Monday, 08 October 2007 01:56

Big Crush is a Big Hit

slide2After a long year of pruning, cultivating and harvesting, Amador County wineries and vineyards celebrated “The Big Crush” Saturday and Sunday. The Amador Vintner's Association’s "Big Crush" event attracted thousands of wine lovers from as far away as Texas wineries throughout the county for great wine, food and fun. Wineries offered every possible way to taste wine, wines poured from barrel and bottle, delicious food, live music at many of the wineries and dancing at some!
Grape stomping, winemaking demonstrations, tasting wine in the early stages of fermentation, helping to punch down bubbling wine in fermentation tanks were all part of the big weekend. Amador County boasts 2,700 acres of wine grapes - - a high percentage of which are farmed organically - - and more than 30 wineries. Amador County wineries are primarily small, family-owned operations whose proprietors make and sell their own wines, and greet visitors in their tasting rooms. Amador's production of robust, intensely flavored red wines is attributable to its high percentage of old vines: roughly 600 acres out of a total of 2,700 are 60 years or older, including several vineyards dating to the 19th century. These deeply rooted, head-trained vines, primarily zinfandel produce tiny crops of small-berried grapes which produce the heady zinfandels for which Amador County is renowned.