🍷 Weinnotes - Weekly Oregon Wine Newsletter


Hi there! I'm A.J. and you're receiving this email because you signed up for a weekly newsletter about Oregon Wine and Wineries. Thank you for being here. If you enjoy please forward it to a friend who also enjoys wine. And if this email was forwarded to you, get your own by clicking here🍷

Harvest is kicking into full gear throughout the Valley. I have seen quite a few Sparkling producers bringing in fruit, some Chardonnay, and I was shocked to see Pinot coming in from Domaine Roy. Are they starting to do a Sparkling as well?

If you remember, we were all trying to figure out what the fruit would end up doing way towards the end of April first part of May. Here's a quote from Oregon Live on April 21st:

“Based on what I’ve seen and what my peers are reporting, between 50% and 100% of the primary buds in many Willamette Valley vineyards were burned by the frost. At many of these sites, 50% of the secondary buds are burned. Realistically, we’re looking at the Willamette Valley losing half its crop this year,”

With Harvest knocking on the door, secondary buds brought up the rear, per se, this year to create large clusters. It’s been a great growing season for the grapes, with record rainfall giving the vines plenty of water to draw from and no heat domes stressing everything out. Thank you, David Patte, for the inside scoop!

Wine Enthusiast created a top ten list of American Sparkling Wines We Love. Argyle, Domaine Serene, and Roco were on the list. I am sad Corollary, Lytle Barnett, Dion, Granville, Maison Jussiaume, Dukes, Mellen Meyer, Gran Moraine, Brooks, Cho, Flaneur, Harper Voit, Lundeen, and Soter didn't make the list. But, on the other hand, I am happy that I don’t have to share. Yes, I am being a little selfish.

The Oregon Wine Board released its 2021 Oregon wine industry report. Here are some takeaways I found interesting.

  • Total wine grape production in 2021 increased 53% over 2020, from 75,142 tons to a record 114,677 tons.
  • The average price in 2021 increased 20% to $2,575 per ton over 2020 values, and the median price rose nearly 11% to $2,211 per ton.
  • 1,058 bonded wineries
  • Major growth was in the Columbia Gorge AVA, which has 14% more wineries for a total of 73
  • North and South Willamette Valley are comprised of 781 total wineries
  • Syrah plantings up 6%, Pinot gris plantings up 5%, and Chardonnay up 4%
  • Export sales increased by 8.9%, with 46% of those sales going to Canada

Typically, at this point in the newsletter, I have some fantastic events you should attend, but I don’t have anything new this week. So instead, here are a few I already mentioned.

If I were to tell you the World of Wine is smaller than you might think, I have a hunch you would think I am crazy. I get it. I would have thought the exact thought many moons ago. Hear me out for a quick minute. A local winery was in New York getting ready to be interviewed for a podcast. The host of the podcast asked if they knew A.J. Weinzettel. I have zero clue what their reaction was, but I can only imagine that is the last name they expected to hear clear across the country.

Another example for me starts back around 2018. The person who oversaw day-to-day hospitality operations and events was Tess at Domaine Serene. I knew she was married to a winemaker but didn’t know any further details. Tess moved on to other opportunities during the pandemic, and I hadn't heard from her again until earlier this summer while I was having dinner in McMinnville at La Rambla. We noticed one another. I walked over, gave her a big hug, and shook her husband’s hand, Travis, whom I had visited a couple of weeks prior, tasting his wines.

While tasting Travis’s wines at de la boue, I knew Tess was his wife, and seeing Tess after a couple of years was a treat. As I mentioned, the World of Wine is super tiny. So you never know who you will run into and the stories accompanying those chance encounters!

If you remember, a couple of weeks back, work kicked my patootski, and the story I wanted to get out didn’t happen. I made a promise two weeks ago, and here we are talking about a winery 99.8% of The Wine World has zero clue about. So today, I am diving into de la boue!

As with any wine expedition, I must create a starting point going backward in time to appreciate what we have today. Many moons ago, Travis Todd was a self-proclaimed ski bum who took advantage of the fresh powder by day and worked at the Yellowstone Club in Montana by night. Over time Travis was the wine buyer for the Yellowstone Club and fell head over heels for the complexity wine brings to the table. I don’t know 100%, but I think Travis and Tess met at the Yellowstone Club. Of course, I could be wrong; it wouldn’t be the first time.

Like myself, if you are unaware of the Yellowstone Club, it is an oh my holy Toledo batman getaway. However, it looks like it is way more than a resort getaway. From the website, there are 3,000+ square feet houses you can buy to get away for the winter or summer. In doing the teeniest bit of research, in 2015, condos were starting for $4 million, single-family housing at $5 million with initial dues at $300k and $36k in annual dues. If you have watched the TV series Yellowstone, I am pretty sure the Dutton family was fighting to keep entities such as the Yellowstone Club out of Montana.

Besides falling in love with wine and Tess, Travis had a soft spot in his heart for 2007 Oregon Pinots during his time at Yellowstone. He also met a person named Chris Andrew during his tenure. As Travis dove deeper and deeper into wine, he attended Pinot Camp in 2014 and did Harvest the same year for Wine by Joe. In the following three years, Travis’s desire to make wine intensified. Tess and Travis talked about where he wanted to make wine, and his answer was, “Oregon!”

The couple made the trek. Tess got a job at Domaine Serene, while Travis got a job helping make wine. I am pretty sure this was also at Wine by Joe, but the timeline is a bit fuzzy. He moved to Integrated Beverage Group, which makes Rascal and Duck Pond. In 2020, he transitioned from helping make wine to becoming the head winemaker.

