“Nicholas O’Connell’s <i>Crush</i> is a lively, personal tour through the joys-and travails-of making wine and is also packed with information and insights about wine in general. It’s an engaging read for anyone who starts feeling that crazy itch that they’d like, someday, to make their own wine-or for anyone who loves wine.”-Ray Isle, executive wine editor of <i>Food & Wine</i> and wine and spirits editor for <i>Travel + Leisure</i> “Nicholas O’Connell’s level of experience is phenomenal: his decades of making wine, his writing style, and his obsession with making wine. This feels like a once-in-a-lifetime work because it includes twenty-plus years of living, social drinking, and learning about wine. It is a memoir mirrored by wine making. It is humble and humorous. Nothing else touches it.”-Mike Medberry, author of <i>The Dark Side of the Moon</i> and viticulturist at Frog’s Tooth Winery “I’d wager there aren’t many wine lovers who haven’t fantasized, at least for a minute, about making their own wine. Nicholas O’Connell helps you scratch that itch without having to deal with swarms of fruit flies or take-their-time fermentations. O’Connell has taught writing for decades, and his considerable skills show in his vivid account of turning grapes into wine.”-Dorothy J. Gaiter, senior editor of <i>Grape Collective</i>
O’Connell’s quest to master the art of wine making begins in his garage. From there he embarks on an apprenticeship at Betz and DeLille Cellar and other great wineries in California, Oregon, and Washington. He provides a first-person, ground-up view of a business not yet fully explored despite record interest in wine. O’Connell also includes conversations with some of the world’s most gifted vintners, including Warren Winiarski, former owner of Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars.
Wine is surrounded by a seemingly impenetrable cloud of descriptors-“wet dog,” “kumquats,” “cat pee”-and a fog of pretention. Crush pierces this fog with colorful, concrete storytelling, in-depth portraits of famous winemakers, and a lively, down-to-earth description of the process by which wine is made: not in the critic’s mind but in the winery and vineyard.
Acknowledgments
Part 1. Crush
1. Garagiste
2. Ciel du Cheval: A Wine Lover’s Idea of Heaven
Part 2. Washington
3. The Founding Fathers of the Washington Wine Industry
4. Betz Family Winery
5. DeLille Cellars: The Art of Blending
6. Decision-Making at Canoe Ridge
7. Picking Grapes
8. Fermentation and Fruit Flies
9. Tom Cooks
10. Pressing: The Merlot Mobile
Part 3. Oregon
11. Learning the Secrets of Making Killer Pinot Noir
12. Beaux FrÈres: Avoiding Getting Lee-ed
13. Tony Soter: Pinot Noir as an Expression of Place
14. Ken Wright Visit: Wine as Fundamentally Spiritual
Part 4. My Wine Journey
15. Falling in Love with Wine
16. On Hallowed Ground: Visiting Bordeaux and the Great Growths
Part 5. California
17. Robert Mondavi: Transforming the Tastes of the Nation
18. Stag’s Leap: The Search for an American Arcadia
19. Opus One: The Place Made the Wine
20. Cain Vineyard and Winery: Letting the Land Speak
Part 6. A Question of Balance
21. Taking Stock: Should I Go Pro?
22. Wine with Dinner
23. The Connoisseur: Dan McCarthy
24. The Heart of Hospitality: Searching for the Spirit of Domaine Tempier
25. Bottling Party
Bibliographic Essay
Index