University of California • Berkeley
Regional Oral History Office University of California
The Bancroft Library Berkeley, California
The Wine Spectator California Wine Oral History Series
Richard Fonnan
LAUNCHING BORDEAUX- STYLE WINES IN THE NAPA VALLEY: STERLING VINEYARDS, NEWTON VINEYARD, AND FORMAN VINEYARD
Interviews Conducted by
Carole Hicke
in 1999
Copyright <0 2000 by The Regents of the University of California
Since 1954 the Regional Oral History Office has been interviewing leading participants in or well-placed witnesses to major events in the development of northern California, the West, and the nation. Oral history is a method of collecting historical information through tape-recorded interviews between a narrator with firsthand knowledge of historically significant events and a well- informed interviewer, with the goal of preserving substantive additions to the historical record. The tape recording is transcribed, lightly edited for continuity and clarity, and reviewed by the interviewee. The corrected manuscript is indexed, bound with photographs and illustrative materials, and placed in The Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley, and in other research collections for scholarly use. Because it is primary material, oral history is not intended to present the final, verified, or complete narrative of events. It is a spoken account, offered by the interviewee in response to questioning, and as such it is reflective, partisan, deeply involved, and irreplaceable.
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All uses of this manuscript are covered by a legal agreement between The Regents of the University of California and Richard Forman dated February 15, 1999. The manuscript is thereby made available for research purposes. All literary rights in the manuscript, including the right to publish, are reserved to The Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley. No part of the manuscript may be quoted for publication without the written permission of the Director of The Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley.
Requests for permission to quote for publication should be addressed to the Regional Oral History Office, 486 Bancroft Library, Mail Code 6000, University of California, Berkeley 94720-6000, and should include identification of the specific passages to be quoted, anticipated use of the passages, and identification of the user. The legal agreement with Richard Forman requires that he be notified of the request and allowed thirty days in which to respond.
It is recommended that this oral history be cited as follows:
Richard Forman, "Launching Bordeaux-Style Wines in the Napa Valley: Sterling Vineyards, Newton Vineyard, and Forman Vineyard," an oral history conducted in 1999 by Carole Hicke, Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 2000.
Copy no.
Richard Forman, 1999.
Cataloguing information
FORMAN, Richard W. (b. 1944) Owner, Forman Vineyard
Launching Bordeaux-Style Wines in the Napa Valley: Sterling Vineyards, Newton Vineyard, and Forman Vineyard, 2000, viii, 149 pp.
Childhood in Oakland, CA, and education at UC Davis; working at Stony Hill Vineyard and Robert Mondavi Winery, 1967-1968; developing Sterling Vineyards, 1969-1978: barrel fermentation in French oak, second Merlot in Napa valley, travel and research in Europe; partner and developer of Newton Vineyard, 1978-1982; owner of Forman Vineyard, 1983 to present: finding the property, innovative building, equipment, tunnels; thoughts on public taste, avant-garde winemaking in Bordeaux-style wines, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot.
Interviewed in 1999 by Carole Hicke for the Wine Spectator California Wine Oral History Series, the Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
TABLE OF CONTENTS --Richard Forman
PREFACE i
INTERVIEW HISTORY vii
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION viii
I BACKGROUND 1 Family Roots 1 Growing Up in Oakland and Grass Valley 3 University and Graduate School, UC Davis 12
II EARLY WORK EXPERIENCES 16 Summer Jobs 16 Stony Hill Vineyard, 1967 18 Robert Mondavi, 1968 19
III STERLING VINEYARDS, 1969-1978 21 Hiring On 21 Designing the Plant 22 First Crush at Schramsburg; Pioneering Barrel Fermentation 25 An Early Merlot Varietal 29 Travel and Research in Europe 30 Pioneering Winemaking Techniques; Importance of Barrel
Fermentation 34
1976 Trip with Dan Duckhorn; Other Trips 35
Hedging 38
David Abreu's Farming Business 40
First Wines of Sterling 42
Chardonnay sans Malolactic 45
Different Techniques Required in California Vineyards 48
Taking Risks, and a Hands-On Management Technique 51
Sterling Wines in the Early Seventies 53
Plant and Equipment 58
Winemaking at Sterling Mid- to Late Seventies 62
Decision to Join Newton 63
IV NEWTON VINEYARD, 1978-1982 66 Vineyard Property 66 Planting the Grapes 68 Building and Equipment 72 Cooperage: The Forman Barrel 74 Winemaking Techniques 76 The 1979, 1980, and 1981 Wines 78 Dissolving the Partnership 80
V FORMAN VINEYARD, 1983 TO PRESENT 83 Selecting and Developing the Vineyard Property 83
Consulting for Woltner and Charles Shaw 88
1983: A Crucial Year 89
Building an Efficient and Innovative Winery 90
Equipment 95
Tunnels 96
Wines of 1983 to 1986 101
Canopy Management 103
Pioneering Introduction of Petit Verdot 104
Merlot and Cabernet Franc 106
Association with David Abreu 106
Rutherford Star Vineyard- -Chardonnay 109
Forman Wine Library 113
VI EVOLUTION OF PUBLIC TASTES AND WINEMAKING TECHNIQUES 115
Chardonnay 115
Cabernet Sauvignon 118
Vineyard Management Tools 121
Forman Vineyard: Present and Future 122
Wine Industry Overview 124
TAPE GUIDE 128
APPENDIX
Forman Vineyard publicity (various) 129
INDEX 147
PREFACE
The California wine industry oral history series, a project of the Regional Oral History Office, was initiated by Ruth Teiser in 1969 through the action and with the financing of the Wine Advisory Board, a state marketing order organization which ceased operation in 1975. In 1983 it was reinstituted as The Wine Spectator California Wine Oral History Series with donations from The Wine Spectator Scholarship Foundation. The selection of those to be interviewed has been made by a committee consisting of the director of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley; John A. De Luca, president of the Wine Institute, the statewide winery organization; Carole Hicke, series project director; and Marvin R. Shanken, trustee of The Wine Spectator Scholarship Foundation.
