Mondavi credited with putting California wine on par with European
Yountville, Calif. -- Robert Gerald Mondavi, the entrepreneur and winemaker who helped put Napa Valley on the map, died today at his home in Yountville, Calif., at the age of 94. Mondavi stressed the importance of both science and style in making fine wine, showed competitors how to sell and promote California wines as equals to the then-better known wines of Europe, trained two generations of enologists and viticulturists, and left a legacy of philanthropy for the wine industry and his community.
Grapegrowers and vintners will team at Heritage Fest
Steve, Buck, Mike and Angelo Sangiacomo and Mike Pucci, Sangiacomo Family Vineyards
Carneros, Calif. -- This North Coast AVA, which encompasses parts of southern Sonoma and Napa counties, will hold its third annual Heritage Fest on Saturday, May 31. Sponsored by the Carneros Wine Alliance (CWA), this year's event will feature a novel concept in wine tasting: in the Growers-Vintners pavilion, member grapegrowers will pair up to pour with the Carneros wineries that purchase their fruit.
Covenant wines display two seals--one from the Orthodox Union (right) the other from Kehilla Kosher (left)--indicating they meet kosher labeling requirements.
Jeff Morgan is one of the few cellar workers to become a full-time wine writer, and he's one of possibly even fewer wine writers to then become a winemaker and winery principal. The St. Helena, Calif., resident owns and operates SoloRosa and ZMOR wines with partner Daniel Moore. Morgan also makes a rare kosher Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon (above) called Covenant ($90 retail) in partnership with Napa Valley vintner and culinary entrepreneur Leslie Rudd.
The opinions of early Biodynamics influences--Rudolf Steiner, creator of the movement, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Hippocrates (from left)--were in sharp opposition to those of René Descartes (right), who saw the Earth as being comprised of many systems unrelated to each other.
By now, everyone who follows wine closely has at least a superficial acquaintance with Biodynamic viticulture--whatever they may think about it. I would guess that in the last five years there have been more articles mentioning the idea of burying a cow horn full of dung than articles about many standard vineyard practices. But after the grapes are harvested, and once they're in the cellar, what is the Biodynamic way? Is there such a thing as Biodynamic winemaking, or is it just Biodynamic grapegrowing?
It had been too long since I visited wine country in the central part of the continent, so I welcomed the opportunity to attend the "License to Steal" wine marketing conference on Lake Erie in early April(see Faces & Forums). We coastal dwellers tend to spend too much time talking among ourselves and not enough time discovering what's happening in between the coasts.
In my July 2005 Wines & Vines column, I reported on the formation of a nonprofit organization, the National Grape and Wine Initiative (NGWI), which has the potential to significantly improve support for research, extension and outreach in all sectors of the grape and wine industry in the United States. It is a critical time in our industry in terms of funding for research and extension, and it's a good time to update readers on NGWI's progress to date.