![]() ![]() Ashley studied communications and business and now handles the business end of things when she’s not assisting in the cellar. Michael went off to Fresno State to study enology and took over as head winemaker in 2013. The children caught the wine bug and now help run the place. Larry uprooted existing vines and replanted with 16 acres of mostly Mediterranean varieties which are sustainably and meticulously hand-tended and cropped in small yields. Larry and Linda Long took a family full of teenagers and transplanted them to the middle of wine country to pursue their passion for making wine. Also in Plymouth you will find Amador 360, a winery collective tasting room and store featuring wines from wineries across the Sierra Foothills that are too small to have their own tasting rooms. Taste restaurant is a delicious and highly underrated lunch and dinner spot (if this place was in the Napa Valley you would need to make reservations years in advance), and Amador Vintage Market is a good place to pick up a sandwich. The town of Plymouth, known as Pokerville back in Gold Rush days, is your last bit of civilization before you head up E-16. And on Shenandoah School Road you will find some of the largest producers in the county. On Steiner you will find wonderful wines and beautiful tasting rooms. ![]() ![]() Shenandoah Road is home to many of the best wineries in the Sierra Foothills. Highway E-16 (known here as Shenandoah Road) runs diagonally from Plymouth in the southwest to the El Dorado County line and the Fair Play region in the Northeast. Some adventurous growers and skilled winemakers are even having some success with Bordeaux and Burgundy varieties from the region, but there are many failed attempts with those varieties as well. Sangiovese and Tempranillo also are proving to be particularly well-suited. All Rhone varieties are thriving with some particularly great examples of Syrah, Grenache, and Viognier. While Zinfandel and Barbara rule, other varieties are starting to find a foothold here in the Shenandoah Valley as well as the rest of Amador County. This prime spot thus produces the most unique and highest quality Barbera wines outside of the Piemonte region. The region’s warmth helps keep acid levels in check while, for some reason, the grapes do not over-ripen and become flabby. Yet, fortunately for us all, the match was made. While the success of Zinfandel is easy to understand, Barbera, which is native to the cool foothills of the Alps in Northern Italy in mostly limestone soils, is another story. This combination of climate, soil, and vine age results in some of the best versions of Zinfandel on the planet. The old vines from OGP and dozens of other old vineyards produce small fruit in lower yields making for highly intense and concentrated wines. The Original Grandpere (OGP) Vineyard, for example, was planted in 1869 and is still a working vineyard that supplies grapes to three local wineries. Largely because of the region’s sandy soils, which the vine-root-destroying louse phylloxera doesn’t thrive in, the Shenandoah Valley is blessed with some very old vines. The region is further cooled by breezes from the San Joaquin River system which transports the cool air from the San Francisco Bay 100 miles inland. The Sierras, though, provide just enough cooling to keep the grapes from over-baking and to help preserve some acidity. The Valley is situated in the western portion of the Foothills and at a lower average elevation than the regions to the east, making it quite warm. As a result, old vines of Zinfandel (the genetic equivalent of Primitivo from Puglia) and Barbera (from Northern Italy) have long dominated the region. They brought with them a love of wine, and some also brought smuggled vines. Many of the settlers were of Italian origin. The region was settled during the Gold Rush and named after the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and West Virginia, though almost certainly out of homesickness rather than visual or geographical similarity. Small family-operated wineries, many of which are of exceptional quality, comingle here with much larger corporate-owned wineries. The Shenandoah Valley of Amador County is home to some of the oldest and most storied vineyards and wineries of the Sierra Foothills. ![]()
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