Focusing on biodynamic wine making practices in the Willamette Valley, husband and wife team, Patrick Reuter and Leigh Bartholomew, studied vineyard and winemaking practices at University of California Davis before traveling the wine world to develop their knowledge, experience, and techniques.

After settling in the Willamette Valley and working for wineries in the region, they decided to start their own house, Dominio IV, and to focus on growing and making wines of Tempranillo, Viognier, and Pinot Noir. They grow their own grapes and source some of their supply from quality vineyards from outside the Willamette Valley.

Dominio IV 2008 Pinot Noir “Pondering Ptolemy”

click on comic to enlarge

Dominio IV’s 2008 Pinot Noir brings together flavors of mountain berries with hints of red chalk and cinnamon, touches of cola, and fresh herbs. The flavors here start focused and open to earthier, richer elements. The fruit turns into a richer jam with clove and all spice alongside a pleasing tartness.

This wine wants either time in the bottle, or time in the glass. Let it have some air if you open it now so that it can show its richness, and ground more into its flavors.

These grapes are gathered from organic and biodynamic vineyards in the second half of October, then fermented in stainless steel after a 3-5 day cold soak. The wine is then aged in French oak barrels from a mix of ages to strike the perfect oak influence balance on the final blend.

Dominio IV 2006 Syrah “Song of an Uncaged Bird”

click on comic to enlarge

The 2006 Syrah offers both black and red berries with brown sugar, mixed pepper and light vanilla. It is pleasantly drying, with mouthwatering acidity to balance. There is a lovely spice medium-long finish here as well.

This wine wants stew, and would do well with several years in the bottle as well. (I love stew.)

These grapes grow in organic and biodynamic vineyards on the Three Slopes section of the Columbia Gorge portion of the Dominio IV Estate. The fruit is then fermented in stainless steel, and aged for 15 months in French oak barrels, 4 months in stainless steel tanks, and finally in bottle for another 4 months.

Dominio IV 2009 Tempranillo/Syrah “Technicolor Bat

click on comic to enlarge

The “Technicolor Bat” brings together Tempranillo with Syrah to varying proportions depending on the ripeness of the vintage. The 2009 offers blue and black fruit with dark brown sugar (aiming towards molasses), mixed pepper, spice, and dried herbs. The wine offers a rich texture, drying mouth feel, and a fullness of body with balance. This is a nicely executed blend that is both fresh and clean on the nose and palate.

I want this wine with baked beans. Mmm… baked beans are gooooddd.

The grapes of Technicolor Bat are Demeter Biodynamic certified, fermented in stainless steel and aged 18 months in a mix of French and American oak barrels, 4 months in stainless steel tank, and at least 8 months in bottle.

***

Patrick Reuter, co-owner of Dominio IV, likes to illustrate his tasting notes for their wines as well! He was kind enough to share these over-time illustrations with me, and he’s snuck a couple of them onto the winery website as well. Keep an eye out for them there!

Cheers!

 

By Lily-Elaine Hawk Wakawaka, June 4, 2012.

http://wp.me/p1XlmA-xA

In Dominio IV, In The News | Tagged with , , ,

From On the Way to Somewhere Else, by Skip Walter

Posted on May 21, 2012

On a dreary Seattle day, an intriguing invitation from Dominio IV showed up in my inbox to come plant a grape vine labyrinth near Mosier, OR at their Three Sleeps Vineyard. I checked my calendar and I had nothing planned for that day.  It has been way too long since I’d been to Oregon Wine Country so this was a great excuse to have another authentic experience for my wine geek education. I usually try to get down to their McMinnville winery a couple of times a year to see what Patrick Reuter is innovating around the making of fine wine. I also try to arrange to help out in the tasting room or with the fall crush.  However, it has been over a year since I’ve made time to visit my favorite wine making family.  While I’ve been hearing for years about their biodynamic vineyard in the Columbia Gorge, I hadn’t managed to make my way to the property. Clearly, now was the time to go learn some more about fine wine growing.