Not long after the 2017 move to Oregon, Travis and Chris decided to create their own label, de la boue. Their first vintage was in 2019 and sold out extremely quickly. When I went out in late July, the 2020 lineup included a Chardonnay, two Pinots, and a Syrah. I am not sure how much they produced in 2019, but for 2020 there were a little under 390 cases (150 cases of Pinot, 140 cases of Syrah, and 100 cases of Chardonnay).

The four vineyards they source fruit from are the Vista Grande vineyard located in the Chehalem Mountains at 800 ft, the Gregory Ranch Vineyard in Yamhill Carlton, and the Lewis Vineyard located in the Columbia Gorge.

When I met Travis for a tasting, it was at Gregory Ranch. One of the stories he told me was the very first Oregon Chardonnay he poured at the Yellowstone Club came from Gregory Ranch. Bergstrom has sourced Pinot from Gregory Ranch along with Chardonnay used for Sigrid. On top of everything else Travis is doing, he is also farming the vineyard.

Starting the tasting, Travis poured some Chardonnay, and we headed out into the vineyard. I enjoyed seeing Travis’s excitement about the vines and the vineyard tour. It always amazes me how every vineyard has some different characteristics to it. For Gregory Ranch, I found one vivid point: one block nestled into its little valley. I also adored seeing the ground cover. According to the Gregory Ranch website, the vineyard is farmed Bio Dynamically.

I thoroughly enjoyed the Chardonnay as we walked around the vineyard and finished it off as we walked back to the green barn where the Pinots and Syrah were waiting. Reading 2020 on the labels, I was apprehensive. I have tried 2020 Pinots and Syrahs picked after the fires, and the number of wines I have enjoyed was few and far between.

The first Pinot was the Vista Grande, and I was very pleasantly surprised. There is no way I would have figured out it was a 2020 in a blind setting. Travis and I talked some, and the Gregory Ranch Pinot followed suit. I was a happy camper in Pinot Land! I still haven’t figured out how to take notes on a glass of wine while keeping a conversation going with a winemaker. It feels insulting being heads down feverishly writing away with the winemaker talking.

Next up was the Columbia Forge Syrah from the Lewis Vineyard nestled at the foothills of Rattlesnake Ridge in the Columbia Valley Appellation. Besides Syrah, this vineyard is also known for Cab Sauv, Merlot, Riesling, and Chardonnay. I didn’t take any notes on this wine; zero are needed. I vividly remember this wine.

When you think about a typical Syrah, it is a heavier, fuller-bodied wine compared to Pinot. It would also be super easy to pair it with a steak to cut through the fat, helping balance out one another. However, the 2020 Lewis Vineyard Syrah is dainty compared to the typical offerings. I was blown away, and Travis’s goal is to create a Syrah that pairs perfectly with Salmon.

One of the stories Travis told me was how he wanted to get grapes from Temperance Hill. He tried multiple times over and over throughout the years with no success. Then, out of the blue earlier this year, he got a call asking if he was still interested in fruit, and there was only one possible answer, “YES!” So, I was fortunate enough to try an early sample of the 2021 Pinot from Temperance Hill. Again, I don’t have notes, but it was fabulous!

A lot is happening in Oregon Wine Country. Mega facilities are built off of 99 with waterfalls and all the works. There are also acquisitions occurring we may feel a little uncertain about for the future of Oregon Wine. I get it, but the spirit is alive and kicking on what Oregon Wine stands for. The work Travis and Chris are doing with de la boue is a classic example of a gemstone I want to share with everyone. Please visit their website, make a reservation, tell Travis “A.J. sent me,” and have a fantastic time!

With Gratitude,

A.J.

PS - I was looking for a bottle of wine tonight and I found a bottle of the 2019 de la boue Syrah. I have no clue how I got it, but I am super stoked to have it!

“Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.”
​— From Coraline by Neil Gaiman​

Weinnotes, Wine Country's Hidden Gems

Discovering the hidden gems of Wine Country and bringing it to you via a weekly newsletter, podcast and iPhone App.

Read more from Weinnotes, Wine Country's Hidden Gems

I am a fan of the show Shrinking on Apple TV+. Tonight I watched episode 10 of season 2 and it might have been the last episode of the season. Harrison Ford is in it, but he is by far the star of the show. I enjoy the cast so much and the general premise of the show are the struggles we face in life. The father and daughter of the show lost a wife and a mom a little over a year ago due to a car accident. In this episode the daughter turns 18 and the dad bought her a car pretty much like her...

A couple of mornings back, I was taking a walk just as the sun was rising. It was cold. There were a few patches of ice on the sidewalk. Christmas lights were up on houses. I was the only crazy person walking that hour of the morning in the cold. With no earbuds and no screens, I soaked it all up. There is something I enjoy so much when the day is opening up to all of the possibilities that lie ahead. Each and every day is a new start, a new beginning to enjoy what is right in front of us....

Did you miss my email last week? Yeah, I missed it too. It didn’t go out. I think there have been three times in the past 5 years where I missed my own deadline. One of those times, the power was out. Not a bad record if I say so myself, but still I know you were sorely disappointed. You might be asking why I was late. Well, there are a lot of events kicking off for the Thanksgiving weekend. One of them is Friendsgiving, which was amazing last year, but this year, Holy Toledo, Batman, it is...