Photo: Mayhem partner Terry Meyer
A new Okanagan producer, Mayhem Wines Inc., was launched in
late October under the license of Meyer Family Vineyards of Okanagan Falls.
So far, most of the public tastings have been in various
Penticton wine stores or at the Meyer tasting room. I was able to taste the
wines in September and they are first-rate.
Mayhem succeeds Anarchist Mountain Vineyards, a boutique winery
that was established after Terry Meyer and Andrew Stone in 2010 purchased a 4 ½-acre
vineyard on the side of Anarchist Mountain above Osoyoos.
Terry is the sister of JAK Meyer (below) who, with wife Janice Stevens,
operates the Meyer winery at the Okanagan Falls vineyard he purchased in 2008.
He asked his sister and Andrew, her partner, to help develop his winery and
they quickly became involved with their own project. Anarchist produced about
500 cases a year (Chardonnay and Pinot Noir) under a custom crush arrangement with
Meyer.
Last summer, JAK and Janice initiated a formal winery partnership
with Terry and Andrew to launch Mayhem. The business model allows Mayhem [ex-
Anarchist] to grow its wine production while eliminating its former varietal
overlap with Meyer. With the exception of a modest volume of Gewürztraminer,
Meyer’s 8,500 cases of annual production are Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.
“I was not really interested in supporting my sister to make
more Chardonnay and Pinot Noir here, which was going to compete against us,”
JAK says. “That is why we launched the Mayhem brand, doing anything but
Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.”
Meyer now takes all of the Chardonnay (three acres) and Pinot
Noir (half an acre) in the Anarchist vineyard, leaving an acre of Merlot for
Mayhem. As well, Mayhem is free to source other varietals, to grow its production
and sales.
“This gives us some room if opportunity comes up,” Terry says.
“For example, if somebody had a couple of tons of Riesling for sale, we can
take advantage of that. We have got contract vineyards. We have Merlot from the
Meyer property and Merlot from Anarchist, so we will always have those. We have
Pinot Gris under contract.”
“We are very opportunistic,” Terry says of production plans
for Mayhem. “The leading varietal would be Merlot; and when possible, a
Merlot/Cabernet Franc blend. And then aromatic dry whites. We have Pinot Gris,
Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Blanc from 2017.”
In the 2018 vintage, Mayhem made most of the same varietals,
along with Gewürztraminer, Riesling and a rosé.”
Like the Anarchist wines before them, the Mayhem wines are
made at Meyer Family Vineyards, at least for the time being.
Last year, JAK bought a small vineyard in Kaleden with three
acres of Pinot Noir. “There is a good space there and a good location for
traffic,” JAK says. “That could be the future home for Mayhem, if it makes
sense to go that route.”
Mayhem has its own wine maker, Simone Ardiel, who shares the
Meyer winery with Chris Carson, Meyer’s long-time winemaker. “It works out well
that we have two winemakers here,” JAK says. “It gives us that ability to keep
things separate but to have the economies of sharing.”
“I am from Ontario,” says Simone (right), who has been at Meyer since
June 2017. “I graduated from Niagara College. I spent two years at Tawse Winery
and then I did a harvest for Clos Jordanne [which has since closed]. Then I
went vintage hopping.” She has done vintages in New Zealand, Australia, Oregon
and Burgundy, as well as the 2014 harvest at Meyer. Before returning to Meyer,
she also worked with Bench 1775 Winery near Naramata.
The partners had to some up with a new winery name after they
discovered that - unknown to them – someone
else already had trademarked Anarchist. The search for synonyms eventually led
to Mayhem.
“Mayhem just seemed to ring a chord with everybody,” Terry
says. “We knew we wanted something that reflected us personally. We are totally
in that mayhem profile. Out of mayhem comes opportunity. We’re flexible. If the
market says all it wants to drink is orange wine, we can say let’s do orange
wine.”
Perhaps orange wine is not a good example, since neither the
winemaker nor the owners are fond of that style. “We actually have to kind of
like it ourselves,” Terry says. “We are always going to be terroir driven,
clean, fresh, quality-focussed wines. But there is that fun element as well.
Mayhem was a great descriptor for how it could go down.”
The Mayhem wines, notably the whites, has been released at
lower price points than the Meyer wines, another differentiation between the
brands. However, Mayhem over-delivers.
“We wanted wines that would be served in restaurants and
hospitality,” Terry says. “So they are really well priced. If the bottle came
out on the table, people would say this is fun; and that the wine would pair
well with food.”
Here are notes on the wines.
Mayhem
Pinot Blanc 2017 ($18). The winemaking here does justice to an underappreciated
varietal. The wine has aromas and flavours of citrus and apple, with good
weight on the palate and refreshing crispness on the finish. 91.
Mayhem
Pinot Gris 2017 ($18). The majority of this wine was fermented in
stainless steel; a minor portion was fermented in neutral oak barrels and added
for texture and complexity. The wine has aromas and flavours of pear and
citrus. The finish is crisp and refreshing. 90.
Mayhem
Sauvignon Blanc ($18). The wine begins with herbal aromas mingled
with lime. It is crisp and fresh on the palate, with an appealing core of lime
and other tropical fruit flavours. 91.
Mayhem
Merlot Cabernet Franc 2015 ($26). This is a blend of 67% Merlot, 33%
Cabernet Franc. It is a juicy, appealing red, with aromas and flavours of black
cherry and blackberry and with long ripe tannins. 91.
Mayhem
Cabernet Franc 2015 ($30). This wine has the classic brambly aromas of
flavours of the varietal, notably blackberry and black cherry. The wine is full
on the palate. There is a lingering note of chocolate on the finish. 91.
No comments:
Post a Comment