| |


A tour through Idaho’s Snake River Valley wine country
sounds like a fine Sunday afternoon drive, until you take a
look at the map. Designated as an official American Viticulture
Area (AVA) in 2007, the Snake River Valley is vast — some
8,263 square miles stretching nearly the entire southern girth
of the state and technically sliding into Eastern Oregon.
Sixteen of the state’s 23 wineries have taken root in the AVA
and wine growers are making a convincing case that Idaho
should be revered for more than just its famous potatoes.
The plan was to start east and head west (could thousands
of Oregon Trail pioneers be wrong?), sampling any wine that
got in the way. Launching from the small southeastern town
of Twin Falls, I meandered through the steep Snake River
canyon and into the agrarian landscape, toward the hamlets
of Buhl and Hagerman, to Holesinskey Vineyards.
Vintner James Holesinskey is 29 and grew up in the
dairy business, one of the major economic drivers in this
rural area. In fact, Holesinskey’s primary occupation is
still creating chemical processes that help dairymen neutralize
massive amounts of cow manure. Paradoxically,
Holesinskey has painstakingly established Idaho’s only
certified organic vineyard.

His vineyards, rapidly growing from hobby to business,
are surrounded by the light sage color of the Russian olive
trees with a backdrop of the dark chocolate-brown basalt cliffs
that brand the valley’s landscape. Holesinskey’s makeshift
tasting room is less picturesque: a rough cinder block shed,
converted from dairy-use, with a huge Coors sign he acquired
from a local barley grower propped up against the building.
Regardless of architectural aesthetics, Holesinskey’s Riesling
has won the Idaho Wine Festival’s People’s Choice Award two
years running. Small batches and limited distribution have
me groveling for a taste. He scares up a glass and siphons
the straw-colored liquid from a barrel. The People are on to
something, I admit, as the unfiltered notes of apricot play off
an acidity that seems as lively as its kinetic maker.
Considered to be part of the new frontier of wine country,
Idaho actually has a long history of winemaking. According
to the industry website, www.idahowine.org, the first wineries
in the Pacific Northwest were located in Idaho. Grapes
were also introduced into the Clearwater Valley by 1872 and
thanks to the pioneering efforts of two Frenchmen, Louis
Desol and Robert Schleicher, and one German immigrant,
Jacob Schaefer, the state rapidly became known for its wines.
Up until Prohibition, Idaho had a nationally renowned wine
industry; growers hope the AVA designation will help them
compete in the same league as Washington and Oregon.
Two other wineries in the area — Blue Rock and Thousand
Springs — are contributing to rebuilding the culture of wine
in this region. From tasting rooms of a more traditional
variety, pourers at Blue Rock direct travelers to the nearby
lavender farm and Thousand Springs owner Paul Monahan
can point out the still-visible Oregon Trail ruts on the banks
of the Snake.
Later my traveling companions and I ramble on to Kirt
Martin’s Snake River Grill in Hagerman. Martin is the town’s
gifted and semi-celebrity chef. Cooking on the Wild Side, his
MyOutdoorTV.com show, started out as an Idaho public
television program; he’s been credited with showing Idaho
hunters how to turn their hobby into something entirely
edible. Just as the Snake River soils are ideal for vineyards,
the cattail colonies in this valley create a waterfowl haven.
Another staple in the Hagerman valley is rainbow trout. Not
only do anglers revere the clear streams, but roughly threequarters
of the nation’s commercially-grown trout are raised
right here.

“We are sitting here in the Garden of Eden,” Martin comments
as he slips a gorgeous pink fillet in front of me with
a glass of Monahan’s Thousand Springs Chardonnay. “Here
I have the freshest ingredients and I prepare them simply.
When you do that, you create a moment in time when the
food is ready right now,” he tells me.
He notes that the strawberries blended into the cheesecake
were picked earlier in the morning. Martin is enthused
about the Snake River Valley’s AVA designation. “These little
wineries are coming on strong and producing incredible quality.
They are not just good, but unique,” he adds, noting that
visitors love finding wines they won’t find elsewhere.
After a soak and massage at Miracle Hot Springs and a
dreamy night’s stay at Jane and Jake Rice’s Ein Tisch Inn, I
realize I have only explored about 15 miles worth of Snake
River Valley and visited three wineries. The pioneers made
better time than this! It’s time to keep moving west.
