Bonterra Bets Big on Regenerative Farming with New Line of Eco-Friendly Wines

Giving a big boost to the eco-friendly and socially conscious farming approach known as regenerative agriculture, Mendocino County-based Bonterra Organic Estates is releasing a new tier of wines, its first bearing the Regenerative Organic Certified (ROC) logo. The company, which changed its name from Fetzer last year, is the largest vineyard holder to date to earn the ROC designation, and these wines will be available nationally and in some international markets.

“We can talk about farming all day, but now we actually have a product behind it that can speak to it,” said Joseph Brinkley, director of regenerative farming for Bonterra Organic Estates.

The new Bonterra Estate Collection’s first wines include a 2021 Chardonnay from Ledford Ranch Vineyard and a 2021 Cabernet Sauvignon from Bonterra’s Butler Ranch; both are priced at $22. The company has produced 7,000 cases of the Chardonnay and 4,100 of the Cabernet, which could provide a chance for the ROC logo to gain recognition among a wider set of wine consumers.

And since these are the first wines from Mendocino County to carry the ROC label, Brinkley also hopes it will earn the region more recognition. “Mendocino has amazing fruit and great wines but it hasn’t gotten the same traction as some neighboring counties,” he said. “This is a great way to demonstrate to the consumer what Mendocino can do, but at a reasonable price point.”

While many regenerative farming methods are old, such as grazing animals on the property and planting cover crops between vine rows for better soil health, the certification itself is fairly new. The project kicked off in 2017 when the Rodale Institute and companies such as Patagonia and Dr. Bronner’s co-founded the Regenerative Organic Alliance, with the aim of creating a higher level of organic certification—one that is more comprehensive and stringent than the USDA Organic label—that covers a wide range of agricultural-based products.

The ROC program starts with organic certification as its baseline, with no synthetic fertilizers and pesticides permitted, and then layers on additional requirements around three pillars: soil health and land management, animal welfare and farmer and worker fairness. There are three tiers—Bronze, Silver and Gold—based on the number of practices addressed and at what scope. Bonterra earned the Silver level for its winery and all of its vineyard holdings, which include 850 acres of vines in production, in late 2021.

[article-img-container][src=2023-01/ns_boerocbacklabel012523_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of Bonterra Organic Estates)] [alt= Back label of one of the new Bonterra Estate Collection wines with the Regenerative Organic Certified–Silver Level logo][end: article-img-container]

“To me, one of the pieces that gets overlooked is the social pillar,” said Brinkley. “We’ve been focused for a while on how we are treating our soils, but it’s critical that we are treating our people well too. You can’t be regenerative without making sure your workers are paid a living wage, that they have a grievance process.”

But the reason regenerative agriculture has recently captured the attention of so many is its ability to sequester carbon in the soil. “Agriculture is one of the only industries that has the capacity to help mitigate the climate crisis,” said Brinkley. “In my mind, it’s magic that photosynthesis takes air and light from the sun and creates food for all things and, in so doing, it’s taking excess carbon in the atmosphere that’s causing an issue for us and turning it into fertile soil, feeding the microlife in soil and creating a resilient farm system. That blows me away every time I think of it. We didn’t need some super-smart person to figure out technology to do this. This is plants.”

Since Tablas Creek became the first U.S. winery to earn the ROC vineyard certification in 2020, the Regenerative Organic Certified program has slowly been picking up steam. “Regenerative farming” has become a buzzword in the viticulture community, particularly at West Coast estates that had already been farming with a variety of organic, biodynamic and sustainable practices.

“For me, the main difference is that sustainability is doing less harm, while regenerative organic is doing good,” Giancarlo Bianchetti, CEO of Bonterra, told Wine Spectator. “That is the shift, that’s why it’s more challenging and more difficult.”

Among the other wineries and vineyards that have earned the ROC designation in the past two years are Medlock Ames and Truett Hurst in Sonoma County; Neal Family Vineyards in Napa Valley; Villa Creek in Paso Robles; Troon Vineyard in Oregon, and Domaine Bousquet in Argentina—the first outside of the U.S. More are expected to soon announce they have achieved certification.

Since its first organic vineyards were planted in 1987, Bonterra’s name has become synonymous in the wine industry with eco-friendly practices. With its extensive land holdings, the company has helped demonstrate that organic viticulture need not be limited to small sites and boutique wineries. Five of the company’s vineyard estates, including Butler Ranch and its home estate, McNab Ranch, are also certified biodynamic by Demeter USA.

[article-img-container][src=2023-01/ns_boerocsheep012523_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of Bonterra Organic Estates)] [alt= Sheep grazing amid the vines in one of Bonterra’s vineyards][end: article-img-container]

Bonterra originally was a label under the portfolio of Fetzer, which was founded in 1968; the Fetzer family sold the company to Brown-Forman in 1992. By the time Chilean wine giant Concha y Toro purchased it in 2011, Fetzer was one of the largest wine brands in California, as well as one of the largest bottling wines from organic and sustainably farmed grapes. Now the Bonterra name has subsumed the Fetzer brand (which still continues), as the company decided last year to put its organic identity front and center.

While 100 percent of Bonterra’s estate fruit is now ROC, Brinkley acknowledges that he would like to earn the Gold level certification in the near future. But for now, the next step is for Bonterra to encourage the growers it buys from to consider adopting the methods and earning the certification, a process it has already gone through with organic conversions. “We’re not necessarily trying to tell everyone that’s not doing it our way that they’re doing it wrong,” said Brinkley. “But we want to be a strong proponent. It would be fantastic if we could continue to bring more labels and brands into this program. … We’ll model the way.”

“It’s not just about our brand,” adds Brinkley. “We’re promoting this whole farming system and other brands and farmers behind it. We’re trying to elevate the wholeness of regenerative organic.”

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Michael Martini, Third-Generation Napa Winemaker, Dies at Age 73

Michael Martini, who was born into a Napa Valley wine dynasty and followed in the winemaking footsteps of his father and grandfather, died Tuesday after a brief battle with lung cancer. He was 73.

Martini retired from Louis M. Martini winery in 2015, after 40 years of making wine for his family. Late last year, Martini found himself struggling to breathe. He was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer on Dec. 23, according to friend and fellow winemaker Ed Sbragia. Martini passed away at his home in Dillon Beach, Calif.

“Mike was larger than life but he was a straight shooter,” said Sbragia, a former Beringer winemaker who met Martini decades ago. “Together with his wife, Jacque, he was a vibrant, vivacious, fun-loving person.”