Wiltshire Labyrinth

Many moons ago when we toured England as a family, our children insisted that we go visit the labyrinth in Wiltshire, England near Stonehenge.  We were fascinated with the distinction between a labyrinth and a maze.  A maze is a complex puzzle while a labyrinth has only a single non-branching path which leads to the center.  We enjoyed walking through the labyrinth and the kids wished that there was one of these closer to home in Seattle, WA.

Patrick Reuter was so fascinated with the experience of labyrinths that he encountered while working at different wineries in Europe, that he chose the labyrinth as the symbol for Dominio IV wines. For ten years, Patrick has tried to convince his co-owner and wife, Leigh Bartholomew, to let him plant a labyrinth on their vineyard property.  Leigh being an amazing vineyard manager at Archery Summit, has resisted because she dislikes driving a tractor in circles through rows of vines.  Maybe one day we’ll all find the real story as to why she relented and decided to support Patrick’s dream of having a labyrinth of grape vines that friends of the winery can come experience the journey to the center.

Three Sleeps Bed and Breakfast

Glenn and Liz Bartholomew who live on the property and run the Three Sleeps Bed and Breakfast along with other family members laid out and prepared the ground for twenty of us to come do the “shape planting.” [Note:  As a way to remember the taste of his wines, Patrick invented something he calls "shape tasting."] Glenn had prepared all of the irrigation lines and then augered all the holes for the vines. The rest of the family pounded in the bamboo stakes into the planting holes to help guide the upward spreading of the grape vine.

Patrick Reuter describing the labyrinth layout

We all gathered on the front porch of the Bartholomew’s home where Patrick shared his vision and philosophy for the labyrinth. He described the difference between a maze and a labyrinth and his fondest hope that these vines would last 100 years and provide opportunities for thousands to make the spiritual journey of the labyrinth. From the porch we could see the primary east/west line of the concentric circles. His design challenge was how to lay out the labyrinth so that it would be both an interesting walk and allow the farming and irrigation of the vines to occur.

Mt Adams rising about Three Sleeps Vineyard

From his winemaker’s view, he is planting an interesting mix of Tempranillo (the majority of the grapes planted on the rest of the property), Syrah, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petite Verdot. His goal is to produce a “field blend” in a couple of barrels that will be available to wine club members and those who journey through the labyrinth. What we are planting today will be harvested in three years and then take two to three years to age before being released. Once again I am reminded of the long range thinking that one has to do in the wine industry – what we do today won’t be available for the market for at least five years.

Leigh Bartholomew on Shape Planting

Leigh then took over to move us from the visionary spiritual to the pragmatics of how we would plant the vines. We moved down to the labyrinth and Leigh went through a detailed explanation and show and tell of how to plant. First, we put some all natural rock phosphate fertilizer on the mound of dirt piled on the side of the hole. She explained that we needed to mix this in with the dirt and put this in the hole first followed by a couple of inches of dirt so that the fertilizer didn’t “burn” the root structure. Ideally, you wanted to have about a fist of root stem above ground right next to the bamboo shoot pole. With the one example we were now educated to go plant our way around the circular rows. I love the process of see one, do one, teach one approach to experiential learning.

Of course I had to encourage Patrick to plant lots more Cabernet Franc which has become my favorite speciality varietal.  I lovingly planted about ten Cab Franc vines with focused intentionality so that they would thrive and Patrick would see the light to plant even more in the future. In addition to the Cab Franc I was able to plant some Petite Verdot and Tempranillo varietals before all of the vines were in their respective holes.  It is amazing how quickly what seems like a forever task is finished with 25 motivated wine lovers.

Many hands makes fast shape planting

As the planting was winding down, I asked Patrick how the journey would flow through the labyrinth vineyard. In his wonderful way, Patrick started with “I’m not sure.  Now that all the vines are in, I have to figure out how to set up a symbol system to guide the flow through these open spaces we have to leave for the tractors. I thought about putting stone markers where people need to turn, but they are so heavyweight for the vineyard.  The tractors will run over them and drive them into the ground compacting the root systems.”

