Tag Archive for: Texas Wines

Cabernet Sauvignon Harvest–August 22

is that YOU in the big hat, picking grapes?

is that YOU in the big hat, picking grapes?

Saturday, August 22nd at 7:00 am, this is the last bunch for the 2015 season, and we welcome you to join us! The vineyard is at 21724 Hill Road, Salado, TX, 76571.

Wear sunscreen, bug spray and a big hat. If you have a favorite pair of pruners then bring them, but we’ll have plenty for you. Dress for heat, but be prepared for anything. I recommend shoes and socks because sometimes there is pigweed that stings or a hidden ant mound and I prefer a little protection for my toesies, but you can wear sandals if you like. Sometimes folks like to wear light cotton gloves, that might help prevent wasp stings, but there are no thorns, so gloves not required.

Families are welcome, the work isn’t hard, just the heat can be a bit discouraging. We will pick until all grapes are harvested, usually around 11 or 12 noon.

If you’re coming, text your RSVP to 254.466.5813, and I will let you know if the plan changes. Otherwise, see you there!

Then join us in the afternoon at the winery to witness the last crush of the season.  The cab sauv grapes will be destemmed, crushed and then I’ll add some yeast and let them start the fermentation.  The air conditioning is set to “cold” and this is the best time of the year to come check it all out.

Salado Swirl – July 11th

Salado Swirl 2015

Buy your tickets now for the 2015 Salado Swirl! This is an 11-stop wine trail throughout Salado with wine and snacks at each stop. Shops will be open late for this fun evening also!

Only 250 tickets are available, so purchase yours while you here:
http://saladoswirl.eventbrite.com/?aff=Facebook

 

Participating Texas wineries and Salado shops include:
Salado Creek Winery will be hosted at Salado Glassworks
Salado Wine Seller will be hosted at their location;
Fairhaven Vineyards will be hosted by 21main
Messina Hof Grapevine Winery will be hosted by Prellop Fine Art Gallery
The Vineyard at Florence will be hosted by Magnolias of Salado
Flat Creek Estate Winery and Vineyard will be hosted by Thomas Kincade Gallery;
Nolan Creek Winery will be hosted by The Howling Wolff
Grape Creek Vineyards will be hosted by Classics On Main
Texas Legato will be hosted by OoLaLa – Unique Gifts & Treasures
Periossos Vineyard will be hosted by Angelic Herbs
We will soon announce the winery hosted by Salado Mercantile with more to come!

21 and up only and we will ID at the door.

Chocolate & Wine Weekend 2015

Picture by Aimee of the desserts during Evening of Chocolate and Wine 2015

Picture by Aimee of the desserts during Evening of Chocolate and Wine 2015

Save the date!  The 2015 Weekend of Chocolate & Wine will be September 18, 19, & 20.  Details will be posted soon.

Salado Winery Company will be hosting an Evening of Chocolate and Wine on Friday, September 18th to kick off Salado’s Annual Chocolate and Wine Weekend. From 7:00 – 9:00 pm that evening, guests will enjoy a guided wine pairing with decadent chocolate desserts matched perfectly with each sip of locally produced wine. This is a perfect evening for a date night or a fun girls night out. This relaxing and fun event includes a winery tour and a chance to taste some of our brand new 2015 wines straight from the barrel!

Reservations must be made in advance, as this event typically sells out. Seating is limited to 50 people. Purchase tickets for $44.95 each online at www.saladochocolatefestival.com.

June Ritterbusch
Salado Wine Seller & Salado Winery Company
(254) 947-8011
www.saladowine.com

The United Estates of Texas Wine Festival

UEoT8x10CWineriesWhere can you taste the beauty of Texas?  The United Estates of Texas Wine Festival at The Vineyard at Florence, featuring wineries from all over our great state!  For only $15, receive a souvenir wine glass, tote and 10 pours of your choice from world-class producing Texas wineries.  Call The Vineyard at Florence for your tickets, 254-793-3363, or visit their website at thevineyardatflorence.com.

We’ll be hanging out at The Vineyard at Florence from 12pm – 3pm on Saturday, October 18th pouring our favorite wines, so come join us!

