17
Dec
10

Napa’s Best Rainy Day Wineries

Wine country is a year-long destination and in even in December we’re still touring with clients, albeit not with the back to back scheduling common during grape crush. But late fall and winter is also the rainy season here, and wine touring is an outdoor activity in part, so when the skies open up it helps to know which wineries are the most fun on cloudy days.

“It doesn’t rain in the tasting room.” Ralph’s often heard refrain in winter time.

Being farther from the ocean Napa is incrementally drier than Sonoma, since it’s from the Pacific that the rain clouds roll in like roiling white express trains arriving from the far beyond. Being a broad, long valley Napa also offers better vistas on rainy days than Sonoma, so for the outdoor experience it is preferable.

Another key is how far is the walk from the car? Wineries are food factories and often it is a hike from the parking lot to the front door. As a driver guide I deliver my clients as close to the front door as possible before heading off to the lot. Hiking is my job, not theirs, they are on vacation. In southern Napa on the Silverado Trail Signorello is a good example of a small winery with a short walk from the lot to the tasting room. The views over the valley are wonderful and the inside experience is intimate and friendly.

Farther north just before the Yountville Cross Road is the Robert Sinskey Winery. This is a favorite on rainy days, a short walk from the lot into their high ceiled tasting room fronting their winery, and the smell of wonderful, fresh made snacks in the air. They have a commercial kitchen in the tasting room and there’s not much that compares to those aromas for making one curious about their very interesting wines.

Just a bit north Goosecross is another small family place with a short walk and a fun tasting room. The view is different here with the valley rising on both sides before you walk past the fermentation tanks into the barrel room to enjoy the wonderful variety of wines. For a bigger winery the new facility at Silver Oak is grand, all of those great stone blocks and stained glass. Those big, hefty Cab blends warm the soul on a cool, wet day.

A little farther north the inside tasting room at Mumm Napa is delightful in the cool weather, with its glass walls and comfy seating. Sparkling wines always stimulate the conversation and their world class photography gallery needs to be visited. Bring a glass of wine with you. Almost forgot! They have one of the most fun gift shops in the valley. Just to the south of them on the Silverado Trail ZD winery has a beautiful tasting room, high, airy and still cozy.

North of St. Helena the Rombauer winery is a just a short walk from the lot and the views from the covered porch are great, although so is their wine. Across the way Failla’s by appointment sit down tasting in their cozy cottage of their Pinots, Chards and Syrahs is perfect on a rainy day.

Around Calistoga the Summer Winery is such a homey place to taste, relaxed, delicious with the feeling of authentic wine country without the airs and ego that often fly around the valley. Surprisingly the four big destination wineries around Calistoga, Sterling, Clos Pegase, Schramsberg and the Castello de Amorosa are not great rainy day locations. They all depend on a lot of time outside. In that neighborhood we much prefer Frank Family, or Cuvaison, or even Revana with their by appointment tasting in their elegant little salon.

So much of wine country is made up of small, family wineries that finding places with a short walk and a cozy fire place is pretty easy. The tasting rooms are dry and the wine is wet, and when the mists cling to the verdant green hills of Napa you would think you were in Ireland, if the Irish grew grapes.

Ralph & Lahni de Amicis are authors of the Amicis Winery Guide Books and Smart Phone Apps and owners of Amicis Tours which does both group and private excursions. They are authors of over twenty books on health, design, business and travel. Their iPhone Apps, The Napa Valley Wine Tour, and The Sonoma Winery Tour are a tour guides approach to these beautiful area, complete with 1000’s of photos and insights. Their articles and products can be found on the sites http://www.amicistours.com and http://www.spaceandtime.com. Their Apps can be found at http://www.sutromedia.com/apps.html

 

 

Advertisement

0 Responses to “Napa’s Best Rainy Day Wineries”



  1. Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s


Amicis Winery Tours

Ralph and Lahni de Amicis of Amicis Tours are authors of 3 books about visiting the wineries of Napa and Sonoma. Their focus is the winery experience and the logistics of safely and enjoyably getting around wine country without getting in trouble. These are insights from guides who visit a wide variety of wineries often with clients. They have the huge advantage of creating books and not depending on winery advertising, so they tell you the straight story about which wineries do a great job for their customers, and which other ones, not so much! They create custom tours both in wine country and San Francisco in a variety of languages, using SUV's and vans. Their tours are always designed around the interests of their clients.