Before we start the labyrinth grape vine planting

I immediately lept to a technical solution to the problem laughing at myself the whole time that I shared it with Patrick.  “Look we could do a quick labyrinth navigation app.  All you would have to do is get one of those augmented GPS transmitters like wheat farmers use to precisely plant a field.  Then the user could look at the app and navigate their way through the vineyard.”

Neither of us could stop laughing at the thought of wine lovers looking to get back to nature and do something spiritual in the vineyard looking at their iPhone the whole time.  Some things are just so wrong.

The planted labyrinth from the existing vineyard

Throughout the afternoon, Patrick and Leigh’s two young boys and a friend were navigating the tall grasses within the maze as they acted out their fantasies of hunters looking to prey on these farmers planting their vines. The lyrics of lions and tigers and bears from Wizard of Oz kept running through my head.

The hunters ready to soak the planters.

After cleaning up a little, we retired to the front porch to have some tacos, fresh vegetables and of course, Dominio IV wines. The Bartholomews know how to put on a fresh food spread. We started with the 2011 Viognier to accompany the chips and salsa and then moved through a progression of reds – Pinot Noir, Syrah, Syrah-Tempranillo blends, and finally a Tempranillo.

As the evening wound down and the labyrinth planters began to drift off, Patrick suggested that Jeff Weissler of Conscious Wine and I chat a bit. Jeff and I had exchanged emails a couple of months back after I’d written the blog post on Shape Tasting and Patrick pointed me to Jeff’s videos on Shape Tasting with Patrick. We did the “do you know” routine to establish our wine geek credentials. We have many mutual friends on our respective journeys including Bill and Barb Steele of Cowhorn Winery, Alan York, Paul Dolan, and the Benzigers.

Jeff is doing some interesting work promoting his four principles and twelve practices of fine wine making.  His focus is on figuring out how to rate wineries over the long term rather than myopically only pay attention to a particular bottle of wine from a particular vintage. I look forward to many great interactions in the future with Jeff as he helps all of us be intentional in what we look for in fine wines and fine wine growers. Jeff posted his video of the labyrinth planting earlier today.

Very early stage grape cluster growth

With lots of hugs for old friends and new wine fellow travellers it was time to head back up the road to Bainbridge Island.

As I headed out from the peace and aliveness of Three Sleeps Vineyard, I once again reflected on Brian Doyle’s insightful quotes from  The Grail:  A Year Ambling and Shambling through an Oregon Vineyard in pursuit of the best pinot noir wine in the Whole Wide World about fine wine growing:

“Grapevines are amazing life forms when you think about it, they plunge their fingers a hundred feet down into the rocky soil, they can live for hundreds of years, they fend off all sorts of insect attacks, and they have been working with human beings for so long, thousands and thousands of years, that you wonder sometimes who cultivates who, you know what I mean?  Are people manipulating and taking advantage of grape vines, or are grape vines deftly using human beings to take over the world?

“On my way back uphill to my car I remember what Jesse told me once, that each vine produces enough grapes to make about three-fourths of a bottle of wine, and I chew on the idea that three-fourths of a bottle of excellent wine is probably just the right amount necessary for two or three people to start telling stories fast and furious,so that each of the vines I pass is pregnant with stories, some of which were never born into the world before, and this idea makes me happy also, so by the time I get to the town where I am supposed to give a talk I am cheerful as a chipmunk.

