Update from the Winery

Tis the season for blending

The darkest months of the year tend to be the slowest in the winery. It’s a rewarding and restful time for a winemaker; a time for reflection, planning, and lots of tasting.

As the yeast convert the last bits of sugar to alcohol, the ephemeral aromas of fermentation dissipate and the wines begin to clarify and take shape. This is when the nuances of the growing season and our practices in the vineyard and winery begin to reveal themselves.

The wines are still very young, especially the reds, but we can see more clearly than ever where they’ll go. Time alone will do most of the work, but there are a few techniques we can utilize in the cellar to pull the wines in one direction or another. These include careful oxygen exposure (or lack thereof), timely rackings, and bâttonage.

Most important, though, may be blending. The majority of wines that end up in our glass are a blend of different base wines from the cellar, carefully combined to build complexity, balance, and beauty. This, we think, is the most artistic aspect of winemaking.

Blending season kicks off with an early look at the new vintage of Limestone because the 2023 is almost sold out! We’re putting together bench blends with different proportions of Louise Swenson, Prairie Star, and two expressions of La Crescent. Teasing out flavors, popping aromatics, and building textures. It’s pretty fun. Grab some bottles of 2023 Limestone before they’re gone!

Kevin & Rosie sampling various blends of wines with beakers on a table in the winery.

Kevin and Rosie working on 2024 Limestone blends.
Taste. Discuss. Conceptualize. Blend. Taste. Discuss. Repeat.

Thanksgiving Wine

Turkey & Marquette:
A Match Made in the Vineyard

Ben and SeSe, our spectacular summer winegrowing interns who tended carefully to the vines throughout the growing season, first came across our flock of wild turkeys in July. It was a small flock then, but by September we were shooing 16 birds out of the Upper Marquette vineyard every morning. We usually found them perched up on the posts, helping themselves to the top half of every cluster of ripening Marquette they could reach. They had found the best fruit at Lincoln Peak and we had to do something about it. But after the game warden forbade us from “terminating” wild turkeys, we had to go greet the birds every morning and politely ask them to leave, with the help of the best vineyard dog around.

Vineyard dog black lab named Sophie with a bone

This year we’re thankful for new friends and 12 barrels of 2024 Marquette. We think Thanksgiving dinner is the best meal of the year to pair wine with. So many wines work well with all of the different dishes on the table, from cleansing and acid-driven whites like Limestone to textural, full-bodied reds like Marquette. It’s worth opening a few bottles for the feast and these are the wines our family is most excited to drink next week. Come pick yours up from the tasting room or order online and we’ll send them to your door.