Until her death in June 1994, Ruth Teiser was project originator, initiator, director, and conductor of the greater part of the oral histories. Her book, Winemaking in California, co-authored with Catherine Harroun and published in 1982, was the product of more than forty years of research, interviewing, and photographing. (Those wine history files are now in The Bancroft Library for researcher use.) Ruth Teiser 's expertise and knowledge of the wine industry contributed significantly to the documenting of its history in this series.
The purpose of the series is to record and preserve information on California grapegrowing and winemaking that has existed only in the memories of winemen. In some cases their recollections go back to the early years of this century, before Prohibition. These recollections are of particular value because the Prohibition period saw the disruption of not only the industry itself but also the orderly recording and preservation of records of its activities. Little has been written about the industry from late in the last century until Repeal. There is a real paucity of information on the Prohibition years (1920-1933), although some commercial winemaking did continue under supervision of the Prohibition Department. The material in this series on that period, as well as the discussion of the remarkable development of the wine industry in subsequent years will be of aid to historians. Of particular value is the fact that frequently several individuals have discussed the same subjects and events or expressed opinions on the same ideas, each from his or her own point of view.
Research underlying the interviews has been conducted principally in the University libraries at Berkeley and Davis, the California State Library, and in the library of the Wine Institute, which has made its collection of materials readily available for the purpose.
ii
The Regional Oral History Office was established to tape record autobiographical interviews with persons who have contributed significantly to recent California history. The office is headed by Willa K. Baum and is under the administrative supervision of The Bancroft Library.
Carole Hicke Project Director
The Wine Spectator California Wine Oral History Series
July 1998
Regional Oral History Office
The Bancroft Library
University of California, Berkeley
iii
CALIFORNIA WINE INDUSTRY INTERVIEWS Interviews Completed as of November 2000
Leon D. Adams, Revitalizing the California Wine Industry, 1974
Leon D. Adams, California Wine Industry Affairs: Recollections and Opinions, 1990
Maynard A. Amerine, The University of California and the State's Wine Industry, 1971
Maynard A. Amerine, Wine Bibliographies and Taste Perception Studies, 1988
Richard L. Arrowood, Sonoma County Winemaking: Chateau St. Jean and Arrowood Vineyards & Winery, 1996
William Andrew Beckstoffer, Premium California Vineyardist, Entrepreneur, 1960s to 2000s, 2000
Philo Biane, Wine Making in Southern California and Recollections of Fruit Industries, Inc. , 1972
William Bonetti, A Life of Winemaking at Wineries of Gallo, Schenley, Charles Krug, Chateau Souverain, and Sonoma-Cutrer, 1998
Albert Brounstein, Diamond Creek Vineyards: The Significance of Terroir in the Vineyard, 2000
Charles A. Carpy, Viticulture and Enology at Freemark Abbey, 1994 John B. Cella, The Cella Family in the California Wine Industry, 1986
Arthur A. Ciocca, Arthur A. Ciocca and the Wine Group, Inc.: Insights into the Wine Industry from a Marketing Perspective, 2000
Charles Crawford, Recollections of a Career with the Gallo Winery and the Development of the California Wine Industry, 1942-1989, 1990
Burke H. Critchfield, Carl F. Wente, and Andrew G. Frericks, The California Wine Industry During the Depression, 1972
William V. Cruess, A Half Century of Food and Wine Technology, 1967
Jack and Jamie Peterman Davies, Rebuilding Schramsberg: The Creation of a California Champagne House, 1990
iv
William A. Dieppe, Almaden ±s My Life, 1985
Paul Draper, History and Philosophy of Winemaking at Ridge Vineyards: 1970s- 1990s, 1994
Daniel J. and Margaret S. Duckhorn, Mostly Merlot: The History of Duckhorn Vineyards, 1996
David, Jean, Peter, and Steven Ficklin, Making California Port Wine: Ficklin Vineyards from 1948 to 1992, 1992
