In what looks like another step in the consolidation of Okanagan
wineries, Arterra Wines Canada has just announced the purchase of Laughing
Stock Vineyards.
This comes two and a half months after Andrew Peller Ltd.
spent $95 million to acquire Gray Monk
Estate Winery, Black Hills Estate Winery and Tinhorn Creek Vineyards.
Peller and Arterra are Canada’s two biggest national wine
companies. Now owned by the Ontario Teachers Pension Fund, Arterra formerly was
the Canadian arm of U.S.-based Constellation Brands and, prior to 2007, was
Vincor International Ltd.
Arterra, which is headquartered in Mississauga, already operates
a group of wineries and brands in British Columbia. These include
Jackson-Triggs, Inniskillin Okanagan, Sumac Ridge, Black Sage Vineyards and See
Ya Later Ranch. It also has a 50% interest in Nk’Mip Cellars. And it operates
more than 1,000 acres of vineyard in the Okanagan.
Laughing Stock gives Arterra control of a boutique producer
with a strong following for its premium wines, much as Peller’s purchase of
Black Hills brought an iconic producer into that company.
Laughing Stock founders David and Cynthia Enns will continue
to be involved with the winery. “We started Laughing Stock Vineyards to create
a boutique Naramata Bench winery,” David said in a statement. “After a decade
and a half, we have reached the tipping point both in terms of scale and
demand. We made a decision to partner with Arterra because of their commitment
to maintaining the quality and the integrity and quality of our wines and their
solid history in the Okanagan.”
For background on Laughing Stock, here is an except from my
recent book, Icon: Flagship Wines from British Columbia’s Best Wineries.
Before David Enns blended the 2003
debut vintage of Portfolio, he made what he calls “the pilgrimage” to Bordeaux.
In two weeks, he tasted about 1,000 red wines to determine the style that would
serve, to some degree, as the model for Portfolio. “When you start out, you have got to have a style,” David maintains.
“You have to stick to it for a number of years.” That discipline worked for
him, making Portfolio a widely collected Okanagan red blend.
David and his wife, Cynthia, were successful investment
consultants in Vancouver when, in 2002, they bought a newly planted 2-hectare (5-acre)
vineyard on Naramata Road for a future winery. They called it Laughing Stock, because
they would embarrass themselves with their clients if it flopped. After all,
David’s winemaking was limited to two vintages in his basement with Washington state
grapes, when he processed one ton of Cabernet Sauvignon in
2001 and two tons of Syrah in 2002.
David and Cynthia made the debut 500 cases of Portfolio in
2003, after their viticulture consultant told them there might never be a
better vintage with which to launch. It had been the hottest season in a
decade. “The grapes were crazy ripe, which translated into quite high alcohol
in the wines,” recalls Cynthia. The Portfolio 2003 had 15.1 percent alcohol,
although due to a printing error, the label read 13.8 percent.
Because the Laughing Stock winery was not built until 2005,
David crushed his grapes at the nearby Poplar Grove winery for two vintages.
That enabled him to mentor under Poplar Grove’s Ian Sutherland. The skill
transfer was invaluable even though the original Poplar Grove winery had
rudimentary equipment. Soon, the well-equipped Laughing Stock winery enabled
David to improve Portfolio.
The greatest improvements have come with Laughing Stock
farming its own vineyards. “Our original business plan was that we were going
to buy a lot of our fruit so we don’t have to become farmers,” David says.
“Well, we quickly realized that if you want good wine, you need good fruit—and
you have to grow it.” In 2007, the year after they sold their investment
business, David and Cynthia, who now manages the vineyards, bought their
Perfect Hedge Vineyard: 9 hectares (22 acres) on the Osoyoos East Bench. About
half of Laughing Stock’s grapes are now from Osoyoos, while the other half are
from Naramata. Perfect Hedge grapes—Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Malbec—have
added flesh and rich flavours to Portfolio since the 2008 vintage.
Laughing Stock’s total production is limited to about 6,000
cases a year, so that David can practise detailed, hands-on winemaking. “When I
am making Portfolio, I have four or five Merlot vineyards, two or three
Cabernet Sauvignon vineyards, a couple of Cabernet Francs, a couple of Malbecs,
and one source of Petit Verdot,” he says. Fermented as individual lots, these
come together during the blending trials about 15 months after vintage. When
the premium Portfolio blend has been decided, it spends at least three more
months in barrel, all of it French oak. Wines that do not make it into
Portfolio are blended for an early-drinking wine called Blind Trust Red.
Portfolio has seen continual improvement through additional
sources of grapes, better
winemaking equipment, and refined selection of barrels. Vintage variations are
less dramatic than might be expected, given growing conditions. In 2011, when
the degree days[AG4] were the lowest
in Laughing Stock’s history, David made a wine good enough to win a Lieutenant
Governor’s Award of Excellence. “My goal is to make better wine every year,
based on what Mother Nature gives us,” he says.
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