10 CapitalPress.com Friday, September 9, 2022 Clearwater Canyon Wines: Using science to create ‘liquid art’ By HEATHER SMITH THOMAS For the Capital Press LEWISTON, Idaho — Family roots run deep in this vineyard and winery in northern Idaho. “My family purchased this ground in 1916. I am fourth generation and our daughter is fifth genera- tion. I grew up in Boise but spent summers here with my grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins on the farm and loved it,” said Coco Umiker, who with her husband, Karl, owns Clearwater Canyon wines. “Four years after my great grandpa purchased this farm, he died and left my great grandmother with four kids and a big mortgage,” she said. “She was a tough lady; she ran the farm, raised the kids and never remar- ried. She stayed here until she died at age 93.” She had 3 girls and a boy — Coco’s grandfather. “She put them all through college, and they all got teaching certificates,” Coco said. “My grandparents had four kids, none of whom were interested in farming as a career, but my mom and aunt helped oversee the operations after he retired,” she said. “Then my husband and I came along and started ask- ing Grandpa if we could convert some of the land Clearwater Canyon wine. Richard Duval Karl and Coco Umiker of Clearwater Canyon Cellars near Lewiston, Idaho. into a vineyard,” Coco said. He rented them a quar- ter-acre to give it a try. “Karl and I planted vines in 2003 and started Clearwa- ter Canyon Cellars in 2004,” she said. “We initially used fruit from Phinny Hill in the Horse Heaven Hills of Washington, and slowly grew our business.” Their first vintage was four barrels, in 2004. Coco juggled winemaking and working 100 miles away as an enologist at Whit- man Cellars in Walla Walla, Wash. Each year they made more wine and slowly expanded. Now they pro- duce about 5,000 cases a year, and the vineyard is about 7 acres. “We made wine in a garage for three years. Then we moved the operation to the Port of Lewiston. We rented space there for nine years and eventually got enough money together to build a facility here, next to the vineyard and our house,” Coco said. It’s been a long road, but a good one, as they grew the business and finished their educations. Karl finished his mas- ter’s degree in soils at the University of Idaho. He has an undergrad degree in chemistry. Coco finished a degree in microbiology, molecu- lar biology and biochem- istry and started working on her Ph.D. in 2005. She received her doctorate at Washington State Univer- sity within the enology and viticulture program. She is a wine microbiolo- gist who specializes in wine spoilage microorganisms. Her doctoral research was on the factors affecting cul- turability, viability and fil- terability of Dekkera brux- ellensis, a spoilage yeast, in red wine. She also considers her- self an artist who uses the natural environment and an understanding of wine sci- ence to craft grapes into “liquid art.” She sees each vintage as an opportunity to explore wine characteristics that are unique to that year. She met Karl at the Uni- versity of Idaho. “We met because we shared a love for bicycles and only later realized we had a lot of other things in common — as we were ped- dling around and going to bike races,” Coco said. Karl grew up in Arkansas racing mountain bikes. Karl and Coco now have three full-time employees. Sara Wilson is a lifelong friend who is now their wine club manager — which is how 90% of their wine is sold. Mike Haberman is their cellar master and viticultur- ist, and Karen Schmidt is the tasting room and wholesale manager. “She’s new to the team but not new to our lives, as she’s been a friend for a long time,” said Coco.