WHAT MAKES WA WINE SO UNIQUE
WASHINGTON’S GEOLOGY
The Missoula Floods were a series of glacial damn breaks that roared through eastern Washington with enormous power clearing out everything in its path. The importance of this lies when the water itself retreated, depositing river rock and alluvial soils that are vital to the success of premium grape vines. What makes this soil important is that it delivers soils low in nutrients. This sounds odd, but a vine mirrors itself to a weed and given all the nutrients it needs it will just sprawl and grow, losing focus on the importance of concentrating its energy on the grapes themselves. But planted in nutrient poor soil, the vines will delve deeper, establish a strong root system, find water and access the limited amount of nutrients required to make it thrive.
WASHINGTON WINEMAKERS
In combination with the geological and climatic factors that make Washington wine so special were the forward-thinkers and doers of the Washington wine industry, beginning with our early founders. It was this group of 10 friends who recognized the potential to grow grapes in eastern Washington. They were the first to plant Syrah, Cabernet Franc, and Pinot Gris. After harvest they would load the grapes onto trucks, head west, and begin the winemaking process, starting with fermentation and leading to full production and aging.
This is an extremely unusual practice for both old world (Europe) and new world (everyone but Europe) wine industries. Even to this day, there’s nowhere else in the world that does this or is quite like Washington.
This forward-thinking movement started what has become our working warehouse wine district - winemakers working in close quarters sharing not only their forklifts, but their special knowledge with each other. These things seem simple to the outside world, such as which yeast strands do well with certain grape varietals, or where to access extra grapes, or who knows of a good cooper, but are typically tightly kept secrets in most wine communities.
There are wine estates and tasting rooms located in eastern WA, but because of the larger population in the west even established wine production estates have tasting rooms for the public in western Washington.
This open and generous sharing of knowledge has propelled the Washington wine industry forward even with its stunted start time due to Prohibition. Prohibition was taken seriously in Washington. It was implemented early and ended late, leaving Washington a bit behind the rest of the new world wine communities such as California. But with collaboration, the Washington wine community caught itself up quickly and is now valued for high quality wine at incredible price points.
As a way to help the wine advocate gain a better understanding of the 14 grape growing regions in Washington, the American Viticulture Area (AVA) system was established. An AVA is a designated wine grape-growing region in the United States distinguishable by geographic features, with boundaries defined by the TTB. The AVA system gives a “sense of place,” to the consumer. With a stated AVA on a bottle of wine that represents more than 80% of the grapes being sourced from that region, the consumer can start to taste the flavor profile that distinguishes that viticulture area.
The Washington wine community from grape to glass is amazing. Open-minded, innovative, and excited for what the future holds. Grab a glass and enjoy the journey!
- Shelly Fitzgerald, Wine Education Specialist, CS, CSW, AWE, WSET Level 3