Brooks Firestone, Firestone Vineyard: A Santa Ynez Valley Pioneer, 1996
Louis J. Foppiano, A Century of Agriculture and Winemaking in Sonoma County, 1896-1996, 1996
Richard Forman, Launching Bordeaux-Style Wines in the Napa Valley: Sterling Vineyards, Newton Vineyard, and Forman Vineyard, 2000
Alfred Fromm, Marketing California Wine and Brandy, 1984
Louis Gomberg, Analytical Perspectives on the California Wine Industry, 1935- 1990, 1990
Miljenko Grgich, A Croatian-American Winemaker in the Napa Valley, 1992 Joseph E. Heitz, Creating a Winery in the Napa Valley, 1986
William H. Hill, Vineyard Development and the William Hill Winery, 1970s- 1990s, 1998
Agustin Huneeus, A World View of the Wine Industry, 1996
Maynard A. Joslyn, A Technologist Views the California Wine Industry, 1974
Amandus N. Kasimatis, A Career in California Viticulture, 1988
Morris Katz, Paul Masson Winery Operations and Management, 1944-1988, 1990
Legh F. Knowles, Jr., Beaulieu Vineyards from Family to Corporate Ownership, 1990
Horace 0. Lanza and Harry Baccigaluppi, California Grape Products and Other Wine Enterprises, 1971
Zelma R. Long, The Past is the Beginning of the Future: Simi Winery in its Second Century, 1992
Richard Maher, California Winery Management and Marketing, 1992
Louis M. Martini and Louis P. Martini, Vine Making in the Napa Valley, 1973
Louis P. Martini, A Family Winery and the California Wine Industry, 1984
Eleanor McCrea, Stony Hill Vineyards: The Creation of a Napa Valley Estate Winery, 1990
Justin Meyer, Justin Meyer and Silver Oak Cellars: Focus on Cabernet Sauvignon, 2000
Otto E. Meyer, California Premium Wines and Brandy, 1973
Norbert C. Mirassou and Edmund A. Mirassou, The Evolution of a Santa Clara Valley Winery, 1986
Peter Mondavi, Advances in Technology and Production at Charles Krug Winery, 1946-1988, 1990
Robert Mondavi, Creativity in the Wine Industry, 1985
Michael Moone, Management and Marketing at Beringer Vineyards and Wine World, Inc., 1990
Myron S. Nightingale, Making Wine in California, 1944-1987, 1988 Harold P. Olmo, Plant Genetics and New Grape Varieties, 1976
Cornelius Ough, Researches of an Enologlst, University of California, Davis, 1950-1990, 1990
John A. Parducci, Six Decades of Making Wine in Mendocino County, California, 1992
Antonio Perelli-Minetti, A Life in Wine Making, 1975
Louis A. Petri, The Petri Family in the Wine Industry, 1971
Jefferson E. Peyser, The Law and the California Wine Industry, 1974
Joseph Phelps, Joseph Phelps Vineyards: Classic Wines and Rhone Varietals, 1996
Lucius Powers, The Fresno Area and the California Wine Industry, 1974 Victor Repetto and Sydney J. Block, Perspectives on California Wines, 1976
vi
Edmund A. Rossi, Italian Swiss Colony and the Wine Industry, 1971
Edmund A. Rossi, Jr., Italian Swiss Colony, 1949-1989: Recollections of a Third-Generation California Winemaker, 1990
Arpaxat Setrakian, A. Setrakian, a Leader of the San Joaquin Valley Grape Industry, 1977
Elie Skofis, California Wine and Brandy Maker, 1988
David S. Stare, fume Blanc and Heritage Wines in Sonoma County: Dry Creek Vineyard's Pioneer Winemaking, 1996
Rodney S. Strong, Rodney Strong Vineyards: Creative Winemaking and Winery Management in Sonoma County, 1994
Andre Tchelistchef f , Grapes, Wine, and Ecology, 1983 Brother Timothy, The Christian Brothers as Wine Makers, 1974 Janet and John Trefethen, Trefethen Vineyards, 1968-1998, 1998 Louis (Bob) Trinchero, California Zinfandels, a Success Story, 1992
Charles F. Wagner and Charles J. Wagner, Caymus Vineyards: A Father-Son Team Producing Distinctive Wines, 1994
The Wente Family and the California Wine Industry, interviews with Jean, Carolyn, Philip, and Eric Wente, 1992
Ernest A. Wente, Wine Making in the Livermore Valley, 1971 Warren Winiarski, Creating Classic Wines in the Napa Valley, 1994 Albert J. Winkler, Viticultural Research at UC Davis (1921-1971), 1973 Frank M. Woods, Founding Clos Du Bois Winery: A Marketing Approach, 1998
John H. Wright, Domaine Chandon: The First French-owned California Sparkling Wine Cellar, includes an interview with Edmond Maudiere, 1992
vii
INTERVIEW HISTORY by Carole Hicke
Richard Fonnan grew up interested in the outdoors, in chemistry, and in trying out new experiments. He was a natural to become an innovative and precedent -making winemaker in the Napa Valley.
