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Tom Hill

A self-admitted wine geek, Tom lives in Northern New Mexico and works as a computational physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory doing numerical neutron transport & large scale code development. He has been tasting wines since 1971, participates locally with a couple of large tasting groups in his area, and is practically a fixture at most California wine festivals, such as the Hospice du Rhône, Rhône Rangers, and ZAP. Other interests: Tom is heavily into competitive sport fencing (foil & epee), biking, cooking, basketball, skiing, backpacking, mountain climbing.


    A Personal Train Ride On The Dry Creek Vineyard Express - June 15, 2006

Many of us have "things" in our life we've grown attached to over the years; a comfortable old pair of shoes, our old Dodge Dart, maybe a frayed old terry cloth robe. For us wine lovers, we often have a winery that fits that description; a winery whose wines we keep drinking year after year because....we just like the stuff.

For me, the winery that best fits this description is Dry Creek Vineyards, located near Sonoma County's Healdsburg. It is a winery that I have followed from the very start, with its founding in 1972. I've been drinking Dave Stare's wines for nigh onto 34 years now. I was prompted to reflect on our long time drinking relationship by the receipt of their most recent newsletter titled "A Pioneer Sails Into The Sunset", announcing Dave's retirement as President of Dry Creek Vineyards. In today's column, I'll describe why DCV owns such a special place in my heart.

My first encounter with DCV occurred in late 1973, when Liquor Mart's Phil Reich (in Boulder, CO) urged me to try this new Gamay Beaujolais they'd just received. It was nothing great or profound, but just a tasty wine that was absolutely delish. About a year later, he insisted I try the new Chenin Blanc and Fume (Sauvignon) Blanc from DCV. Having developed a fondness for Loire Valley whites, I immediately recognized that these two wines were, though again nothing profound, really great drinking whites and very much in the character of their French brethern. Those first three labels now reside in Volume #2 of my wine label collection. As I recall, I fired off a short note to Dave, complimenting him on those two whites. He responded immediately with a thank you and an invitation to stop at the winery for a visit. A bit of history: Dave graduated from MIT in Civil Engineering and took a job with the B&O Railroad, trains being a passion in his life. A trip to the Loire Valley precipitated a lifelong love affair with those wines, made from Chenin Blanc and Sauvignon Blanc, and triggered an insane notion that he could make such wines in California.

In 1972, he settled on a plot of land in the Dry Creek Valley, ripped out the prune orchard to plant grape vines, and founded the first winery in the area since Prohibition. The locals were convinced he was plum loco and certain this Boston city kid was on the fast track to failure. Starting with mostly purchased grapes, he expanded his portfolio to include both Zinfandel and Cabernet Sauvignon. At that time, there were many very old vineyards of Zinfandel in the Dry Creek Valley and Dave realized, early on, what unique wines came from these ugly/gnarly old vines; well before old-vine Zinfandel became trendy.

I first met Dave in 1975 when I finally arranged a visit to his small winery. I, like many others over the years, took an instant liking to the guy. The wines were all good and very reasonably priced. Interestingly, during one of these early visits, I noticed his daughter, Kim, sitting in his office, merrily drawing away while Dad entertained this visitor from New Mexico. Through the '70's, I bought and tried nearly every wine Dave made. His Zins continued to improve and they brought recognition to the Dry Creek Valley, with it's old vineyards, as the source of some of California's finest Zins.

I developed a real love affair with Dave's Cabernets. They were polished, smooth, spicy and very good drinking. In an era of heavy hitters like Joe Heitz, Warren Winiarski, and Paul Draper; it was easy to overlook Dave's Cabernets. But they became a special part of my cellar. About 1983, I invited Dave to come to Los Alamos and do a tasting of his wines for our group, an invitation he eagerly accepted. Ever the train buff, I remember well picking him up at the Amtrak station down in Albuquerque.

I continued to follow his Cabernets. They were always blended with other grapes, exactly as in Bordeaux. They showed elegance and balance and forsook the bigger-is-better character that most California Cabernet makers sought.

