Photo: Hester Creek winemaker Rob Summers
Several years ago, I had a hilarious confrontation with an
Italian vintner at a tasting in Vancouver. I think of it every time that Hester
Creek Estate Winery sends the latest release of its Trebbiano.
The vintner, whose name I have forgotten, was from Tuscany.
A friend had recommended I taste his wines because of their high quality.
Indeed, the wines he was pouring were excellent, including a crisp and complex
Trebbiano.
I complimented him on the wines and then added that a
producer in the Okanagan also made an excellent Trebbiano.
“You can’t grow wines here,” he replied. “It rains too
much.”
Indeed, it was raining outside the Vancouver venue that day.
But I told him that our major wine region was 400 miles east of Vancouver, with
two intervening mountain ranges blocking most of the rain from the vineyards,
which must be irrigated.
“The average rainfall in the Okanagan is the same as the
average rainfall in Sicily,” I told me. (I have been in Sicily recently.)
The vintner snorted again in derision. “You don’t have the
soils,” he said.
I rebutted that with a description of the Okanagan’s complex
geology. The Hester Creek vineyard is on a peninsula of soils deposited by the glaciers.
There is everything in the soils from gravel and clay to traces of ancient
volcanoes.
The vintner’s third objection was that the Okanagan lacked
Italy’s long tradition of wine and viticulture. Of course, I could not quite
match that. But I pointed out that the man who planted the Trebbiano vines (and
other varieties) in 1968 was an Italian immigrant named Joe Busnardo. So we
have a link to that historic tradition. Here is a biographical sketch from my
1996 book, British Columbia Wine
Companion.
When he was growing up on a farm
at Treviso, north of Venice, and when he studied at a nearby agriculture
school, [Joe Busnardo] "never liked any plant but grapes." He came to
Canada in 1954, a twenty-year-old bachelor, and by 1967 scraped together enough
to buy sixty-eight acres on an eastward-facing sloping bench just south of
Oliver. He imported twenty-six varieties of vinifera grapes from Italy and a
further fifty-six varieties from the University of California in Davis. Busnardo's planting of pinot bianco (Italian
for pinot blanc) was one of the earliest and largest plantings of what now is
recognized as a vinifera superbly suited to the Okanagan. He ignored the
established wineries and professionals in the Okanagan who urged more hardy
hybrid varieties [such] as bath, a labrusca grape totally unsuited for table
wines. With the wineries not prepared to pay a premium for his low-yielding
vinifera, the struggling Busnardo took a job as a heavy-duty mechanic for the
city of Penticton and simply neglected his vineyard. "I closed the farm
down," he recalled. "I didn't even prune the grapes." His father
visited him, shook his head and advised Joe to rip out the vineyard.
The bitter winter of 1978-'79
killed the next season's growth on many vines in the Okanagan and destroyed
some vines entirely. But Busnardo found that his casually-tended vineyard had
come through the winter, proving that his faith in vinifera was not
ill-founded. By coincidence, the first estate winery regulations had been
issued by the provincial government in 1978. Busnardo now decided to get a
winery license. Untrained as a winemaker, Busnardo launched Divino [Estate
Winery] on a wing and a prayer, making wines in the traditional method that he
remembered from his father's farm. "I just throw in the grapes and hope for
the best," he said at the time. The occasional winemaking mistake slipped
by: once, 5,000 bottles of pinot blanc had to be taken off the market after the
harmless but unsightly residue of the fining agent began settling out in the
bottles. Busnardo survived and learned from such experiences; subsequently, a
brother, Guido, began coming from Italy to help with the winemaking which
became more sure-handed with each passing vintage.
The vineyard once had as many as
128 different grape varieties, a testimony to Busnardo's undisciplined
curiosity about the vine. It also has made for a wide range of releases from
the winery, among them several that no one else has. Divino has been the only
winery to release varietals made from garganega, trebbiano and malvasia, all
important to vintners in Italy. Garganega, for example, is the principal grape
for the production of Soave, a well-known delicate white made in the northern
Italian winegrowing district of Veneto. But Divino has been at a disadvantage
with these varietals because, in the British Columbia market it targets, these
whites are scarcely known and, as much as Busnardo argues -- and rightly so --
that consumers should explore wines beyond the mainstream varietals, not many
leave the beaten track.
The winery was sold in 1996, to
become Hester Creek. Joe moved Divino to the Cowichan Valley where he sometimes
still presides in the tasting room Friday and Saturday afternoons.
Hester Creek has been totally
transformed by the team that has owned and run it since 2005, including Rob
Summers, the veteran winemaker. The vineyard has been rationalized but some of
Joe’s original plantings have been retained, including the Trebbiano. I regret
that I never had a bottle to share with the Doubting Thomas from Tuscany.
Here are notes on two currant
releases.
Hester Creek 2016 Old Vines Trebbiano Block 16 ($23.95). The wine
begins with alluring aromas of apple, melon and grapefruit. Intense flavours of
apple, pear and citrus dance across the palate. With good acidity, the wine has
a finish as fresh as a morning in spring, with a remarkable persistence. This
surely is one of the best Trebbiano wines in the world. 93.
Hester Creek 2016 Rosé Cabernet Franc ($19.95). This
dry rosé has intensity both in the hue and in the flavours. It begins with
aromas of strawberry and cherry, leading to a potpourri of rich berry flavours
– strawberry, black cherry – with a touch of vanilla and red licorice on dry
finish. 91.
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