine events and classes.

Peju Family Estates Wines

Fita Preta Vinhos

Alentejo

Fita Preta Vinhos

Jamie Drummond podcast with David Booth - Episode 25

Portuguese winemaker António Maçanita and English viticultural consultant, David Booth met for the first time in early 2004.  Over the next few months, a close friendship developed and when the opportunity came up to buy some pretty special grapes from some vineyards that David was managing, and António was able to rent some space in a local winery, the business rapidly took shape and Fita Preta Vinhos was founded.

Their distinctive, rich and complex wines that are the result of applying their specialist skills with huge personal attention to detail at every point in the production chain; from vineyard site selection, grape growing, harvesting, fermentation, maturing, label design, marketing and distribution.

Fita Preta Vinhos

 

Château Gilette

Bordeaux (Preignac)

Château Gilette

Jamie Drummond podcast with Julie Gonet-Médeville - Episode 20

Château Gilette, is unique amongst Sauternes producers in that they age their wines for many years, sometimes decades, only in concrete vats before they are bottled.

Current owner and winemaker, Julie Gonet-Médeville, continues this tradition begun by her grandfather, René Médeville, more than 70 years ago. René couldn’t afford the expense of oak barrels during the 1930s, so he chose to age his wines in concrete vats. He discovered the wines matured more evenly than in wood, and developed more complex aromas and flavours than those he had formerly aged in oak. The vat permitted the wines to breathe so slowly that the winery was content to allow the wines to age there for up to 20 years before bottling. In fact, the youngest wine in this collection (1985) is just about to have its 23rd birthday!

“Gilette is one of the finest-made wines in Sauternes despite the fact that Gilette was not classified. The vineyard, situated several miles north of Yquem, is planted on sandy soil with a subsoil of rock and clay. However, what is bizarre and unbelievable in today’s harsh world of commercial realities is that Gilette’s proprietor, Christian Médeville, holds his sweet wines for over 20 years in concrete vats prior to bottling them. For example, he bottled the 1955 in 1984, 29 years after the vintage. The fact that his wines are excellent and have a honeyed maturity has caused some of France’s leading restauranteurs (like Pierre Troisgros) to beat a path to his door to purchase his old vintages of Sauternes.” (Robert Parker)

Donatella Cinelli Colombini

Tuscany (Montalcino)

Donatella Cinelli Colombini

The roots of the Colombini family in Tuscany go back to 1592, and their tradition of excellence in winemaking began in 1790 with the founding of the Fattoria dei Barbi.  It was in the 1960’s that Francesca Cinelli Colombini, also known as the “Lady of Brunello” made a name for herself as the stalwart leader of Barbi’s top wines.  When the next generation came into the spotlight, her son Stefano took over the family estate, while Francesca placed her daughter Donatella in charge of farming the neighbouring Azienda del Casato.  Her father Fausto later appointed Donatella to manage the Fattoria del Colle.

Donatella is a major force in the world of quality Italian wine and has spurred important advances in enotourism: she conceptualized “Cantine Aperte,” a nationwide day for winemakers to welcome visitors, and has even provided marketing tools to the elite producers throughout Italy.

Donatella Cinelli Colombini

 

Fanti

Tuscany (Montalcino)

Fanti

The Fanti Estate has belonged to the Fanti Family since the beginning of the eighteenth century. It extends over about 300 hectares, of which 52 are specialized vineyards, 110 are olive orchards, with over 8,500 olive trees, 80 hectares used for seed plots and 70 as forests. In 2004, Fanti began building their modern and spacious gravity-flow cellar for winemaking, ageing and refinement.  Specifically designed to improve handling of the carefully selected grapes produced with extreme care in the vineyards, this system avoids unnecessary and aggressive pumping.  Fanti aims to offer truly characteristic, high quality wines, which are expressive of the soil and climate of the vineyards in which they are grown.

Fanti

Bernard at Fanti with wine order ready for Ontario


J.M. Sohler

Alsace (Bas-Rhin)

J.M. Sohler

Situated 30 km south west of Strasbourg, J.M. Sohler finds its home in Blienschwiller, a hamlet surrounded by high quality wine producers.  To the north lies Nothalten, a city that formerly produced Sylvaner, but now noted for its Rieslings, especially Grand Cru Muenchberg.  To the south lies Dambach-la-Ville, considered by many to be the best wine village in the Bas-Rhin.

From an altitude of 240 to 320 metres, the Grand Cru Winzenberg vineyard overlooks the town of Blienschwiller.  Its steep south-south-east-facing slope guarantees exceptional exposure to the sun.  Covering 19.2 hectares, its microclimate and granite-mica soil are particularly favourable to the production of Grand Crus. The Winzenberg vineyard’s granitic soil makes it especially well-suited to growing Riesling and Tokay Pinot Gris.  Often quoted in historical documents, the reputation of J.M. Sohler’s Winzenberg vineyard has been founded on centuries of proud tradition.  These Grand Cru Winzenberg wines develop a marked floral character of great finesse, and should age very well in the bottle.

Where winemaking has been a tradition for centuries, the two houses pictured on the label are the home and winery of the Sohler family.  The caves, where all the wine is matured, date back to 1563.  Matured in both 228 litre barrels as well as 5000 litre century-old French oak casks, J.M. Sohler’s wines originate exclusively from the vineyards’ own hand-picked harvest.  J.M. Sohler currently bottles 25,000 – 30,000 bottles each year, which is approximately 40% of its total production.  The remaining 60% is sold in bulk to larger négociants of the region.  These include some of the most prominent and internationally recognized wineries from the Alsace, including F.E. Trimbach, Domaine Klipfel and J. Hauller & Fils.

