Brown Estate
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Brown Estate Vineyards | |
---|---|
Location | St. Helena, California, USA |
Coordinates | 38.2985° N, 122.2871° W |
Appellation | Napa Valley |
Founded | 1995 |
First vintage | 1996 |
Key people | C. Deneen Brown, President; David F. Brown, Brown Estate Winemaker; Coral E. Brown, House of Brown Director of Winemaking; Stefanie Kelly, General Manager |
Known for | Napa Valley Zinfandel |
Varietals | Zinfandel, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Petite Sirah |
Website | http://www.brownestate.com |
Brown Estate Vineyards is a winery in Napa Valley, California, United States. It produces zinfandel, cabernet sauvignon, chardonnay, and petite sirah varieties.[1] Founded in 1995 by siblings Deneen, David and Coral Brown, Brown Estate produced its first Napa Valley zinfandel in 1996 after the family had been farming grapes and selling them to established winemakers. It is the first and only Black-owned estate in Napa Valley.[2][3]
Early history
[edit]In 1980, parents Bassett Brown, originally from Jamaica, and Marcela Abrahams Brown, originally from Panama, acquired 450 acres (1.8 km2) in the Chiles Valley AVA of the Napa Valley. Abandoned for ten years prior, the land and its two structures—an 1859 stone and redwood barn and an 1885 Queen Anne Victorian home—were derelict. The senior Browns cut roads and installed plumbing and electricity, for which they received an award from the Napa County Historical Society for their restoration of the residence structure.[4] In 1985, they planted their first vineyard, approximately 9 ha (22 acres) of zinfandel. The Chiles Valley microclimate, characterized by extreme temperature shifts throughout the course of each day, suited the cultivation zinfandel grapes. The Brown family's fruit soon gained popularity among zinfandel producers such as Green & Red and T-Vine Cellars, both of whom purchased Brown Estate fruit for many years. The Browns also sold cabernet sauvignon to the famed Mike Grgich. It was through a series of apprenticeships with winemakers who were working with his fruit that David Brown, who by then had been farming his family's vineyards for five years, began learning the art and science of winemaking.[citation needed]
In the mid-1990s, as a result of rising demand for their fruit, Deneen and David, then both residing on the vineyard property, made the decision to produce wine under their own label. Because they had no winery facility on site, they secured a custom crush contract with Rombauer Vineyards in Saint Helena, and for six years they produced their wines at the Rombauer facility. On January 29, 2000, Brown Estate debuted their first two vintages of Napa Valley zinfandel, 1996 and 1997, at the annual Zinfandel Advocates and Producers (ZAP) tasting at Fort Mason in San Francisco.[5] ZAP is the largest single varietal wine tasting event in the world, and the Brown offerings were very well received by the trade and public alike, thereby establishing Brown Estate as a winery to watch in the arena of Napa Valley zinfandel. Simultaneously, in the January 31, 2000 issue of the Wine Spectator, the 1997 Brown Estate zinfandel received a score of 91 points.[citation needed]
Fire
[edit]In June 2000, a fire broke out at the warehouse facility where Brown's wine library and a recently bottled 1998 vintage were stored.[6] With the exception of sixteen bottles - two that went to wine critic Robert M. Parker, Jr. for review, two that went to Christie's for auction, and twelve that the Browns had stored at home - all of their 1998 zinfandel was destroyed, as were the remaining cases of their first two vintages. The lost 1998 vintage left the Browns out of the zinfandel market for one whole year, a devastating setback that was mitigated only by the help of restaurant and retail accounts who held space on their wine lists and shelves for the next vintage of Brown zin. To bridge that gap, the Browns accelerated the release of their 1999 Napa Valley zinfandel, which they showed at ZAP in 2001. The previous month, in December 2000, Parker gave the Brown 1998 zinfandel a score of 90, noting that his review was "of academic interest only" since all of the wine had perished in the fire. The loss of the 1998 vintage has kept Brown Estate's Napa Valley zinfandel bottlings on a perennially early release schedule.[citation needed]
Winery and cave construction
[edit]As production grew, Brown expanded beyond the Rombauer facility. Winery construction began in summer of 2002, and by September of that year, a derelict barn was repurposed as an on-site wine production facility. Beginning in April 2004, the Brown Estate added a wine cave, blasting through a granite hillside with dynamite.[citation needed]
Milestones
[edit]In November 2010, the Browns released the world's first hashtagged wine,[7] their 2009 Napa Valley Zinfandel. Subsequent vintages of this wine bore the #brownzin hashtag.[8]
In April 2017, Brown Downtown Napa opened on downtown Napa's First Street corridor.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "Chronicle Top 100 Wines 2009 — SFGate". Archived from the original on 2010-04-19. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Ch. I, 4.26-4.30 (4–1–05 Edition)" (PDF), govinfo.gov, retrieved Aug 8, 2024
- ^ Mobley, Esther (March 30, 2023). "Only 4% of Napa tourists are Black — except at this winery". San Francisco Chronicle. (subscription required)
- ^ "WINERIES: The Old New Winery". Knights' Electric Monthly Newsletter. Archived from the original on 2010-11-14. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Home". zinfandel.org.
- ^ "Fire Hits Frank-Rombauer Wine Warehouse".
- ^ "Brownzin why Hashtag on our 2009 Napa", BrownEstate.com, October 2010.
- ^ "Brown Estate Napa Valley Zinfandel", BrownEstate.com, 2010.