Click here to discover more about Skip Walter

In Dominio IV, In The News, Jeff's Blog, Winery Events | Tagged with , ,

“Beyond my expectations!”
5 of 5 stars Reviewed May 16, 2012 NEW

Searching the internet is how I found Youngberg Hill Inn. My stay was for 5 nights and 4 days and I loved every minute of my stay. Shortly after I booked online, I received a very warm and welcoming email from Becky, the Innkeeper. I let her know I am vegetarian and she was happy to accomodate me. The Gamay room was home for the time I was there and was a wonderful choice! It was very cozy and I had the fireplace going every day. The property is absolutely breathtaking. Becky and Vail, who is there on the weekends, made me feel like there only job was to pamper me and to make sure I had everything I wanted or needed. They are both so lovely. Becky’s breakfasts are really delicious and they serve fantastic coffee. Wayne and Nicollette, the owners, are very gracious and welcomed me as if I was a part of their family. My last morning there, I had to leave very early….way before breakfast. When I opened the door to my room, I found a bag containing freshly baked muffins and a ‘to go’ coffee cup with a note letting me iknow the coffee was on and Becky wanted to make sure I had coffee and something to eat on my way to the airport! I will definitely return. Make sure you do not miss this experience!

Check out Youngberg Hill in for yourself:  www.youngberghill.com

To read more reviews like this, visit Trip Advisor.

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Youngberg Hill Vineyards and Inn in the Willamette Valley, Oregon

Where: Oregon’s Willamette Valley in McMinnville, about an hour from Portland

The Details: Eight rooms (four queen suites and four king guest rooms) offer views of the 22 acres of organic vineyards. Rooms are in the same building as the tasting room, where you’ll have the chance to taste four wines with the three people heavily involved in the day-to-day operations: the winemaker, the grape grower, and the owner. Rooms have private baths, comfy chairs from which you can enjoy the views, fireplaces, Jacuzzi tubs, Wi-Fi, and loaner iPads.

Why Stay Here: Its on-site vineyard produces organic Pinot Noir and Pinot Gris, rated 90 or better by Wine Spectator. Common areas include a library, a lounging salon, and a dining room. Sipping wine on the wrap-around porch offers panoramic views of the Coastal Range, Mount Jefferson, Mount Hood, and Willamette Valley. Want to explore? Dozens of wineries are within a 20-minute drive, including Dundee, Carlton, Amity West Salem, and Eola Hills. Wake up in the morning to a two-course gourmet meal with seasonal food and local products such as homemade granola and yogurt, Pinot-poached pears, and pancetta tarts.

Best Time to Avoid Crowds: November to March

How Much: From $200 per room per night for two people

Info:
tel. 888/657-8668; www.youngberghill.com

From Frommers.com
Read more: http://www.frommers.com/slideshow/index.cfm?group=1005&p=9#ixzz1sy5bXIgf

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May is Oregon Wine Month, and the Oregon Wine Board is welcoming it in style with “Unwine’d”, a major event in Portland on Sunday, April 29th.  More than 85 wineries and over a dozen restaurants will be showcasing extraordinary wine and food, casting a spotlight on the incredible breadth and depth of Oregon’s fertile, vibrant landscape.

Unwine’d is being held at Portland’s Left Bank Annex, from 3pm-6pm. Trade and Media early access is from 2pm-3pm.  Tickets are just $50 and can be purchased through the Oregon Wine Board’s website.

ConsciousWine is honored to have been invited and is especially proud to participate in Unwine’d, and to join our colleagues in celebrating not just the overall growth and success of Oregon’s wineries and farms, but specifically the growing and thriving community of organic and biodynamic farms and vineyards.

To demonstrate just how spectacular these wines are, ConsciousWine’s Jeffrey Weissler will be pouring at least two exceptional wines from Cowhorn Vineyards located in Jacksonville and Dominio IV located in McMinnville.

Don’t miss a chance to see Jeff Weissler in person, sharing and talking wine.  Jeff is an expert on wines made from organic, biodynamic grapes and a passionate advocate for what’s happening in Oregon.

Come to Unwine’d on April 29th and say “hi”!

In Blog Roll, Conferences, ConsciousWine, In The News, Jeff's Blog, Media, Sustainable Practices, Tasting Wine, Winery Events | Tagged with , , , , , , , ,

Gerry Frank’s picks: Hood River’s Blossom Craft Show, Vineyard B&B, and more

Columbia Gorge scenery comes into full bloom at Hood River’s Blossom Craft Show (541-354-2865) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, April 21-22. In addition to enjoying one of the most geographically breathtaking areas anywhere, you’ll find gourmet food choices and local wines, a quilt show, arts and crafts, fine art, nursery stock and those delicious Hood River pears presented by the Columbia Gorge Fruit Growers. Free admission.