Martini was born Nov. 7, 1949, in St. Helena. His grandfather Louis M. Martini had emigrated from Genoa, Italy, and was still a teenager when he started making sweet wine with his family in San Francisco in 1906. Martini’s father Louis P. Martini grew up in Kingsburg in San Joaquin Valley, where Louis M. operated L.M. Martini Grape Products. As the end of Prohibition approached in 1933, Louis M. made a risky decision to build a winery in St. Helena, believing that dry wines like Cabernet Sauvignon were the future of the wine business.

Martini’s father and grandfather were like day and night. Louis M. was outgoing, fearless, while his son Louis P. was quiet and scholarly. Mike took after his grandfather. “Mike was a very funny, entertaining guy,” recalled sister Carolyn Martini, who was the winery’s CEO until the family sold it to E. & J. Gallo in 2002.

Martini started working in the cellar of the winery in 1974 after a brief stint in the military. He commuted to U.C. Davis from St. Helena to get his degree in fermentation science. In 1977, he became head winemaker, replacing his semiretired father. During his tenure, the winery was known for making elegant wines that emphasized fruit and subtlety. “They weren’t in-your-face wines,” Sbragia said, “but he made some killer wines. He was a really good winemaker.”

Martini was active in the wine community, serving as president of the Napa Valley Vintners association, an organization his grandfather helped establish. He also served on the boards of the American Society for Viticulture and Enology and the California Wine Institute. In his free time, Martini played lead guitar for Private Reserve, an ad hoc rock band of winemakers (including Sbragia) that played wine events and cruises.

Martini lived large, his sister Carolyn said. “He liked to eat and drink and be with his friends all the time. He had a wonderful time for 73 years.”

Martini is survived by his wife, Jacque, and two daughters, Shana and Larkin.


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2022: In Memoriam

As we prepare to ring in 2023, Wine Spectator‘s editors are taking a moment to toast the wine industry pioneers, innovators, leaders and chroniclers we lost this year, among them one of our dearest friends.

This year we said goodbye to California Pinot Noir pioneer and Calera founder Josh Jensen, charismatic Château Léoville Barton owner Anthony Barton, Napa vintner Jack Cakebread, Two-Buck Chuck innovator Fred Franzia, Burgundy’s Louis-Fabrice Latour, Sonoma’s Joe Rochioli Jr., restaurateur Tony May and our own Kim Marcus. We’ll dearly remember these members of our community that we lost in 2022.


[article-img-container][src=2022-04/ns_franco042522_1600.jpg] [credit= (Colin Dutton)] [alt= Franco Allegrini brought a determined, precise focus to Allegrini’s vineyards and cellars.][end: article-img-container]

Franco Allegrini
One of three siblings who helped make their family winery and Valpolicella global names, he oversaw winemaking and viticulture.


Anthony Barton
A dashing figure for decades in the wine trade, he raised Bordeaux’s Châteaus Léoville Barton and Langoa Barton to iconic status.


[article-img-container][src=2022-05/ns_cakefam101420_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Cakebread Cellars/Alexander Rubin)] [alt= Jack Cakebread with his wife, Dolores, and sons Bruce, left, and Dennis, who help manage the winery today, at a 2019 winery event.][end: article-img-container]

Jack Cakebread
The owner of an auto repair shop and a freelance photographer, Cakebread found a second career helping define Napa Chardonnay at Cakebread Cellars.


Fred Franzia
The co-founder of Bronco Wine Company was known for launching “Two Buck Chuck” and for his outspoken opinions of the wine industry.


[article-img-container][src=2022-03/ns_alain030422_1600.jpg] [credit= (Jon Wyand)] [alt= Alain Graillot found winemaking greatness in the rocky soils of the Northern Rhône Valley.][end: article-img-container]

Alain Graillot
His Northern Rhône Valley domaine became the standard-bearer for the Crozes-Hermitage appellation.


[article-img-container][src=2022-08/ns_andre081922_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of Famille Hugel)] [alt= André Hugel in his family’s storied wine cellars. He helped rebuild the company, founded in the 1600s, after World War II devastated Alsace.][end: article-img-container]

André Hugel
The 11th-generation member of one of Alsace’s top wine families helped rebuild the business after World War II.


Josh Jensen
Pioneering founder of Calera Wine Company turned his passion for Pinot Noir into one of California’s most recognized and celebrated wineries.


Louis-Fabrice Latour
Eleventh-generation president of Burgundy’s Maison Louis Latour led one of Burgundy’s most prominent and historic producers.


Kim Marcus
Longtime Wine Spectator senior editor helped shape the magazine’s global coverage of wine for more than three decades.


Ross Andrew Mickel
The young vintner, who went from sommelier to boutique winery owner, was lost in a seaplane crash near Seattle.


[article-img-container][src=2022-04/ns_tony040522_1600.jpg] [credit= (Jeffrey Holmes)] [alt= Polished, professional and passionate about Italian cooking, Tony May was a legend in New York restaurants.][end: article-img-container]

Tony May
Giant of Italian food and wine in the U.S. championed authentic Italian cuisine and mentored countless chefs at New York’s San Domenico, Palio and SD26.


[article-img-container][src=2022-02/ns_pender020722_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy Tawse Wine & Spirits)] [alt= Paul Pender was winemaker at one of Niagara’s top wineries for more than 15 years.][end: article-img-container]

Paul Pender
The longtime winemaker for Niagara’s Tawse Wine & Spirits made gorgeous single-vineyard wines.


Joe Rochioli Jr.
California Pinot Noir pioneer saw potential for fine wine from Sonoma’s Russian River Valley.


Allen Shoup
As the head of Chateau Ste. Michelle, he was a guiding force in establishing Washington state’s wine reputation.


[article-img-container][src=2022-08/ns_lucio080222_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of Tasca d’Almerita)] [alt= Lucio Tasca d’Almerita worked at his family’s winery for six decades, expanding not just its sales but also the world’s perception of Sicilian wine.][end: article-img-container]

Lucio Tasca d’Almerita
At his family’s winery, he gained global respect for Sicily’s terroir by trying international grapes, then built on that with outstanding native grape wines.


[article-img-container][src=2022-01/ns_claude011022_1600.jpg] [credit= (Benainous/Vandeville/Getty)] [alt= Claude Taittinger promoted great cuisine and modern art, while also selling his family’s Champagne brand.][end: article-img-container]

Claude Taittinger
Champagne icon managed the Taittinger Champagne house, investing in vineyards, modernizing marketing and co-founding Domaine Carneros in Napa.


