A BIT OF HISTORY
Dario Sattui is no stranger to the wine business – he’s the great grandson of Vittorio Sattui, who founded V. Sattui Winery in 1885. The original winery, located in San Francisco, was shut down due to Prohibition. In 1975, Dario re-established the V. Sattui Winery in St. Helena.
In 1993, Dario purchased a 171-acre vineyard property in Calistoga and began construction on his 12th-century style Tuscan castle winery as a tribute to both his Italian ancestry and his love of medieval architecture. After almost 14 years of construction, Castello di Amorosa opened in April of 2007. The 121,000 square foot castle features 107 rooms (95 are for wine), 8 levels (4 are underground), 900 feet of caves, a great hall with a 500-year-old fireplace and two-story Italian frescoes, a drawbridge, dungeon and torture chamber, stables, medieval church, a lake, and a wine barrel room constructed with ancient Roman cross-vaulted ceilings.
In 1993, Dario purchased a 171-acre vineyard property in Calistoga and began construction on his 12th-century style Tuscan castle winery as a tribute to both his Italian ancestry and his love of medieval architecture. After almost 14 years of construction, Castello di Amorosa opened in April of 2007. The 121,000 square foot castle features 107 rooms (95 are for wine), 8 levels (4 are underground), 900 feet of caves, a great hall with a 500-year-old fireplace and two-story Italian frescoes, a drawbridge, dungeon and torture chamber, stables, medieval church, a lake, and a wine barrel room constructed with ancient Roman cross-vaulted ceilings.
Castello di Amorosa produces approximately 16,000 cases of Italian style wines per year. All production takes place at the winery. Additionally, all wines are sold direct to the consumer from the winery or online.
TASTING AND TOURING
Castello di Amorosa is different than most wineries in that you must pay a fee to enter the castle. The $17 entrance fee includes a premium tasting of up to five wines in the main tasting bar ($26 gets you a reserve tasting of up to six wines). You may be able to tour a couple of the levels on your own, but you’ll miss some of the key sites, including the torture chamber, the production areas and the barrel rooms. For $32, you can take a 1-1/2 hour guided tour of the castle and the winery, including a premium tasting of five wines and a barrel tasting in the private tasting bar ($42 covers the tour, barrel tasting and six wines, including reserve wines). Castello di Amorosa was seen in Adam Sandler’s Bedtime Stories and ABC’s The Bachelor. The workmanship and the detail are amazing and should not be missed. To make your “taste or tour” decision even easier, NapaValley.com features a special 2 for 1 offer on a premium tour and tasting.
Our castle guide was Bradford Reed. He kept the tour interesting and entertaining with stories of the castle, its history and some of the artifacts. Bradford also did a great job keeping track of the group – there are so many different tunnels underground that it would be very easy to get lost. Dario Sattui was at the winery during our tour and gave a quick wave as we passed him in the courtyard.
Our tour began in the Saint Catherine of Siena Chapel. A Latin Mass is held in the chapel every Sunday at 8:30am. After the chapel, we visited the Courtyard, the Great Hall and one of the towers for some history before heading downstairs to the very modern tank room and crush pad.
After visiting the production areas, one of the castle gates was opened for us and we went back in time. We continued underground, past a suit of armor and a collection of armor masks, heading down to the torture chamber. Complete with three prisoner cells, the chamber featured a collection of torture devices, including an antique iron maiden, a chair of spikes and a beheading block. We continued through the maze of underground caves and tunnels to the grand barrel room for a barrel tasting. At the end of the barrel room was the private tasting bar.
The bar was set up with glasses, a tasting binder (with full descriptions of each wine available to taste), and a tasting sheet / order form and pencil for each guest. The premium tasting menu included white and rosé wines (Pinot Grigio, Chardonnay, Pinot Bianco, Dry Gewürztraminer, Rosato di Sangiovese), red wines (Sangiovese, Merlot, Il Brigante – a red blend, Cabernet Sauvignon) and sweet wines (Il Raggio Del Sole – a Muscato, La Fantasia – an Italian sparkling, Late Harvest Gewürztraminer). The reserve tasting menu offered additional white and red reserve wines (Chardonnay, La Castellana – a super Tuscan blend, Il Barone – a Cabernet Sauvignon, Il Passito – late harvest Semillon / Sauvignon Blanc). There were more whites and sweet wines than I expected. The wines were good, but not outstanding. My favorites were the Il Brigrante, La Fantasia and Il Barone. La Fantasia was an unexpected surprise. It's a soft sparkling wine with a cherry hue and black raspberry / strawberry flavors. It's not too sweet either – a good wine to sip on a warm summer night.
At the end of the tasting, Bradford led us through the gift shop and into the main tasting room where he ended the tour. The main tasting room is set up in a rectangle with the tasting bars in the middle and wine / products around the outside. The tasting bars were packed with visitors – it just reinforced that the Tour and Tasting option (with the private tasting bar) was the way to go. In addition to people trying to stand at the bar and taste, there were others milling about, either trying to find the wine they wanted to buy or checking out all of the wine tchotchkes for sale. There are baskets to carry your wine and other purchases to the registers at the end of the tasting room. The baskets are fine if you want to purchase a bottle or two, but if you want more, just take your tasting sheet / order form to the cashier and let them pull the bottles for you.
Outside of the main tasting room are some of the orchards. You’ll see the resident sheep milling about. You may also catch a glimpse of the castle cat hunting in the grass “moat” on the side of the castle.
TIDBITS
If you are planning a visit to Castello di Amorosa, make a tour reservation in advance. In addition to the premium and reserve tours and tasting, the winery also offers chocolate pairing options and horse-drawn vineyard tour.
OTHER DETAILS
Castello di Amorosa
4045 North St. Helena Highway (Highway 29), Calistoga, CA, 94515
707.967.6272
Wine tasting hours: 9:30am to 5:00pm November - February, 9:30am to 6:00pm March - October. Tours: 9:30am and 4:30pm Weekdays, 9:30am and 5:00pm Weekends & Holidays.