After studying food science and enology at the University of California at Davis, with early work experiences at Stony Hill Vineyard and Robert Mondavi Winery, he took up Peter Newton's challenge to build and develop Sterling Vineyards, starting in 1968. At Sterling he began processes which were new for the Napa Valley, but not for French wineries, such as barrel fermentation for Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Chardonnay. Traveling to France with increasing frequency, Forman found more and more ideas that he liked, and he put these ideas into practice. At Sterling he made the second-ever Merlot produced in the Napa Valley.
After Sterling was sold to Coca-Cola, Forman went into partnership with Newton in 1978 to develop Newton Vineyard, where he cleared and planted the vineyards, built the winery, and continued to make wines in the Bordeaux style.
Always an individualist, Forman finally decided to produce his own wines from his innovative and efficient winery built above St. Helena. He is especially proud of the tunnels there, where he can store barrels without stacking them. He carries his Cabernet one step further toward the French style by adding a small amount of Petit Verdot--one of the many examples where his leadership has been followed by other winemakers.
Forman was interviewed in his beautiful home, which is built above the winery and includes his office. The interviews took place on February 24, March 3, and March 19, 1999, following in general the outline prepared and sent to him. I reviewed the transcript for clarity and sent it to him, but in spite of repeated requests, he failed to review it himself.
The Regional Oral History Office was established in 1954 to augment through tape-recorded memoirs the Library's materials on the history of California and the West. Copies of all interviews are available for research use in The Bancroft Library and in the UCLA Department of Special Collections. The office is under the direction of Willa K. Baum, Division Head, and the administrative direction of Charles B. Faulhaber, James D. Hart Director of The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley.
Carole Hicke, Interviewer/Editor July 2000
Regional Oral History Office The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley
viii
Regional Oral History Office Room 486 The Bancroft Library
University of California Berkeley, California 94720
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
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I BACKGROUND
[Interview 1: February 24, 1999] II1
Family Roots
Hicke: Let's start with when and where you were born. Forman: I was born on May 18, 1944, in Oakland, California.
Hicke: Now I'm going to back up a little bit and ask you to let me know about your ancestors.
Forman: I don't know an awful lot. We have a small family, I guess you could say. My father, Robert White Forman, was born actually in Hayward. It was in 1905 he was born. I never did meet his father, but his father was named Dick, Richard, whom I was named after. He was an engineer. I think one of his projects was Boulder Dam. He died relatively early, and I never did meet him.
Hicke: Can you tell me why your name is spelled without the "e" as in Foreman?
Forman: Well, it's just a spelling. There are various spellings. I am of English parentage, and the English spelling of Forman is without an "e"--as far as we can determine, anyway.
I didn't really know my grandparents very well. Then my dad lived with his mom up in Hayward.
Hicke: What did your grandfather do in Hayward?
Forman: I'm not even sure he lived there. On the other hand, on my mother's side, her father was a doctor in Pomona.
'## This symbol indicates that a tape or tape segment has begun or ended. A guide to the tapes follows the transcript.
Hicke: You're a Calif ornian.
Forman: Yes, true. My mother's mother, whom I certainly never met because she died when my mother was only seven, was--I'm not sure what she did. I think she was kind of into acting. I know she was very interested in the theater, which is why she made my mother, Rosalind--
Hicke: What was her maiden name?
Forman: Wallace, a pretty English name. So anyway, my grandparents I didn't spend much time with. Really no. My father had no siblings, so there were no relatives there, and my mother had one brother by the name of Caleb. But they called him Kay. Let's just say his name is Kay, K-a-y, I guess. He was quite an entrepreneur in Pomona and had all sorts of ranching projects and one thing and another, and did very well for himself, I believe. Flew airplanes and had sailboats and did lots of things. He was a nice guy. He's now dead as well. My mother is really the only surviving one. My mother is ninety-one, and she's quite active. She lives out in the Walnut Creek area, Danville area actually, on the Crow Canyon Country Club fairway there, in a condominium.
She went to school in Pomona, Pomona College, and had a teaching degree and taught nursery school classes for a while. She did that up in the North Bay, not down in Los Angeles. Went to school at a convent for a while, I know. Had an interesting background. My mother's father, my grandfather, was very interested in horses as well, so she rode horses a lot—kind of English-style horse riding: jumping and so forth.
Anyway, my mother had some interesting experiences. She'd tell me about growing up in the orange grove. I'll never forget the story she told one time that some poor Mexican was just screaming and yelling outside the window. Evidently, he'd drunk methyl alcohol instead of alcohol. I don't know where in the devil he got it, but she said it was the most awful thing she could ever remember as a child.
She used to really enjoy riding through the orange groves. In fact, another interesting part of her childhood was knowing Will Rogers. She used to know him quite well. He lived close to them. She said she used to love to go over and sit on the porch and talk to him, and he was very friendly with her and obviously quite a personality. That was kind of fun for my mother.
