Lillooet-based Fort Berens Estate Winery has added a
super-premium Meritage blend called Red Gold to its portfolio.
The first release is from the 2014 vintage. Production was
limited to 109 cases, at $45 a bottle, and 48 magnums with original art on the
label, at $399.
By the time you read this, Red Gold will be almost certainly
be sold out. Production was limited in order to maintain the quality of the
winery’s 2014 Meritage, a bread and butter Bordeaux blend with a volume of
1,170 cases.
“The risk as a winery is that
you start taking your best barrels out of your blend, you can degrade your
Meritage blend,” says Rolf de Bruin, one of the proprietors of Fort Berens. “We
did not want to do that. We did a lot of blending trials in order to be sure
the Meritage was going to be exceptional because we were using some very good
fruit.”
The 2014 vintage was so solid
that, even with five “best” barrels set aside for Red Gold, the winery had no
difficulty making a first-rate Meritage.
In fact, 2014 was a landmark
year for Fort Berens for other reasons as well. That vintage was the first made
entirely in the new, well-equipped Lillooet winery and by a new and ambitious
young winemaker named Danny Hattingh. And it was Danny who urged making a
super-premium red when he saw the quality of the 2014 wines.
The winery already has a
premium Chardonnay called White Gold. It was launched in the 2010 vintage when
two barrels of Chardonnay were of exceptional quality.
“We had the idea there must
also be a Red Gold,” Rolf says, “but we thought the Red Gold would be a Pinot
Noir. We have five clones of Pinot Noir. But we were not actively working
towards a Red Gold at all until when it came up in the 2014 vintage.” In other
words, until Danny proposed the idea.
Danny and his partner,
viticulturist Megan DeVilliers, came to Canada 10 years ago from South Africa.
Danny received his enology degree at the renowned Elsenburg
Institute in Capetown. He met Megan at university where she was studying law.
She began helping him on his practicums and that triggered her to switch to
viticulture and pomology.
They first came to Canada as vacationing students to visit
Danny’s stepfather, a doctor in Dawson Creek. Attracted to Canada, they returned
in late 2007 and checked out wineries across the country. They send résumés to numerous wineries,
especially in British Columbia, and were snapped up by Saturna Island Vineyards
in the summer of 2008. After turning the winery around, they left in 2010 to
travel.
Returned in 2012 from their travels, the couple headed for
the Okanagan. Megan took a variety of viticultural assignments while Danny
became the winemaker for two Summerland wineries, Saxon Winery and Sage Hills
Winery.
They moved to Fort Berens in
2014. “We are both ready for this next
adventure and to begin exploring Lillooet,” Megan said at the time.
“Geologically, this area is very different from other areas where we have
worked, yet the climate is very similar. We are excited to work in this new
area and to see what we can create in this unique geographical pocket.”
Danny was given a comparatively
free hand in the Fort Berens cellar. He began a series of winemaking trials
that fall in order to understand the various terroirs from the winery buys
grapes. Fort Berens supplements the production of its 20-acre Lillooet vineyard
with grapes from Okanagan and Similkameen vineyards.
One of his more interesting
trials that fall was air-drying some of the estate vineyard’s Cabernet Franc
grapes (in a nearby hop-drying shed). After six weeks, evaporation reduced the
weight 30% while concentrating sugar, flavour and acidity. The grapes were then
barrel fermented (there was just one barrel). This technique of making ripasso-style
wine is traditional in the production of Amarone and Valpolicella wines in
Italy. Only a few B.C. wineries have made wine with partially air-dried grapes.
In 2015 the ripasso-style Cabernet Franc was
one of five barrels blended to produce Red Gold. The blend also includes a
barrel each of Merlot and Cabernet Franc from the estate vineyard, a barrel of
Merlot from Blind Creek vineyard in the Similkameen and a barrel of Cabernet
Sauvignon from a grower in Osoyoos, Roger Pires.
“In 2015, we made a Red Gold again, about 20% ripasso-style
Cabernet Franc in the blend,” Rolf says. “Stylistically, I love that the 2014
Red Gold is not overpowering or overbearingly big. It still has elegance and
delicacy. That is always the style we have been looking for. With my European
background, the wines need to be restrained in their expression.”
A significant premium had to be
charged for the 48 magnums because of the packaging. The winery commissioned label art from a Lillooet
artist named William Matthews, choosing an image of a sunrise over the Fraser
River Valley. While the basic design of the labels is similar, the artist added
an individual touch to each canvass.
Yes, canvass is correct. The over-size
labels, numbered and signed by the artist, are painted on canvass and can be
removed from the bottles for framing.
“Good art and good wine require
contemplation,” Rolf says philosophically. “The art on the label slows things
down before you pop open the cork. The art needs a bit of time for someone to
properly evaluate. Doing something like that on a bottle also creates a bit of
a platform for when the cork is actually pulled and the wine is poured. There
is this multi-sensory evaluation that starts with the art and then goes beyond.
That moment of contemplation is something we all need. Nor every day, but once
in a while, it is good to slow down and reflect and contemplate. What better
way to do that but with art and wine.”
A week after the Red Gold
release, all but 13 of the magnums had been sold. Rolf has yet to decided
whether some of the 2015 will also be bottled in magnums.
“It is so much work,” he sighs.
“Ultimately it is a very expensive project. A sizeable chunk of the $399 goes
to the artist. But there is a market for it. I thought people would just buy
one magnum. I have seen people buying six or 10. They use it for gifts and
other things that I did not anticipate.”
Here are notes on Red Gold and
the other recent releases from Fort Berens.
Fort Berens Red Gold 2014 ($44.90). The
wine begins with generous aromas of cassis and black cherry, which lead to
flavours of black cherry, blackberry, figs and olives. The wine is full-bodied
but the long ripe tannins give it a silky texture. It is exquisitely elegant.
93.
Fort Berens Meritage 2014 ($23.99 for 1.170 cases). The blend is
65% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc and 15% Cabernet Sauvignon. It begins with
aromas of vanilla, cherry and red currant and has flavours of cherry mingled
with hints of chocolate. It is juicy and lush with soft, ripe tannins. 91.
Fort Berens Cabernet Franc 2014 ($24.99 for 1,045 cases). The wine
is made primarily with estate-grown grapes with a modest amount of Okanagan
fruit in the blend. The wine is bright and bramble, with aromas of cherries and
blackberries. Those fruits are echoed on the palate, mingled with cola
flavours. 88.
Fort Berens Pinot Noir 2014 ($25.99 for 672 cases). This wine is
made with five clones of Pinot Noir, all grown in the winery’s Lillooet vineyard.
The aromas are fruity with a hint of spice and forest floor. The palate is
lively with flavours of raspberry and cherry. The texture is silky and
ethereal. 88.
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