Sean Thackrey
The art dealer turned maverick winemaker pursued wines of character over convention; he also amassed one of the world’s largest collections of historic wine books and manuscripts.

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What Can You Expect from Wine in 2023?

Economists are uncertain if 2023 will deliver a full recession to the U.S. economy or simply a slowdown, thanks to stubborn inflation, rising interest rates and the continued impact of the war in Ukraine and the pandemic. A lot of household net worth has been wiped out in the past 12 months, between the stock market and sinking home prices, not to mention anyone who invested in cryptocurrency.

For the wine industry, economic pain has already hit. Several industry sources report slowing sales in the final quarter of 2022, and many industry analysts expect the first six months of 2023 to be worse.

“Economists are factoring in strong odds of a recession,” says Stephen Rannekleiv, Rabobank’s global strategist for the beverages sector. “A slowdown seems more and more likely. Some consumers are already pulling back on spending.”

The last time the economy looked this grim (aside from the early pandemic days) was just over a decade ago, during the global financial crisis. But economic downturns are like snowflakes—no two are the same. So what can wine consumers expect from this one?

Patagonia Recession or Busch Light?

U.S. wine consumption has declined an estimated 1 percent in 2022, according to IMPACT Databank, a sister publication of Wine Spectator. California wineries report that tasting room visits are down. Even rare wine sales are slowing—the Liv-Ex 100, a London-based index of the top collectible wines, declined for the first time in 18 months in July, then again in October and November.

An economic slowdown will hurt wine consumers in different ways because those consumers buy different wines. “The divergence between lower price and higher price has never been wider,” says Rob McMillan, executive vice president for Silicon Valley Bank and head of its wine division. “We really have two different wine industries now.”

“This shows some signs of being a Patagonia vest recession,” says Rannekleiv. “Tech workers are getting laid off right now. At the same time, sales of Busch Light are growing as blue collar workers earn higher pay but are also paying more for everything due to inflation.” Lower income households are grappling more with inflation, as rising prices surge faster than rising wages.

But the premium wine sector, which means wines priced at $15 a bottle and up, depends on higher income consumers. While there have been layoffs in tech and a few other sectors, employment is still pretty strong and wages are solid.

But, as Rannekliev points out, higher income consumers tend to spend based less on their wages and more on their net worth. For most moderate and high income households, that means their investments and their homes. The S&P500 is close to finishing its worst year since 2008, down more than 15 percent. The sharp rise in interest rates has led to falling home prices.

The biggest factors keeping the economy moving right now are low unemployment and all the money people saved during the recession. Consumers are spending a lot of that cash now as they deal with inflation, and economists estimate it will dry up about six months into 2023. All of that means cutting back on luxury items, even everyday luxuries like a decent bottle of wine.

The Good News? Wine Prices Are Not Rising

A year ago, many importers and retailers were warning that wine prices would rise dramatically in 2022, just like most other consumer goods. But, for the most part, that hasn’t happened.

That isn’t because winemakers are enjoying lower costs. Just about everything in wine production has gotten more expensive, thanks to supply chain issues. Paper for labels has gotten pricier. A fire at a glass factory in Argentina left many producers scrambling for bottles. Fuel costs have been higher, particularly diesel, which is crucial for transporting wine around the country and the globe.

But most premium wine producers haven’t raised prices by much, if at all. The reason? Wine sales have been sluggish for much of the year, especially compared to spirits sales, and wineries didn’t want to risk raising prices and turning off consumers. “There have been price increases, but not enough to cover inflation,” says McMillian. Keeping prices steady while costs are rising is not a recipe for profits, but wineries seem willing to swallow some short-term pain rather than risk losing customers.

The Bad News? No Bargain Bottles

If there was a symbol for the wine industry during the last recession, it was probably a website called Wines Til Sold Out, a New Jersey retailer that blasted email accounts with great limited-time offers on premium wines. Wine lovers could buy some outstanding wines for 20 percent, 30 percent, even 50 percent off.

Don’t expect big bargains this time around, however. One reason is inflation—if wineries aren’t raising prices, even as they face higher costs, they’re probably not dropping them either.

The other big reason is supply. When the 2008 global financial crisis hit, wine regions in many countries had enjoyed several bumper crops. There was a lot of wine, and wineries needed to move it.

Today, wine supplies are relatively balanced. The 2022 growing season was just the latest in several challenging years for Europe, with record heat and dry conditions creating small harvests in many regions. In California, most wineries would be selling their 2020 vintage this year—a year when devastating wildfires blanketed regions like Napa in smoke during the crucial harvest months.

“Demand is weak but volume is low,” notes McMillan. “In past recessions, we’ve had over supply. When you have that, supply backs up quickly and everyone says discount. I don’t think we’re going to see that kind of behavior this time.”

That doesn’t mean there aren’t ways to save money. There are plenty of wines, often made by top wineries, that have received outstanding scores are are selling for less than the big luxury cuvées. In times of economic trouble, consumers just need to be smart.


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Tao Group Hospitality Opens Sake No Hana in New York

Expanding its global portfolio, Tao Group Hospitality opened a new restaurant on Dec. 6 at the Moxy Lower East Side hotel in New York City: Sake No Hana, a lively spot for contemporary Japanese cuisine. A reinvention of the original Sake No Hana in London (which closed in 2021), it joins more than 70 Tao properties, including the group’s Hakkasan restaurants and Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence winner Cathédrale at the Moxy East Village in New York.

Tao’s chief culinary officer, Ralph Scamardella, worked with chefs Yoshi Kojima and Jason Hall to develop Sake No Hana’s menu, influenced partly by Japan’s casual izakaya bars. “The culinary vision behind Sake No Hana was really inspired by this invigorating sense of place melded with a bit of New York City flare,” Hall, who is Tao’s vice president of culinary operations, told Wine Spectator via email. “The energy of [izakayas] is so closely intertwined with drinking, and we wanted to put together a really fun menu that pairs well with all kinds of wine, cocktails, beer and sake.” The restaurant brings in fish from Tokyo’s Toyosu Market and snow-aged sirloin from Niigata Prefecture.

Executive chef Nick Phongmekin leads the kitchen, where his team grills kushiyaki-style skewers over a traditional robata grill, cooks Japanese wagyu over binchotan charcoals and makes fresh sesame oil with a seed press. The menu is divided into six sections, with dishes such as amiyaki mushroom salad, Narikura-style pork tonkatsu, short rib yakimeshi (fried rice), bamboo branzino, A5 Miyazaki tenderloin and varied sushi.

