WELCOME TO FIDELITAS WINES

Fidelitas is a family owned winery focused primarily on making the very best Bordeaux style wines from some of the best fruit grown in Washington's Columbia Valley. Over the years my passion to create this style of wine prompted me to start Fidelitas with the 2000 vintage.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

December Wine Club Wines & Farmer's Kitchen Restaurant

Our next wine club wines that will be shipped next week includes the 2005 Boushey Vineyard - Red Wine from Boushey Vineyard in the Yakima Valley and our first ever wine from the Red Mountain appellation that being 2005 Red Mountain Merlot from Red Mountain Vineyard. Both wines are highly allocated so if you think you would like some of this wine please feel free to call Jessica Gamache and place your order at 509-521-4433.

The 2005, Boushey Vineyard wine is a blend of 53% Merlot, 40 % Cabernet Sauvignon and 7% Cabernet Franc. All the grapes grown for this blend came from vines 25 years and older. When Dick Boushey approached me before the 2005 harvest with the idea of making a special wine from his vineyard I was honored take the grapes and to make a wine. Dick was recently honored by Wine & Spirits Magazine as " Grower of the Year" for 2007. What a well deserved honor to bestow on a great Washington wine grape grower. We have poured the wine at a few events to give people a sneek preview. The response has been very positive and we should sell through the wine quickly. Only 300 cases were produced of this wine and it is packed in six bottle custom boxes.

Merlot from Red Mountain Vineyard is the other wine in this shipment. Only six barrels of this highly allocated wine were produced from the 2005 vintage. This is the first of what we hope will be many wines from the Red Mountain appellation that we will make for Fidelitas. Only 190 cases of this wine was produced. If you are interested in these wines they are available via our web site at www.fidelitaswines.com If you are a wine club member please remember that you get a 20% discount on these wines for the first thirty dates following recieving the shipment.

I recently had dinner with our distributor Denise & Martin Pitney along with my wife Terri at the Farmer's Kitchen in Hermiston, Oregon. We had a great dinner and I would recommend checking this fairly new restaurant out the next time you are looking for a great dining experience. The proprietors of this new establishment are Kristen and Aaron Yunker. Aaron is from Hermiston. The location of the restaurant is 920 SE 4th in Hermiston and they can be reached at 541-289-3333. They can also be reached via e-mail at FarmersKitchen@gmail.com . Martin and I had the Lamb, while Denise and Terri ordered the Cajun Ling Cod. Both entree's were fabulous and the atmosphere superb. We also ordered three different dessert's and enjoyed both cheesecakes and a baked apple pie. If you get a chance check this great new addition to our area. The Farmer's Kitchen is open Tuesday through Saturday from 5- 9 P.M.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

2007 Crush Complete

We finally pressed off the last couple of tanks of Malbec right before the weekend. It is great to be finished. Although much of what we brought in this year ripened earlier than normal the harvest seemed to drag on to finish about when we usually finish, November 1st. Andy Perdue was out over the weekend to interview me in regard to my thoughts on the 2007 harvest. This was good because it made me summarize my thoughts in regard to the vintage rather than just being relieved to be done. The video can be watched on the Wine Press Northwest web site. Look for the weekly video blog in the left hand margin.


The more I think about the 2007 vintage the more it reminds me of 1999. Extremely high acids at harvest was the norm then as was the case this year. Once we put these wines through malolactic fermentation we should see wines with perfect acids well within the range we are looking for. This is not the case every year in Washington, despite the fact many people in the industry would like to have you think otherwise. Recent very warm vintages have pushed the natural acids down dramatically and without acidulation the wines we would have produced would have been nearly undrinkable. 2007 seems like a great vintage to look forward to.


I scheduled some events and trips since harvest has been completed. I am spending a couple of days here in Arizona working with a new distributor. The weather here is perfect today, I guess that is why so many people winter here.

