Photo: Winemaker Dwight Sick
If the British Columbia wine industry handed out packaging
awards, a sure winner would be Amulet Wines, a new label just released by
winemaker Dwight Sick through Roche Wines of Penticton.
Each bottle is emblazoned with a simulated gold medallion surrounded
by a crown of thorns and perched on the word, Amulet, in red. Since the glass
is dark, both the medallion and the name of the brand stand out dramatically.
This is a bottle that dominates the table.
The wines – a red and a white – are every bit as impactful as the package. These also are limited production wines made at the Roche winery and are being sold through the Roche website.
Dwight Sick, now the winemaker at Moraine Vineyards, began collaborating
with Dylan and Pénélope Roche several years ago when Dwight still was the
winemaker for Stag’s Hollow Winery.
“I am very excited about the release of Amulet as I have been
visualizing and conceptualizing these wines for the past 15 years,” Dwight
wrote in a covering letter with the samples.
Both wines are made with Rhone varieties – varieties comparatively
rare in the Okanagan. This sets the wines apart from the mainstream, but in a
positive way. These are not weird natural wines but wines with solid palate
appeal that anyone would welcome to the table.
The weird bit comes, perhaps, in how the arresting label
design is explained.
“The medallion on our Amulet bottles is a replica recast of
the original hand-struck Gold Angel coin from the Elizabethan era,” the winery
writes. “First appearing in 1470, the coin depicts St. Michael slaying an evil
dragon. Rumoured to be Shakespeare’s preferred method of payment for his
services, the gold coin was also frequently worn as an Amulet to ward off evil
and bring good luck to those in its possession.”
Dwight continues: “This concept of good vs evil plays well
with the style of our Rhone-inspired wines as, we believe, in order to be good,
we sometimes must be a little bit evil.”
That should start a good theological debate over a glass or
two of these wines. Here are notes on the wines.
Amulet White 2018 ($26.79
for 163 cases). This is a blend of 90% Viognier and 10% Marsanne. The grapes
were whole clustered pressed. The juice underwent a long, cool ferment in
French oak (14% new, 28% second fill and 58% neutral) and was then aged six
months before being bottled unfined and unfiltered. The wine begins with aromas
of stone fruit, honey and spice, leading to flavours of nectarine and apricot
mingled with hints of oak. The texture is rich and the finish is dry. I would
recommend decanting this wine to let it open fully in the glass. 91.
Amulet Red 2018 ($35.71 for 123 cases). This
is 46% Grenache (from a Penticton vineyard), 28% Syrah and 26% Mourvedre (from
vineyards on West Bench Osoyoos). Whole berries were left to cold-soak for five
days. Then half of the most lignified Grenache stems were added and fermentation
began with indigenous yeast. After 20 days, the wine went into French oak
barrels (20% new, 80% neutral) and left there for seven months. The wine was
also bottled unfined and unfiltered. The wine begins with appealing aromas of
black cherry, fig and spice. On the palate, there are robust flavours of black
cherry, plum, black licorice, pepper and sage. The finish lingers. This wine
also benefits with decanting. 93.
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