News and Reviews - Winter Wine Touring
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Wine-Country News Bytes...
Tidbits, Anecdotes and Just In


New Winery Profiles on Wines Northwest

A Passion for Blends
Brian Carter Cellars
Woodinville, WA

Distinctly Southern Oregon
RoxyAnn Winery east of Medford


Reviews of Pacific NW wines
 

 

Wine-Country News... Just In

 


Walla Walla's Dunham Cellars opens wine bar

 

Enjoy a snack along with wines by the bottle or glass at Dunham Cellars' new:

 Hangar Lounge Wine Bar
at the Walla Walla Regional Airport
150 E. Boeing Avenue

The wine bar is open from 4-7 p.m., Fridays only, through Dec. 31.

For more information, call 509-529-4685 or e-mail wine@dunhamcellars.com or visit their website: www.dunhamcellars.com

The wine bar will be closed: Nov. 28, Dec. 5, Dec. 26 and Jan. 2.

 


Poppy... a place of his own

After 17-year career as Herbfarm chef, Jerry Traunfeld proves change is good

We live in an ever-changing world. People don’t stay in jobs for their entire career.  Within the restaurant industry, a few years is a long time.  Jerry Traunfeld stayed at The Herbfarm for 17 years.  Is it any wonder there is so much excitement about the opening of his own restaurant, Poppy?

Photo: Jerry Traunfeld in front of his new kitchen

Read the full story on SeattleDining.com

 

Poppy
622 Broadway East
Seattle, WA 98102
206-324-1108

 

 

WSU Opens Research Winery in Prosser
October 2, 2008

Washington State University now features the largest experimental, non-commercial winemaking facility in the Pacific Northwest.

The research winery, which is located at the WSU Irrigated Agriculture Research and Extension Center in Prosser, has a production capacity of about 5,000 gallons. The new facility was designed by enologists James Harbertson and Kerry Ringer, scientists in the WSU Department of Food Science. The facility will be used to conduct research in support of the region’s rapidly growing wine industry.

“We designed the winery for small-lot, research-scale production,” said Harbertson. The winery will produce multiple small lots of wines under controlled and reproducible conditions, said Harbertson and Ringer.

“We spent about six months designing the facility,” said Ringer. “We wanted to make sure that we had the capability to conduct the research the industry needs, so that meant ordering a lot of custom-made equipment.”

The experimental winery includes 73 stainless steel fermentation tanks that are temperature controllable. The tanks range from 26- to 260-gallon capacity. Temperature in the tanks is monitored and controlled by a Web-based system called TankNET.

With the new winemaking facility, Harbertson said, “there are lots of questions we can now address. But our main issues are pretty much all practical. How does one piece of equipment affect the winemaking process compared with another? And how do viticultural practices affect grape quality and, in turn, wine quality?”

The scientists wasted no time in getting winemaking research projects under way. WSU viticulturist Markus Keller and his team harvested chardonnay grapes from a research vineyard early in the morning of Oct. 1. Within a few hours, the first batch of grapes were pressed and left to settle over night. The next morning, yeast was added and a new series of winemaking experiments was under way.

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WSU to Partner with
Walter Clore Wine and Culinary Center

Washington State University will join forces with those leading the creation of the Walter Clore Wine and Culinary Center at Prosser to highlight the breadth, depth and quality of all aspects of Washington agriculture.

Dan Bernardo, dean of the WSU College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences, announced formalization of the partnership here today at the annual meeting of the Washington Association of Wine Grape Growers.

“Washington desperately needs an icon that can represent the diversity and quality of its agricultural enterprise,” Bernardo said. “The science behind the food is a critical, compelling story to tell. With the completion of the Clore Center, we will have a world-class stage, in eastern Washington, on which to present our heritage as well as the evolving research that will improve our future.”

Bernardo said WSU is “very excited to join with the Clore Center’s Board of Directors and the entire state’s food, wine, agriculture and tourism industries in making this visionary project a reality. The center is a natural extension of the foundational work Dr. Walter Clore did to help found the Washington wine industry, and it provides many opportunities to highlight the science and education behind the entire agriculture and food system within the state.”

The late Walter Clore, who was a WSU faculty member for nearly 40 years, was named the “Father of the Washington Wine Industry” by an act of the Washington State Legislature in 2001, in recognition of his efforts proving that premium wine grapes could be grown in Washington state. Members of the viticulture and enology community from across the state began plans in 2002 to develop a center named for him to highlight the burgeoning Washington wine industry.

 

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Wine-Country News Bytes

 



Cold Hardiness System alerts growers during winter months
Using a sophisticated system they designed, WSU viticulturist Markus Keller and his team are measuring the cold hardiness of grapevine. The system allows them to collect data from buds and wood pieces from a range of grape varieties in order to determine “critical” temperatures for each variety temperatures at which the tissues freeze and are killed.

The system is now being used as a model for programs working in grapes and other crops around the world.

Each week the team adds new information to their Web site, which growers use to track the changes in cold hardiness throughout the winter season.  Based on this information, growers can decide whether to run their wind machines or use other measures of frost control.

This year, for the first time, Ste. Michelle Wine Estates is participating in the project. Ste. Michelle viticulturists collect samples from their extensive variety collection each week, and that information is used to supplement samples collected by Keller’s team.

The service is funded by WSU, the Washington Association of Wine Grape Growers through the Washington Wine Industry Foundation and the Washington State Concord Grape Research Council.

 

 
http://tinyurl.com/5vndbx. The site has year-round value for grape growers, including information on Powdery Mildew, precipitation, growing degree days, and evapotraspiration.
Visit the Grape Cold Hardiness Web site:
http://tinyurl.com/5vndbx. The site has year-round value for grape growers, including information on Powdery Mildew, precipitation, growing degree days, and evapotraspiration.
Want the scientific low down on how Keller’s team is collecting cold-hardiness data? Fire up your browser and visit the American Journal of Enology and Viticulture to download the paper by Mills, Ferguson and Keller:
http://tinyurl.com/63q5te.
 


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Wine News & Reviews


Wine-Country News Bytes...
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Current Feature Articles and Reports

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New Winery Profiles on Wines Northwest

A Passion for Blends
Brian Carter Cellars
Woodinville, WA

Distinctly Southern Oregon
RoxyAnn Winery east of Medford


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