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5 matches were found for Wine - Winery, Tasting Rooms
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Cardwell Hill Cellars
Nancy Chapel
Owner
24241 Cardwell Hill Dr
Philomath, OR 97370
541-929-9463
714-315-7622
Fax: 541-929-2708
Member Since: 2012
A boutique winery founded with a passion for premium wine and a love of the Willamette Valley. We are a family-owned business. Our vineyards are certified sustainable. The tasting room is open 7 days a week May - November.
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Fullerton Wines
Susanne Fullerton
Owner/GM
804 NW Buchanan Ave
Corvallis, OR 97330
1-503-544-1378
1-503-267-7432
Member Since: 2023
https://fullertonwines.com/
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Valcan Cellars
JP Valot
341 SW 2nd St #3
Corvallis, OR 97333
541-360-3194
Member Since: 2020
Delfino Fine Wines
Emilia Delfino
3111 Santiam Hwy SE
Suite G
Albany, ORE 97322
301-520-4620
503-791-7193
Member Since: 2022
What is Fine Wine? Delfino Fine Wines has a very precise definition of the term, with just two absolutely necessary and fundamental conditions. Fine Wine comes from well-farmed vineyards and is directly traceable to its vineyards. Thus, a wine product that cannot be traced back to the specific vineyards of origin cannot be called Fine Wine, per our definition, and we do not trade it. Fine Wine-making is an artisan craft activity. Thus, Fine Wine comes in limited quantities and is traceable to individual winemakers, where the product is fully finished. The fine winemaker is either the farmer itself or is intimately familiar with the farmers and the vineyards of origin. That is the opposite of mass-production by industrial processes, say in excess of ~50,000 cases/year for a given label, which cannot be called Fine Wine per our definition. Also, bulk wine shipping for bottling/packaging/blending somewhere away from the production site, although a profitable activity for many traders in the industry and especially newcoming online subscriptions businesses, is not Fine Wine per our definition, and we do not trade it. Other variables, like color, aroma and taste profiles ("Organoleptic properties" in fancy terms); price point; vintage year; wine age; projected drinkability window; specific winemaking techniques/materials/tools; containers form and shape; country of origin; certifications; winery business structure and ownership; school diplomas; not to mention label artwork, critics scores, awards, advertising and face-persons, influencers, etc. - are all clearly more or less important indicators of many attributes, some including quality to be sure, for a product and its fitness with an individual wine drinker's taste, but none of those are fundamental to the purpose of calling a Fine Wine, in our own definition. Ultimately, a Fine Wine will convey to a discerning drinker a very clear and expressive, sometimes almost moving, sense of terroir: the flavors of its patch of land and micro-environment of origin, and the hand of its winemaker. Even another bit more poetically, a Fine Wine will talk to its drinker about culture, geography, history, and human connections - blue bloods and blue collars, indiscriminately. A few additional points on Fine Wine and the DFW Business Model 'Fine' does not equal 'expensive'! Retail price has no bearing on our definition: if the two fundamental conditions are met, it is Fine Wine, honest and genuine to its vineyard and winemaker, whether it comes from a winemaking farmer with no commercial intent who will sell you a case for ?10, or whether it comes from a world-renowed French first growth producer that sells through negociants and en primeur for $10,000+/case. Delfino Fine Wines' average price to the consumer is around $30 per 750ml (about $25-$30 for Oregon wine and $30-35 for our imports). 'Fine' does not mean 'Fancy'! Most of the wine produced every year world-wide, and most of the Fine Wine as well, is made to be consumed fresh, say within five years of vintage year, made for casual enjoyment and the every day dining table in wine drinking countries. It is generally reported that less than 1% of all wine produced is intended for aging. Our portfolio includes, at about 50-50, both fine wine made ready to drink and fine wine made "for the ages", where we often take care of the cellar aging part ourself. As an approximate but useful statistical reference, more than 95% of all wineries in the US are small or very small operations (under 50,000 cases/year) but altogether they only account for less than 10% of the wine produced any given year in the US. That is, 90% of the wine produced in the US is from a few mass-production facilities (mostly located in California). Delfino Fine Wines only operates within the 10% of the wine trade that we call Fine Wine as per our own business definition, and partnering with producers that are well, well, well under 50,000 cases/year, in the US and abroad. By the way, the five French "first growth" chateaux - Lafite, Latour, Mouton, Margaux and Haut-Brion - each produce in average between 10,000 and 20,000 cases/year. Chateau Ausone is less than 2,000 cases/year - a production level which is even under the 5,000 cases/year that is often reported as the lower limit of financial viability for a winery business in the US! In Italy, Gaja may be considered by some these days a "giant" in the wine trade, having expanded over the decades beyond its native Barbaresco township in Piedmont to the hills of Tuscany and beyond, producing several labels that are sold a bit everywhere in Italy, and still maintains an overall production below 30,000 cases/year in Piedmont, about 35,000 in Bolgheri and less than 10,000 in Montalcino. Similarly, in the US, Opus One of Napa Valley averages around 25,000 cases/year. These producers, just a few examples of the world-renowed elite, all command prices in the hundreds to the thousands of dollars per bottle. In contrast, a few true industrial wine giants mass-produce in the hundreds of thousands to the millions and even tens of millions of cases per year, and 'content' themselves with prices in the few-bucks to the few-tens of dollars per bottle, where the value allocation to the wine itself when all is said and done is in the nickels and dimes, literally... Our point: Fine Wine, capital F and capital W as per our definition, from small artisanal producers anywhere, maybe little known but established by generations of family farming and wine making, brings you the highest quality/price proposition, and Delfino Fine Wines wants to be your single trusted wine trader in this regard.
Bluebird Hill Cellars
Sue Shay
Owner
25059 Larson Road
Monroe, OR 97456
541-424-2478
Member Since: 2022
Recently described as a ?Rising Star of the Southwest Willamette Valley Wine Region? Bluebird Hill Cellars produces Pinot Noir and Chardonnay, along with other whites and reds typical of the region. Our wines are made from both estate fruit and other lots obtained from select premium vineyards.  Just in the past few years, Bluebird Hill has received gold, platinum, and double-platinum awards and 92+ point ratings in numerous blind tastings.
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