Blue Mountain winemaker Matt Mavety
Matt Mavety, the winemaker at Blue Mountain
Vineyards & Cellars and one of the family that owns it, was in Vancouver recently,
autographing bottles in several leading private wine stores.
Autographing bottles of Blue Mountain ?
I’m not kidding.
In the last two or three years, there has
been a sea change at Blue
Mountain . This occasionally
reclusive winery sometimes refused to receive visitors without appointments,
only making exceptions during wine festivals. They earned an unfortunate
reputation as curmudgeons.
To be fair, the Mavety family is not that
large. They were too busy in growing grapes and making the wine at Blue Mountain
to drop everything whenever a car came down the driveway. But since last year,
the family has freed up the time to open the wine shop from April to October
and to send family members out more often on promotional tours.
And after staying out of most industry
associations for years, Blue
Mountain this year has
joined the 12-member Okanagan Falls Wineries Association, to the absolute
delight of its peers. This summer, the winery is even doing three luncheons in
its vineyard with Joy Road Catering.
Everybody benefits when a winery as
important as Blue
Mountain decides to join
the parade, and perhaps even lead it, after years of appearing to stand aside.
The winery has never been quite as
inaccessible as its reputation suggested. Getting an appointment to visit was
as simple as making a phone call to the winery. If the tasting room was not
always open, it often reflected the fact most of the wines were sold out
anyway.
The winery has participated several times
in the Vancouver International Wine Festival. During the past decade or two,
the winery often has sponsored an annual charitable fund-raising wine tasting
that featured its wines paired with dishes from top Vancouver restaurants. It has always been one
of the hottest tickets on the Vancouver
wine scene.
There are, however, at least two reasons
why Blue Mountain has been raising its profile
lately.
One is a generational change. Matt and his
sister, Christie, have taken on greater roles at the winery that was launched
in 1992 by their parents, Ian and Jane Mavety.
The second is the dramatically increased
competition in the B.C. wine market. Blue
Mountain came out of the
gate with the best wines in the Okanagan by a considerable margin. Every good
restaurant and every savvy wine consumer wanted this smart new label in the
cellar.
That was then. Today, there are a number of
producers with wines that can play in the big leagues with Blue Mountain .
Other excellent Pinot Noirs are now being made by Quails’ Gate, CedarCreek,
Foxtrot, Howling Bluff, La Frenz, Kettle
Valley , Meyer; and the
list could be longer. I am told that Mission Hill is working on a stunner.
That, I think, is why Blue Mountain ,
now making 15,000 cases a year, has made it far easier to buy its wines, which,
by the way, are still reasonably priced. The winery’s Pinot Noir Reserve is $10
to $20 a bottle cheaper than most reserve quality Pinots while matching them
for quality. The winery’s regular Pinot Noir at $25 is superb value.
As well, Matt has continually tweaked his
winemaking techniques over the past decade. An agriculture graduate from the University of British
Columbia (like his father), Matt began working fulltime at Blue Mountain
in 1997 after completing viticulture and enology studies at Lincoln University
in New Zealand .
In 2001 he began trials with fermenting
with natural yeast. Today, as much as half the volume of some varieties is
fermented with natural yeast. While that can be a risky technique, it does
yield more complex wines in the hands of a skilled winemaker.
I have tasted some Blue Mountain
wines that have just been released or will be released in a matter of weeks.
They all impressed me with their elegance and complexity. Here are my notes.
3 comments:
You can buy these wines from their website: www.bluemountainwinery.com
You could always buy the wines from the website, by the case, but you could not get one or two bottles in private wine stores until the last few years.
Looks like Natalie Maclean cribbed a your full Blue Mountain Bubbly review...check out the "community review" here: http://www.nataliemaclean.com/winepicks/wine/blue-mountain-vineyard-and-cellars-gold-label-brut/109214
We're discussing this over on my LinkedIn group - Wine Bloggers, Lovers and Enthusiasts...
Thought You'd like to know - one wine blogger to another. Cheers, Billy, The Wine Cask Blog.
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