My grandfather was very affluent. He had done quite well in the medical practice and had done also extremely well in real estate, so they lived fairly well.
Hicke: Did she tell you any stories about Will Rogers?
Forman: Oh, I'm sure she has in the past and, you know, I didn't pay much attention to it when I was younger because he didn't mean very much to me. Now I know what a personality he was. I heard and I realized, because she mentioned it, that he was obviously important, but it didn't really make much difference. I suppose if I asked her now- -haven't thought about it in years, but if I asked her now she probably could recall something.
Hicke: I'll bet she could.
Forman: But we haven't talked about it in years and years.
So that's not an awful lot to say about my grandparents because we didn't do much together.
Growing Up in Oakland and Grass Valley
Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke:
Forman:
I grew up in Oakland. Went to Oakland Tech. In fact, my father went to Oakland Tech, which is kind of interesting. But I think it was a very good school. I enjoyed it. I had a lot of good friends. We enjoyed living in the hills of Oakland. It was in the area, actually, that a few years ago had that horrible fire. We had a terrific home. There's another story which I'll relate in a moment, but I had burned it once myself with my chemistry lab. But it burned a lot more severely with the Oakland fire anyway, and it was kind of sad to see it go.
Were your parents still there?
No, they weren't, fortunately. We had sold it. But it sat up on one of the ridge lines and just had this magnificent view of San Francisco. I'll never forget. My bedroom had these windows that looked over the entire bay. I remember going back there recently, just to see, because it was sad to see where the fire had—what it had done. I'm standing approximately where the house was, looking out over. It was just remarkable to remember how the view was. It was dazzling.
How many places you've been where there are views? have a magnificent view of Napa Valley here.
Because you
Yes, I must like views, that's true. But growing up, I was lucky also, but I had a lot of fun in the city of Oakland, particularly where we lived, because--! don't know--I had a very creative mind,
I guess, and I had friends who were the same. We found lots of things to do. Lots of trouble to get into.
Hicke: How about an example here?
Forman: As I said, I was very interested in chemistry at a very young age. Unfortunately, one of the paths that it led me to was a fascination with pyrotechnics. Even in junior high school I would find these books and various recipes. In those days, it was very easy to get chemicals. You could go to these chemical supply companies, which we found out about. We'd just go down. They would have no problem selling you these incredible chemicals.
So we'd go home and we'd manufacture all these wild things. At one point, I was trying to make a chemical called mercury fulminate, which is a frightening chemical, highly explosive. It's a detonator chemical, and it required 95 percent ethanol as part of the reactant to produce it. That was hard to get, so I decided I'd make it, so I concocted a sugar solution with nutrients. Mind you, I was only about thirteen years old, but I figured out how to do it, and I distilled quite a large quantity of it. I had about a gallon to distill again, to get high proof. I was doing it, and unfortunately the flask broke, and I was stupid enough to be doing it with a flame, and it lit on fire- -lit me on fire, too. Fortunately, I didn't get scarred, but I was burned pretty nastily on my face and arms.
My parents weren't home. It was on a weekend, and they were over at some neighbor's house a couple of miles away. So I ran down the street to a friend of mine's house, whose father was a doctor, and he took one look at me and we went to the hospital, but in the meantime the house burned up! It didn't burn right to the ground, but it took six months before we were back into it. It was pretty much gutted. That's one of the examples.
But we had lots of fun.
Hicke: I was really asking for examples of the things you did, but that's an example, I guess. You said you did a lot of things with other kids.
Forman: Well, we'd hike all around the hills, and we'd have forts in the craziest places you could think of. We enjoyed--well, like all kids, you know--riding your bicycle all around. I remember riding through the cemetery, which was quite a wonderful cemetery in the Oakland hills. I remember we used to have fun going out at night on the weekends with a flashlight and going into the old part of the cemetery, where these old, old crypts--honestly, it was the
most frightening thing you could think of as a young kid. loved it. We loved to tantalize ourselves with the fear.
Hicke: Like for Halloween.
But we
Forman: Yes. Anyway, we were always very busy. And then I started to say I was also lucky in that I was able to have fun even in a city, as most people would think you could only do in the country. I always found places to go, places to hike, forts to be built, things to do that were recreational, not in a sports sense but in a venture sense, even in the city.
But my mother was very determined for our family- -which consisted of my brother, who is five years older than I--
Hicke: His name is?
Forman: Peter. He's a dentist. They thought that it would be nice to get out of the city for weekends and summers, and so she was determined to find a summer home. At about age seven for me, she began looking around for the family to find a summer home. It's really intriguing. She started looking in the Napa Valley, of all things. One of the places she looked at was Schramsberg. It was for sale. God knows, I wish she had bought it.
My father determined that it was too hot here, and there were too many rattlesnakes. He hates rattlesnakes. And there's no fishing here, so we couldn't fish. It's really too close to the Bay Area. It's too warm. So she said, "Fine, I'll forget the Napa Valley," which is really a coincidence that it started there, not having any idea that I'd land here.
