Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Ode to Jasmine


Soon after we adopted Jasmine,
the three became best friends
When our boys were young, they were petrified of dogs. Harry had a bad experience at a park that was the source of that fear, and he seemed to pass his fear along to Kai.

When we were getting closer to buying our property, we knew we wanted a farm dog, but it had to be the right dog; one the boys wouldn’t be afraid of.  That dog was Jasmine. She belonged to the people renting the house that we now live in. Every time we visited the property, while still in escrow, Jasmine would be there to greet us. The kids fell in love with her instantly and we kept saying that we wanted to find a dog just like Jasmine.

When we were about to move to the property, the people renting the house couldn’t find another rental that would allow dogs, and asked us if we wanted to adopt Jasmine…..not only did we get a dog just like Jasmine, we got Jasmine!

Formally a strong swimmer, she was too weak
to make it across the river so Steve had to give her a ride
Jasmine quickly became part of our family. She watched out for the boys when they would go for adventures….We always knew where they were because we could here her barking, and she’d be with them. And we knew that if something ever happened to the boys, Jasmine would come and tell us.

We are very sad that she is no longer with us and we miss her very much. She lived a very long, happy life.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Harry won the photo contest! Our wine is in the Top 100.

Our son Harry started taking a photography class last year as an elective at school. In general, he's very observant, and it turns out he has quite a knack for photography. We asked you all to vote on which of Harry's photos he should enter in a photography contest. Well, we are proud to say that, thanks to all of the input, Harry got 2nd place and a $100 cash award! 
the award winning photo

 And last year, he got 2nd place in the Napa County Cover Art contest for the annual crop report and won $150....he's doing very well so far! 


Napa County Crop Report Cover Art contest

And in the world of wine, we are very excited to be included in the San Francisco Chronicle's list of the Top 100 Wines of 2011. Here is what they had to say about the wine:

2010 Matthiasson Napa Valley White Wine ($35, 12.5%): 
When not doing some of the best vineyard work in Napa, Steve Matthiasson keeps fine-tuning his brilliant white blend, this time a co-fermented mix of Sauvignon Blanc, Ribolla Gialla, Semillon and Tocai Friulano. It's more subtle and focused than ever, and time in bottle has given flesh to steely chive, key lime and orange notes. It'll be even better in a year — no surprise considering its inspiration in the long-aging whites of Italy and Bordeaux.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Thirteen Active Fermentations

grapes being dumped into the crusher/de-stemmer
the crusher/de-stemmer
a close up









the stems
"barreling down" (wine goes from tank to barrels)

In September, 1995, after dating for one month, we (Steve+Jill) harvested some grapes from the UC Davis teaching vineyard, where Steve was a graduate student. We set out to make one carboy (5 gallons, or two cases) of dessert wine from Muscat of Hamburg. After stomping on the grapes and pressing them, Steve put the carboy in his garage. He started spending more time at Jill's house, and less time with his housemates, and forgot about the wine. The next summer, when he was moving in, we discovered that the wine had gotten overheated in the garage and turned to Sherry! It was actually delicious.
We continued to make wine every year after that, with better success as the years went on.
This year's harvest is our 17th together. We started making wine under the MATTHIASSON label in 2003. We started making a very small quantity of our Red Wine with the idea of slowly increasing production slowly, which is pretty much what we’ve done, though we've indulged Steve's restlessness by adding all sorts of different wines to the MATTHIASSON lineup.
As Steve’s reputation as a winemaker (and not just a vineyardist) has grown, other folks have hired him to make wine for them. We also recently started a new, larger wine brand, with some partners. So our five gallons of Sherry has grown quite a bit as of late and for the last two months, Steve has been tending between 11 and 13 active fermentations at any one time (25 separate lots of wine this harvest)!
Flora fermenting on the skins
This is an incredibly late year, and right now he is fermenting Flora, for our dessert wine; five lots of Cabernet Sauvignon; and one lot of Merlot. Most of the lots are done and in barrel resting now, including all the pieces of the White Wine, the Cabernet franc and Refosco from our home vineyard, and the Red Hen Merlot. It's been very busy around here and we're looking forward to putting these babies to bed!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

The Harvest from Hell

This harvest has been the wildest ride we've experienced. As the record cool season progressed, we got more and more excited about the quality potential--full flavors at lower potential alcohol levels--and then the rain hit. The first few days of cold rain weren't so bad, but the full day of muggy drizzle we got the second time around ignited a grape disease called botrytis. Botrytis is also known as rot, so we worried that the vintage would be lost. We pulled leaves around our grapes to expose the them to more sun, and then, since we are organic and don't have anything much to spray for the disease, watched the weather and prayed. We actually stayed pretty free of disease. Then, last week it dried out and warmed up, slowing the progress of the disease and allowing flavors to come back in the fruit.....some really great flavors. The vintage was back on, and we scheduled our home vineyard to be picked last Friday. 