Roehr Wines

Barossa Valley

The Roehr Wines Estate vineyard is home to some of the valley’s most mature Shiraz, now almost a century old.

Elmor Roehr’s great-great grandfather emigrated from Hamburg, Germany to Austraila in 1841. Amongst the earliest settlers at Ebenezer (meaning "Hitherto hath the Lord helped us") in the north of the Barossa Valley, the Roehr family took up farming and grape-growing. The Roehr Wines Estate vineyard is home to some of the valley’s most mature Shiraz, now almost a century old.

The Roehr Wines Estate vineyard area is about 32 hectares, or about 80 acres, where the soil types vary from sandy or ironstone topsoil, with most areas having red clay underneath. Some parts of the vineyard also have a substantial layer of limestone under the topsoil, somewhat like that of the terra rossa soils of South East of South Austraila. All wines are aged for 12 to 18 months in American oak hogsheads, depending on the characteristics of that particular wine. Total production is approximately 20,000 bottles some 1,700 cases.

Macaw Creek Wines

Gilbert Valley

Macaw Creek Wines

Organic Practices

Situated between the Clare and Barossa Valleys in South Australia’s Mt Lofty Ranges, the Macaw Creek vineyards lie in the Gilbert Valley. The Gilbert Valley is unique in its proven ability to produce quality Rhone varietal grapes in an organic environment, free from systemic fungicides and pesticides.

Rod Hooper is one of Australia’s most accomplished young winemakers. With over 20 vintages under his belt by the age of 40, Rod’s first vintage was with Penfold’s Wines in 1980. After graduating with a Bachelor of Applied Science in Oenology from Roseworthy Agricultural College in 1984, he gained international winemaking experience producing vintages in California, France and Germany. Rod was Operations Manager at Charles Sturt University for 7 years, and over this perio, his wines were awarded 15 Trophies, 25 Gold, 47 Silver and 139 Bronze Medals.

Macaw Creek Wines

DogRidge Wine Company

McLaren Vale

DogRidge Wine Company

Jamie Drummond podcast with Fred Howard - Episode 23

Sustainable practices

DogRidge supports vineyard biodiversity and employs modern sustainable viticultural practices that optimize vine health and sun exposure, creating fruit of extraordinary quality.

Named DogRidge for the winemaking family’s extreme love of Curly Coat Retrievers The Dog Ridge’s ecologically driven vineyards typify why the McLaren Vale is such a great winegrowing region. The balanced vines on the estate have consistently produced powerful wines with generous fruit driven spicy flavours and perfumed aromas.

DogRidge is located at the base of The Range overlooking the McLaren Vale wine region. This premium South Australian wine-growing region is known for its consistency and reliability. The DogRidge Vineyards employ modern viticultural practices, which optimise sun exposure and canopy health, resulting in ripe fruit of intense colour and quality. This desirable combination has led to the creation of wines that express outstanding depth of colour, aromatic elegance and richness of flavour.

DogRidge owns 140 acres (56 hectares) and operates established grapevines ranging in age from 2001 plantings to some of the oldest vines remaining in the region today. At the McLaren Flat vineyards, DogRidge boasts some 60+ year-old Shiraz, Cabernet Sauvignon and Grenache that form the basis of their bottled product. The soils vary considerably over a small area giving them the opportunity to select small parcels of the best fruit for small batch fermentation.

DogRidge Wine Company

 

Nichols Winery & Cellars

Paso Robles

Nichols Winery & Cellars

Nichols Winery is a small winery, established in 1991 by Keith Nichols to produce ultra premium wines with limited production of each Varietal.  The winery produces Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Meritage and Zinfandel.  In 2002 Syrah was started and 2005 a Sauvignon Blanc program was started.  The winery is located in Paso Robles, California.

Paso Robles is a warm wine-growing region in the central coast of California.  The warm days and cool nights are ideal for Sauvignon Blanc and Cabernet Sauvignon, in that the grapes like warm temperature to show their true character of revealing forward bright wild berries, plum and cherry flavors in Cabernet Sauvignon.  Cool nights allow the vines to shut down and rest for the next days push for enhanced flavors.  This climate also allows for a long growing season with long hang time, which matures the flavors and gives them depth.

Keith Nichols has traveled to Toronto on many occasions to promote his wines during the annual California Wine Fair in April and the Toronto Sante International Wine Festival in May.

Nichols Winery & Cellars

Domaine Michel Prunier et Fille

Burgundy (Auxey-Duresses)

Domaine Michel Prunier et Fille

Sustainable practices

Auxey-Duresses is a small village of 350 inhabitants, situated in Côte de Beaune, 10 km from Beaune, 2 km from Meursault. It is tucked in a valley between where the great red wines of Volnay and Pommard meet the great white wines of Meursault. The Prunier family has been making wine in Auxey-Duresses for over four generations. After establishing their own winery in 1968, Michel Prunier and his wife, Michèle started off with one inherited hectare and one rented hectare. Since the addition of their daughter Estelle to the team, the family now looks after a total of twelve hectares. Their land is divided amongst several Appellation Contrôlées in the Côte de Beaune: Meursault, Beaune, Chorey-les-Beaune and Auxey-Duresses.

Although Michel Prunier’s winemaking style does follow traditional practices, modern viticultural techniques are employed in order to craft these great wines. Producing both red and white wines, the domaine uses principally organic viticultural techniques. Domaine Michel Prunier et Fille has been mentioned and acknowledged by many French and foreign guides such as Gault et Millau, Revue des Vins de France, Le Guide Dussert Gerbert, Le Guide Hachette, Vins et Santé, Guides des Vignobles et de la Gastronomie, as well as guides by Robert Parker and Hugh Johnson. The winery has received many gold & silver medals over the years for their outstanding wines.