So she went up to the foothills above Auburn in the Grass Valley area, and we did ultimately find a fantastic place: this wonderful, old, six-gabled house that a woman artist and her husband artist had built. Had these beautiful grounds, with big, giant cherry trees all around. It was really a wonderful place. It had been the site of an old gold mine and so there were lots of gold mine timbers in the house.
We proceeded to make a beautiful estate /summer home out of it. My mother was a fabulous gardener. She had a vegetable garden that would have dazzled Sunset [magazine] in every given year that she did it. It was amazing. She'd be up at five in the morning every morning, tending to that. People wouldn't believe- -
Hicke: You mean up in Grass Valley?
Forman: Up in Grass Valley. We'd go up there as soon as school got out-- my brother and I and my mother would go up, and my father would work in the week and come up on the weekend. We'd spend the entire summer up there. During the school year, we'd go up occasionally on weekends. We had a great time. This was a complete fascination to me because there was so much to do. I had tons to do in the Bay Area; now, given the country environment and the time that we happened to land there, when the little towns were just getting over the gold-mining era—some of the mines were still operating; if they weren't operating, they were just closing down. The town was old and more or less unsecured and insecured as far as having tight regulations and everything, so I was just fascinated.
I'd get on my bicycle and ride over to these mines and go into all the crazy places they had and all the labs. They were closed, and I would be able to get in and look at it all. I mean, I was just in heaven. I'd go into tunnels. I remember crawling through the roots of trees the animals had dug out through the shafts and getting down into these big caverns and all. It just went on and on and on. It was so much fun.
And the mines were a tremendous fascination to me. I loved the tunnels, and I loved all the sort of—this was low-grade ore, so they all used the cyanide treatment plants. They were like big fermenters. That whole process, the cyanide fermentation of the pulverized ore and all that--I got very fascinated with the chemistry of it.
Hicke: More chemistry.
Forman: More chemistry, yes. I was just really delighted with it.
Hicke: I'm surprised they weren't fenced.
Forman: No, there was nothing. You could go and do anything. There were no locked doors. It looked like they just walked and abandoned them. The labs were there. It was crazy. It was a paradise. I remember the old assay still had all the old papers on the desk and everything. It was like everybody had just walked away.
It's a museum now. It's all a museum. As a child from about seven to about sixteen or seventeen, I had free access to anything and everything, and it was untouched. It was just absolutely a delight to me because I had a very inquisitive mind, and I was always wanting a new adventure. I had good friends who loved the same thing.
Hicke: So you had a set of friends up there as well as--
Forman: No, I would import them. My father would come up and bring a buddy of mine for a week or so, and he'd stay with me until he came back the following weekend. We got into all kinds of trouble and had lots of fun, just having a good time, the way young kids do. We were able to do more and get away with more than we possibly could now. You can't go anywhere or do anything of the nature that we did.
We had a wonderful lake on the property, and so we had boating, and we had--my brother and I--we had lots of places we could fish, and so there was fishing and just unending hiking, and so that was great for me. I had both country life and city life, and I think was very enriched for it.
Hicke: Yes, it sounds like it.
Forman: One of my first experiences with fermentation was--my parents were big entertainers. Mother is still a fabulous cook. They were very social and did, as I say, lots of entertaining. We always had a black lady living with us that helped my mom. This one gal named Dorothy--she was a wonderful woman--! don't know how she knew about it because she didn't drink alcohol herself, but she told me that you could ferment the fruits on these trees.
One day I decided that sounded like a great idea, so I picked as many of the cherries as I could pick from all the trees. I was probably only eight or nine years old. I crushed them all up, and I fermented it. It was the most fun thing. I was totally fascinated with this fermentation process.
Hicke: That was an early start on your career.
Forman: Yes. Then I took it a step further a few years later, once I really understood the process. We had these huge blackberry patches. My brother dug a frog pond down there, and so we had opened up a lot of paths to it. We went and picked just cardboard boxes full of these blackberries one year. I fermented those, and then I took it a step further, and I actually distilled it. So I made this blackberry—what could we call it?--a liqueur, except it wasn't sweet- -blackberry brandy, really. So that was fun. I did that probably at age fifteen.
Hicke: Did you taste it?
Forman: Oh, yes! My brother drank a little bit of it. I didn't care
about drinking the stuff; I was just fascinated with making it.
Hicke: Oh, that's amazing.
Forman: So that was one of my first introductions to fermentation. It was interesting enough that I knew someday I'd want to do something of that sort. I always knew, from I guess probably--! don't know what age—eight, nine, ten, somewhere in there—that I liked chemistry. Something about it fascinated me. I always had a little chemistry lab and then a bigger lab, and then I was interested— as I said, I was fascinated— with explosives, so I did a lot of explosives chemistry.
I learned a lot from it. I did some very sophisticated things— way too sophisticated for the time, and it was highly dangerous; but you don't know that. My parents hadn't a clue of what I was doing. So I got away with it. I'm lucky I got away with it, but it also taught me a lot. Then the fermentation sorts of things were interesting to me.
