
At the recent Northwest
Wine Summit,
Hells Canyon won BIG!
Their 1998 Idaho Reserve Merlot
won "Best Idaho Wine" and
the only Gold that came back to Idaho. They also won a Silver for their
1998 Idaho Pinot Noir, a Bronze for their 1998 Idaho Chardonnay and
another Bronze for the 1998 Idaho Cabernet.
According
to Northwest Wines, A Pocket Guide to the Wines of Washington, Oregon
and Idaho, "A few years back, a leading publication in London, named
Hells Canyon the best Chardonnay in the world." Hells Canyon Winery was founded in 1980
by Steve and Leslie Robertson. Using their lifelong love of food, appreciation
for and fascination with fine wine, and an enduring entrepreneurial
spirit to guide them, they took the plunge into grape growing and wine
making in a relatively unknown wine-growing area overlooking the Snake
River. They named Hells Canyon Winery after the famous canyon created
by the Snake River.
Hells Canyon produces 3,000 cases of premium Idaho
Wine. With the new spring expansion of the vineyard, they now have
10 acres of Chardonnay, 5 acres of Cabernet Sauvignon, 6 acres of Merlot,
3 acres of Cabernet Franc and 12 acres of Syrah. The Robertson's are
looking forward to the future with these varieties: these red varietal
are generating excitement in the marketplace nationwide, and have shown
to be well suited to Idaho's climate and soils.

Pioneer winemakers blaze trails
in the Gem State
By Andy Perdue
Wine Press NW reprinted with permission
At first glance, the Snake River Valley seems an
idyllic place to grow wine grapes. But making wine in the area west
of Boise is more like an extreme sport.
With elevations reaching 3,000 feet, winter weather
always a threat and a less-than-tolerant religious influence skeptical
of the industry, Southern Idaho's fledgling wine industry is fighting
for growth, support and survival.
Even so, vineyards are being planted in this fertile
region, new wineries are emerging, and more than a few heads are being
turned by the quality of Idaho wines.

Image © Jackie Johnston 2002
'I think we have a future'
" We have the most unique growing conditions in the world," says Steve Robertson,
owner with his wife, Leslie, of Hells Canyon Winery in Caldwell. (In photo above).
Surrounded by 40 acres of vines, the Idaho natives
perhaps seem out of place, though they're obviously in their comfort
zone and relish their place in one of the most exciting emerging wine
regions in the Pacific Northwest. After moving back to Boise from Portland
in 1974, the Robertsons opened a restaurant, which they sold six years
later to plant grapes.
They opened the winery in 1984. Its first name
was Covey Rise, but after a lawsuit with a Washington winery with a
similar title, the name changed in 1988 to Hells Canyon Winery. In
hindsight, the legal problems were a stroke of luck because the name
and beautiful labels help sell more bottles than the product inside.
The Robertsons have a sense of elegance far removed
from the agricultural region surrounding them. Make no mistake: Running
the vineyard and winery is hard work, and the Robertsons are dawn-to-dusk
folks, but they carve out an enjoyable existence that includes vintage
automobiles, fine cuisine, gardens and patios with a European feel
and reminiscing about favorite times in grand places around the globe.
Steve
pulls out a few bottles of wine to sample. The first is the 1985 Covey
Rise chardonnay. "That's the wine that put Idaho on the map!" Leslie
proudly extolls as she reveals a copy of Decanter magazine that featured
the chardonnay with some heady company from California and Europe.
It's still a stunningly bright wine that doesn't
reveal its age in the glass, but instead greets the nose with aromas
of oranges and coats the palate with deliciously clean and crisp citrus
flavors.
The Robertsons embrace
the outdoors and wildlife for which Idaho is known, and this shows
on their labels, which feature
hunting dogs, fish and more. Hells Canyon's "Artists Conservation Series" labels
even won a global award for the British Columbia company that designs
it. Adams Label of Surrey, B.C., won Best of Show last year in the
Tag and Label Manufacturers Institute's 23rd annual competition. The
winning label was for the 1998 Idaho pinot noir.
Hells Canyon's wines are crafted a few hundred miles away in Eastern
Washington with the help of Rob Griffin, co-owner and winemaker of
Barnard Griffin Winery in Richland. Ever the maverick, Griffin bottles
some of the wine under his own label with the Hells Canyon Vineyard
designation.
The relationship between the Washington and Idaho
wine industries is strong. It was cemented in 1996, when a devastating
winter decimated vineyards throughout Washington's Columbia Valley.
Vintners turned to Idaho looking for grapes - any grapes - to make
it through that tough year.
"Idaho's wine industry might not exist today if
it weren't for '96," Steve Robertson says.
He says a similar devastating freeze in 1991 knocked
down Idaho vineyards just when area vintners were starting to gain
some momentum, and the wineries and vineyards were hurting until the
bonds between the two regions solidified a half decade later.
The similarities between the Idaho and Washington
wine regions are striking. Each experiences hard winters on a regular
cycle. Each laid its foundation on white wines, particularly riesling.
And each is in a dry agricultural area that gets fewer than 10 inches
of rain a year and therefore relies on irrigation.

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