How Robert Mondavi's White Smoke Captured the Wine Industry
In the history of Napa Valley, California,  Robert Mondavi (1913 – 2008) holds a special place. In 1965, Robert had a  much-publicized split with younger brother  Peter Mondavi.
 The rift precipitated Robert’s leaving the family business at Charles 
Krug Winery in St.  Helena. In what seemed like no time, Robert Mondavi 
then created the  California premium wine business, as we know it today.
 
Among his first moves was to secure a location in Oakville for his new winery. Mondavi hired  architect Cliff May
 (1909 – 1989) to design his new winery. It also happened  to be the 
first new winery in the Napa Valley since the passing of Prohibition  in
 1930. Well known for his  California ranch style homes,
 the Mondavi Winery soon became May’s most  prominent commission. Even 
today, the arched entrance arouses both our  contemporary esthetic and 
our search for timeless beauty. From his first 
vintage  onward, Mondavi featured the building’s front façade on his 
label. Experiencing  only minor variations in style, the Mondavi premium
  contemporary label looks much like one from the 1960s. To this day, the  Mondavi label is a reliable symbol for quality California wine.
Mondavi
 was a marketing genius. The first vintage for Robert Mondavi  Winery 
was his 1966 Oakville Cabernet Sauvignon. Upon its release in 1968, the 
entire  vintage sold out almost immediately. Soon after his Cabernet 
Sauvignon sold out,  Robert Mondavi rechristened an otherwise plebeian 
Sauvignon Blanc, calling it “Fume  Blanc”. 
By featuring the “white smoke” designation on the label, Robert Mondavi 
 succeeded in convincing many neophyte wine consumers that he had 
invented a new  varietal wine. Advances in large-scale cold fermentation
 were still years away, so making a  distinguished Sauvignon Blanc was 
not easy. I will leave it up to others to  determine if Mondavi 
succeeded in making a remarkable Sauvignon Blanc.
On
 my first visit to Robert Mondavi Winery in 1969, the ubiquitous Fume 
Blanc  was the only wine available for sale to the public. Although I 
have since  consumed many bottles of Robert Mondavi Cabernet Sauvignon 
and Chardonnay, I  have not noticed a bottle of Robert Mondavi Fume 
Blanc on sale for years.  However, there are images of 2007 Robert 
Mondavi Fume Blanc on the internet, so  they must still make that wine.
For those who bought land early, like Joseph Heitz, producing the only 
other 1966 Oakville Cabernet on the market was a natural step. Before 
Mondavi and Heitz, Beringer,  Inglenook
 and other Napa Valley winemakers saw the place as just another  
California viticulture area. It was after Mondavi opened his winery that
 the  Napa Valley became one of the hottest real estate markets in the 
United States.  Wealthy individuals and corporations alike rushed to own
 a part of the  California premium wine business. 
Until Napa Valley real estate prices skyrocketed, Sonoma County and  Mendocino County
 held nearly equal viticultural status to the nearby Napa  Valley. After
 a string of international accolades for its premium wines in the  
1970s, Napa Valley rose to preeminence in the minds of most California 
wine  aficionados. To the present day, a Napa Valley "domaine de origin"
 still holds  sway with wine aficionados, both young and old. Regardless
 of how imperfect a  Napa Valley wine may be, most vinophiles will 
unconsciously give a Napa Valley  wine the benefit of the doubt.
For Robert Mondavi, one could say that he happened
 to be in the right place at  the right time. Although he was certainly 
in the right place, he capitalized on
  several trends, including the rush to varietal wine labeling. Until 
ridiculed by Mondavi and others, the term  “California Burgundy” was in 
common usage. Soon thereafter, new laws required  winemakers use 
accurate geographical and varietal wine labeling. 
As with the red wine tradition in Bordeaux, France, a blend of California  Cabernet Sauvignon,  Cabernet Franc and  Merlot
 often makes a wine preferable to straight Cabernet Sauvignon.  However,
 Robert Mondavi’s push for varietal labeling won the hearts of both  
legislators and consumers. Unless a wine could meet the seventy-five  
percent-of-content threshold, such a blend might be labeled “Claret”  or worse yet, “Red  Table Wine”.
 Out of misplaced deference for Robert Mondavi and his  successful push 
for varietal labeling, we now drink our California Cabernet  Sauvignon 
and even Merlot mostly straight, rather than in more thoughtful  blends.
 For a winemaker to do otherwise, risks having his or her wine languish 
 on the shelf, rather than consumed by the public.
Another
 reason for the success of Robert Mondavi and his fellow Napa Valley 
Vintners is the compact geography of the appellation. The valley  is 
only twenty miles long and several miles wide. In the 1970s, a tourist 
could  visit almost every winery in the valley in one day. In the early 
1970s, stops at  Robert Mondavi, Beaulieu, Louis M. Martini, Beringer, 
Charles Krug, Inglenook,  then newly reformed Freemark  Abbey and the new Sterling Vineyards might make for one full day of Napa  Valley wine tasting. 
Today, a tasting-trip north on the same California Highway 29 might take
 a week, given the large number of wineries now along that  road. From 
Calistoga, a return trip south along the  Silverado Trail
 yields scores more wineries, all still in the Napa Valley.  On a 
weekend during the crush, the Napa Valley can seem like one giant 
amusement  park for adults. When at Sterling Vineyards, be sure to ride 
the overhead tram  out to the tasting room and back. After a glass of 
wine, it is a real  experience.
              
By James McGillis at 05:38 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link
