4.8 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 16 April 2020
⏱️ 133 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Christopher Howell is the winemaker and General Manager of the Cain Vineyard and Winery in the Napa Valley of California.
Christopher discusses his early wine tastings and home winemaking in the 1970s, and talks about some key relationships that helped form his interest in wine. He explains how he ended up pursuing an oenological and viticultural education in Montpellier, France, highlighting some notable people that he studied with, and how that school work then led to a stagiaire position at Château Mouton Rothschild in Bordeaux. Christopher talks about a chance meeting that he had while working at Mouton, and something that was said to him that has stayed with him for the rest of his life. He also discusses other adventures in other wine cellars in France, notably at Château Rayas in the Rhône Valley.
Christopher discusses his return to the United States, and a pivotal meeting with Helen Turley that then led to a job at Peter Michael in the late 1980s. He talks about characteristics of Helen Turley and her husband John Wetlaufer that would contribute to their success in the wine world, and Christopher is frank about what he learned from them both. He further explains how the transition to working at the Cain Vineyard and Winery came about, where he has now been employed for the last thirty years.
Christopher is open about his sometimes unconventional winemaking choices, and explains the thought processes behind some idiosyncratic decision making, as well. In particular concerning brettanomyces, reduction, and volatile acidity. He also discusses the evolution of the different wine offerings at Cain, and what he has learned from that progression. He shares a great deal of his philosophy on topics like farming, vineyard trellising, terroir expression, grape variety blending, and wine complexity. He also is frank in his discussion about what his career choices have really entailed.
This episode also features commentary from the following people:
Cathy Corison, Corison Winery
Kelli White, author of "Napa Valley Then and Now"
Ehren Jordan, Failla
John Lockwood, Enfield Wine Co.
Bernard Portet, founding winemaker at Clos Du Val
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0:00.0 | And the Chris Howell of Kane Vineyard and Wenry is the guest for this episode of |
0:19.4 | all drink to that and the interview covers a lot of ground. |
0:23.0 | We talk about Hal's time in France and in the United States and the development across several |
0:27.7 | decades of his career. |
0:29.7 | And to better understand some of those subjects that are discussed in the interview, let me play for you some |
0:34.4 | clips from other I'll drink to that interviews. Kelly White, who wrote the book Napa Valley |
0:39.2 | then and now, join me for episode 307 of this show, and at one point she spoke about the |
0:44.8 | diversity of different terwar within the Napa Valley of California. |
0:48.8 | The Napa Valley is incredibly geologically diverse. Jonathan's Winsat wrote a great book called The Winemakers Dance, |
0:55.0 | and he writes a lot for World Fine Wine magazine |
0:57.0 | and does these regional profiles. |
0:58.4 | And the reason why he wrote a book about Napa |
1:00.6 | is not because he's Ra Ra Napper line, because geologically it's a really fascinating place so you have the two |
1:06.8 | mountain ranges that were formed by two very different kinds of events a lot of volcanic |
1:11.5 | activity and it's a fairly young earth as opposed to some place like |
1:16.0 | Bordeaux or Burgundy where the slopes are general and the soils are a little bit more |
1:19.3 | uniform just speaking generally California's coastal mountains are really young. |
1:25.0 | They're probably what I think between only three and seven million years old so |
1:29.1 | that's a baby that's new growth for in terrestrial terms. |
1:33.0 | So what's happened is that things haven't settled out. |
1:37.0 | There hasn't been enough of the erosion over time |
1:40.0 | or just the settling forces of time. |
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