[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_sakenohanafriedrice122822_1600.jpg] [credit= (Ashley Sears)] [alt= A ceramic bowl and plate evoking Japanese pottery holding short rib fried rice and a bone][end: article-img-container]

Senior beverage director Nikki McCutcheon leads the wine program, which features 75 grape-based wines and 26 sakes arranged by style, including the local Brooklyn Kura. “We wanted to home in on the iconic varietals and producers that guests know and love,” McCutcheon explained. “Regions we knew would pair well with our cuisine, like Burgundy, were a big focus to highlight. Also, opening so close to New Year’s Eve, we had a bit of fun expanding our bubbly list!” Acclaimed wineries are featured throughout, like Australia’s Penfolds, France’s Guigal and Oregon’s Beaux Frères.

“We hope that guests find our list to be approachable with recognizable favorites, but also glimpses of new and interesting options,” said McCutcheon, who expects the beverage list to grow. “Our team is there to guide them through an experience, whether that be enjoying a pairing menu or decanting an ’09 Bordeaux.”

The Rockwell Group has designed Sake No Hana with flashes of the Lower East Side’s 1980s punk scene, and there are nods to Japan’s analogous yankii motorcycle subculture. The space features leather, metal and glass elements, along with long, kimono-like tapestries and—hanging from the dining room’s mirrored ceiling—lighting fixtures that recall traditional Japanese pottery. Other lights suggest lanterns, helping to establish the Moxy’s “pleasure garden” setting.

Tao’s fans can look forward to a new Cathédrale location in Las Vegas, set to open in spring 2023.


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Ariete Team Opens Brasserie Laurel in Miami

The Miami dining scene has been growing ever-stronger this year, and there’s no sign of slowing. Earlier this month, following about three years of planning, chef-restaurateur Michael Beltran added a new downtown restaurant to his Ariete Hospitality Group: Brasserie Laurel, a French-inspired eatery in Miami’s Worldcenter complex.

“There are other great operators in that part of town,” Beltran told Wine Spectator via email. “We wanted to join that wave—I guess if you want to call it a ‘renaissance of downtown.’”

Across their menu, Beltran and executive chef Ashley Moncada give French classics their own spin, offering dishes like scallop with almond gazpacho, tuna with colatura di alici aioli, escargot with herb butter, frog legs almondine and venison tartare. For mains, guests can expect whole trout with rock shrimp, a pork chop with fennel and guinea fowl with chanterelles. Vegetable accompaniments and a caviar service add even more permutations. “Going back to the nuts and bolts of classic technique was something that inspired chef Ashley and myself,” Beltran explained. “[Laurel’s cuisine is] this beautiful, modern interpretation of classic technique and classic flavor profiles.”

Wine director Adrian Lopez has assembled more than 75 labels for the predominantly French-focused list, which is split into “Old World” and “New World” sections. Both the by-the-glass list of 15 wines and the wider program spotlight France’s key regions and respected wineries, featuring Champagne’s Lallier, the Loire Valley’s Hubert Brochard, Bordeaux’s Château Carbonnieux, Châteauneuf-du-Pape’s Domaine de Beaurenard and many more. Diners can also expect selections from California, Oregon, Italy, Spain and Germany, including Sonoma Chardonnay, Barolo and Ribera del Duero reds. “When it comes to winemakers and wineries, we focus on small, boutique wineries that are not [mass-producing], and family-owned estates,” said Lopez. “We focus on a lot of the classics when it comes to grape varieties; we have a little bit of everything for every palate, from Aligoté to Malbec from Cahors.”

”The experience is supposed to be elegant, but comfortable; refined but approachable and most of all delicious and fun,” said Beltran.

Laurel joins a slew of siblings in the wider Miami area, including Beltran’s Gibson Room, Navé, Chug’s Diner and Wine Spectator Award of Excellence winner Ariete, which is in Coconut Grove. That list is getting two more additions: the new Chug’s Express and El Vecino, opening soon in Worldcenter.

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Top New Wine Videos of 2022

While our most-popular videos of 2021 highlighted the itch to get together after being cooped up during the pandemic, 2022’s videos were a return to the basics of wine enjoyment. Refreshing summer cocktails for poolside imbibing, tours of the grand estates of Bordeaux and classic wine-and-cheese pairings all appealed to our viewers, as did a never-before-seen interview with wine legend Ernest Gallo and appearances by rock stars Sting and Jon Bon Jovi at Wine Spectator‘s 2021 New York Wine Experience. From learning about lesser-known wine regions like Franciacorta and Alentejo to exploring the Top 10 Wines of the Year to simply mastering a waiter’s corkscrew, this year’s most-viewed clips indicated a thirst to return to wine in its purest forms of pleasure and exploration. Cheers to that!

Video Contest Winner

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Cabernet Tonight

With its Broadway-style belting, frequent scene changes and large cast, Steve Jacobson’s energetic musical parody “Cabernet Tonight” won the hearts of our editors and viewers—and our 2022 Video Contest! A fun and flamboyant tour of the wine world, with a profusion of labels, Jacobson’s creative first-time entry was infectious enough to make even the most snobbish enophile break out in a full-throated vibrato. Voters’ second- and third-favorite videos were “Full Circle,” winemaker Jennifer Higgins’ ode to a plot of land that holds a special place in her life, and “A Bold Vision” from vintner Xavier Cervantes, who is pursuing a life of adventure on what he calls “Napa’s last frontier.” Watch all the finalists and honorable mentions!

People

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Ernest Gallo: A Rare Interview

This spring, Wine Spectator released exclusive, never-before-seen footage of editor and publisher Marvin R. Shanken interviewing Ernest Gallo, the late co-founder and chairman of what was then and continues to be one of the world’s largest wine companies. Conducted at Gallo’s home in Modesto, Calif., in 1999, this rare personal interview nearly didn’t happen!

Wine 101

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How to Use a Corkscrew

Sometimes you just have to get back to basics. Wine Spectator gave new wine lovers a simple visual guide to using a seemingly intimidating waiter’s corkscrew. With some helpful terminology, a smooth foil cut and a few confident twists, this tutorial can help anyone achieve sommelier-like efficiency. Check out our other Wine 101 videos on how to open sparkling wine and screwcaps!

Wine Regions

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ABCs of Franciacorta

Senior editor Alison Napjus and Restaurant Awards director Cassia Schifter dive into the details of Franciacorta, one of Italy’s top regions for bubbly, exploring its traditions, terroir and techniques. Check our entire library of ABCs videos, from Bordeaux and Burgundy to Sicily and Alentejo.

