The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater (known locally as "The Rocks District") is an American Viticultural Area (AVA) in Umatilla County, Oregon that is a sub-appellation of the Walla Walla Valley AVA, and both lie within the vast Columbia Valley AVA. The appellation was established on March 11, 2015 by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), Treasury after reviewing the petition submitted from Dr. Kevin R. Pogue, a professor of geology at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington, proposing the viticultural area called "The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater."[1][2][4][5]
Wine region | |
Type | American Viticultural Area |
---|---|
Year established | 2015[1] |
Country | United States |
Part of | Oregon, Columbia Valley AVA, Walla Walla Valley AVA |
Climate region | Arid |
Soil conditions | cobbly and gravelly silt loam[1] |
Total area | 3,770 acres (6 sq mi)[1] |
Size of planted vineyards | 472 acres (191 ha)[1] |
No. of vineyards | 35[1] |
Grapes produced | Cabernet Franc, Grenache, Tempranillo, Syrah, Viognier[2] Malbec[3] |
No. of wineries | 5 |
The appellation lies entirely within the Oregon portion of the Walla Walla Valley AVA that partially expands across Walla Walla County. It is named for the city of Milton-Freewater, Oregon and a unique alluvial fan resulting in rocky soils with "baseball sized" basalt cobbles covering the earth, and is notable as being "the only AVA in the United States whose boundaries are defined by the soil type."[6][4][7] Unique wine flavors are said to result from the mineral composition, hydrology, and temperatures of the volcanic rocks.[1][8][a][9][10]
History
editWashington State geologist and terroir consultant Kevin Pogue submitted the petition to TTB proposing an area named "The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater." [2][4][6][5][b][1] The AVA petition was published for comment in the Federal Register in February 2014,[1] and was established in February 2015.[12]
Controversies
editThe AVA, unlike the Walla Walla Valley AVA, and the Walla Walla Valley itself, lies entirely within the state of Oregon. This has implications for use of the appellation on wines produced in Oregon and Washington. Because Federal rules require wines to be fully finished in the state in which the AVA lies,[13][14] only a handful of Oregon wineries,[15][c] out of the more than 100 wineries in both states in the Walla Walla Valley,[17] would be permitted to use the appellation on their product.[d] At the same time, Oregon wineries as far away as Portland could use the appellation.[e] This has caused some, labeled "prominent dissenters" by Wine Spectator's Harvey Steiman, to oppose the AVA.[5] Other reactions were less pointed with wine publishers using terms like "a bit of controversy"[11] and "the location...creates some nuances".[16] One of the same publishers said a "sub-appellation was ... inevitable given the uniqueness of the soils and resulting wines".[16]
Critical reception
editWine Spectator's two top-rated Northwest wines as of 2013[update], both Syrah scored 98 out of 100, were sourced in the AVA.[18]
Footnotes
edit- ^ "Vines struggle to grow, resulting in tiny grapes of amazing flavor intensity. And yes, the wines show the sort of flavors that fall under the heading of "minerality," although to my taste it's more like black olive and tar.": Steiman 2013[5]
- ^ "[Kevin] Pogue authored the TTB petition to establish 'The Rocks at Milton-Freewater' as a federally approved American Viticultural Area.": Perdue 2014[11]
- ^ Sullivan states only Cayuse, Otis Kenyon, Watermill, Don Carlo Vineyard and Zerba wineries meet the criterion.[16]
- ^ "The [Rocks AVA] petition is surrounded by a bit of controversy because it is wholly within Oregon though entirely within the Walla Walla Valley. Under current federal labeling laws, Washington wineries that use grapes from 'The Rocks' would not be able to use that AVA name on the label. Instead, they would need to refer to it as coming from the Walla Walla Valley. This would apply even to Washington wineries that own vineyards within the AVA. Only Oregon wineries would be able to use the designation.": Perdue 2014[11]
- ^ "[Wineries in] Portland, hundreds of miles away, can and do make wines from these grapes. They could legally use the AVA.": Steiman 2013[5]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i Federal Register 2014.
- ^ a b c Richard 2013a.
- ^ "The 18 wine regions of Oregon, from green valleys to the high desert". Oregon Live. Portland: The Oregonian. November 22, 2018.
- ^ a b c Richard 2013b.
- ^ a b c d e Steiman 2013.
- ^ a b Holden 2014.
- ^ Kimbel 2014.
- ^ Pogue 2009.
- ^ Sullivan 2013b "Stylistically, the wines are known for their outrageous, earthy, meaty aromas and flavors. In contrast to Syrah grown elsewhere in the Northwest, many of the wines off The Rocks emphasize the savory aspects of the grape instead of the fruitiness."