In 1986, Dave again returned to Los Alamos and we tasted through a decade's worth of his Cabs from my cellar, from 1973-1984. It was a day of great upheaval in my personal life and I remember little of that tasting; but my notes indicate the wines were amazing and a clear illustration of the importance of balance in aging of California Cabernets.

More history: This cute little girl in Dave's office grows up, goes off to college and gets her degree in Marketing. She marries Don Wallace, who was then supervising the construction of the huge dam at the headwaters of Dry Creek that now entrains Lake Sonoma. Don decides to leave construction and return to his farming roots. In the late '80's, the second generation begins at DCV with Kim in charge of Marketing and Don supervising the DCV vineyards. About 1989, Don and Kim are on a cross-country journey in their camper. They happen to be in Santa Fe, along with Dave's mom, on Thanksgiving. They accept my invitation for dinner. With a huge turkey, a roomful of special friends, and an ample flow of wines; it was one of the most memorable Thanksgiving dinners I've had.

Fast forward a few years: Kim and Don launch the third generation; with a daughter, Taylor, and a son, Spencer. Don becomes General Manager at DCV and Kim Vice President/Director of Marketing.

During the late '90's, I drop in at DCV to chat a bit with Don and Kim. They're having some friends over for dinner that night and invite me to join them at their home near the winery. Don introduces me to the new DCV Beeson Ranch Zin. I recognize it as, perhaps, the best Zin yet to come from DCV. It was a memorable evening, with kids galore.

Somewhere in their photo archives, they have this picture of Taylor and Spencer and several other kids, all in this line of little chairs, driving this "train" across the Atlantic Ocean to France. And way in the back, in the caboose, sits this big "kid" from New Mexico, wearing a silly hat and big aviator goggles, calling out "all aboard" and making all the necessary train noises!! This is the kind of photo you hope will never make it onto the Internet.

These personal remembrances make DCV very special to me. It's been an exciting journey... and the train ride's not over by a long shot. With the hiring of Bill Knuttle as winemaker several years ago, the quality of the wines has ratcheted up another notch. The wines are probably the best they've ever been.

DCV is not a winery that attracts a lot of attention from the wine cognoscenti. They don't receive huge scores from Robert Parker. They don't receive a lot of buzz on Internet wine boards. But they do what they do best..... making good, delicious, reliable wines at a good price. Their last Zins, from Beeson Ranch and the Old-Vine bottling, are as good as Zinfandel gets. Their Chenin Blanc and Fume Blanc continue to be good. The Taylor's Vineyard Musque and DCV3 Vineyard

Estate Fume Blancs are as fine as any you can find in the world. The DCV Chardonnay is one of the few California Chardonnays I ever drink. And Merlot?? It's probably the only California Merlot I've tried over the last several years.

So...what does the future hold for DCV?? With Don stepping up to President, I don't foresee any dramatic changes. Dave is certainly not going to "sail into the sunset" and will continue as Ambassador for DCV. As more of their vineyards come into production and mature, I expect the wines will continue to improve.

And...maybe...sometime down the road, I'll stop by Dry Creek Vineyard to meet their newest marketing whiz....Taylor Wallace. Or maybe the new cellar rat, Spencer, will be out back; hosing down a tank or topping off barrels. And...just maybe...they'll remember that wild train ride across the Atlantic a few years earlier!! Especially if the picture shows up.

[Postscript]

Dave Stare was/is also an avid sailor. Probably more of a passion in his life than trains (he actually bought/owns a small amusement park train steam engine and was one time going to have Don lay the tracks through the vnyd and refurbish the train and do rides!!). When he wanted to spruce up his label w/ artwork, I expect the sailboats made a classier image (after all.... the wine biz is ALL about image...not what's actually in the btl!!) than a clunky railroad engine. I didn't have space to get into the sailboat thing in the article. And the tie to trains was the hook I was looking for.

Dave's father was Frederick Stare (who died in 2002), a famous man in his own right. He founded the Harvard School of Nutrition and wrote several books and many articles on debunking food fads.

Now you know the rest of the story.

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