Photos: Laughing Stock's David Enns
A lot of eyebrows were raised in June when Laughing Stock
Vineyards hired Nikki Callaway, a star winemaker star formerly at Quails’ Gate
Estate Winery and, before that, at Mission Hill Family Winery.
All are producers of quality wine. However, the explanation
behind the move likely relates to the size of the various wineries. Laughing
Stock produced about 10,000 cases in 2017. Quails’ Gate is about 10 times
larger. At Laughing Stock, working with executive winemaker David Enns, Nikki
gets to focus on comparatively small lot production.
She also retains the possibility of resuming a big-winery
career because Laughing Stock was taken over last year by Arterra Wines Canada
Ltd. That is the big national wine producer owned by the Ontario Teachers
Pension Fund. The brands in the group include Jackson Triggs, Inniskillin,
Sumac Ridge and See Ya Later Ranch.
“I convinced Nikki to apply,” David admits. Neither he nor
Arterra’s national winemaker were happy with the calibre of candidates they
attracted when Arterra began advertising for a winemaker to work with David.
However, he and Nikki long have been members of
a winemakers’ tasting group and he was familiar with her qualifications.
The job interview was primarily a huge tasting of each
other’s wines and a discussion of winemaking philosophy. “It was a wonderful
discussion of where we were going,” David says. “You could see the synergies of
care and attention to the wines. She and I hit it off.”
In the Okanagan, nearly all the Arterra brands are made in
the big winery complex north of Oliver. Laughing Stock, however, will continue
to be made at its Naramata Road facility, retaining the cachet that its premium
wines have earned since the winery was launched in 2003 by David and Cynthia
Enns. Arterra has given them a two-year contract to remain with Laughing Stock.
They sold the winery because they had no successors in their
family interested in taking over. But there was more to it than that: Arterra
brings resources that will allow the perennially sold-out Laughing Stock to increase
production and add a few more wines to the portfolio.
“We are increasing the production for this next harvest to 200 tons,”
David says. (That is the equivalent of 12,500 cases). “You could never increase
at that kind of rate because there are no fruit sources in the valley. With
Arterra buying us, we now have access to 1,200 acres of the best vineyards in
the valley.”
“They have given me access to anything,” David adds. “The thing about Arterra
is that they have more fruit than premium products for it to go into. That is
the strategy in buying Laughing Stock Vineyards – to feed it with the best
fruit.”
Laughing Stock has long made a top-flight Viognier from its own Perfect
Hedge Vineyard in Osoyoos. It now has the possibility of adding a white Rhone
blend to the portfolio with Roussanne and Marsanne from an Arterra vineyard
south of Oliver.
“They were about to tear it out but I said I would take it,” David says.
“Those grapes going into amphorae. I am doing a Viognier/Roussanne/Marsanne
this year, 100% in clay.”
Here are notes on the current releases.
Laughing Stock Pinot
Gris 2017 ($19.95 for 1,645 cases). Complexity was built into this wine by
fermenting 55% in neutral oak, 30% in stainless steel and – for texture – 15%
in concrete eggs. It begins with aromas of citrus, melon and Asian pear. These
are echoed in the flavours. The texture is rich but the finish is dry. 91.
Laughing Stock
Viognier 2017 ($24.99 for 379 cases). This is a generous and rich wine from
grapes grown in the winery’s Osoyoos vineyard. Forty percent was fermented in
neutral French oak, 30% in stainless steel and 30% in concrete eggs. In the
glass, it presents dramatic aromas of apricot, peach and orange. On the palate,
there are flavours of stone fruits, guava, passion fruit and vanilla. The
flavours coat the palate and the finish persists. 92.
Laughing Stock Blind
Trust Red 2016 ($28.99 for 2,050 cases). This blend is the little brother
to the winery’s flagship Portfolio but there is no inferiority here. It is just
a blend for more immediate consumption while Portfolio ages. This wine, aged 15
months in French oak, begins with aromas of black cherry, chocolate and cedar
leading to flavours of plum and black currant. The long, silky tannins add the
wine’s approachability. The actual blend is hidden under the capsule but, for
the impatient, here it is: 45% Merlot, 24% Cabernet Sauvignon, 22% Malbec and
9% Cabernet Franc. The final blend was topped up with three percent of
Portfolio. 93.
Laughing Stock Syrah
2016 ($36.99 for 1,048 cases). There is five percent Viognier in this
blend, co-fermented with one lot of Syrah in stainless steel. A second lot of
Syrah (22% of the entire volume) was fermented in 500-litre open-top French oak
puncheons. The two lots were blended and barrel-aged 16 months in French oak
(36% new). The Viognier lifts perfumed and floral aromas, along with hints of
delicatessen meats. On the palate, there are flavours of black cherry, plum and
fig with a hint of pepper on the finish. The texture is generous and the finish
lingers. 93.
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