Photo: Coolshanagh proprietors Skip and Judy Stothert
With its fifth vintage of Chardonnay, tiny Coolshanagh
Vineyard confirms it is one of the premier Chardonnay producers in the
Okanagan.
The release of 750 cases of the 2016 vintage is the largest
release so far from this Naramata Bench producer. There will never be much
because Coolshanagh has just 10 acres of vineyard, almost a quarter of which is
more recently planted Pinot Noir. The first vintage of Pinot Noir was 2015 – a miniscule
27 cases. Production of that doubled in 2016.
Coolshanagh is a boutique winery operated by Skip and Judy Stothert.
The wines are available on the Coolshanagh website (and in some high-end restaurants).
There is no tasting room of wine shop. The vineyard, seven kilometres north of
Naramata Village, is at the north end of Naramata Road, just past the Chute
Lake turnoff.
The Stotherts bought the 52-acre property in 2003 because
they wanted acreage with views of Okanagan Lake and also with privacy. There
was no intention to plant vines initially. “We bought the property just to
retire,” Skip says.
Skip is a retired businessman. The company he founded is now
called Green Roads Recycling. It is a road paving company with a difference: it
renews paving with a moving train of equipment that scoops up the old pavement
and melts it and mixes that with the new pavement that is laid down
immediately.
“We moved here in 2003,” Skip says. “My sons were taking
over the business and I got bored. I researched grape varieties. I knew I
wanted to do Chardonnay and I wanted to do Pinot Noir.”
He had grown up in a household with wine on the table. His
father, Win Stothert, ran an international engineering company. “My dad was in
the Opimian Society, so I grew up drinking Burgundian Chardonnays right from
the get-go, when I was about 10 or 11,” Skip says. “And there also was
Burgundian Pinot Noir.”
Trees were felled, land was
prepared, and the first hectare of Chardonnay was planted in 2004. Since then,
the vineyard has been quadrupled with the planting of more Chardonnay and Pinot
Noir. For viticulture advice, Skip has
tapped the experience of Okanagan Crush Pad vineyard managers as well as Pedro
Parra, the Chilean terroir consultant used extensively by OCP.
Between 2008 and 2011, Coolshanagh
Chardonnay grapes were sold to Foxtrot Vineyards. Then in 2012, Skip and Judy decided
to launch their own label. The target, when Coolshanagh is at full production,
is to release about 1,500 cases of Chardonnay and 300 cases of Pinot Noir
annually.
The wines are made for Coolshanagh
by OCP’s winemakers, with input from Skip, who has a clear idea of the style he
wants for Coolshanagh. He does not want to make a California-style Chardonnay.
He wants an age-worthy wine in the style of a white Burgundy.
The 2016 Coolshanagh Chardonnay
began by picking on advice from Pedro Parra. “Each block of Chardonnay is
hand-picked at a different time, with the first picking taking place in
mid-September and the last in early October, 2016,” according to the technical
notes for the wine. “Each section was treated differently to optimally express
each vineyard location.” The lots were ultimately blended and bottled without
fining or filtration.
While OCP ages most of its wines
entirely in concrete, about one-third of each Coolshanagh Chardonnay spends
about 11 months in oak (mostly neutral). “To me, Burgundian wine has oak
in it,” Skip says. “Even Chablis is moving into using some oak.”
The Stotherts are content with OCP
and are not planning to build their own winery. “Maybe if one of the
granddaughters wants to build it,” Skip says. “I have a wine building down here
and it could be done. But that means we could not do all of the travelling we
want to do. That is what it comes down
to.”
A note on the winery name. Coolshanagh is a Celtic word that translates as “a meeting place of
friends.” For the Stotherts, it had an excellent ring to it for their property.
The name has been used by Judy’s family, which has roots in Scotland and
Ireland, for several generations to identify their various homes.
A note on the wine.
Coolshanagh Chardonnay 2016 ($36.90). This elegant wine has aromas and flavours of citrus and apple with very subtle oak, bright acidity and a spine of minerality. The flavours are fresh and focused, supported with good texture. 93.
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