Relax at the Three Sleeps Vineyard B&B (1600 Carroll Road, Mosier; 877-867-7776) where you’ll enjoy a welcoming evening taste of Dominio IV wine with owners Liz and Glenn Bartholomew. The accommodation overlooks the Dominio estate vineyard and Mt. Adams in the distance. Choose from either a king ($150) or queen ($135) room, each with a private entrance and patio. The B&B name originates from the Lewis and Clark expedition when explorers asked how far it was to the ocean. Native Americans replied, “Three sleeps.”

There’s year-round appeal in the Gorge; be sure to drive all or part of the Historic Columbia River Highway. As a side note, Menucha, the former summer estate of Governor Julius Meier (my great-uncle), is on the highway and now serves as a Presbyterian retreat.

Open for breakfast and lunch since January 2011, The Gathering Spot Cafe (106 N. First St., Silverton; 503-874-4888) has garnered an enthusiastic following. This place is a good eats bet and the prices are right (all menu items are under $11). Crepes, waffles, French toast and the signature eggs Benedict Florentine are offered for breakfast; enjoy soups, sandwiches, wraps and more crepes and egg options for lunch. Kids plates are available. Bring your family and friends to a great mealtime gathering place from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily. Sundays offer an all-day special brunch menu.

By Gerry Frank, Sunday, April 15, 2012, Special to the Oregonian (OregonLive.com)

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Last month we had the pleasure of welcoming to Youngberg Hill Ornithology Professor Don Powers of George Fox University, and nearly two dozen of his current and former wildlife biology students. Professor Don and his group conducted on March 17 the first ever Youngberg Hill Vineyards Native Bird Study.

It was a lucky day for bird-spotting, as forty different native species were identified in less than three hours! Highlights included a gorgeous Pileated Woodpecker, Merlins, Kestrels and a Northern Harrier Raptor. Our resident eagles made a regal appearance soaring over the vineyard rows. The students were an enthusiastic bunch, tramping through the muck of the vineyard and recording everything they saw.

We ended the experience with a hearty lunch in the warmth of the dining room. If you have been following our blogs this winter, you are probably well aware of our ongoing trouble with the non-native European starlings that eat so many of our grapes during harvest time. We were especially pleased to see that only one or two starlings were sighted, and that the avian diversity of our vineyard ecosystem looks very healthy.

Professor Don was very impressed by the species count and said that if the weather had been better (it rained, of course!) we would have seen even more native species. This initial effort was so successful that we have decided to monitor our native bird population’s health on a regular basis by conducting quarterly surveys with Dr. Powers and his wonderful George Fox students.

Upon the completion of our new vineyard panorama deck, we will also be launching a “Wet Your Beak” wine tasting, in honor of our feathered friends. Imagine spotting colorful native birds while sipping our tasty organically grown flight of Pinot noirs.

Now that’s our kind of birding!

Taken from Youngberg Hill’s Blog, April 7th, 2012 by Nicolette

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Diners in the Willamette Valley have numerous options when it comes to fine fare and atmosphere, but eating out every night can make a sizable dent in anyone’s bank account and most certainly add inches to most waistlines. For those wanting to learn to make their own culinary creations at home, help has arrived.

Meet Chef Wendy Bennett.

Bennett, who lives on a farm in Dayton, took note of an increased interest in all things agricultural, including winemaking, cheesemaking, organic produce, grass-fed beef and farm-fresh eggs. Embracing the farm-to-fork momentum, she opened Wine Country Cooking Studio in January.

Located in Dundee, above the Red Hills Market, her kitchen caters to local residents and visitor groups, offering detailed hands-on cooking classes for all skill levels and ages.

