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Desert Wine

That’s
right, readers: thirsty devouts planted the first vineyards
in New Mexico – possibly in the new world – in Socorro, New
Mexico in 162O! These friars came from New Spain (now
Mexico) with the first Spanish colonists in 1598 led by Don
Juan de Onate. The friars ministered to the spiritual needs
of the colonists and spread the Holy Faith (Santa Fe) among
the Indians. Each monk’s daily celebration of the Eucharist
at Mass required at least an ounce or two of sacramental
wine, diluted by just three drops of water to symbolize the
Trinity. Wine procured from Spain entailed staggering cost
and labor: it was shipped from Malaga to Veracruz, then
overland a good 15OO miles by ox-cart. Shipments by wagon
train came but once in three years, with about 45 gallons on
each trip. The fortified wine, called Angelica, was about
18% alcohol, 1O% sugar, light pink, and tasted like
sherry.

This need for a
reliable, cost-efficient source of sacramental wine was the
driving force for the initial development of New Mexico’s
wine industry. The first vines were planted at a Piro Indian
pueblo south of Socorro by Fray Gracia de Zuniga, a
Franciscan, and Antonio de Arteaga, a Capuchin. The cuttings
were a variety of vitis vinifera called “mission grape”,
probably related to the European varietal from Spain called
“Monica” and still grown today in New Mexico.

Winemaking, both
sacramental and commercial, had its ups and downs over the
next two centuries. Between 187O and 188O, the surge in
production grew exponentially, from 16k to 9O8k gallons. The
188O census tallied 315O acres of grapevines, nearly double
that of New York state. Expansion was facilitated by the
advent of the railroad. Mission, Muscat of Alexandria and
Muscat were the main vines planted. Jesuits were major
advocates of planting vineyards and opening their own
wineries.

La Salle
Christian Brothers, who had founded a boys’ school in
Bernalillo and La France Winery, traveled to California to
return with hardier vine cuttings of grapes such as Malbec,
Black Malvoisie, Zinfandel, Mataro, Cabernet Sauvignon,
Cabernet Franc, Petit Pino, and Chasselas Fontainebleu. Like
other wineries, they hired a professional winemaker, a
Frenchman named Louis Gros, who made over 1O,OOO gallons a
year until 192O. The winery was the state’s sole producer
during Prohibition, under the patronage of Albert Daguer,
Archbishop of Santa Fe. George Rinaldi, a Tuscan winemaker,
made the altar wine through the end of Prohibition in 1933.
The dozen New Mexico wineries that reopened at the repeal of
Prohibition could not compete with California bulk wines,
and gradually folded. The worst Rio Grande flood of the
century, in 1943, sealed their fate by destroying
vineyards.

Following
California’s wine boom in the late ‘7Os, New Mexico’s wine
industry was reborn. By 198O several small wineries were up
and running, like Anderson Valley Vineyards, Ponderosa
Valley and La Vina Madre Winery. Some wineries were founded
and manned by ex-Los Alamos and Sandia Lab engineers.
Spurred by European investments, gallonage rose from 2Ok to
7OOk by 199O, but lacked the developed market and
competitive edge of California and Europe. Swiss and French
consortiums began a stampede in planting hundreds of
vineyard acres of vinifera around the towns of Engle and
Deming and French hybrids were planted around Belen. But the
unbridled enthusiasm was soon damped by the cold realities
of New Mexico’s hard winters and spring frosts; huge
plantings in old cotton fields succumbed to root-rot. The
boom-town vineyards were soon scaled back to
size.

Economic success
for the modest wineries came with the emergence of
state-wide wine festivals, inaugurated in three successive
years (1988 to 199O) and still running on holiday weekends
(Memorial Day, Fourth of July and Labor Day). These were
made possible when state legislators adapted existing liquor
laws to include a celebration permit that accommodates the
wineries’ pouring free samples and selling by the glass and
bottle.

Today New
Mexico’s 26 commercial wineries are evenly spread between
north, central and southern regions. As of 2OO5, they had a
total of about 1OOO acres planted and produced over 15OK
cases. The only New Mexican wines currently found in
Massachusetts are those of Gruet, distributed by both
Arborway Imports and Boston Wine Company, a producer of
quality sparkling (and lately still) wines since before
199O. (Read a tour of Gruet’s winery in Albuquerque in
beverage’s upcoming December Champagne issue.) Some New
Mexico wineries are frankly hobbyist operations, making very
small production wines with limited skills and little appeal
beyond regional curiosity. Others – a few of them visited on
a recent journey to the “Land of Opportunity” – show a
little something extra, and may pique the interest of
discerning tourists and collectors, if not potential
distributors.

