Photo: Mirielle Sauvé
Recently, a cheque of $17,000 was given to the BC chapter of Les
Dames d’Escoffier, an organization dedicated to supporting female professionals
getting into the wine industry.
The money had been raised from the sale of wines made by Mireille
Sauvé, a Vancouver wine marketing consultant whose career once got a boost from
a Dames scholarship.
The story is related in a news release from the BC chapter. I
cannot improve on the narrative, so I will just reproduce it.
Back in 1991, a 22-year-old
Mireille was struggling with her career. Having started working in restaurants
at the young age of 14, she was an established server in fine dining with vast
experience but frustrated that she was unable to find anyone to take her under
their wing to attain management status, and a professional sommelier degree
from Toronto’s George Brown University was both out of financial reach and necessitated
a move across the country.
A few senior women in
the industry knew of her talents and ambition and encouraged her to apply for a
scholarship from the local chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier, money they raised
throughout the year for exactly this type of need. Mireille received a generous
scholarship, scored honours distinction in her course, and went on to become
the youngest certified sommelier (yes, of any gender) in Canada.
Apprenticeship at a
Washington State winery, work experience with Eric von Krosigk at Hawthorne
Mountain Vineyards (now See-Ya-Later Ranch) behind her; her own successful wine
consulting business; travels across the world judging wine and no less than three
children later, Mireille had reached a level in her career and was invited to
join Les Dames as member - the very same organization that had helped her to
pay for the schooling she needed to reach this place in her career. Talk about
full circle.
Jumping into the
fundraising arm of the chapter committees she saw an opportunity to move away
from silent auctions and give back, include other members in an amazing
winemaking experience and, if she was lucky, be able to involve and give back
to a whole new generation of female winemakers and sommeliers by making and
bottling wine with all the profits being donated back to the chapter. The BC
Chapter was thrilled to be the sole recipient of these funds and was on hand to
accept the first cheque, which was presented August 29th at a “Dames
wine” tasting at Marquis Wine Cellars in Vancouver.
The Dames Wine Project
Mireille started to
experiment with the white wine a few years ago as she discussed her dream of creating
a special Dames wine. An early prototype blending Sauvignon Blanc and Muscat was
good enough to inspire her. With that presentation, the chapter approved her
use of their branding and gave her their blessing to move ahead. When it was
time to pick the grapes, heavy smoke taint from forest fires in Washington State
(2015) meant the grapes were at risk in Mireille’s estimation so she went
looking for grapes from other regions of the Okanagan or a varietal that would
be enhanced, rather than compromised, by a smoky characteristic.
This was a
serendipitous move as not only did she find some amazing Pinot Blanc grapes in
winemaker Ann Sperling’s vineyard, Ann became not only a mentor, but a friend
and her beautiful grapes would go on to be part of the blend for the Dames Rosé
and future sparkling wine, next in line. The other grapes that Mireille choose to
blend into the white were a Riesling from Sperling Vineyard and a
Gewurztraminer from Meyer Family Vineyards, both vinified dry as was the Pinot
Blanc.
The red wine grapes
were already crushed and Mireille found an organic Merlot that she loved as the
base for the “Dames Red”. She turned to her former boss and friend Eric
von Krosigk, who had just made a Syrah from grapes grown in the south
Okanagan, and like the Merlot, also organic, and Katie Bruce, a young viniculturist
at Summerhill, oversaw its production. The
Dames Red is 70% organic Merlot and 30% organic Syrah.
Next Up
“Dames Sparkling” - Working
again from Ann Sperling’s grapes, a dry sparkling wine, due to be bottled this
fall, will mark the final celebration in the year that marks Les Dames d’Escoffier,
BC Chapter’s 25th Anniversary.
The Dames Rosé 2016, which was released recently, is a blend
of 80% Pinot Blanc and 20% Pinot Noir. Mireille set out to make a Provençale
style rosé. The French often use a variety called Cinsault which has good
minerality, delivers strawberry flavours and is not too dark.
The Pinot Blanc that she chose once again came from the
Sperling Vineyard in East Kelowna, which delivers the desired minerality and
structure. The Pinot Noir, which delivers the colour and the fruitiness, is
from the Stoneboat Vineyard on the Black Sage Bench. The grapes were processed
at the Sperling winery.
Here is a note on the wine. It is available in several private wine stores and restaurants and by the case from www.dameswine.com.
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