Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Oregon winemakers put squeeze on California winery for pinot noir

- ANDREW SELSKY

SALEM, Ore. — Pinot noir is one of the finickiest grapes, but with proper nurturing it produces an amazing wine. Officials in Oregon and at a U.S. government agency are similarly finicky, and are stomping on a California winery’s claims that it makes an Oregon pinot.

Copper Cane, a Napa Valley, Calif., winery sells more pinot noir made from Oregon grapes than anyone else, and often at a lower price. That has some Oregon winemakers, who call the California version a less elevated product, seeing red.

Now, both the U.S. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau and Oregon’s liquor agency have ruled that Copper Cane’s labels have been improperly referring to Oregon wine regions. The case recalls France’s mostly successful efforts to have only sparkling wine produced in its Champagne region called by that name.

At stake is a multibilli­ondollar industry, and Oregon’s reputation for producing a delicate pinot noir in its cool, rainy climate, according to state Rep. David Gomberg and winemaker Jim Bernau, who have been sharply critical of Copper Cane.

“Part of this is prestige and marketing,” Gomberg said.

Grapes for Copper Cane’s pinot noirs are grown in three Oregon wine regions and trucked in dry ice to California. Jim Blumling, Copper Cane’s vice president of operations, acknowledg­ed that the winery’s top-selling Elouan Pinot Noir is more pronounced than the typical Oregon version because the grapes are picked later, with higher sugar content.

“It helps deliver a more concentrat­ed juice in the fruit,” Blumling said.

Bernau, founder of Willamette Valley Vineyards of Turner, Ore., said Copper Cane’s labels deceptivel­y indicate its wines came from Oregon’s officially designated wine regions, or AVAs.

“Copper Cane takes something valuable that isn’t theirs and deeply discounts it,” Bernau said. “They can’t use Oregon AVAs if the wine is not made in the AVA.”

In their rulings last month, the federal and state regulatory bodies agreed there was a problem because Copper Cane’s labels refer to Oregon’s Willamette Valley, Rogue Valley and Umpqua Valley wine regions. If a wine label claims or implies it’s from a particular designated wine region, 95 percent of the grapes must be from there, according to the Oregon Wine Board.

The federal Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau told Copper Cane that it has to

● ditch seven of its labels, agency spokesman Tom Hogue said.

The Oregon Liquor Control Commission found last month that Copper Cane has committed seven violations and is seeking to revoke its ability to sell in Oregon, said commission spokesman Matthew VanSickle. The violations focus on Copper Cane’s improper use of wine region designatio­ns and “misleading statements on labeling.”

One major grocery store chain in Oregon, Fred Meyer, is already taking Copper Cane’s

Elouan Pinot Noir and Willamette­r Journal wines off its shelves.

Gomberg wants the federal government to stop Copper Cane from selling Elouan wine in the other 49 states.

“Copper Cane claims they were simply engaged in ‘fanciful’ marketing,” Gomberg said. “But the state of Oregon has determined that they crossed the line from fanciful to fraudulent.”

The company has already submitted new labels to the federal Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau that don’t mention Oregon winemaking regions and say only that the grapes come from

prime Oregon vineyards, Blumling said. Those labels have been approved by the federal bureau, he said.

Copper Cane hopes the new labels also satisfy the Oregon liquor commission.

The previous labels had been in use for years until Gomberg and Bernau complained, the California winemakers said. They believe it was to edge out the competitio­n. Last year, 120,000 cases of Elouan wine — over 1.4 million bottles — were sold nationwide, Blumling said.

“We’re being blatantly attacked,” Copper Cane’s owner, Joe Wagner, said. “What’s disappoint­ing is it’s for financial gain.”

In a Nov. 19 statement, Gomberg said that Elouan Pinot Noir and The Willamette­r Journal “look and taste like they have an additive” called Mega Purple, often used in California to make wines darker and thicker. Blumling called that “slanderous” and denied any such additive has been used.

He said Elouan’s growing national popularity, with sales up 50 percent in a year, will raise consumers’ consciousn­ess and boost overall demand for Oregon pinot noir.

“We’re expecting that all boats rise with the tide,” Blumling said.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Pinot noir grapes grow in 2013 at the Benton-Lane Winery in Monroe, Ore.
AP file photo Pinot noir grapes grow in 2013 at the Benton-Lane Winery in Monroe, Ore.

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