I got interested in gold, and so I started doing these gold analyses of the soil around there. I fiddled with all kinds of stuff. Eventually, I knew I was really going to do it. Obviously, these kinds of classes, right from junior high and high school, were the ones I liked most. All the science classes, I was fascinated with.
Hicke: What kinds of science did you take?
Forman: Everything, everything that was offered: biology— all the stuff that was offered.
Hicke: Any particular teachers that were influential?
Forman: Well, not until I got into college, really. They appreciated the fact that I was interested in it, but I don't remember anybody really promoting anything for me or encouraging me in any sort of way. I had enough encouragement on my own. I was fascinated with it. It was fun to me.
Hicke: Did your family drink wine?
Forman: No, no, my family didn't like wine [chuckling]. They were of the old school. They were bourbon drinkers. I guess when they entertained sometimes they drank wine. They ultimately stopped drinking hard liquor and started drinking wine once I started getting into the business, but that was a long time after. No, I had no influence of wine around the family. They knew nothing about it. So I came by that strictly through chemistry and my interested in agriculture and being outside and one thing and another.
Hicke: Did you ever find any gold?
Forman: Yes. I had a buddy of mine. We made some really neat equipment. God, we worked so hard on this thing. I recall what happened to it the first day, too. I was so mad. We worked for about two weeks, manufacturing this gold dredge, and we were all set to take it up and go into this creek that we thought we'd have good luck with. My brother was going on a fishing trip, and he backed over the thing and crinkled it all up. I could have killed him. I'll never forget it. So we spent another day or two uncrinkling it, and we went up and checked out for gold. We had the right equipment, but the pumps we had wouldn't work, or the creek wasn't right, so we never really did get anything, but it was good experience. We had a lot of fun doing it.
Hicke: Making the--
Forman: Yes, making the thing and getting out there and doing it and
seeing how it was done, talking to other people who had done it.
Hicke: Did you do much reading?
Forman: I didn't read very much in my youth.
Hicke: I guess you were too busy.
Forman: Yes, I really was. I wasn't a reader per se. I am now. I don't reach much in the summer, but I read all through the winter and spring when I'm not so busy all day.
Hicke: But you didn't go and get books on how to--
Forman: Oh, yes, of course. Oh, yes, we read up on gold mining. I read a lot of chemistry books, but that's hardly reading. It was fascinating. God, at age fourteen or fifteen, I'd be up at the engineering library at Berkeley. I learned how to get these books, and I'd go in and I'd read all this stuff. I was fascinated with it. So that interested me, but not novel-type reading.
Hicke: I'd call that reading.
Forman: Well, it was reading, yes. I certainly could read. I read an odd set of stuff, but I did.
Hicke: Are there any of your friends that you particularly remember?
Forman: Oh, sure, all of them. A guy named Fritz Henshaw--he was very
clever. He was a good builder. He ended up going to Berkeley and getting a degree in electrical engineering. I don't see him much anymore, but he's still a good friend. And a good friend of mine,
10
named Phil Crane--he and I are concocting a business together right now, trying to sell wine to Japan with a special label that he's come up with. He has a valve business that takes him to Japan often, and so we're kind of working together. I still see him, a great guy.
Hicke: But he's going to sell your wine?
Forman: No, not my wine. We're going to try to buy probably bulk wine and use his special label for it, kind of a celebration wine, he calls it. He's got an idea, and I just offered to help him. Whether it will go anywhere, I don't know.
And then another friend, Frank Potts, became a dentist. I still see him--oh, I don't know—every two or three months.
Hicke: Not on a dental basis, I trust.
Forman: No, no, not with my brother being a dentist.
Hicke: Oh, that's right. Is he up here?
Forman: He practices in Concord, California.
Hicke: How nice.
Forman: So yes, 1 still do see at least a couple of the old buddies that I had in high school. Obviously, you get out of high school and college and you go to another community, and you make new friends. But I am still close to at least a couple of them, which is fun. We have lots of memories, and we laugh like crazy every time we see each other. It's a kick.
Hicke: One other thing that I find kind of fun to find out is what kinds of foods people like. You said your mother is a great cook.
Forman: Well, yes. And because they entertained and liked to cook so much, at a very young age we learned to eat everything. We weren't fussy kids, and we ate pretty fancy food. I mean, I remember my brother and I would be delighted to think that we were going to have eggs Benedict for breakfast or fried oysters and chicken livers and green fried tomatoes for breakfast. We thought that was just super. So we ate sophisticated food.
My brother and father, actually, more than I were great fishermen and hunters, so we'd eat a lot of wild game: deer, wild ducks, salmon, what have you- -everything from stuffed lamb hearts to the normal things. We just thought that was great.
11
And a lot of vegetables because my mother was such a vegetable farmer. Every single year of my entire life, I would either have a garden in conjunction with my parents or on my own, so I've had fresh vegetables every summer. I always look forward to that. I love them.
Hicke: You're spoiled!