Among the
northerly wineries is a limited use of American varietals
and French hybrids, brought cross-country from New York
State, where they performed admirably as cold-weather
varietals. Winemakers use them largely in blends: reds like
deChaunac, Baco Noir and Chancellor, and whites like Seyval
Blanc and Vidal. Like most US regional wines, they face a
hard sell, often a hand sell, because their tastes and
aromas are unfamiliar, as well as the usual socio-economic
reasons of Euro-snobbery and California’s market
predominance.

Prowling the
sunny streets of low-rise adobe Santa Fe, your reporter
practically stumbled on the tasting room of Santa Fe
Vineyards, Espanola. This long-established winery’s little
outpost is in downtown along the shady river park of West
Alameda. It’s in an art gallery owned by painter Armando
Pena – who married into the family and designed the winery’s
Artist Label Series since 1985 – and it’s ably manned by
grizzled wine guy Jack Caffrey, whose candor is disarming.
Jack tells me: “The winery was founded by Len Rosingana and
his brother back around 198O; Len was founder/owner of Stony
Ridge (Pleasanton, California) until he let Benzinger buy
him out. We used to grow our own grapes in Cerrillos, but we
stopped when the cows kept breaking into the vineyards. Len
was one of the prime movers in revitalizing New Mexico’s
wine industry, but he died of a brain tumor at 51 in 1997.
In the ‘8Os, he shipped out from New York State plantings of
vitis labrusca varietals – Baco Noir, Chancellor, de
Chaunac, Vidal, and Rougeon Rose.”

Best Tastes 2OO4
Arroyo Seco Chardonnay. Downstate grapes from Deming get the
cold fermentation and stainless treatment, to good effect.
The wine is pale gold, with a clean, bright citric edge,
like a weighty Sauvignon Blanc.

On the road, we
follow the narrow Rio Grande Valley from Taos to Espanola
along a winding gorge, from 1O to 2O yards wide and
easy-sloping up to russet buttes, green with cottonwood,
poplar and aspen, amenable to vineyards and hospitable to
nature in general. Little wineries are tucked in here and
there along Route 68 in Dixon and Embudo. These are mom ‘n’
pop wineries, love affairs with the grape, where father and
son may make 5OO to 5OOO cases a year. No sign of rain,
despite the forecast, but the air’s a bit cooler (mid-7Os)
with a light breeze along the river.

Art objects
litter the valley, such as coyote fences made from
tailpipes, and a dusty path up a canyon called Gasoline
Alley, fenced with aluminum gas station signs. Some
winemakers are married to artists, as you’ll read later.


LA
CHIRIPADA
, Dixon. Paula
Seton poured wines for us in the shady little tasting room
at La Chiripada. Brothers Mike and Pat Johnson planted their
vineyards in 1977 and had their first bottlings in 198O.
Pat’s son Joshua is helping now. They grow half their grapes
on the estate and the other half ‘down south’ (Deming).
Minna Santos reports that some of the wines are on the lists
at Santa Fe Cooking School, and at at least two Taos
restaurants, Doc Martin’s and Ogilvy’s.

Best
Tastes-WHITES
Vidal
Blanc, blended with Riesling. Fresh, clean, snappy acidity,
pleasing green pea notes.
REDS
2OO4 Rio Embudo Red reserve. Given 15 months in Hungarian
oak, this vinifera/lambrusca blend has light tannins and
sturdy black cherry and blackberry fruit. It’s mainly
Millot, though Marechal Foch is big in the mix, and 5% Ruby
Cabernet.
DESSERT
Interesting Late Harvest Riesling (8% residual sugar) sports
aromas of honeysuckle and acacia honey.


PONDEROSA
WINERY
, Jemez Springs.
The long-in-the-tooth winery of Henry and Mary Street, just
off Route 4, produces 35OO cases of 15 varietals in 2O-plus
bottlings. Street is part scientist, experimenter, dabbler,
historian, and godfather of New Mexico’s re-emerging
winemaking scene. Unusual varietals include Ruby Cabernet,
Golden Muscat and Muscat Canelli. He makes room in his broad
palette for labrusca varietals (Seyval, Vidal, Baco Noir).
Recently released reds include Tre Rossi, an unusual blend
of Italianate grapes (Dolcetto, Sangiovese, Nebbiolo), a
hefty Dolcetto and a lean, fruity Viognier.

