Followers of this blog will know that I admire all the wines
now being made at Hester Creek Estate Winery by Robert Summers and Mark Hopley.
Among the whites, I have had a preference for the Trebbiano.
However, the Terra Unica Sémillon makes a fair bid at taking over the top spot.
It is, alas, a wine club only wine with just 167 cases produced. There are
2,000 cases of Trebbiano and it is more widely available.
You may also recall my story about trying to convince a
winemaker from Tuscany, where lots of Trebbiano grows, that an excellent one is
produced in the Okanagan. He just scoffed that it rained too much and the soil
was not right. When I countered those arguments, he snapped that “You don’t
have the culture.” I gave up trying to open a closed mind.
In fact, it was an Italian immigrant who planted the vines at
what is now Hester Creek. Joe Busnardo, the original owner of the winery – it
was then called Divino – is believed to have planted the Italian variety in
1968. He sold the vineyard in 1996 to relocate Divino to the Cowichan Valley.
He took vine cuttings, including Trebbiano, with him for the Vancouver Island
vineyard. If he produced that wine there, it likely disappeared into a blend.
It is not known whether anyone ever asked Joe where he sourced
Trebbiano in Italy. There are at least six varieties of Trebbiano listed in Wine Grapes by Jancis Robinson et al.
The varietals are not even always related to each other.
The odds are that Hester Creek has Trebbiano Toscano. “It is
by far the most widespread of the heterogeneous group of varieties with
Trebbiano in their name and the second most widely planted in Italy,” Robinson
writes. “It generally disappears into blends or in some countries into a still.
Its neutral nature and high acidity make it an ideal candidate for
distillation.” It is in fact the same variety as Ugni Blanc, much favoured by
French distillers.
Hester Creek’s vines might also be Trebbiano Spoletino, a much
less well known Umbrian variety. Joe Busnardo came from Treviso, north of
Venice, which is closer to Umbria than to Tuscany.
It would take extensive DNA work to establish which Trebbiano
this is. In fact, the Hester Creek vineyard still has a few other old Italian
varieties, including one just called Italian Merlot, that need more research.
Joe was blazing trail when he started planting the vineyard in 1968 with vines
both from Italy and California. He planted as many as 136 varieties,
experimenting more than a decade before the Becker project. Pinot Blanc, the
most successful varietal in the Becker project, was already thriving at Joe’s
vineyard.
Joe and succeeding owners have been winnowing the varietal mix
down to what succeeds best here (and with consumers).
Hester Creek has propagated enough Trebbiano from its original
block to support an annual production that has now grown to 2,000 cases.
The Sémillon vines were planted in 1997 and 1998, after Joe
had sold the winery. Credit for choosing that varietal likely belongs to Frank
Supernak, the legendary winemaker who managed Hester Creek from 1996 until his accidental
death in 2002. If you belong to the Hester Creek wine club, drink a toast to
Frank with this sensational white.
Here are notes on the current releases.
Hester
Creek Character White 2018 ($15.99 for 3,500 cases). This is a blend of
two-thirds Pinot Gris, one-third Gewürztraminer. The wine begins with aromas of tropical fruits
mingled with pears. On the palate, there are flavours of apple and pear. The
finish is crisp and refreshing. 90.
Hester
Creek Pinot Gris 2018 ($16.99 for 7,000 cases). Crisply dry, the wine
has aromas and flavours of citrus, pear and apple, with a spine of minerality.
90.
Hester
Creek Old Vines Trebbiano Block 16 2018 ($20.99 for 2,000 cases). This
wine begins with aromas of papaya and grapefruit. On the palate, there is an
intense and rich medley for fruits, including papaya, mango and apple. The
finish is dry and lingering. 93.
Hester
Creek Terra Unica Sémillon 2018 ($19.99 for 167 cases). Utterly
delicious just about covers it, the result of a long cool fermentation in
stainless steel (11% was also fermented in French oak). It begins with aromas
of honeydew melon, citrus and apricot. Those aromas are echoed on the palate,
alone with notes of tangerine and lemon. The finish is crisply dry and very
long. 93.
Hester
Creek Cabernet Franc Rosé 2018 ($17.99). The wine presents
attractively in the glass with a bright ruby hue. It begins with aromas of strawberry
and rhubarb that are echoed on the palate. The finish is crisp and dry. 90.
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