Just 30 miles downriver is the old railroad town of Glenns
Ferry, where Carmela Vineyards are located. The winery overlooks
the Snake and is adjacent to Three Island Crossing State
Park with its small, but impressive, Oregon Trail interpretive
center. Carmela has me excited for two reasons. First, I’m
interested to see what charming winemaker Neil Glancey has
bottled recently. And second, Carmela has a 9-hole golf course
that is out of the way enough to afford an enthusiastic but
horrible golfer like myself a chance to hit a few balls without
attracting too much unwanted attention. As it turns out, Neil
lets me sample some of his new releases from the golf cart, a
pleasantry that makes the detour to Glenns Ferry more than
worthwhile.
Carmela’s frontline wines are unabashedly sweet,
appealing to the statistically large crowd of White Zinfandel
lovers. But if sweet’s not your style, ask Neil to pour his
reserve Chardonnay or red blends for a bit more character. Better yet, ask him if he’ll do so
from your golf cart.
In just over an Interstate 84
hour, we’re in downtown Boise, or
as people more hip than I refer to
it — BoDo. Boise is minutes from Snake River Valley wineries
near Kuna and the Sunnyslope area and has the added
advantage of being the West’s IT city and a new proving
ground for hoteliers and restaurateurs. The transition from the
southwestern Snake River ag land to the city feels like we’ve
crossed time zones and may need to produce a passport. We
base out of what was formerly the dowdy Statehouse Inn that
has become the black-red sleek Hotel 43. My friends and I
walk the few blocks to dinner and pass shops that would have
one believe that cowboy boots, hats, and belt buckles are the stuff of costumes rather than work.
At the 8th Street Wine Company
and Café I seek owner Erik
McLaughlin’s opinion of Idaho’s
new AVA designation. McLaughlin
has the structure and intensity of an
age-worthy cabernet. In his mid-30s,
he owns two of the best entries in
Boise’s highly competitive restaurant
scene: 8th Street and The Bungalow
in the North End Hyde Park neighborhood.
The former corporate wine
buyer for Cost Plus World Markets,
McLaughlin’s wine knowledge is
even more encyclopedic than his
establishments’ ample wine lists. He
is unapologetic about the slim Idaho
wine pickings on those lists.
“I don’t grade on the curve,” he
says with a frankness that quickly
reveals itself to be characteristic. “I
have high expectations and I won’t
put an Idaho wine on my list because it is good ‘for Idaho.’ It
has to stand on its own against wines from around the world
at a similar price.”
The Snake River AVA will come into its own if the bar is
set high, McLaughlin predicts. “I think the Snake River Valley
will be producing world-class wines someday,” he asserts in
what seems an uncharacteristic bout of enthusiasm.
The 8th Street Café mirrors the BoDo culture — stylishly
warm but modern, with a palpable hankering for a West that
is becoming less reality and more legend. Chef Josh Young’s elk chop special is a sensory example of that dynamic. Young
is a burly 25-year-old who causes me to question whether the
elk was actually farmed at the nearby Black Canyon Ranch
like he purports or if the chef just returned from the nearby
Boise National Forest with his kill. His black chef’s coat is
impeccably pressed, his uniform rounded out with Levi’s and
hunting boots.
Broad shouldered and stout-necked, one waits for Young
to chat about rugby, Greco-Roman wrestling, or the Marines.
Instead, he soft-spokenly describes the gastrique — the magical
marionberry sweet and sour sauce that graces the elk. He
nods approvingly at my wine selection, the Hells Canyon ‘04
Cabernet.
“You can pair Idaho elk with French wine, but the flavors
are different when you pair it with an Idaho wine. The terroir,
the taste of the place, matters,” Young says.
The truth is, the invocation of the Frenchy word terroir
coupled with the too-cool BoDo has me wondering if I’m still
in Idaho, but the taste of the place at the Saturday morning
farmers market grounds me with its earthiness. The lively
market that persists from spring through fall is an event in its
own right, but also a great venue to assemble picnic basket
goods for a tour of the western Snake River Valley wineries.
Artisan breads, local sausages and cheeses, and produce
abound. Dozens of vendors displaying artwork, jewelry, and
tapestries threaten to derail an early start to the Sunnyslope
wine region, but my anxieties are soothed when I see that
several wineries occupy booths at the market.

Aside from the crowds and the paper Dixie cups, the
farmers market is a top-notch place to start the day’s wine
tasting. Snake River Winery, located in the far western part
of Idaho’s AVA, uses the market as its primary tasting room.
“We’re pretty far out there,” says the winery’s co-owner Susan
DeSeelhorst, “So it makes sense for us to come to where the
people are.” Another thing that makes sense is to try Snake
River Winery’s Chardonnay with the kettle corn; its aroma
pervades the brisk morning air.