- ^ Cayuse 2014 "The rocky soil offers excellent drainage and limited nutrients, the vines have to struggle to survive, thus reducing production and concentrating the fruit's flavor. High density planting forces their root systems to compete and dig deeper for moisture and sustenance, and the heat transmitted by the stones helps the grapes to ripen."
- ^ a b c Perdue 2014.
- ^ "TTB Approves New AVA: The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater" (Walla Walla Valley Wine Alliance). Cision. PR Newswire. February 6, 2015. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
- ^ Hermann & Kipp 2014.
- ^ Kingery Ritter & Trinidad 2014.
- ^ Degerman 2014.
- ^ a b c Sullivan 2013a.
- ^ Marquardt & Darr 2014.
- ^ Richard 2013c "Reynvaan syrah Walla Walla Valley Stonessence 2010 snagged the [2013] No. 11 spot with a score of 98. The only other Northwest wine to ever receive 98 by the magazine is Christophe Baron's No Girls syrah Walla Walla Valley La Paciencia Vineyard 2009. The two wines that scored 98 come from grapes grown on the Oregon side of the Walla Walla Valley, in what could become next spring a sub AVA called the Milton-Freewater Rocks District."
Sources
edit- Geology and terroir of the Walla Walla AVA, Cayuse Vineyards, 2014
- Degerman, Eric (March 3, 2014), Oregon winery restriction sparks comments on The Rocks AVA petition, Great Northwest Wine
- "Establishment of The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater Viticultural Area" (27 CFR 9 [Docket No. TTB–2014–0003; T.D. TTB–127; Ref: Notice No. 142] RIN 1513–AC05 Final Rule), Federal Register, vol. 80, no. 26, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau {TTB), Treasury, pp. 6902–6906, February 9, 2015, archived (PDF) from the original on April 18, 2023 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Hermann, Chris; Kipp, Bernie (March 6, 2014), "Conditions For Using Multi-state AVAs On Wine Labels", Alcoholic beverages law blog, Stoel Rives
- Holden, Ronald (April 2014), Home Grown: A celebration of local culinary enterprise, Seattle DINING!, archived from the original (—Kevin Pogue: Champion of Rocks) on September 3, 2014
- Kimbel, Lori (July 1, 2014), "Milton-Freewater Rocks District AVA awaits approval", Northeast Oregon Business News
- Kingery Ritter, Carol; Trinidad, John (March 1, 2014), TTB Proposes New Oregon AVA, Cites Wine Blogs as Support
- Marquardt, Tom; Darr, Patrick (August 1, 2014), "The Wine Guys: Walla Walla Valley prepares to welcome new AVA", Yakima Herald-Republic
- Perdue, Andy (May 2014), "Walla Walla Celebrates Syrah", Walla Walla Lifestyles
- O'Connor, Jim E., ed. (2009), Volcanoes to Vineyards: Geologic Field Trips Through the Dynamic Landscape of the Pacific Northwest (Folds, floods and fine wine: Geologic influences on the terroir of the Columbia Basin: Kevin Pogue, Department of Geology, Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA), Geological Society of America, p. 15, ISBN 9780813700151
- Richard, Terry (October 16, 2013), "Walla Walla emerges as wine-tasting haven in scenic southeast Washington", The Oregonian
- Richard, Terry (October 21, 2013), "Walla Walla's southside wine district features proposed Milton-Freewater AVA", The Oregonian
- Richard, Terry (November 29, 2013), "Wine Spectator's newest magazine gives serious coverage to Northwest wine scene", The Oregonian
- Steiman, Harvey (February 28, 2013), "New Walla Walla AVA Faces Rocky Road" (Steiman at Large), Wine Spectator
- Sullivan, Sean (February 2013), "Proposed 'The Rocks of Milton-Freewater' AVA focuses on terroir" (PDF), Washington Wine Report
- Sullivan, Sean P. (Summer 2013), Walla Walla Valley: A Matter Of Rocks, Tasting Room magazine
- Veseth, Mike (July 22, 2014), "The Five Pillars of Walla Walla's Wine Success", The Wine Economist blog
Further reading
edit- Gregutt, Paul (2010), Washington Wines & Wineries, University of California Press, p. 152, ISBN 9780520261389
- Richard, Terry (August 22, 2014), "Walla Walla Beckons Visitors", The Oregonian
- Cole, Katherine (September 2, 2013), "Wine notes: Rhone wave breaking in Walla Walla", The Oregonian
External links
edit- 45°57′30″N 118°24′30″W / 45.95833°N 118.40833°W
- Federal Register: Notice of Proposed Establishment of The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater Viticultural Area
- Government docket TTB-2014-0003 including proposed AVA maps and other documents
- Federal Register: Establishment of The Rocks District of Milton-Freewater Viticultural Area: Final Rule
- TTB AVA Map