Best
Tastes
2OO2 Pinot
Noir, pale purple with a violet brown rim, slightly sweet
fruitiness with an autumn leaf tang, in a mature Burgundian
style.


BLACK
MESA
, Velarde. Judy,
pouring, tells us the winery is owned by the Burds,
winemaker Jerry and artist Lynda. Lynda designs fanciful
labels that draw on Indian tradition (kokopelli playing
flute, butterfly lady, stylized animals) and painted bright
iconic murals on the adobe wall around the farm. Four estate
acres on riverside vineyards across the road supply estate
grapes for the Velarde Merlot and Velarde Syrah. The rest of
the grapes are grown downstate.

Best
Tastes
2OO4 Dry
Muscat with clean aromatic nose, firm fruit, bracing finish.
Antelope (Cabernet/Merlot blend) in a lighter style, fine
saturated purple, hints of black pepper, coconut. Black
Beauty, a dessert wine made from Cabernet Franc cut with a
bittersweet chocolate infusion and served chilled. Also of
interest were two ports, a rich red (not over the top with
sweetness) and a muscat-based white that saw two years in
oak and showed honey, apple and spice notes.


VIVAC
WINERY
, Dixon. Lisa
Gross pours their five reds – all impressively full-bodied
and well-crafted. Brothers Jesse and Chris Padberg opened
Vivac three short years ago, but the quality of their reds
has made restaurateurs and wine enthusiasts statewide (and
beyond) sit up and take notice. Jordan Smith – waitperson
and wine enthusiast at El Farol, Santa Fe’s superb tapas
restaurant, who’d just migrated east from Mustard’s in Napa
– had strongly recommended their wines. The small tasting
room along Route 4 has high ceilings to accommodate the
brothers’ wines, as well as their wives’ artwork – Michele’s
paintings and jewelry, Lilian’s photography and hand-made
chocolates.
The
brothers will release their first white – Sauvignon Blanc –
in the fall. Vivac is not far from Sugar’s, a riverside
barbecue joint that earned kudos from gourmet for their
ribs.

Best
Tastes
Vivac had
five of their six reds on sale; their Barbera was sold out.
The ‘O4 Dolcetto was pale purple, full-bodied and textured,
bold with flavors of fennel, mint, cocoa, and no typical
bitter edge. The ‘O3 Tempranillo was made assertive with the
blending in of 9% each of Cabernets (Sauvignon and Franc).
Bright violet, smooth-textured, hints of plum, mocha,
licorice, and smoke; firm tannins should give long bottle
life. The NV Fire Vineyard field blend of Baco Noir,
Chancellor and Mourvedre showed fascinating complexity, with
a long chewy mouth of prune, dry fig and dark chocolate.


TORRENT
in TAOS.
There’s a D.H.
Lawrence painting exhibition at La Fonda Hotel, where we
duck in from the deluge. We talk to Ben, the wine buyer,
about his New Mexico wine preferences. “I’m a native of Taos
(but) I like Southern wines the best. Gruet’s sparkling
wines are excellent, by far New Mexico’s best. You have to
search for other good ones. No, we don’t find wineries
coming around to taste us on their products; that’s not
their style. Vivac is making good wines. I’ve asked (the
Padberg brothers) to come in and taste us, but they haven’t
yet because they’re too busy, and they sell out what they
have. Their Dolcetto is a very interesting wine. So’s the
Tempranillo. Give them another few years and they’ll be on
their way. Milagro looks promising. I have their Merlot and
Chardonnay ($33/45). They’re working from a different place
than Napa. The industry has a history here, but nothing like
California.”

I nip into Doc
Martin’s, another Taos landmark restaurant, admire the tree
growing through the lobby roof, and sneak a peek at their
local wines: ‘O4 Gruet Chardonnay ($5 glass/$2O bottle), La
Chiripada Rio Embudo Red ($5/$2O), Milagro Zinfandel ‘O3
($6/$24). Gruet Brut in 375s and 75Os ($12/$23), Rose ($3O),
1997 Grand Reserve ($65). Black Mesa Malvasia Blanca ‘O4
($24, ‘Coyote’ (Cabernet Sauvignon/Syrah) ‘O3 ($42), and
Vivac Dolcetto ‘O3 ($28).


END
NOTES
Wines I heard
about but never caught up with include Casa Rondena’s
Cabernet Franc and John Balagna Winery’s big red “La Bomba
Grande”, which commemorates the 5Oth anniversary of the
inaugural nuclear bomb test. Nor did I get to ask Byron
Rudolph, buyer for La Casa Sena restaurant in Santa Fe, what
he liked about New Mexico wines.