Top 10

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Wine Spectator’s Top 10 Wine Values of 2021

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Wine Spectator’s Top 10 Wines of 2022 series

As usual, Wine Spectator’s Top 10 Wines (including the Wine of the Year) garnered the most interest in 2022. But a new addition, the Top Wine Values of the Year, debuted in January with our senior editors’ top value picks from 2021, generated a lot of excitement too. These affordable wines scored 90 points or higher, cost $40 or less, were made in large enough quantities to be widely available and represented the diversity of the global wine scene. And the Wine Value of the Year scored 93 points yet only cost $17! Check out who made the new list.

Drinks

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Summer Cocktails: Aperol Spritz

2022 brought a return to easy summer livin’, as evidenced by the popularity of our new summer cocktail series. Aperol spritzes, Porto tonicos and Spanish fizzes flowed, with viewers learning step-by-step how to make refreshing concoctions for any warm-weather soiree.

New York Wine Experience 2021

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Jon Bon Jovi and Jesse Bongiovi

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Sting and Trudie Styler

For the 40th anniversary of Wine Spectator’s New York Wine Experience, wine stars and wine lovers from around the globe convened for best annual get-together in the wine world, with A-list appearances from rock legends and vintners Jon Bon Jovi and Sting. Bon Jovi and his son Jesse Bongiovi presented their Hampton Water Languedoc Rosé 2020 and talked about their latest charity initiatives to address food insecurity and hunger. Sting took the stage with his wife, Trudie Styler, to discuss their Tuscan winery, Il Palagio, and the 2019 vintage of their flagship red blend, 1530—right before Sting performed some of his greatest hits.

In the Vineyard

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In the Vineyard with Eva Dehlinger

In our “In the Vineyard” series, senior editor James Molesworth hit the road, visiting top California winemakers and viticulturists in their natural environment, including Eva Dehlinger of Dehlinger Winery, a star Pinot Noir and Chardonnay producer in Sonoma’s Russian River Valley. She took him through three parcels of her family’s estate vineyards, including one with nearly 50-year-old vines.

Pairing and Dining

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Classic Wine & Cheese Pairings: Chèvre and Sauvignon Blanc

In this short-and-sweet cheese pairing series, Wine Spectator shares classic combinations that everyone should know, including tangy, fresh Sauvignon Blanc with tangy, fresh chèvre. Other palate partners include rich Stilton with powerful Port and creamy Brie with lively Champagne.

Estates of Bordeaux

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Estates of Bordeaux: The DNA of Cheval-Blanc

In this three-parter, Château Cheval-Blanc technical director Pierre-Olivier Clouet takes viewers on a tour of this iconic St.-Emilion estate to learn more about its history, terroir, how it farms for the future and its lesser-known, not-to-be-missed white wine. The “Estates of Bordeaux” series also delved into other renowned châteaus such as Phélan Ségur, Lynch Bages and Troplong Mondot.

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The Existential Crisis of Bordeaux’s Small Grapegrowers

Earlier this month, a thousand angry vignerons and their allies marched through the streets of downtown Bordeaux, calling for help to save their livelihood. When they reached the doors of the Bordeaux Wine Council (CIVB), the local trade organization, they hung a dummy from a tree outside, representing financially troubled grapegrowers at risk of suicide, and piled dead vines on the doorstep.

The growers are demanding financial compensation in exchange for grubbing up their vines, and no one on the Place de Bordeaux was surprised. (Several officers of the CIVB took part in the march.) The region faces a crisis and grubbing up vines seemed the most direct and equitable solution. Trading for bulk Bordeaux has skidded to a halt.

The vignerons are calling on the French government to subsidize pulling up vines in Bordeaux’s less prestigious areas. They are asking for €10,000 per hectare, but the government has said that European Union rules prevent such funds. And that is leading to a crisis and anger.

Déjà Vu

How did one of the world’s most prestigious wine regions hit this point? “The problem today is not the price. The problem is there are no transactions,” said Christophe Chateau, spokesperson for the CIVB. Sales of bulk Bordeaux are so scarce, he said, the CIVB hadn’t published price quotations since October.

If you’re getting a sense of déjà vu, you’re not wrong. For decades now, Bordeaux has been grappling with shrinking sales of value wines. “There are regularly similar crises every 10 to 15 year because exports are not sufficient for compensating for declining consumption in France,” said Jean-Pierre Rousseau, CEO of négociant Diva.

In the years after World War II, the average French adult drank 150 liters of wine per year, mainly red table wine—that’s nearly 17 cases per person annually or half a bottle per day. Today they consume 40 liters, or four and a half cases per year. Spain, Italy and Portugal have seen similar declines. In France, drinkers are not only drinking less, they’re drinking differently—beer and cocktails are increasingly popular, and when they drink wine, they’re showing a preference for better reds as well as white, rosé and sparkling wine.

Back in 2010, following a similar price crisis, Bordeaux launched a strategy that meant structural changes. They would eliminate the lowest category of wine and improve the quality and taste profile of the next category up, as well as expand the production of rosé and sparkling wines. So far so good. Sales of Bordeaux’s sparkling wine or crémant has multiplied by four in ten years. “We don’t even know if we’ll have enough stock to respond to the market demand,” said Chateau.

At the same time, négociants have been tasked with finding export customers for the wine the French aren’t drinking. They’ve done a pretty good job, racking up record sales, shipping to more than 100 countries, from America to Sweden to Panama. And demand for luxury wines is particularly dynamic, but not value wines. “Demand remains very strong for Bordeaux’s fine wines for export,” said Rousseau, “[But] much less for entry-level and mid-range wines, at €20 starting price and below.”

America is a lucrative market for Bordeaux, particularly mid-range to premium cuvées. It’s the top export market in value. But America isn’t interested in the bottom of Bordeaux’s production. A decade ago, China solved Bordeaux’s crisis.

China first entered the market for Bordeaux in force after the 2008 global financial crisis. Consumers there initially soaked up a flood of cheap wine that no one else wanted. But not anymore. “For China, the first eight months of 2022, we are down 27 percent in volume and down 12 percent in value,” said Chateau.

It’s not just the pandemic impacting sales. “China was indeed a huge buyer a decade ago but there has been a gradual reduction in consumption and a transfer to branded wines from other countries,” said Rousseau. Chinese President Xi Jinping began a campaign against corruption and flamboyant spending after he took office. The Communist Party quietly instituted rules on how much could be spent on alcohol at banquets. Average consumers began to reduce spending on wine.

“Consumption dropped very sharply, dropping in 5 years from 1.9 billion liters to 1 billion. Local wine production itself has almost halved, and that is the main competitor of inexpensive Bordeaux,” Rousseau told Wine Spectator.