 

 

Central Texas Wineries Offer Hill Country Alternative

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KCEN, the local NBC station just did 2 stories on wine in Central Texas!  Click on the link below and the first video features wineries near Waco, while the 2nd video mentions the Texas Wine & Rogue Art Fest along with a quote from yours truly!

Central Texas Wineries Offer Hill Country Alternative.

kcentv.com – KCEN HD – Waco, Temple, and Killeen

(KCEN) – Forget Hill Country; central Texas has plenty to offer to wine drinkers. 

“It’s been an education,” said Cathy Endres of Harker Heights. We talked to her at the sixth annual Texas Wine and Rogue Art Festival in Salado in March.

“I didn’t even know we had central Texas vineyards,” she said. “It’s not really the place you’d think we have them.”

That’s one of the biggest difficulties for wineries here — just getting the word out. 

“A lot of people don’t expect Salado and this area to have wineries that can compare to Fredericksburg,” said Stephen Clifton with Dancing Bee Winery.

Dancing Bee, outside of Rogers, makes mead — honey wine. 

“It’s for that sweet wine drinker,” Clifton said. “The moscato drinkers tend to really like our wines.”

And we’re just getting started. 

Gary McKibben owns Red Caboose, with wineries in both Clifton and Meridian. They make what they call “old world wines”: no pesticides on their vineyards, no filtering, and none of that fancy electricity. 

“Electricity’s only been around for 120-something years, and wine’s been around for 6,000 years,” McKibben said.

You’ve also got Lily Lake Vineyards in Lorena, Salado Creek and Rising Star Wineries in Salado, The Vineyard at Florence and Inwood Estates in Florence, Texas Legato in Lampasas, Nolan Creek Winery in Belton — the list goes on and on. 

(CLICK HERE for an interactive map of wineries and vineyards in central Texas, including links to their Websites.)

But there’s an issue for these up-and-comers: getting their wine in stores like Spec’s that buy through big distributors. 

Among the rows of wine from California’s Napa Valley, you can find the occasional local bottles. Right now they are few and far between, but the demand for that local flavor is definitely growing.

“Every day and every week, I am getting more and more product in, listening to what the customers want, what they need, what I think would be interesting,” said Meredith Meyer, the wine consultant for Spec’s in Waco.

But that’s also where independent sellers come in. June Ritterbusch owns Salado Winery and Salado Wine Seller. She’s the one who hosted the wine fest last month. 

“It’s a way to travel in your own backyard,” she said. “It’s a way to go explore.”

And the more people doing that exploring, the more the central Texas wine business grows. 

“People are just trying some new stuff with their Texas wine,” said Stephenie Kilgore of Messina Hof Winery in Bryan. “It’s nice to see, and it’s exciting to see what they’re going to come up with.”

And the wine-lovers are excited too. 

“I know that I’ll be looking for that wine now,” Endres said.

With hundreds of new wineries starting up in Texas in the last decade, you can now take your pick from wine makers like John Bagnasco. 

Walking around his vineyard with him, you get a sense for just how much he loves the work. 

“If you can show me a prettier vineyard than this in the state of Texas, I want to come see it,” said Bagnasco, who owns Valley Mills Vineyards.

And he really knows his land. 

“What we’ve discovered here is this limestone-thick soil,” he explained as we toured his acres of grape vines.

Rocky soil means lower fruit volumes, but better fruit — and better wine. Then you’ve got the central Texas climate to work around. 

“The hot-weather varietals are king,” Bagnasco said.

Tempranillo grapes come from Spain originally. They do very well here, as do moscato grapes. 

Valley Mills recently finished off planting its five acres. It’s about 3,000 grape vines total, and each plant makes about a gallon of wine.

And once they make their wine, you can taste and buy it at their tasting room out Highway 6 past Lake Waco. 

Head east down Highway 6, and you find Tehuacana Creek Vineyards. 

“I made my first wine in 1974 when I was in college,” said Tehuacana Creek winemaker Ulf Westblom.

That was back in Sweden; Westblom still has the last bottle from his very first batch on display in his tasting room here.

“You can only do so much as an amateur wine maker,” he said, “and I wanted to have the resources to make great wines.”

