Photo: Sandhill winemaker Sandy Leier
Over the next five years, the sprawling Calona Vineyards
complex near downtown Kelowna will be almost entirely rebuilt.
Since Andrew Peller Ltd. took over the winery in 2005, there
has seldom been a year when the new owners were not spending money on a
facility that dates from the 1940s.
In 2014, Calona’s cramped wine boutique was swallowed by the
spacious and elegant Sandhill tasting room. With that change, the venerable
Calona name began to disappear from the buildings and the labels. Conviction
has now replaced Calona’s labels. The tasting room also stocks wines under the
Peller and Wayne Gretzky brands, both part of the growing Peller stable in B.C.
The effect of these changes and of the renovations will put
some distance between Peller and the historic Calona brand.
Both are wineries with a long history in B.C. Andrew Peller
began in 1951 as Andrés Wines, with a facility in Port Moody. This winery
closed only in 2005 after Peller took over the Kelowna winery and moved all
production there.
Calona was started by Giuseppe Ghezzi, an Italian
entrepreneur (he had run a silk factory in Italy and a farm colony in Manitoba)
who arrived in the Okanagan in 1931 with the know-how for making wines from
cull apples. Short of cash, he got the support of Kelowna ’s business leaders, notably grocer
Pasquale (Cap) Capozzi and hardware merchant W.A.C. Bennett, the future premier
and then president of the city’s Chamber of Commerce. They raised the money,
provided management and, with Ghezzi’s son, Carlo, as winemaker, got the
Okanagan’s first winery off the ground. The winery began making grape wines in
1936. Calona’s early success was assured when it began producing St. John sacramental wine for the Catholic Church in Canada on the initiative of a Kelowna priest, Monsignor W.B. McKenzie.
When the Conviction labels were introduced in 2015, there has
been an effort to commemorate some of that history. For example, Conviction
Pinot Noir is sub-titled The Priest, referring to Monsignor Mackenzie.
Calona had scored a major commercial success in the 196os by
producing fruit flavoured wines modelled on what the Gallo Brothers were doing
in California. However, the unfortunate image of plonk attached itself to the
Calona label and nothing could shake it even after the winery began producing award-winning
table wines.
The Sandhill brand was created in 1997, successfully
distancing that label from Calona’s image. Sandhill was recognized from the
beginning as a producer of premium wines, an image increasingly important as
consumers gravitated to drinking premium wines. That is why, when Peller
decided to refresh the Calona wine shop, the company re-developed it as the
Sandhill wine shop.
Sandhill differentiated itself not just with premium wines,
but with single vineyard wines. In recent vintages, that strategy has been
amended with the introduction of “Terroir Driven” series wines. Those wines
blend grapes from more than one of the vineyards under Peller’s control. It
enables larger volume production of those wines. It also gives winermakers the
tools to introduce more complexity to the blends.
The Sandhill Small Lots wines, however, remain single vineyard
wines.
The legendary Howard Soon was the Sandhill winemaker for 20
years until he retired last year. (He is now the winemaker at Vanessa Vineyards
in the Similkameen Valley.)
His successor, appointed in June, is Sandy Leier. Born in
Kelowna in 1978, she joined the Calona winemaking team in 2006 after earning a
chemistry degree at UBC Okanagan. Since then, she has been the lead winemaker
for both the Calona and Wayne Gretzky Okanagan labels.
On her appointment, she was quoted as saying: “I love exploring the unique
properties and diverse microclimates of each of Sandhill’s vineyard sites and
celebrating those differences in the wines. The single vineyard and single
block wines in the Small Lots portfolio give us this window into the terroir of
a range of excellent growing sites within our region.”
Sandy leads a quartet of female winemakers at Kelowna
winery. The others are Sydney Valentino, who began making the Conviction wines
three years ago; Stephanie Van Dyk, right, who began her winemaking career at
Summerhill Pyramid Winery in 2002; and Barbara Hall, who joined the group this
summer after working at Chaberton Estate Winery, Burrowing Owl Vineyards and
Church & State.
Recently, Sandy and Stephanie led a tasting for me of a
representative range of the wines they are making at the Sandhill and Friends
winery. Here are my notes.