For the lowest category of wine made in Bordeaux, the trouble in China leaves few other options. “Bordeaux doesn’t make money in this category. We need to get out of it,” said Chateau.

How much surplus wine are we talking about?

The calculation is fairly simple, according to Allan Sichel, president of the CIVB and a négociant. Over the last five years, the average annual crop for the region is about 480 million cases, but they’ve only been selling 440 million. And of the amount sold, 22 million cases are going at fire sale prices. “It’s sold at very low prices, just to turn wine into cash,” said Sichel. “It’s uneconomic to produce, but they are completely desperate.”

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If you consider the wine sold at unsustainable prices, plus the wine not being sold at all, you’re left with close to 60 million cases of excess wine per year, or 500,000 hectoliters. “At 50 hectoliters per hectare on average, that means pulling up 10,000 hectares [of vines],” said Sichel.

Local bank executives say about 500 local growers are in severe financial straits, with no prospect of bouncing back. Then there are the growers nearing retirement, who have no buyers for their vineyards or demand for leasing their vines, meaning retirement isn’t possible. While the value of vineyards in prestigious appellations like St.-Emilion or Margaux has skyrocketed in the past few decades, land prices in areas like Fronsac and Médoc have actually declined.

Nor can the growers simply abandon their vines. That’s illegal. Abandoned vines are vectors for pests and disease, which easily spread to other vineyards. They must cultivate their vineyard or grub it up, and the cost of grubbing up vines is €2,000 per hectare, money they don’t have.

Which Exit Strategy?

What Bordeaux needs for these growers was an exit strategy, and after much discussion a plan was devised for funds from the French government. But there’s a problem.

“We were hoping for a blanket measure of €10,000 per hectare for 10,000 hectares. This was so we could engage in one big operation and over 12 to 18 months we would have solved the problem,” said Sichel. “What is now becoming clear is that it’s not going to happen the way we had hoped.”

After calls with the French Minister of Agriculture and other government officials, the answer was a firm non. The European Union previously funded such plans, but current policy forbids its member states from using either EU or national funding to subsidize destruction of farming assets. “It’s complicated,” said Sichel.

Instead, officials are plotting a less-straightforward, more drawn out, basket of modest alternative measures—funds for the installation of a solar panel farm; planting harvestable trees; rezoning near urban areas; growing alternative crops; and for those needing help as they consider their future, auditing and counseling services, so they don’t feel quite so alone.

“There is also a social dimension. These people have been farming their vineyards through generations. Now they’re reaching the end of their professional career, with no prospects, completely stuck,” said Sichel.

But the growers’ demand of €10,000 per hectare? “It is not possible and it’s not fair to let people hope that it will happen,” said Sichel. Which means as Bordeaux continues to transition, more pain and more protests are inevitable.


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Turning Tables: City Winery Comes to New York’s Grand Central Terminal

With Wine Spectator Restaurant Award–winning locations around the U.S., City Winery is an innovative and leading force for both urban wineries and U.S. hospitality. Now, it’s coming to a New York landmark, Grand Central Terminal. On Nov. 21, the City Winery team opened a new space, its 14th, in the transit hub’s Vanderbilt Hall West, featuring two restaurants, to-go options (including wine), live entertainment and, impressively, on-site winemaking. The space previously housed the Nordic-cuisine Great Northern Food Hall, which closed in 2020.

“I’ve actually never been more excited, on some level, for a launch of a concept,” City Winery founder and CEO Michael Dorf told Wine Spectator. “Not only do I think it makes good business sense, but if we’re somewhat successful—even if we’re marginally successfully—it’s going to raise the bar on how a small, little company can potentially affect how people [interact] with wine.”

[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_citywinerybar120122_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of City Winery)] [alt= A bar at City Winery in Grand Central with wine in kegs on tap, with a screen displaying train departures.][end: article-img-container]

The 7,400-square-foot space boasts a 75-seat restaurant, Cornelius (set to open later this month), named for Grand Central Terminal’s founder, Cornelius Vanderbilt. Prepared by executive chef Zachary Bondy, the restaurant’s locally focused, farm-to-table menu will play off Continental-cuisine classics, with oysters Vanderbilt (a take on oysters Rockefeller, sourced from Long Island), salad Lyonnaise, duck confit, beef tartare and, appropriately, a “Wall-Dorf” salad with Hudson Valley apples. “‘Old farm to new table’ is basically our tag,” said Dorf, “It’s got a nod to the historic menus of yesteryear, but obviously with a more [modern twist].”

As with the other locations, the beverage program at Cornelius—and at the space’s two City Winery tasting bars—is primarily focused on City Winery wines from California and New York offered on tap and served by the glass. This includes wines made on site. “Wine, no matter what, is our focal point,” said Dorf. “People are going to walk into Grand Central Station off of 42nd street and they’re going to see a large fermenting tank.” Cornelius’ list will also spotlight producers in regions like Spain and France, as well those practicing eco-friendly techniques. The wine program is overseen by City Winery national beverage director Denise Prykanowski and the wine team from City Winery’s Best of Award of Excellence–winning New York flagship.

[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_citywinerybarrels120122_1600.jpg] [credit= (Courtesy of City Winery)] [alt= Stacks of wine barrels in the winemaking area of City Winery Grand Central][end: article-img-container]

For a more casual affair, diners can go to the now-open City Winery wine bar–restaurant for burgers, flatbreads, shareable plates and more, or to the grab-and-go spot, City Jams, for sandwiches, baked goods, snacks and to-go wine in glass growlers. (Another City Jams spot is located closer to Grand Central’s subway entrances.) Not only does this offer an easy option for guests catching trains, but it adds to the eatery’s sustainability, a key part of City Winery’s ethos; the eatery also gives guests a $5 credit for returning their growlers.

“To me, it’s almost got a historic connection to the way we operated as a consumer culture pre–oil energy and plastic,” Dorf noted. “This is what we did when Cornelius Vanderbilt built Grand Central.”

It wouldn’t be City Winery without live entertainment, and the space will deliver with ambient music for about 190 guests at a time. Dorf hopes the venue can put a spotlight on performers and buskers regularly working in New York train stations.

As for design, the City Winery space complements and recalls the elements of Grand Central Station. “We have, as a company, been very good about adaptive reuse of space,” Dorf explained, observing that City Winery’s Hudson Valley location is located within a historic knitting factory. “We’ve always gone into older buildings, respected the history—frankly, accentuated the history. You know, old brick or old beams.”—C.D.


