Letters from Lodi
An insightful and objective look at viticulture and winemaking from the Lodi
Appellation and the growers and vintners behind these crafts. Told from the
perspective of multi-award winning wine journalist, Randy Caparoso.
Favorite Lodi wine country photos of the year (August through December)
As this year draws to its end,
We give thanks for the gifts it brought
And how they became inlaid within
Where neither time nor tide can touch them
The days when the veil lifted
And the soul could see delight
When a quiver caressed the heart
In the sheer exuberance of being here
Surprises that came awake
In forgotten corners of old fields
Where expectations seem to have quenched...
Lodi sparkling wines⏤dryer than most French Champagne⏤crafted from both classic grapes and Mediterranean or exotic varieties
Hooray, we're getting close to a New Year!
This calls, of course, for a good champagne. It's that time of year when we want to hear that pop and fizz, and feel the icy taste of tart, bubbly, foamy wine to mark the end of a year and start of a brand new one... especially after 2024 (not the best of years for many of us).
So let's talk sparkers. Champagne style wines are, indeed, grown and produced in Lodi, despite the fact that the original Champagne region in France, located some 100 miles north of Paris, is associated with a climate that is much colder than Lodi's...
Continue »Baker's dozen of last minute Christmas ideas⏤Lodi wineries' top-of-the-line bottlings
Just seven more days of Christmas shopping. There is plenty of time if you are living in or within striking distance of Lodi wine country to pick up top-of-the-line bottlings from the local wineries.
Another great one-stop-shopping idea: The Lodi Wine Visitor Center, located at the corner of W. Turner and Lower Sacramento Roads (on the same site as Wine & Roses Hotel). The original idea of the Lodi Wine Visitor Center when first established by Lodi Winegrape Commission in the late 1990s was to provide a tasting room and retail outlet for wineries and brands that do not have tasting rooms.
Today, the Lodi Wine Visitor Center performs the same function, while offering a wide assortment of carefully curated wines (i.e., wines that exemplify "Lodi" on a sensory level) from the local wineries...
Continue »LODI RULES: California’s Original Sustainable Winegrowing Program
Guest post by Lisa Waterman Gray
Today's Lodi Wine post gives props to Lisa Waterman Gray for her excellent elucidation of LODI RULES, Lodi's industry leading sustainable program. More than ever, environmentally conscious consumers are prioritizing sustainability as a factor in their choices of wines—one of the vestiges of climate change.
Ms. Gray's article on LODI RULES was originally published by The Alcohol Professor—an online page self-described as "The class you always wanted to take"—and was generously loaned to us by Editor-in-Chief Amy Sherman of San Francisco (thank you, Amy!).
Gray's perspective is that of a Kansas-based food and beverage writer who goes coast to coast seeking out the most significant stories. As interesting as Lodi wines have become, she identifies LODI RULES as one of the region's most significant attributes. She pours heart, soul and enthusiasm into her narrative, told through interviews with some of Lodi's leading sustainable proponents...
Continue »2024's ten most interesting wines of Lodi
Guest post by Bob Highfill
Lodi Wine welcomes guest contributor Bob Highfill, asked to share his personal list of "2024's ten most interesting wines" grown in Lodi because of his unique perspective. Bob himself might cite his prior experience as a newspaper wine columnist for Stockton's The Record, a brief stint as Marketing and Communications Manager for the Lodi Winegrape Commission and his current status as the Lodi focused online wine columnist for Stocktonia.org.
What impresses us most, though, is the fact that he spent most of his prior 27 years at The Record as a sports reporter and the daily newspaper's sports editor; not to mention previous stops as sports director of KGW Radio and as a securities broker at Dean Witter...
Continue »2024's best blogs and articles on Lodi wine have also been dealing with industry-wide challenges
Time to go back and take a gander at some of 2024's most informative blogs and articles pertaining to Lodi's wines and winegrowing industry.
Because the Lodi AVA (i.e., American Viticultural Area) is easily America's largest grape growing region, it is also emblematic of all the challenges currently facing the entire American wine industry.
Essentially, the overriding theme of 2024 has been this: American wine consumption, at least by volume, has been in a serious slump over the past three, four years⏤seriously impacting the economy of the Lodi community⏤even while Americans as a whole continue to spend more money on wine than ever before.
The following selection of articles reflect these ongoing, multifaceted circumstances. Americans love wine more than ever, despite generational shifts in consumer habits. It's just that they are choosing to go "dry" for longer periods of time. The Lodi industry is dealing with that...
Continue »The young guns of Lodi wine
Guest post by Anna Delgado
Let's welcome guest columnist Anna Delgado, who will introduce us to three outstanding "young guns" in the Lodi wine scene: A head winemaker (Marilia Nimis-Schrader), a brilliant up-and-coming winemaker (Jesus Aleman), and a promising sommelier (Jacob Weisman).
We first introduced Anna Delgado this past July in a post co-written by her entitled Do not talk about what younger consumers think about wine unless you're under 30. Ms. Delgado, who is 26 years old, knows more than a thing or two: Not just about the tastes of other 20-somethings but also that of consumers of all ages⏤she speaks with them on nearly a daily basis as a full-timer at the Lodi Wine Visitor Center.
This past harvest season Delgado almost doubled her working hours (who needs sleep when you're young and energetic?) working as a "cellar rat" at Lodi's St. Amant Winery, doing everything from crushing grapes (in some instances, with her bare feet) to filling, moving and topping barrels...
Continue »