One of their dessert wines has won a couple awards, but one of their most popular is Mulsum, a white mixed with honey, the way the ancient Romans imbibed.

“It’s one of those types of wines that people really love it,” said Jerry Federico, a new business partner at Tehuacana Creek.

But getting people out to the winery to taste those wines is still a challenge. That’s where Federico comes in. 

“We’re thinking about, you know, do we do an event center, do we expand the tasting room,” he said.

It’s a common problem for wineries here, especially with local liquor stores carrying mostly big-name wines. 

That’s got the folks at Valley Mills hoping the central Texas wine industry continues to grow, and maybe even challenge Hill Country with a wine trail of our own. 

“I hope that happens,” Bagnasco said. “We’ll see. We’ll see.”

It’ll probably take some time to build up the wine industry here, maybe even a generation or two. 

But once it’s there, wine makers hope it’ll attract some tourism, the same way Hill Country does.

2014 Texas Wine & Rogue Art Fest pictures

Here are some great pictures from Aimee Nesse, thank-you for taking them!  If you want to share your pictures with us on facebook as well, then either tag our location (https://www.facebook.com/SaladoWinery) or the festival (https://www.facebook.com/events/273309656070588/)

TX Winery Passport is Here!

Passport to TX  WineThe Texas Wine and Grape Growers Board of Directors proudly announces the launch of the TX Wine Passport Smartphone Mobile App, a tool to promote the Texas wine and grape industry and drive consumers into Texas wineries.

The TX Wine Passport Mobile App is a project started two years ago to when marketing funds were lost. The TWGGA Foundation, along with 38 Texas wineries who are TX Wine Passport launch partners, believes the mobile app is the best marketing and tourism program available. The development of the mobile app was managed by BarZ Adventures in Austin, TX.

There are several mobile apps that have been developed touting wine regions, wine trails, passport programs, and other wine-related venues. All of the mobile apps require a participant fee. What makes the TX Wine Passport Mobile App unique? It is the only mobile app whose sole purpose is to market only the Texas Wine and Grape Industry and provide funding for Viticulture and Enology scholarships.

The Texas Wine and Grape Growers Foundation, Inc. is devoted to the improvement, growth, and prosperity of the Texas wine and grape industry. The Foundation generates funds for marketing, promotion, research, and education programs.

Participation in the TX Wine Passport Mobile App is open to all Texas wineries who are TWGGA members.

New Release–Diamond Back

It’s finally here!  These grapes were harvested AUG 2009.  It is a blend of grapes from Central Texas including our 2009 Sangiovese, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Merlot. Vanilla notes and hints of raisins.

New Release–Rootin’ Tootin’

Rootin’ Tootin’ 2011 is now available for sale! …only 5 cases made..!

 This is a sweet red wine made from the sangiovese grapes grown in our vineyard in Salado.  It is light & fruity a touch tart and hopefully this year it won’t re-ferment in the bottle (although some of you loved that bubbly effect).

 

2012 Salado Winery Harvest Statistics

time to ferment

Our BIGGEST year yet!

We’ve processed quite a few grapes this summer, in fact, we made wine from 9 tons of grapes, all from central Texas.

Our vineyard here in Salado grew one ton of Sangiovese, a half ton each of cabernet sauvignon and merlot and more than a half ton of chardonnay.  That means we have over 160 gallons of Rootin Tootin for next year!  As well as 85 gallons of chardonnay and 150 gallons Wild Hare (cab + merlot).

From our friends in Belton, we harvested 4 tons of Blanc Dubois and Black Spanish!  These grapes were new to us and presented us with many winemaking challenges do to the thick skins and tough nature of the grape.

The Black Rock Vineyard co-op brought in a ton of white and red grapes, mixed varieties and we hope to make some sparkling white from some of the white grapes.

From Belle Crest Vineyard had almost a ton of tempranillo, malbec and cabernet  sauvignon.  They had so much fun at harvest, they even stomped on their grapes!  (see story)

So there you have it, in total we made about 1400 gallons of wine for the 2012 vintage.  And don’t forget, one exceptionally cute baby (I’m obviously un-biased).