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Delfina Returns to San Francisco

Delfina had been an icon of San Francisco’s dining scene for nearly 25 years before closing its dining room at the onset of the pandemic in March 2020. Through much of the pandemic, it served guests exclusively in its parklet, and locals wondered if the beloved Mission District Italian eatery would ever open its doors again.

After two-and-half years, it has fully reopened, perhaps even better than its first iteration. The former Wine Spectator Award of Excellence winner received a facelift and reopened for service on Oct. 26, expanding its square footage by merging with its neighboring sister restaurant, Pizzeria Delfina. The new, open dining room seats 115 and melds modern decor with classic Italian touches, including light brown leather banquettes, mid-century–style pendant lights and red-tinged wood floors. A second dining room features a golden-domed ceiling with tiled floors.

“We’re beyond thrilled with the remodel,” said owners Craig and Annie Stoll in an email to Wine Spectator. “It accomplishes exactly what we set out to create: a sexy, modern and complete transformation of the restaurant, still channeling the fun and warm vibes. Seeing our first baby full of happy guests in a better-than-ever restaurant is incredibly gratifying after two and a half years of darkness,” they added.

Delfina brought back several signature dishes, including spaghetti Pomodoro and grilled Monterey Bay calamari with rice beans. In addition, the Stolls and executive chef John Arcudi have added new items, including house-made focaccia and a menu built around produce from the Stolls’ farm in Sonoma.

[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_delfinagold120122_1600.jpg] [credit= (Albert Law)] [alt= One of Delfina’s revamped dining rooms, with a gold arched roof][end: article-img-container]

The restaurant also added a new Italian-inspired cocktail program, joining its concise-but-thoughtful wine list of around 60 wines. Curated by consulting wine director James Butler, the list is exclusively devoted to Italian and California selections and grounded in offerings from Piedmont and Tuscany.

“Delfina’s previous wine list was pretty deep, but we needed to recontextualize the inventory. We don’t know how people are spending during this post-pandemic period,” said Butler. Because of that, the wine list offers tons of value options, such as Piedmont’s Luca Ferraris Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato Sant’Eufemia 2021 ($48) or a magnum of Isole & Olena Chianti Classico 2015 for $100.

The wine menu is user-friendly, broken into categories such as “clean, lean and mineral” or “structured, elegant and bold,” with the idea of empowering diners. Butler noted it was tricky to inherit existing inventory and ensure it didn’t overshadow the new wines he was bringing on, so he is creating a reserve list of around 25 wines that will include older vintages.—A.R.


[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_molyvos120122_1600.jpg] [credit= (Matt Weiss)] [alt= A view of the dining room at Molyvos’ new location in Hell’s Kitchen, with wine prominently displayed and artwork and ceramic plates on the walls][end: article-img-container]

Molyvos Reopens at New Hell’s Kitchen Location

For nearly 25 years, Best of Award of Excellence winner Molyvos delighted the hungry wanderers of Midtown Manhattan at its location on Seventh Avenue and 55th Street, just south of Carnegie Hall. When the restaurant closed during the pandemic, New York temporarily lost one of its most important advocates for Greek cuisine—and Greek wine. With its reopening, in the intimate 43rd Street space formerly occupied by seafood destination Esca, diners seeking Greek in Gotham can breathe easy.

The restaurant’s soft opening menu is divided into four parts: traditional spreads; a new section devoted to raw, chilled and marinated seafood; salads and appetizers (including meatballs and grilled octopus); and a smattering of classic entrees, among them dolmades (Napa cabbage stuffed with lamb, beef and pork), moussaka and roasted chicken. The menu will expand to include additional entrees and grilled selections, including a whole fish.

Longtime wine director Kamal Kouiri’s list features over 750 wines—all of them Greek—with 30 by-the-glass offerings and a cellar of nearly 10,000 bottles. Kouiri told Wine Spectator, “During my 21 years at Molyvos, I was able to collect and develop verticals [of] some amazing wines, highlighting the versatility of the indigenous grape varieties, the terroir [and the] savoir faire of amazing people.”

Start with a Greek spirit (the list boasts an entire page, full of rare finds) or a glass of retsina, the ancient style of white wine infused with pine resin. Greek wine aficionados will find plenty of familiar friends here—Xinomavro, Assyrtiko, Agiorgitiko and more abound—plus unknown and unexpected finds from across the country, from northern Macedonia to southern Crete. Diners who prefer to stick with the familiar won’t be disappointed either; many of the wines are based on internationally popular grapes such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah and Chardonnay. And while there are plenty of splurge-worthy bottles—perhaps one of the many mature magnums on offer?—the number of wines under $100, including many in the $50 to $75 range, is remarkable, as is the sweet wine selection.

Molyvos regulars may be pleasantly surprised by the new section devoted to natural and skin-contact wines, which joined the list during the move to Hell’s Kitchen. Kouiri reflected, “We believe that Greece, with its nearly 4,000 years of history of making wine, is actually synonymous with the thing we today call ‘natural wine.’ When Aristotle mentions in his writings the wine made from the grape Limnio 2,400 years ago, what he was referring to was most certainly a natural wine. Greece has seen a renaissance with respect to the ancient tradition of winemaking in recent years. We are happy to offer a selection of the best Greece has to offer at Molyvos.”

Molyvos is open for dinner daily from 5–11 p.m., with lunch offered on weekdays from 12–3 p.m.; brunch is planned for the near future.—K.M.


[article-img-container][src=2022-12/tt_navybluebludorn120122_1600.jpg] [credit= (Michael Anthony)] [alt= Portrait of chef Aaron Bludorn behind a display of oysters at one of his Houston restaurants][end: article-img-container]

Team Behind Houston’s Bludorn Opens Second Restaurant

Chef Aaron Bludorn opened Bludorn, in Houston, Texas, with fingers crossed in August 2020. At a time when the pandemic had forced many restaurants to close, he knew it was risky, but he didn’t go in expecting to fail. “We opened at a time when Houstonians were looking for hope,” said Bludorn, adding, “We thought it was a big gamble. But it was the right gamble at the right time.”

Two years later, Bludorn has succeeded, while earning a Wine Spectator Best of Award of Excellence for its wine list in 2022. Now Bludorn and his partners—wife Victoria Pappas Bludorn and general manager Cherif Mbjodi—are doubling down with the Nov. 18 debut of Navy Blue, a seafood-focused restaurant with French underpinnings in Houston’s Rice Village neighborhood.

