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White
750ml
Bottle: $25.89
12 bottles: $25.37
Dazzles of Light white blend is a new addition to our portfolio. We wanted to make a bright and springy, textural...
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White
750ml
Bottle: $34.95
12 bottles: $34.25
Grapes are destemmed and co-fermented in 1.5-ton fermenters, no sulfur at crush, and fermentation kicks off natively....
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White
750ml
Bottle: $25.95
12 bottles: $25.43
“Only Always” is our little love letter to the famed field blends of Alsace and Austria. Composed entirely of...
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White
750ml
Bottle: $24.95
12 bottles: $24.45
57% Pinot gris, 43% Grüner veltliner, co-fermented with 9 days of skin contact. Fermentation was completed in used...
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Sparkling
750ml
Bottle: $25.93
12 bottles: $25.41
Riesling and Gewürztraminer (20% direct press, 10% skin contact). The fruit was sourced from an organically farmed...
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Sale
White
750ml
Bottle: $20.93 $22.00
12 bottles: $20.51
Pinot Gris, Riesling, Chardonnay, Muller Thurgau, direct-press Cabernet Sauvignon, and misc. field blend . The fruit...
White
750ml
Bottle: $17.88
12 bottles: $17.52
OLD LOVE ‘White Wine’ comes from FIVE different Riesling vineyards planted throughout Oregon: Willamette,...
Red
750ml
Bottle: $35.95
12 bottles: $35.23
• Practicing Organic. • 100% Mondeuse. • 100% whole cluster on ripe, young vine (3rd leaf). • All native...
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Champagne Blend Mondeuse White Blend 2022 United States Oregon

The sparkling wines of Champagne have been revered by wine drinkers for hundreds of years, and even today they maintain their reputation for excellence of flavor and character, and are consistently associated with quality, decadence, and a cause for celebration. Their unique characteristics are partly due to the careful blending of a small number of selected grape varietals, most commonly Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. These grapes, blended in fairly equal quantities, give the wines of Champagne their wonderful flavors and aromas, with the Pinot Noir offering length and backbone, and the Chardonnay varietal giving its acidity and dry, biscuity nature. It isn't unusual to sometimes see Champagne labeled as 'blanc de blanc', meaning it is made using only Chardonnay varietal grapes, or 'blanc de noir', which is made solely with Pinot Noir.

Of all the New World wine countries, perhaps the one which has demonstrated the most flair for producing high quality wines - using a combination of traditional and forward-thinking contemporary methods - has been the United States of America. For the past couple of centuries, the United States has set about transforming much of its suitable land into vast vineyards, capable of supporting a wide variety of world-class grape varietals which thrive on both the Atlantic and the Pacific coastlines. Of course, we immediately think of sun-drenched California in regards to American wines, with its enormous vineyards responsible for the New World's finest examples of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot based wines, but many other states have taken to viticulture in a big way, with impressive results. Oregon, Washington State and New York have all developed sophisticated and technologically advanced wine cultures of their own, and the output of U.S wineries is increasing each year as more and more people are converted to their produce.

The beautiful state of Oregon has, over the past few decades, become increasingly well known and respected for its wine industry, with several small but significant wineries within the state receiving world wide attention for the quality of their produce. Whilst the first vineyards within Oregon were planted in the 1840s, the state's wine industry didn't really take off until the 1960s, when several wine producers from California discovered that the cooler regions of the state were ideal for cultivating various fine grape varietals. Today, Oregon has over four hundred and fifty wineries in operation, the vast majority of which are used for the production of wines made from Pinot Gris and Pinot Noir varietal grapes, both of which thrive in the valleys and mountainsides which characterise the landscape of the state.