Ralph is winetourguy

RSS HerbsAreFood

  • Staying Healthy @ Work – Supplements February 24, 2011
    There is an inverse ratio between how far removed we are from the natural world and the quality and enjoyment of the foods that we experience. Where we live in the California Wine Country many of the foods served in the high end restaurant come from within twenty miles from the kitchen. The typical lunch [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Happy Chinese New Year for the Metal Rabbit February 2, 2011
    One of the most powerful tools in creating healthy work and living spaces is knowing how to identify your personal directions. People have preferences, and personality types are drawn to face specific directions. You see this all the time whenever you set us a room where people can sit facing a wide variety of directions. [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Why is Ophiuchus showing up in the news recently? January 14, 2011
    Why has Ophiuchus, or as he is known by his other name, Asclepius (the healer) showing up in the news recently? Because of the transits of planetary bodies through that part of the sky! The first thing that I should make clear is that Ophiuchus overlaps other constellations on the ecliptic, Scorpio and Sagittarius are [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • “Holiday Cheer Without Fear!” (gallbladder health) December 6, 2010
      With the Holidays right around the corner, we look forward to celebrating with friends and family. Tradition often means Mom’s Twice Baked Potatoes or Aunt Sue’s Butter Cookies. Gravies, sauces, alcoholic beverages and rich desserts are our reward after working hard all year. But we can undo a year of good health in the [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Calcium and the Paleo Herbalist November 22, 2010
    One of the oddest things about adopting the Paleo diet is the way it affects our choice of supplements. For example, one of the premises of physiology is that the foundation of the nervous system is calcium. So, when you are dealing with stress you add load up on calcium. But, one of the oddities [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Tumors and the Paleo Diet November 13, 2010
    A friend contacted me about a member of his extended family who was diagnosed with cancer of the liver and gall bladder. The patient was in his eighties and was otherwise pretty healthy. I can hear what you’re thinking, ‘The man has cancer, how can he be considered healthy?’ Well, tumors and cancers are just [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Arthritis and the Paleo Herbalist October 16, 2010
    A report came out the other day stating that 1 in 5 Americans suffer from arthritis. That is a horrific statistic and the entire fault of it can be laid at the feet of the dysfunctional Standard American Diet. The other day I was wine touring with a Naturopathic Physician from Seattle, a lovely woman, [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Attitudes and the Paleo Herbalist October 13, 2010
    One of the odd results of living with the Paleo Diet is the sense of wonder at what people eat! Honestly I’m used to this. I started studing natural healing in my teens and in my early twenties started my first herbalist shop. My life has been a nutritional experiment, something that many people can [...]
    motivatedhealth
  • Thyroid and the Paleo Herbalist October 8, 2010
    The key here is that when you consume lean protein first thing in the morning it makes the body work harder to use that nutrition and in the process the metabolism cranks up. Once it’s up to speed it tends to stay there. In the same way having the ‘hots’ for somebody cute definitely gets the hormones going and warms up the entire system. Working hard and str […]
    motivatedhealth
  • Weight Loss, Tight Skin and the Paleo Herbalist September 30, 2010
    All of the amino acids benefit from being taken on an empty stomach because stomach acid can work on them to full effect. Amino acids are the building blocks of protein, and part of stomach acid’s job is tearing apart incoming protein into those building blocks. A Protein has a Program and your digestive system is designed to not let those outside proteins i […]
    motivatedhealth

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2 other followers


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.