The 7,100-square-foot space evokes an aquatic ambiance, with natural, oceanic tones throughout the 110-seat dining room, which features long tables separated by white oak partitions and plush banquettes. White-grey Japanese ceramic tile and steel driftwood punctuate the bar area. Behind the bar is a flex space that can be used for overflow seating or as a private dining area and features a mural by Austin artist Emily Eisenhardt.

Jerrod Zifchak, Navy Blue’s executive chef, began his career at Grand Award-winning Le Bernardin before working under Bludorn at New York’s now-shuttered Café Boulud, then assuming the executive chef role there after Bludorn’s departure in 2019. Classically French–trained and an avid fisherman, Zifchak is tailor-made for the toque at Navy Blue, where the menu capitalizes on Houston’s proximity to the Gulf of Mexico.

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Navy Blue—a name that nods to the ocean, but is also a tribute to Bludorn’s father, a naval aviator whose call sign was “Blue”—borrows from a classic steakhouse format; diners can order fish à la carte and choose accompanying sides, such as potato purée, broccoli rabe or French fries with cod roe mayonnaise. A handful of pasta dishes, soups, salads and large plates round out the menu.

One of Bludorn’s culinary hallmarks is threading the needle of what is expected with a dish while placing his stamp on it. “The more straightforward I am, the more playful I can be,” he said. Diners can expect classic dishes with a twist, such as crab cakes with celeriac rémoulade and bottarga, or spaghetti vongole with Manila clams, sea urchin and seaweed. Swordfish stands in for steak, prepared with green peppercorn sauce.

Adopting from Bludorn restaurant, where diners love ordering oysters every way (raw, fried and poached, with additional accompaniments), Navy Blue features a similar concept. Again, oysters are offered three ways, as well as shrimp (cocktail, fried, BBQ) and clams (casino, fried, steamed). That model is carried over to the main fish, with whole Dover sole served either almondine, Oscar or Provençal, and to a whole lobster, either boiled, grilled or Thermador.

Navy Blue’s beverage program emphasizes cocktails, including modern takes on classics and customizable martinis. Bludorn wine director Molly Austad started with around 160 bottlings, including 20 by the glass. The list focuses heavily on white Burgundy—including bottlings from producers such as Benjamin Leroux, Marc Morey and Michel Niellon—with an abundance of whites from European coastal and island regions. “Our selections are mainly based on wines traditionally paired with seafood from all over the world,” said Austad. “We have a fun selection from Greece, the Canary Islands, Sicily and beyond.” For reds, the focus is on lighter-bodied wines that can complement the seafood. “We have Pinot Noir from California and Oregon, as well as a Trousseau from Santa Barbara and an old-vine Grenache from Australia.”—A.R.

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Tony Parker Doubles Down in Southern France

Tony Parker isn’t content to merely collect and enjoy wine, he also wants to make it. The French-American NBA star has been busily investing in projects throughout France since retiring from the San Antonio Spurs in 2019 at the age of 37. On the heels of his 2022 partnership with Château La Mascaronne in Provence and Champagne Jeeper, Parker just announced his purchase of Château St.-Laurent in the Rhône Valley.

“I always knew I wanted to invest in wine, but I wanted to wait until I retired,” Parker told Wine Spectator. “And I’ve always loved the Rhône Valley. Almost all my investments in France are between Lyon and Monaco, through the Alps with my ski resort, and Avignon and Provence with La Mascaronne.” (In 2019, he co-purchased two ski resorts in the southern French Alps).

Situated in southeastern France along the Rhône river in the Côtes du Ventoux appellation, Château St.-Laurent dates back to the 14th century when the papacy relocated from Rome to Avignon. In fact, the property features a six-mile underground passageway that connects the estate to the medieval Palais des Papes, or Popes’ Palace, in the heart of the city.

The 100 acres of vineyard holdings were an equal draw for Parker, who grew up in France in a household where wine was always on the table. “At Château St.-Laurent, we’re lucky to have many plots of very old vines, many up to 80 years old,” he said. Parker is committed to organic viticulture and has begun the process of converting the estate’s farming. Established Rhône vintner Guillaume Valli is in charge of crafting the wines. The limited 3,000-bottle release of his first vintage—a 2022 red blend of Grenache, Cinsault and Syrah—will be available in November 2023.

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While Parker has partnered with others in the past, such as French entrepreneur and Château La Mascaronne owner Michel Reybier, he is going solo on this particular project. “On this Château St.-Laurent adventure, I’m all by myself,” he said.

He has, however, teamed up with fellow NBA star Carmelo Anthony’s Club dVIN for his first release. The NFT wine club will offer 500 tokens for sale this month, each of which give buyers access to six bottles of Château St.-Laurent’s future vintages as well as opportunities to stay at the château. Parker is renovating the 22-room château with the goal of making it “one of the most incredible reception venues in the south of France available for private use,” he said.


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Burgundy’s Hospices de Beaune Charity Auction Hits a $32 Million Record

The 162nd Hospices de Beaune auction raised a total of $32 million last week, a record for any wine auction conducted by Sotheby’s and the highest total in the charity event’s long history. “It was a fantastic sale with lots of enthusiastic bidding,” Jamie Ritchie, worldwide chairman of Sotheby’s Wine & Spirits, told Wine Spectator.

Proceeds from the annual event support the upkeep of the Hospices Civils de Beaune’s hospitals. One reason for the record total was the high number of lots—802 barrels, divided into 620 red wine lots and 182 white, the highest number of lots since 828 barrels in 2018. That’s also more than double those in last year’s sale, and Ritchie noted that the average price per lot was up by 12 percent, a sign of optimism toward Burgundy’s 2022 vintage.

The Pièce des Présidents, a unique barrel designated to support one or more charities, set a record sale price of more than $837,000. It was purchased jointly by Maison Joseph Drouhin and Maison Louis Latour, with an additional $113,000 contributed by the Fédération des Négociants-Éleveurs de Grande Bourgogne (a federation of Burgundy wine merchants). The lot was in honor of Louis-Fabrice Latour, who died this past September, and Romane Drouhin, daughter of Frédéric Drouhin, who passed away in 2020.

The Pièce des Présidents, a Corton 2022 made by Hospices de Beaune manager Ludivine Griveau, incorporated grapes from three of the foundation’s parcels: Corton-Bressandes, Corton Renardes and Corton Chaumes. The wine will age in a custom 228-liter barrel made by the Maison Latour cooperage, in collaboration with the Hospices de Beaune.

The proceeds from this special lot will benefit the Princesse Margot Association, which supports children with cancer, and the World Vision organization, whose mission is to aid impoverished children.

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