Monday, October 29, 2007

2007 Harvest Winding Down

Our last grapes for the year will picked in the next couple of days, that being some Gamache Vineyard Malbec. It's been a good harvest with most vineyards about a week ahead of normal ripening time. The quality that I have seen is very encouraging and can best be summarized by the great acid levels we have seen in most of the grapes for the year. I have talked to a few other winemakers in regard to the relative high acid levels before malolactic fermentation and have reassured them that we are going to see the acids fall into normal levels once malolactic fermentation is complete. This is what we saw in the 1999 vintage in Washington where the acid levels turned out to be nearly perfect. For Fidelitas so far I think we have seen some great wines with Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Malbec being the highlights. Much of our Cabernet Sauvignon is right in the middle of primary fermentation and will come off its skins this week to go to barrel. It's great to be winding down, I am feeling a bit fatigued at this point.
Last Saturday, October 27th we hosted three of our growers for dinner and our Wine Club event. Grower's taking part were Dick Boushey - Boushey Vineyard, Paul Champoux - Champoux Vineyard and Miguel Rodriguez from Weinbau Vineyard. We have a story board at the winery now behind our tasting carts that highlight the contributions these growers make to the success that Fidelitas has had with its wines. All three of these growers have twenty years of vineyard management experience under their belts and is reflected in the grapes we recieve and wines we are able to make. We put these guys behind a table with either a wine from their vineyard or a blend that had grapes from their vineyard in the wine. It was great for our Wine Club members to actually meet the grower who's name is often on the bottle they have purchased. This was a special time and I think all three growers had a great time meeting the customers.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Wine and Spirits Magazine Top 100

The Winter - 2007 issue of Wine and Spirits magazine is the issue in which they name their Top 100 wineries from throughout the world. Fidelitas was fortunate enough to make this year's list along with eight other Washington wineries. The magazine based the award upon "excellence and consistency" in what the winery is producing. We scored 93 points for our 2003 Champoux Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon along with a 90 score for both the 2003 Optu and 2003 Walla Walla Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. The magazine tasted over 3300 wines in the calendar year and based it's decision upon consistency and overall average score of wines recommended.
Grower of the year honors went to Yakima Valley grower, Dick Boushey. This is grower of the year for all regions. This is a significant honor for a grower from Washington state and reinforces my belief that Washington's growing region is on par with the best in the world. Dick Boushey is a grower that we buy fruit from and have made a vineyard designated wine from the 2005 vintage. We are looking to release this wine as a wine club shipment in December of this year.
Fellow Washington winery Leonetti Cellars was honored as top estate winery of the year by the magazine. Other wineries from Washington were Amavi, Betz, Cadence, Chateau Ste Michelle, L'Ecole No. 41, Leonetti, McCrea and Tamarack Cellars.
It is an honor to be mentioned along side some of the most highly respected producers of wine in the world. On a personal level, it is always nice to get mentioned for our efforts to produce the best wine possible. Cheers ! Charlie

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Light At the End of the Tunnel

I figured out exactly how far we are through harvest today, roughly 55% of the way. Being more than half way finished is a big deal, at least mentally it is. Most people do not realize what a grind harvest can be after a while. Once we start filling fermentors up in the cellar, winemaking is an everyday job that lasts about sixty days from start to finish. We are so heavily weighted towards Cabernet Sauvignon now that it seems like we should be further along but we are not because of the lateness of this varietal. Most of the warmer sites for Cabernet Sauvignon have been picked such as all of Red Mountain and Champoux Vineyard in the Horse Heaven Hills appellation. Some of the sites we get fruit from in the Wahluke Slope appellation such as Weinbau Vineyard are ready and will be picked this week as well.
The vintage continues to show great promise so far. Great tannin structure and incredible fruit flavors dominate. The weather looks to stay nice at least through this weekend so we will continue to bring in fruit at a accelerated pace. We have picked all but one lot of our white wine grapes and that will be picked early next week. We can see light at the end of the tunnel !
Cheers
Charlie