Separating the Refosco and the Petit verdot
That was supposed to be the end of the drama. But it was just starting. At 6:00 am, we heard a tractor out in the vineyard. The workers had been picking all night at a neighbors, finished early, and came to start picking with headlamps. Only I hadn't showed them where the Refosco, Cabernet franc, Petit verdot, and Merlot were. If our tractor had started up like it was supposed to, they would have mixed all the different varieties together, which would have been a disaster. But luckily, with only one tractor, they started at the other end of the vineyard....this is the first time I've been glad the tractor wouldn't start. 

Luckily the Refosco grapes are much bigger
After carefully explaining which variety is which, a yellow jacket nest exploded out of the ground, stinging all of the workers. The workers ran screaming, stripping off their shirts, while I rolled on the ground smashing the stinging yellow jackets that were on my back and brushing them out of my hair. When the brave few started picking again (a bunch refused to keep working), they forgot about keeping the fruit separate, and it got mixed anyway. We managed to salvage the varieties by hand sorting the fruit back into different bins based on the size and shape of the clusters.

Finally, the old wooden bridge over the ditch separating the forklift and truck from the vineyard gave out while a tractor was crossing it with a load of fruit. Luckily the tractor didn't roll over, and we piled plywood over the gaps to try and finish out the harvest.

When we got the fruit to the winery, the Cabernet franc weighed 666 lbs! Truly the harvest from Hell.

Silver lining: the fermenting wine is awesome--best yet.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The Sensuous Fig

The fig tree is the symbol of abundance, of fertility, and of sweetness in several cultures. The edible fig is one of the first plants that was cultivated by humans and it figures in the founding of many cultures and religions. The first California figs were planted in 1769 in the gardens of the mission at San Diego, and are known as "Mission" figs. 

One of the many treasures on our property is the Mission fig tree. But like many other things we discovered when we bought this "fixer upper" property (house, vineyard, barn, etc.), the fig tree had been long neglected and was in need of Steve's green thumb. 


After a couples years of love and care, we started to get some great tasting figs. And this year, when our grapes, peaches, and plums all produced a much smaller crop than usual, we got a bumper crop of figs! We picked about 30 pounds of figs this weekend from one tree. We're turning those yummy and VERY perishable figs into Fig Jam. And FYI, the Fig Jam, as well as many of our other jams, jellies, butters, vinegar, etc, are available if you join our Wine Club.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Ivy Tree

Bee getting nectar from a sage plant in the hedgerow
We purchased our property about five years ago, and after a three year transition, the property was certified as organic. As part of the transition to organic, we were able to get a grant from the federal government to plant a hedgerow along the ditch on the west side of our property. We planted drought tolerant, native California plants that flower almost year-round to provide pollen and nectar for bees and other beneficial insects and wildlife. The winter months are tough for the beneficial insects and bees because there aren't a lot of plants that flower during this time and therefore not a lot of food. That's when the bees use up their reserves of the honey in the hive.
Hedgerow
Our house was built by the Bruno family around 1903. Their son George, who was born in and died in this house, brought his bride Gladys to live here when they married in the 1930's. Neighbors and relatives have told us stories about what an accomplished horticulturalist George Bruno was and we live with constant reminders of his innovations and the traditions brought by his Italian immigrant parents.

Ivy tree
One of those traditions is a crazy "tree" next to our house referred to as an "ivy tree." Everyone who comes to visit remarks about the tree because it's so unusual and so beautiful. It's actually two different ivy plants vining up a pole with a defunct TV antenna on top (the kids have no idea what a TV antenna is).

The amazing thing about the ivy tree is that, starting around the middle of October, when most plants are going dormant, it begins to flower and continues to flower for about a month! It seem like all of the bees from the whole Napa Valley come to this tree, because if you stand anywhere near the tree at this time of year, it sounds like it's alive because there are SO MANY bees buzzing.....those old Italian farmers knew what they were doing when they planted that tree.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Ribolla gialla

      
Harry harvesting

     This weekend we harvested the Ribolla gialla - one of our favorite annual farm activities.
    In 2005, Steve travelled to Fruili, Italy with good friend and mentor George Vare, to learn the correct way to grow and make wine out of the Ribolla gialla that George grafted into his vineyard in Napa. This ancient variety is only grown in the Fruili region in Italy, in the adjacent part of Slovenia, where it is known as "Rebula," and on the Greek island of Kefalonia where it is known as "Robola."
    During that 2005 trip to Fruili, Steve met with some of the premiere Ribolla producers including Radikon, Gravner, Miani, and Simcic. Steve came back inspired by the richness and freshness of the wines, and the wines of Miani, in particular, became a big influence on the style of the Matthiasson White Wine blend.
Ribolla gialla

     In 2007, we grafted some Ribolla gialla into our own vineyard. We harvested our first crop in 2008, with the kids picking and then stomping on the grapes. This wine was made in the style of Radikon and Gravner, who ferment the grapes on the skins (more like a red wine). The resulting wine, our 2008 Matthiasson Ribolla gialla, turned out just fantastic--extremely nutty and spicy, with the wet stone/seashell character  that defines Ribolla gialla. However, our 2009 attempt chose to become an exotic vinegar instead of wine (which we aged for 18 months and will offer to our wine club!). Our 2010 is doing much better, and the quality of the just harvested 2011 is amazing!

