10 CapitalPress.com September 9, 2016 Oregon winery features unique Albariño grapes By MARGARETT WATERBURY For the Capital Press Tad Seestedt, founder of Ran- som Wine and Spirits, has been working in the Willamette Valley wine industry for more than 20 years. Yet until a few years ago, he didn’t have a vineyard to call his own. “When I irst got here,” says Seestedt, “I was pretty naive. In upstate New York, I could buy land for ive or 10 thou- sand dollars an acre. I thought it would be the same here. And then I got slapped with reality.” Today, Ransom Wine and Spirits sits on a 40-acre parcel between Sheridan and Willa- mina, just before the foothills of the Coast Range. Ransom is the only winery in Oregon that also operates a full distillery, where Seestedt and his team make whiskey, vodka, grappa, vermouth and two kinds of gin. The property where Ransom is currently located was purchased in 2008. Between 2010 and 2012, Seestedt planted 1.2 acres of Albariño grapes on the site, and the irst harvest took place in 2015. Margarett Waterbury/For the Capital Press Ransom’s Albariño vines are planted in front of a larger ield of barley, which is used to make Ransom’s whiskey. A whole-cluster, barrel-fer- mented, partial skin contact Albariño release is currently in the works. Although Seestedt has been making and selling wine under the Ransom label since 1999, and making wine professionally since 1993, the Albariño plant- ings are Ransom’s irst estate fruit. At irst, Seestedt thought they were the irst plantings of Albariño in the valley. Not un- til after the vines were in the ground did he discover that My- ron Redford, Willamette Val- ley wine pioneer and longtime friend and mentor to Seestedt, had also planted Albariño grapes at Amity Vineyard in 2007. Last year, Ransom and Amity joined forces to release a 100 per- cent Albariño wine made from JTI Supply is your source for trusted makers of sprayer equipment & parts. NEW LOCATION! 33935 Hwy 99E, Tangent, OR A half-mile north of Hwy 34. V16-1/#14 541-928-2937 • 1-800-982-1099 • WE DELIVER ANYWHERE! See our full inventory at www.jtisupply.com V16-2/#5 Check out our storage tanks. grapes from both plantings. Becoming a grape grow- er was the next chapter for Seestedt. “The transition has been really rewarding. It helps as a winemaker to be out in the vineyard. You have a much bet- ter grasp of what’s happening,” he explains. While more plantings might be in Ransom’s future, Seestedt isn’t sure when that will hap- pen. “I don’t want to rush. We’ll start getting an idea of how this acre performs, and then go from there.” Although Pinot noir and Chardonnay command the best prices, as an estate winemaker, Seestedt is much more inter- ested in exploring less popular varietals. “Wine in modern Oregon hasn’t even scratched the sur- face as far as varietals are con- cerned,” says Seestedt. “It took the Europeans millennia to ig- ure out what grew best where — we’re just getting started. Really our climate is not very similar to Germany or France. We have very low humidity in the summer. I think our cli- mate is more like the Iberian Peninsula.” When asked what other vari- etals spark his interest, Seestedt sticks with Spain. “If I could get my hands on some Basque varieties, I’d love to plant those. They’re hard to ind in this coun- try, though. I like the idea of be- ing a suitcase renegade, but a lot of bad things have happened as a result of that attitude.”