Sunday, November 22, 2009

Field Trip to Sonoma



In early November, we went to Napa and Northern Sonoma to visit vineyards, buy winemaking supplies/equipment and do wine tasting. We met some winemakers and tasted limited-production wines, new releases and wines that were only available to wine-club members. The wineries that we visited paired their featured wine with just the right food in their cozy barrel rooms. The weather was perfect, sunny and clear. The vineyards were absolutely beautiful displaying vines in magnificent colors in various shades of gold, yellow and red. In Sonoma, Russian River and Alexander Valley, the winemakers and winery staff were especially down-to-earth, friendly and gracious to us when we introduced ourselves as winemakers from San Diego county. They shared with us their hospitality and traded secrets on winemaking techniques. Their wine-food pairing was divine. We loved the lamb meatballs paired with a hearty Russian River Zinfandel. They were very generous in pouring their best wines. We tasted excellent Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Cabernet and Zinfandel that were only available directly from the wineries ranging from $70+ to $150 per bottle. We loved the pork sliders paired with the mellow red wine at one winery and a delish slow-cooked pork paired with Pinot Noir and polenta at another winery. At one winery, the winemaker generously gave us a barrel tasting experience of their wines as he shared his thoughts on winemaking techniques. His wife served us an excellent coq-au-vent dish with polenta to pair with their Pinot Noir and then chocolate cake with their port wine. As a foodie, I could go on forever about the wine and food pairing experience. However, the trip was also an educational event. So, with all the will power that we could muster, we dragged ourselves away from tasting rooms, from the wine and food pairing to tour winemaking facilities and check out winemaking equipment. We enjoyed chatting with winemakers, equipment sales people and vineyard managers. I remembered a nice chat with a husband and wife winemaker team as they pressed their estate Zinfandel with the help of their two young two sons. We’ve learned so much how established wineries set up their winery facilities and tasting rooms, equipment that they use, fermentation techniques that they practice, etc.

As we’d plan to convert to solar energy as a main energy source for our winery in the future, we noted that many wineries in Napa and Sonoma have gone green, lots of solar panels everywhere we looked.

It was a very enjoyable fact-finding field trip. I went home with a great sense of humility and compassion for all of the winemakers and winery owners whom we met during those three days because I know how hard they have worked to build their winery business and how much time, efforts and money that they have poured into these wineries. As an old adage has said, “It’d take a big fortune to make a small fortune in winemaking business”. But winemakers like us do it for the love of wine!

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