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Wine-Ho!
A boot camp offers a crash course from vine to wine
By Charyn Pfeuffer
There are few true faux pas in today's society. Hardly
anything is off limits, and what once may have raised eyebrows--obscure
fetishes, unconventional childbirth tactics--has today become lively
cocktail party chatter. But tolerance has its limits, and nothing stops a
cocktail party deader in its tracks than ignorance of one of the North
Bay's most precious commodities: wine.
Wine appreciators everywhere--educated or not--could take
a lesson from some savvy educators operating Sebastopol-based Affairs of
the Vine's Wine Boot Camp. Part tourist-driven "wine country experience"
and part genuine educational program, Wine Boot Camp whips its recruits
into shape so that the once mysterious characteristics of chocolate in a
Merlot or the hints of honey in a Chardonnay no longer terrify.
Soon after registering for duty, I received an e-mail from
"Major" Barbara Drady, president and event mastermind of Affairs of the
Vine: "Be dressed for battle: We've requested perfect weather for April
20." I was instructed to bring sunscreen, a hat, and rain gear in case of
rain.
On Wine Boot Camp day, I arrived at the designated meeting
spot (the Safeway parking lot in Sonoma), and the training officially
began.
0830 HOURS--The recruits assemble at forward
command post dressed for battle in casual clothes. There is no whistle
blowing or yelling, and no mandatory push-ups--just 31 recruits gathered
around three vans, anxiously awaiting instruction. Once everyone has
arrived, we are shuttled in appropriately red and white vans to the square
in Sonoma.
0850 HOURS--Rookie recruits and wine mavens join
ranks for induction, orientation, and issuance of uniforms. The attendees
range from married couples to single folk, event planners to stockbrokers,
young surfers to wealthy, aging yuppies. Some people are pondering a
career change in the wine industry, while others received Wine Boot Camp
as a gift. Drady and her officers set out heaping baskets of croissants,
muffins, and juice boxes before calling "Atten-shun!" for an initial
briefing. The recruits gather around Maj. Drady, a spunky, middle-aged
blonde woman--a cross between a Jewish grandmother and a Girl Scout--with
an unstoppable sense of humor. Plump packets containing a three-ring
binder with the "Orders of the Day," a T-shirt, and baseball cap are
efficiently distributed. We are also supplied with water and a box full of
healthy and not-so-healthy snacks to sustain us through the day and, I
suspect, to soak up some of the wine we will be drinking.
0900 HOURS--The platoon is transported to our first
mission, a vineyard and winery tour at Gundlach-Bundschu Winery conducted
by Lt. Col. Towle Merritt, assistant viticulturist. The recruits are
handed brown paper bags crammed with Gundlach-Bundschu goodies, and loaded
onto hay-filled trucks. Once we arrive and are unloaded, Lt. Col. Merritt
briefs us on the vineyard.
0940 HOURS--Lt. Col. Merritt initiates and directs
the group in a vineyard exercise called "suckering." This precise pruning
ensures the proper growth of next year's grapes while also helping the
current vines to spread evenly. As much as I'm opposed to performing hard
labor, I quickly refine my careless gardening skills and find suckering to
be quite meditative. I suppose if I were doing tens of thousands of vines
in the hot Sonoma sun, I'd feel differently, but for a brief period, I am
at peace with the activity.
1045 HOURS--Field exercises were continued by Capt.
Stuart Young, wine educator and tour guide extraordinaire, with a tour of
the winery and 10,000-foot wine tunnel. Capt. Young eloquently explains
the winemaking process and conducts a barrel tasting of several of
Gundlach-Bundschu's red wines.
1130 HOURS--Aromatic Workshop. Several long picnic
tables are set up beneath a lattice wooden awning nestled among the hills.
Laminated sheets, sectioned into 21 spaces with 21 small containers sit
before us. The paper containers hold items like honey, strawberry jam,
pineapple, cinnamon, and vanilla. Two wine glasses sit before each of us,
labeled "One" and "Two." We proceeded to taste five rounds of two wines
each. First we swirl the wine (I am the first to break a glass), taking
note of its clarity, brilliance, tone, and depth. Next, we inhale the
aromas. Finally, we taste. Each time we perform this drill, we compare
what our noses detect with the different aromas placed before us. Maj.