“We are so excited to welcome the Wine Country Cooking Studio to the Willamette Valley,” said Jenna Winkler, meetings and event services manager at The Allison Inn & Spa in Newberg. “This is a wonderful addition to the area, and we are looking forward to having another place to send our guests for a wine and culinary experience.”

Classes feature local, fresh ingredients that students prepare using professional utensils in an exceptional culinary kitchen. Bennett uses a light-hearted approach and offers classes ranging from knife skills to sauce preparations to developing “street food” flavors. The average fee is $79 for three hours, with prices based on class content and meals prepared.

Bennett grew up in a restaurant family. From the time she could see over a table, she’s been interested in the hospitality industry. She attended Johnson & Wales University, earning degrees in Culinary Arts and Food Service Management, and was trained and mentored by Noel Cullen, master chef and past president of the American Culinary Federation.

In 1988, Bennett captained a six-member culinary team, which earned a gold medal at the IKA Hoga Culinary Olympics in Frankfurt, Germany, as well as 26 medals in Hotelympia, a culinary competition in London. Before graduating, she was inducted into the Golden Key Honor Society by Julia Child.

Bennett has taught countless future chefs as an instructor at Boston University’s School of Hospitality and at Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts. She spent five years as the vice president of academic affairs for Le Cordon Bleu in Portland, prior to opening Wine Country Cooking Studio.

Wine Country Cooking Studio is located on the second floor at 155 S.W. Seventh Street, Dundee. For more information, visit www.winecountrycookingstudio.com or call 503-689-5549.

Article taken from Oregon Wine Press, March 1, 2012

In In The News, Winery Events | Tagged with , , , , , ,

The KID
Pascal Brooks, Brooks Wines, Amity, Oregon

At 15, Pascal Brooks is America’s youngest winery owner. He’s heir to Brooks Wines, an Oregon producer of organic and biodynamic Pinot Noirs and Rieslings. But even as a very young child, he was on the purple path. “I always wanted to be a winemaker,” Brooks says. “I can remember having wine stains on my jackets after crush when I was 6.”

Pascal’s father, Jimi Brooks, passed away unexpectedly when Pascal was 8, leaving the winery to his son. Jimi’s family and friends banded together to continue production and open a path for Pascal to carry on his father’s tradition when he feels ready, should he so choose. “It was my choice to keep it going,” says Pascal’s aunt, Janie Brooks Heuck, who runs her late brother’s winery while Pascal attends school in Pittsburgh where he lives with his mother. “There is no pressure for Pascal to take it on.”

Still, Pascal chooses to fly to Oregon to help at the winery during his vacations from school. And he says he plans to honor his father’s tradition and continue making the wines — which appeared recently at a White House dinner — even more successful. “I really want to carry on my father’s legacy and help broaden the market for wine of that nature,” he says.

He’s already starting to add his own personality and presence to Brooks where he can. “I love helping out at the winery,” he says. “During harvest I sort fruit, do punch-downs, clean bins, and help around. The greatest feeling in the world is when you’re cold, your hands and arms are sticky with juice, your muscles ache, and a soft rain hits your face as you sort fruit. That’s my favorite job to do at the winery.” He’s also starting to dip his toes in the marketing side, helping to design labels, writing for the newsletter and website, speaking at winery events and helping in the tasting room (though he’s not old enough to serve wine).

If not a winemaker, Brooks says he might have wanted to be a doctor, but he feels at ease with his path. “My friends think it’s cool, and I love seeing the expression on people’s faces when I tell them I own a winery,” he says. “It’s funnier to see the parents’ reactions. I bring many of my friends’ parents my wine and they understand how special it is for me to give them that.”

Brooks plans to attend college, then gain working experience at other wineries before finally settling down in Oregon’s Willamette Valley, where Janie and head winemaker Chris Williams will fully induct him into the ways of the business. “My hope for him is that he lives a happy, passionate life like his dad did,” says his aunt Brooks Heuck. “Everything I see in him is so much like Jimi—I think he may be in charge of Brooks before we know it.” Until then, he gets to enjoy being a kid.

Taken from ImbibeMagazine.com, May/June 2011

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