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Your Opinion is Needed!

This is Harry....

I'm entering some photos that I've taken in a photography contest. There are five categories including: Budding Artist (for kids under 14), Grown in California; All in a Days Work on the Farm; Rural Scenic; and Kids and Critters on the Farm. I can enter one photo in each category.

Can you help me choose which five of these photos I should submit?

Thanks!
Grown in California (#1)

grown in California (#2)
grown in California (#3)
Rural Scenic (#4)
grown in California or Rural Scenic (#5)
Kids and critters on the Farm (#6)
Rural Scenic (#7)
All in a Days Work (#8)
Kids and Critters on the Farm (#9)
Rural Scenic (#10)
Budding Artist (#11)
Budding Artist (#12)
Budding Artist (#13)
Budding Artist (#14)
Budding Artist (#15)

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Waiting for Harvest


"Waiting"
by Harry Matthiasson


Waiting for harvest is a bit like Waiting for Godot. Waiting for Godot is a play where two characters wait endlessly and in vain for someone named Godot to arrive.

As grape growers and wine makers, we are watching the weather very carefully right now and just waiting for the grapes to ripen. Last week's weather was very cool and it felt like we were transitioning to Fall. This week has been much warmer and feels like the beginning of Indian Summer - yesterday we even harvested the second round of Sauvignon blanc!
....but all of the other grapes are still just slowly ripening....and all we can do it wait......


Wednesday, September 7, 2011

A year in the life of a Napa Valley vineyard....



Great video posted by Steve's viticulture consulting company Premiere Viticulture of the Sauvignon Blanc vineyard we're gearing up to harvest for the 2011 White Wine!

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

You just never know....



    Steve got a very funny voicemail message the other day. It was from a guy called Joey Burns. He said that he was a good friend of Steve's mother, that he has a band called Calexico, and that he was performing that night at the Mystic Theatre in Petaluma, and did we want to come to the show....and by the way, he's really into wine.
    I never really expected Steve's mom, a very sweet, proper, older lady to be friends with the lead singer of a rock bank, but you just never know. Steve's mom happens to have become a Doula in her retirement, and she now helps new moms and dads bring their babies into this world. Turns out she helped Joey Burns and his wife with their newborn twins, and they got to know each other pretty well.
    We made it to the show at the Mystic...their music is very layered and actually reminds me of our wine. 
    Then Joey stopped by the next day to visit and taste our wines.....I do love this business!


Joey Burns and Steve Matthiasson


Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Why a blog?

    So why a blog?  What's different about Matthiasson that warrants your attention? Honestly, to us, it seems that what we do is just regular life stuff....dragging our kids out of bed in the morning and hurrying them to get ready for school; struggling to keep up with paperwork and emails; driving kids around after school to soccer, choir, Tae Kwon Do, etc; nagging the kids to do homework and get to bed; and then falling into bed each night after a long, busy day.... not all that interesting.
    That's our day....but not everyday....There's being woken up in the middle of the night by the sound of the sheep clodding around on the front porch, rising early Saturday mornings to sell fruit at the farmers' market; collecting eggs and closing up the chicken house late at night so the coyotes don't get them. And most of Steve's days are filled by visiting many of the vineyards all throughout Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino Counties to diagnose problems and come up with solutions; tasting the wine made from those vineyards in the constant pursuit of improving wine quality, and ending his days swinging by our winery to check on our own wine. 
   And the meals that we eat... breakfast with homemade scones filled with lemon curd made from our own lemons and eggs, lunches with pickled veggies from the garden, and dinners with sausages made from the pesky lambs that woke us up late at night. 
   And, lest we forget, the wines we drink...wines we've traded with our winemaker friends, wines we try from all over the world to explore what the possibilities are, and, of course, our very own MATTHIASSON wines, made with the care and attention that we pay to every aspect of our lives. 
   We welcome you to share with us on our journey...two co-dependant foodies (Steve+Jill), one winemaker/viticulturalist in search of excellence (Steve), one mom wanting the tastiest, healthiest food for her family (Jill), and two very sweet boys (Harry & Kai).