Weeks of sitting side-by-side at the market have inspired
more than one creative blend. Kristen Koenig serves a sample
of the Koenig brothers’ ice wine and sends me to her left to the
Ballard family’s organic white cheddar. Inspired and properly
fueled for farm country, I make a beeline from Boise to the
neighboring Nampa (not Napa) area.
The Sunnyslope region used to come alive in late summer
when the peaches were on and in the fall when cider was pressed. Brad Pintler’s family farmed row crops (like beans
and sugar beets) on their farm just south of Lake Lowell.
Neither the beans nor the sugar beets excited the masses quite
like the Pintlers’ grape crop. Hundreds of people arrive at the
Sawtooth Winery’s Mother’s Day wine tasting event, now in
its 19th year. The grounds surrounding the winery are covered
with a patchwork of picnic blankets and children huddle close
to a local band doing a sound check.
The event seems as much an Idaho winemakers’ celebration
of spring as a Mother’s Day tradition. Idaho winters
threaten grape growers every year. Sometimes the threat is
without substance; other years arctic weather brutalizes even
the most cold-hearty vines. Each bottle seems a miracle, the
royal purple in my glass a defiance of the odds. It’s Sawtooth’s
2003 Cabernet Sauvignon, a varietal sometimes associated
with less northerly climates, that stands out. “Remember
how hot and dry 2003 was? The fruit really developed and
ripened,” Pintler tastes with me, his friendly smile acknowledging
the absurdity of a farmer rolling the taste of drought
around in his mouth like a lollipop.
We’re interrupted by my friend Kristin Troy, who is
thrusting a glass of Hells Canyon Deer Slayer Syrah toward
my nose. “Try this,” she insists, “I just bought all they had.
We’re going to need to move the bikes,” she says, referring
to the recreation gear stashed in the back of my Honda Pilot.
Kristin is a skeptic in the style of Erik McLaughlin. She and her
husband own a Main Salmon river rafting business in Central
Idaho and as a commercial wine buyer had never before been
dazzled by an Idaho’s wine quality-to-value ratio.
Pintler fills Kristin’s glass with the cabernet and they
rapidly move into negotiations. They wheel a handcart and
head toward Sawtooth’s warehouse. “We’ll leave the bikes
— they’re old anyhow. I’m going all-Idaho this year — the
guests will love it!” she shouts at me over her shoulder.
As Kristin exuberantly paired Idaho reds with her Idaho
whitewater, I witness others making similar if slightly more
demure discoveries. With 11 Snake River Valley wineries
assembled on Brad Pintler’s spring green lawn, each with several wines from which to choose, only one or maybe two
disappointed my palette. The quality of almost all of the wine
was good — swirling, sniffing and slurping with the winemakers
themselves, even better.
After being impressed by Greg Koenig’s Viognier and
Riesling, I visit his winery and distillery along the Snake.
Greg and his brother, Andrew, were born to be Snake River
Valley vintners. Their father is from Austrian winemaking
stock; their mother from a family who homesteaded in this
Sunnyslope area. The vineyards on their property contribute
to their wines, the orchards yield bounty for their fruit brandies,
and their internationally ranked vodka comes from the
ubiquitous Idaho potato.
Mixing wine tasting with her other Idaho travel plans
suits Kathleen Quirk, a visitor from New York. The young
education policy specialist has toured Napa and Sonoma, but
confesses she prefers Idaho’s wine touring experience. “These
are small towns and I feel a lot more comfortable asking questions
about wine here,” she says.
I’ve got a few questions of my own for Ron Bitner, one of
the Koenig’s neighbors and a driving force behind the tedious
homework required for AVA designation. Ron has one of the
oldest vineyards in the AVA with plantings that date back
almost 30 years. He recently started marketing wine under his
own label, and he and his wife Mary have opened a tasting
room next to their home surrounded by 65 acres of grapes.
There’s no better place to watch the sunset than the tasting
room’s flagstone patio. Ron surveys the scene like he’s
never seen such loveliness before. I drink his Cab-Shiraz blend
like it’s my first sip of the day.
Facing west, as the sun slips behind clouds in a game of
hide and seek, we agree that Idaho’s wine industry is as limitless
as the view.
I forgive 8th Street’s Josh Young for resorting to the word
terroir. Because the terroir, or taste of this Snake River Valley
place and time, is part Cabernet, part Shiraz, part amber sunset,
and part humble philosopher-farmer. If there’s a better
word, I’ve yet to find it.BSJ
|
|
|
|
|
Copyright © 2007 Big Sky Journal. All rights reserved.
Powered by Wagner Interactive
|
|
|
|