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Merlot In the Door

We finally got all our Merlot picked in between a few days of rain. It rained Friday, September 28 and Sunday, September 30. We finished up with Boushey Vineyard and Conner-Lee Vineyard Merlot on Monday. The quality of the Merlot at least initially seem very nice since we have pressed all our Merlot with the exception of these two vineyards. Very deep red colors as the fruit was being destemmed and crushed. This is usually a good indication of how the grapes will progress in the tank once fermentation starts. Most of the fermentations have been six to seven days in length with pumpovers twice daily. I am not big on cold soaking the fruit before fermentation occurs. I prefer getting things going quickly with inoculation (pitching) of yeast happening shortly after the fruit is crushed into the tank. If we ferment in smaller tanks and we are going to punch the cap down we do this at least twice daily and sometimes three times a day. I believe in short very warm fermentations where much of the extraction of flavors occurs prior to much alcohol being produced. I also like to get the fermenting juice off the skins as soon as I feel we have extracted the color and flavors that we are looking for in the wine. After we press the juice off of the skins we generally go to barrels within twenty four hours. This is my twentieth vintage in Washington and the methods I discuss above are what I feel works for me to make the very best wine possible from Washington's Columbia Valley. Cheers!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Weather Watching / Cordon Group

It has rained two of the last three days. I canceled the Merlot I had scheduled to pick today. We will look at the weather in the morning and decide whether we will pick tomorrow or not. The forecast looks decent for the week with a slight chance of rain each day but as long as the weather stays clear we should get quite a bit of fruit picked this week.
Friday night, the 27th we hosted our distributor, Cordon Selections annual trip to Eastern Washington with members of the trade from Western Washington. This is the fourth year we have started the weekend with taco's and wine on Red Mountain. Our neighbors, Tim & Kelly Hightower have co-hosted this event since it's inception. This is a great chance for key members of the industry to get a chance to see wineries in action and for many a chance to see ripe fruit on the vine. Saturday is spent with a visit to wineries that Cordon represents that are located in the Walla Walla Valley. I spent today on the bus touring vineyards north of the Tri-Cities with the group. I enjoy the contact with these key players in the industry and find the questions they ask very stimulating. Often times this interaction puts some of their preconcieved ideas to the test, which I find great. Crop level was one of the topics we touched upon today that had some of these people scratching their heads. It's great to get these people over to Eastern Washington and see first hand where it all happens.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Harvest Update - 2007

As we approach the end of September I am starting to get a good feel for how this vintage is stacking up compared to other vintages and it looks fairly promising. The weather has been nothing short of perfect so far this fall, with day time highs in the upper 70's to low 80's. Temperatures at night have been cooling off into the 40's. These temperature consistently have enabled us to slowly ripen the crop over a period of time. This type of ripening reminds me of 2005 which is considered by many to be a very good vintage from Washington. It is still just the end of September and we have a whole lot of fruit yet to bring in, so as I have said before I am not ready to declare a great vintage yet.
We will finish bringing in all of the Merlot we will be taking by Sunday, with Boushey and Conner-Lee Vineyards picking. We have started bringing in Semillon from Stillwater Creek Vineyard and have picked a little Cabernet Sauvignon from Champoux Vineyard in the Horse Heaven Hills. Next week we will really start bringing in a good portion of Cabernet Sauvignon from warmer sights such as Red Mountain and the Horse Heaven Hills. Malbec, which I am finding out has many followers should start coming in next week as well.
This weekend, September 28-30 is the Columbia Valley Winery Association's "Catch the Crush" event, we hope to see many of you at the winery.
Cheers!
Charlie Hoppes - Winemaker+Owner

Monday, September 17, 2007

Growers - The Real Winemakers

I had a chance this past weekend to spend some time in the vineyard with a few of our growers for Fidelitas and was I ever impressed. I think all too often, that winemakers get too much of the credit when it comes to wine quality when the real heroes are the growers who get us consistently great fruit. As I visited vineyards this past weekend I was struck by the dedication of Roger Gamache. He is sincere about trying to get me the very best fruit that his vineyard will provide so that I can make the very best wine possible. I saw the same dedication and attention to detail from Miguel Rodriguez at Weinbau Vineyard on the Wahluke Slope as well. The list of growers that we use at Fidelitas is a list of some of the best grape growers in the state and in each and every vineyard we see this type of dedication. The next time you read about how great a wine is from a winery, think about the growers and there immense contribution to the overall process.
Cheers!
Charlie