Wayne Gretzky
Okanagan 2017 Pinot Grigio ($14.99). Sometimes, Pinot Grigio on the label
is more about marketing than style. With this wine, however, Sandy made a light
and refreshing wine (12.7% alcohol) approximating the Italian Grigio style. It
is a crisp wine with notes of citrus and peach. 91.
Sandhill 2016 “Terroir
Driven” Pinot Gris ($17.10). This is a blend of grapes from Peller’s Hidden
Terrace Vineyard at Oliver and the King Family Vineyard on the Naramata Bench. “The
King Family gives the wine the nice minerality while the fruit from Hidden
Terrace is picked a little riper and it gives a nice rich palate,” Sandy
explains. The wine has 13.8% alcohol, with rich flavours of pear and apple. 91.
Sandhill 2017 “Terroir
Driven” Pinot Blanc ($19). This has aromas and flavours of apples. By fermenting
30% of this in barrel, the winemaker has added weight to the texture. However,
the finish still is crisp and refreshing. 91.
Sandhill 2016 “Terroir
Driven” Chardonnay ($17.10). Fifty percent of this wine was fermented and
aged in French oak (half new). The wine has aromas of citrus and oak, leading
to buttery and marmalade flavours. Good acidity leaves a finish of bright
fruit. The wine is seriously underpriced for the quality. 91.
Sandhill 2016 “Small
Lots” Viognier ($25 for 522 cases). The grapes are from the Osprey Ridge
Vineyard on the Black Sage Bench. The wine is almost fat in its ripeness with a
texture so rich that I took it to be barrel-fermented (it was not). It has aromas
and flavours of ripe apricots. 91.
Conviction 2016 Sovereign
Opal ($13.99). Sovereign Opal is an aromatic wine grape developed at the
Summerland research station. It is grown on just one Kelowna vineyard and
Calona/Conviction gets it all. The aromatics are dramatic, leading to mouth-filling
tropical flavours of spice, lychee and lime. 90.
Sandhill 2017 “Terroir
Driven” Rosé ($18). This blend of Merlot and Gamay comes down on the side
of intensity as opposed to the anaemic style that, unaccountably, seems to be
in fashion. The wine presents with good colour in the glass. It has aromas and
flavours of strawberry and cherry. 90.
Wayne Gretzky
Okanagan 2016 Cabernet Sauvignon Syrah ($16.99). The blend has slightly
more Cabernet than Syrah. These two varietals marry well together. There is a
hint of mint in the aroma along with black currant. On the palate, the flavours
are a medley of deli meat spices, black cherry, black currant and fig. 90.
Wayne Gretzky
Okanagan 2014 Signature Series Shiraz ($29). Made with fruit from Osprey
Ridge Vineyard, this co-fermented Syrah and Viognier won gold last year at
Syrah du Monde competition. The aromas begin with black pepper and dark fruits.
On the palate, it is plump and rich with flavours of black cherry, figs, dark
coffee and dark chocolate. 93.
Sandhill 2016 “Terroir
Driven” Syrah ($22). This wine blends fruit from the Sandhill Estate
Vineyard on Black Sage and the Vanessa Vineyard. The dark colour telegraphs the
bold aromas and flavours of this meaty red. There is a hint of white pepper.
90.
Sandhill 2016 “Small
Lots” Syrah. ($N/A). Made with fruit from Sandhill Estate, this wine has an
attractive core of luscious fruit (cherry, plum). The long ripe tannins give
the wine a juicy texture and svelte finish. 92.
Sandhill 2015 “Small
Lots” Petit Verdot (Wine club only). The fruit is from the last vintage
that Sandhill bought from the Phantom Creek Vineyard before it was sold. Only
200 cases were made. The wine, typical of the varietal, is dark and dense, with
flavours of plum, fig, black coffee and dark chocolate. 93.
Sandhill 2016 “Small
Lots” Petit Verdot (N/A). This was a
barrel sample. The fruit for this wine comes from Osprey Ridge, a vineyard not
far south of Phantom Creek with a comparable terroir. Again, the wine is dense
and black, with flavours of dark fruits, dark chocolate and a touch of slate on
the finish. 94.
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