The Daily Courier

Fort Berens Reserve

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With a decade of winemaking under its belt, Fort Berens Winery in Lillooet now has the expertise and premium grapes to launch its highly anticipate­d highest tier of reserve wines.

I had the chance to taste three of reserves lately and particular­ly liked the 2017 Riesling Reserve ($23).

Fort Berens made only 213 cases of this limited-edition Riesling, which has all the classic German characteri­stics of off-dry apple, lime and honey with a unique expression of minerality from the gravel, loam, river rock and sandy soils of Lillooet.

Fort Berens is the only winery in Lillooet, which is along the Fraser River in the Fraser Canyon.

While it may be considered out of the way for B.C. winemaking, the climate is similar to the Okanagan.

The 2016 Cabernet Franc Reserve ($32) is full-bodied with soft and ripe tannins and opens with cherry flavours that morph to herbs.

Plum and cherry aromas and flavours make the 2016 Meritage Reserve ($32) jammy and the oak aging added some smoke, wood and spice characteri­stics.

Fort Berens’ regular line is up also very good with the release of the 2016 Pinot Noir, Cabernet Franc and Meritage priced a little lower at $26 each and expressing varietal complexity. Fort Berens is also in expansion mode. It has added to the original 20-acre Dry Creek Vineyard planted in 2009 and has created a new Red Rock Vineyard in May with four acres of Merlot and five acres of Cabernet Franc.

Planting will continue next year with three-and-a-half acres of additional Merlot, some Cabernet Sauvignon and a new varietal for the winery – Gruner Veltliner.

This summer, Fort Berens also found out a new geographic­al indication for Lillooet was approved.

So, beginning with the new vintage, it can use the Lillooet VQA (Vintners’ Quality Alliance) designatio­n for its wines.

It’s testament to Lillooet’s history and future potential as a grape-growing region.

Besides Fort Berens’ vineyards, there are four additional vineyards in the region – Frugal, Winches Spur, Roshard and Fraser Bench – which all supply Fort Berens.

Fort Berens will soon have company in Lillooet with Cliff & Gorge about to become the second winery in town with its first vintages being released with the opening of its tasting room in spring 2019.

A pre-release party for the wine documentar­y SOMM3 will be thrown Monday at 6 p.m. at Okanagan College’s Kelowna campus theatre.

This is the third film in the series using the SOMM term, short for sommelier, the designatio­n earned by wine profession­als.

The original SOMM is the most-viewed wine film on Netflix. SOMM3 will start streaming soon. Madeline Puckett, the Seattle-based author of Wine Folly: Magnum Edition and founder of the WineFolly.com website, narrated SOMM3 and will be at the Kelowna screening.

The film follows the adventures of Decanter magazine editor Steven Spurrier, master sommelier Fred Dame and famous wine critic Jancis Robinson.

Of course, this wouldn’t be a wine-related event without

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 ?? Special to The Okanagan Weekend ?? Wine author and blogger Madeline Puckette, narrator of SOMM3, will be in Kelowna on Monday for a screening of the wine film, preceded, of course, by some wine tasting and appetizers.
Special to The Okanagan Weekend Wine author and blogger Madeline Puckette, narrator of SOMM3, will be in Kelowna on Monday for a screening of the wine film, preceded, of course, by some wine tasting and appetizers.

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