Sunday, January 16, 2011

Trefethen Family Vineyards – One Family. One Estate. One Passion.

A BIT OF HISTORY
Gene and Catherine Trefethen moved to Napa Valley in 1968 and created a 600-acre wine estate by purchasing six small farms and the old 1886 Eshcol Winery. Gene’s son, John, and daughter-in law, Janet, produced their first commercial vintage in the renovated winery in 1973. More than 40 years later, Trefethen Vineyards has a few notable distinctions. It continues to be a family business with John running the winery, Janet managing all marketing efforts, and their children, Loren and Hailey, working at the winery full time. In 1988, the winery was recognized as a National Historic Landmark. And Trefethen is one of the only American wineries that has never purchased a single outside grape to make its wines.

THE EXPERIENCE
Trefethen is one of those wineries you need to plug into the GPS navigation system – it’s on Oak Knoll Avenue off of Highway 29 in Napa. If you're not looking for the road sign, it's easy to miss. Once you turn onto Oak Knoll, you need to do a series of left turns to get to the winery parking lot. It’s a beautiful drive and worth the extra five minutes. The driveway runs through the middle of the vineyards and ends at the historic winery and tasting room.


John and I visited Trefethen on a Saturday with two of his friends from the sommelier course, Frank and Mark. We got to the winery at about 10:15am – it was right after they opened, so there were only a few other visitors. As we entered the lobby, we were welcomed by three of the tasting room staff. One of the associates, Keith, took us around the corner and into the tasting room. Keith is a graduate of the Culinary Institute of America at Hyde Park, NY and is planning to take the sommelier exam so there was a lot of discussion about the test and how everyone was preparing for it. As a professionally trained chef, Keith also does a lot of Trefethen’s food / wine pairings and events (Twilight at Trefethen) – some of his recipes and pairing recommendations sounded amazing. Keith was friendly, really knowledgeable about the wines, and passionate about how food and wine go together to provide the ultimate tasting experience.  

The Trefethen tasting room was warm and inviting with lots of wood and deep red hues.  It was decorated for the holidays with twinkle lights, Christmas trees and holiday displays. I really liked the tasting room because it felt roomy and relaxed. There were two bars at different ends, as well as a few overstuffed chairs and some barrel tables (wine barrels turned into high cocktail tables). While the tasting room filled up, the variety of bar and seating options enabled everyone to spread out and enjoy the wines with their friends and family. Additionally, there was a really pretty side room set up for private tastings.

The tasting room features a “tasting passport” of two options – an Estate Tasting and a Winemaker’s Reserve Tasting. The Estate Tasting is $10 and you choose four wines from a total of eight featured wines (the tasting wines that day included a 2009 Dry Riesling, 2008 Chardonnay, 2008 Viognier, 2008 Quandary – a white blend, 2007 Cabernet Franc, 2006 Merlot, 2007 Double T Red – a “Bordeaux blend”, and a 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon). The Winemaker’s Reserve Tasting is $25 and includes a selection of five special, limited release wines (our featured wines included a 2007 Harmony Chardonnay, 2008 Pinot Noir, 2007 Dragon’s Tooth, 2002 Library Cabernet, 2006 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon).

Sometimes it pays to hang out with the sommelier guys as Keith poured wines for us from both tasting options. My favorite wines were the 2007 Dragon’s Tooth, the 2002 Library Cabernet and the 2006 Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon.  Dragon’s Tooth is a blend of 61% Malbec, 22% Petit Verdot, 11% Cabernet Sauvignon, 3% Merlot and 3% Cabernet Franc. It’s got a deep purple color and aromas of berries, cherries and chocolate. In addition to the jammy fruit, it tastes of oak, nutmeg, chocolate and spices – the Petit Verdot gives it a nice peppery kick. Yum.


During our tasting, Keith treated us to a private tour of the barrel room and the historic production area.  When John and Janet Trefethen restored the winery, they kept the Eshcol winery’s original de-stemmer/crusher and the gravity-flow system. Trefethen was placed on the National Register of Historic Places as the only 19th-century wooden gravity-flow winery in Napa Country. The barrel room is gorgeous with its casks and painted barrels that are used to age the winery’s Bordeaux variety red wines.  

TOURS AND TIDBITS
In addition to the Estate and Reserve tastings, Trefethen offers tours and special tastings.  There’s a 30-minute winery tour daily at 10:30am and includes a tasting of the current releases ($25/guest) and a “Twilight at Trefethen” event on Friday evenings at 6pm that features a private reception, winery tour and barrel tastings ($100/guest). 

OTHER DETAILS
Trefethen Family Vineyards
1160 Oak Knoll Avenue, Napa, CA 94558
707.255.7700 / 866.895.7696
Wine tasting hours: 10:00am to 4:30pm daily
Tours by reservation: 10:30am daily

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