4 CapitalPress.com Friday, September 10, 2021 Applegate House Vineyard: Avennia: A rising wine-making star in Woodinville Wine with Oregon history By HEATHER SMITH THOMAS For the Capital Press By CRAIG REED For the Capital Press Craig Reed/For the Capital Press Jessica Applegate, owner of the Applegate House Vineyard near Yoncalla, Ore., shows off the label of the Applegate wine. The Applegate House is featured on the label. gate said. “It’s a way for this old house to go into the future while still respecting its past.” Applegate plans to eventually resume tours of the house and the vineyard and to sell Applegate wine with those proceeds used to maintain the two-story home. “We want more of a boutique vineyard, not a mass produc- tion operation,” she said. “We’re looking for quality over quantity, keeping it small and manageable for us and making sure we’re fol- lowing our values for it.” Wood managed the vineyard for its fi rst fi ve years, and Isa- bel Newlin has been the vine- yard manager for the past two years. Avennia Wine Marty Taucher and Chris Peterson blending wine trials at Avennia Wine in Woodinville, Wash. classes on wines of the world. Chris has traveled to all the major wine growing regions of France, Tus- cany and Sicily where regional wine, vineyard tours and relationships with other winemakers inspired his wine- making practices. Eventually, he worked at DeLille Cellars at Woodinville and spent seven years helping make some of Washington state’s most heralded and award-winning wines. After he and Marty met, they laid the foundation for Avennia. When Marty asked Chris to review his draft winery business plan in 2009, it coincided with Chris’ desire to start a new chapter in his own winemak- ing career. They chose the name Avennia for their new winery, the Latin name for the city of Avignon in southern France. Chris has always admired French wines and their balance between fruit and non-fruit charac- ter. He envisioned making Wash- ington wines that portrayed this bal- ance, yet still remain unmistakably Washington. Their respective strengths and experiences enabled them to forge an eff ective partnership, with their passionate commitment to signa- ture vineyards and natural processes in the cellar, resulting in timeless world-class wines. With support and input from Chris’ wife Lauren, and Marty’s wife Colleen, Avennia became a reality. By the end of 2010, 16 tons of fruit were transformed into wine (released in 2012) and they had rela- tionships in place with some of the state’s best growers, to secure the best fruit in the region for future vintages. INVESTING IN OUR LOCAL AG COMMUNITIES FOR MORE THAN 60 YEARS LEE’S DIESEL & MOBILE REPAIR Rickreall, OR • 541-936-9146 • www.leesdiesel.com Pivot & Linear Irrigation Systems Parts & Service - TL, Pierce, Valley, Reinke & Zimmatic Linear, Corners, and Pivots Guidance Systems Submersible & Line-Shaft Turbine Pumps, VFD’s Sukup Banking with a Local Focus: • A knowledgeable and helpful banking team offers access to the convenience of modern banking technology with the added one-on-one personalized care you expect. • On-site Loan Officers, who are empowered to make local credit decisions, offering a variety of small business, commercial, and commercial real estate loans. TL Sales, Parts & Service call Brian 503-983-6251 Cell/Text S234036-1 Grain Bins, Dryers, Fans & Heaters Grain Handling Equipment S224159-1 YONCALLA, Ore. — Pio- neer Jesse Applegate planted a 12-acre vineyard in 1876 on property his family had home- steaded 20 years earlier. That vineyard was eventu- ally destroyed by an insect infes- tation. But now, over a century later, a young vineyard is matur- ing on a southeast-facing slope of the property a couple miles east of Yoncalla, Ore., in north- ern Douglas County. In 2014, Jessica Applegate, a sixth generation descendant of the Applegate family, and Nathan Wood, owner of Elkton Vineyard Management, prepped and planted the 3-acre Apple- gate House Vineyard on what had previously been sheep pas- ture and hay ground. There are 2 acres of Pinot noir and 1 acre of Albarino. “You plant what you love to drink if it works for the land,” Applegate said. The vineyard is across the backyard of the Applegate House, the oldest home in Ore- gon owned by the same fam- ily since its construction in the early 1850s. The house is on the National Register of Historic Places. “I think of this as a steward- ship project,” Jessica Apple- WOODINVILLE, Wash. — Winemaker Chris Peterson tells peo- ple that the success of this venture — which began in 2010 — is the result of two people with complementary skills who met at a fortuitous time. Chris had the winemaking skills, after many years working at DeLille Cellars. He started the Avennia proj- ect with Marty Taucher, a local exec- utive who wanted to branch out into the wine trade. Andrew Bradshaw, who joined the operation in 2016 to open and operate their tasting room and become manager of retail operations and services, says the two partners had a similar vision. Marty graduated from Oregon State University in 1977 and started working at Microsoft in 1984. He led their public relations and event marketing teams for 10 years and his work involved a lot of travel around the world. During those travels, his interest in wine and winemaking grew. He still enjoys seeking out new vintners and wine styles from all over the world. Following his passion, he took classes at South Seattle Community College and graduated with a degree in wine. In 2009, he became a crush intern at DeLille Cellars, where he met Chris. Chris graduated from the Univer- sity of Washington, and then became the fi rst graduate of Walla Walla Community College’s Enology and Viticulture program. Later he taught www.citizensEbank.com 15 Branches across 13 communities in the Willamette Valley Member FDIC