Drady says this task will help us "make the connection" when identifying a
wine's characteristics. In no time, I am able to identify characteristics
of apple, honeysuckle, apricot, and gooseberry, which has a remarkable
cat-urine-like smell.
1230 HOURS--Mess hall. We gain sustenance for the
afternoon by feasting on panini, asiago pasta, and homemade
cookies--washing it all down with Gundlach-Bundschu 2000 Chardonnay and
2001 Gamay Noir, both from Rhinefarm Vineyards. With full bellies and a
warm, fuzzy feeling, we are granted permission to hike up the knoll for a
spectacular view of the Sonoma Valley before boarding the transports for
the next site.
1345 HOURS--Maj. Drady has an unexpected surprise
in store for us, and our convoy proceeds to a secret mission site. We pull
into the driveway of Tantalus, a small artisan winery located on Sonoma's
west side. Headed up by Jim Harwood, Chris Clemens, and local KRSH 95.9
radio personality Ziggy Eschliman, award-winning Tantalus produces only
2,500 cases of ultrapremium wine annually. Ziggy, an animated dynamo, and
Jim, the yin to her yang, conduct a brief tour (the winery is just a few
acres) and unique winetasting. Among the wines that tickle our taste buds
are a 1999 Semillon (Russian River Valley), a 1999 Syrah (Lodi), a 1997
Cabernet Sauvignon (Sonoma County), and a 1998 Cabernet Sauvignon (Sonoma
County).
1500 HOURS--Maneuvers continue at Benziger Family
Winery, a friendly winery that produced a 1994 Late Harvest Reisling some
claim to be "better than sex." Lt. Nathaniel Reynes, a tanned, no-nonsense
man with a sizable stomach, leads us on an educational vineyard tram tour.
Benziger takes care of the land above and below the surface--they also
don't use herbicides or pesticides. Our education efforts are rewarded
with a winetasting, and by this point, I am feeling comfortably numb.
1600 HOURS--Participants are advanced into the rank
of winemaker, guided by cellar rat Col. Terry Nolan. Nolan dishes the ins
and outs of winemaking from inside one of Benziger's barrel-filled
garages. We are soon unleashed around tables with test tubes, beakers,
funnels, and bottles of Benziger's 2000 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon,
Merlot, and Petit Verdot (which Nolan refers to as the "ugly step-kid").
The mad scientist in us taking over, we mix different variations of the
three reds to create individualized bottles. I finally settle on a blend
of 85 percent Cab, 10 percent Merlot, and five percent Petit Verdot before
labeling, corking, and sealing the bottle with melted red wax.
1715 HOURS--Tired and hungry from our exhausting
day, we head to Benziger's wine cave. Over hors d'oeuvres, we sample some
predinner wines, including Kunde and Kaz. Kaz (the winemaker's real name),
a completely kicked-back wine buff, was on hand to share his wine savvy.
Kaz Winery produces organic and sulfite-free wines.
1800 HOURS--Graduation ceremony. Applause breaks
out as, one-by-one, we recruits are awarded our honorable discharge
papers.
1815 HOURS--The evening detail is the "Taste of
Sonoma Valley" dinner, featuring Sonoma Valley food and wine pairings. We
all relax and revel in our wine-induced buzzes, savoring the well-earned
food. Not only have we gained an invaluable amount of information during
the day, I'm sure we gained a few inches to our collective waistline.
2000 HOURS--Dismissal and issuance of discharge
orders. Now officially a member of the wine military elite, certified in
the art of wine small talk and a master at pairing, I feel assured that
any mission ahead of me will result in success. The shelves of the wine
store no longer contain enemies but compatriots.
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Affairs of the Vine's Wine Boot Camp, 696 Elliott Lane,
Sebastopol, 707.874.1975, http://www.affairsofthevine.com/. Upcoming Wine Boot Camp
Missions: Napa Valley, Aug. 3; Santa Barbara County, Aug. 24; Monterey
County, Sept. 14; Sonoma County, Sept. 21. The cost of Wine Boot Camp
includes all workshops and educational materials, lunch in the vineyard,
dinner paired with appropriate wines, extensive winetasting, a bottle of
wine created by the recruit, transportation to all food and wine events,
and an "I Survived Wine Boot Camp" T-shirt. $350 per person.
From the July 11-17, 2002 issue of the North Bay Bohemian.