BEST OFF-THE-BEATEN-PATH NAPA TASTING ROOMS
After having visited numerous renowned wineries, many of us are looking for the hidden gems within the Napa Valley. Good wines are certainly valued, but the entire experience a winery provides leaves guests wanting to return and telling their friends and family to visit. Each winery listed in this article has some special draw, whether it’s art, architecture, ambiance, gardens or compelling history.
I conducted an informal poll seeking wine enthusiasts’ favorite wineries and coupled the results with my own picks to produce a short list of can’t-miss experiences that you could almost miss while driving in wine country. Criteria for inclusion are that the winery:
Signature wines and the tasting room experience are discussed for each. Regardless of the perks, beauty or caliber of wines, most enthusiastic comments came from respondents when the people were the attraction. Establishments immediately exude an upbeat ambiance when their staff obviously loves meeting people, are experts at what they do and are knowledgeable about their wines.
1. The Winery: ARTESA VINEYARDS & WINERY
The Draw: BOLD ARCHITECTURE AND STUNNING VIEWS
Signature Wine/Varietal: PINOT NOIR
Winery Tasting and Other Fees: $10-$15
THE EXPERIENCE
By far, the most extraordinary approach to any out-of-the-way tasting room is that of Artesa Vineyards & Winery. Innocently exiting Highway 121 to Old Sonoma Road in Napa, you will drive back-country roads lined with fields of wildflowers and eventually follow signs into the entrance of the winery. But it keeps going. And going. At some point, you believe you are visiting a castle on top of a hill.
What you do confront is an architectural wonder: a building and grounds that are, themselves, modern art. The reflecting pool renders its water as glass. The winery structure is built into the side of the hill and has been compared to an art museum.
Interiors are reminiscent of the 1960s, with bold colors, angular, clean-lined furniture and graphic paintings hung throughout. The gift store offers items mirroring the interior design – lovely and sleek – for the person who has everything.
Crowds ebb and flow, but tasting room staff keeps up. Dan May, for example, expertly dances among patrons, attentive to each, while ardently describing the wines and winery. He is fond of saying his 22-year experience as a counselor at Stanford Children’s Hospital gave him the skills to deal with adults on vacation who sometimes act like children. His five-year history with Artesa has made him a cheese guru, qualifying him as host for the winery’s weekly “Vino con Queso” (wine and cheese pairings). Administration staff claims that, without a doubt, Dan receives more fan mail than any other hospitality worker.
Artesa’s excellent collection comprises pinot blanc, sauvignon blanc, chardonnay, albarino, pinot noir, merlot, syrah, cabernet franc, cabernet sauvignon, tempranillo and sparkling wines. But their elements red is especially lovely, with a blend of cabernet franc, syrah, tempranillo, cabernet sauvignon and grenache. Their Estate Pinot Noir, which garnered 93 points from Wine Enthusiast, is classic for the grape, while their upper tier Limited Release Carneros Pinot Noir is bigger and inkier.
Artesa’s 2004 Reserve Napa Cabernet Sauvignon was recommended by Playboy magazine as Best Wine Under $50.







Comments
Thanks for sharing this. I am taking a trip in August and this is right up my alley!