Forman: I know. I love them. I really look forward to the first of the tomatoes and all the special things that I grow. So it's hard to say that there's anything that I don't like. I really love quality food. I mean, you can see that I like to cook by the pots that I have. [points to the kitchen] I'm into it. Those are by no means just decoration. I use them all.
Hicke: They're very decorative, but if you use them all, then I'm really impressed.
Forman: I cook a lot. I'm into cooking with good, fresh ingredients. I'm not what you call a fancy sort of French-style chef. I don't like to do elaborate sauces and all those things. I like to do good ingredients, cooked tastefully with good flavors. I'm not a recipe follower. I kind of invent things. Just like my chemistry. I like to taste things and kind of get an idea of what I think I like about the thing and then try to create something on my own that's around, rather than pick up recipes and follow them. I don't have the patience for that for some reason or other.
Hicke: You're creative to cook that way. Forman: Yes.
Hicke: You're taking full advantage of being in the Napa Valley, where the gardens--
Forman: Yes, we have good food. This is every bit as nice as Provence in the south of France. We have all these wonderful olives. We have everything, really, that they do. It's incredible. We have some great garden food here and farmers' markets, which supply wonderful stuff during the summer, and obviously, all the great wine and so forth.
Hicke: Okay, so you liked the science courses in high school probably the best?
Forman: Oh, sure. The junior high school was so simple. I was still interested in it, but the high school chemistry was really fascinating. I loved that.
12
Hicke: Did you learn anything that you didn't already know?
Forman: No, it was pretty simple. I did well in it, obviously. At that point, it was just fun that I did know it all, and it was kind of a kick.
Hicke: You got to mess around in a lab.
Forman: Yes, and I liked it. I had a better lab in my home than the high school had. But it was still fun.
University and Graduate School. UC Davis
Forman:
Forman:
Hicke:
Forman:
Then, of course, I went to college. I actually started off at San Jose State [University]. I'm not quite sure why. I guess a lot of my friends lived there, and I thought, Well, that sounds good. I was there for a year in the chem department, and one of the professors, a guy named Wilkinson, said, "You know, Ric, you do really like chemistry. I can see that. You do well in it." And he said, "What do you want to do with it?" He kind of said, "Are you interested in straight chemistry as a research chemist, or what would you like? How about wine? Are you interested in wine?"
it
"How about wine?" he said. I said, "What does that have to do with chemistry?" He said, "There's a great deal to do with chemistry. There's a whole department at [University of California at] Davis that's involved in it." I instantly knew that that's what I wanted to do, so I applied to transfer and fortunately had the grades to transfer, and so I transferred to Davis and got right into their Department of Food Science, with the idea that eventually I would get into the enology program. But they didn't have a fermentation science course curriculum to graduate in then. It was food science. So I did all the food science classes in undergraduate school, and then went to graduate school.
Wait a minute, were--
You said there were some of your professors that
Oh, I'm sorry. I think this was this one guy at San Jose who quickly re-routed me and got me interested in focusing on what direction I'd like to take the chemistry. I knew very well, right out of high school, that when I went to college, chemistry was
13
what I wanted to do. My major was picked probably three years before I went to college. So that was simple. But then what 1 was going to do with it, I really didn't know. That I didn't have any idea, but the more I thought about it after talking to him, the more I realized that I really didn't want to be in just sort of research lab. I needed to be outside a lot. I like the out- of-doors, which is obviously coming from my childhood background, being outdoors all the time, doing things. And I liked agriculture because I was fascinated with the way my family had always had agriculture, even though it was just gardens. That interested me.
So Davis 's ag department was definitely where I needed to go. And then, when I thought I could get into the wine business-- I like not only chemistry but the biochemistry, bacteriology part of it fascinated me as well, so I had it all.
Hicke: Any professors at Davis that you recall?
Forman: I was impressed with [Maynard] Amerine. Amerine was very nice to me. I'll never forget the first day, taking his Vit [iculture] III class, which I ended up finally being a reader for, or a TA [teaching assistant] or whatever you want to call it. But I'll never forget him coming into class. I was very impressed with him because he was so dignified. He just had an elegant appearance and manner to him. He also reminded me of a guy who was a friend of my parents whom I just happened to like very much, a guy named Len Richards. He was one of my favorite friends of my parents, so he had this charisma of looks just reminding me of someone whom I had liked from my family, but also he was impressive because he spoke so articulately. He just really looked important, and I realized that this was a step in a very important direction.
I immediately took it seriously because of him, and then I realized, after seeing all the other professors, that I was focusing on something that was really pretty intense and not general in the sense that chemistry was but that there was direction to it. Yes, I was really excited about it and almost fearful because it was so intense and focused in the direction that it was. I felt the specialization immediately.
Hicke: Do you recall anything specifically that you got from him? Philosophy of wine--
Forman: I remember going into his office, and I just remember admiring him because he was obviously so important and well liked in the industry. I admired the way that he tasted wine once I finally got into the classes. Not only did he understand how wine was made, but he understood the history of wine, and he understood the
14
elegance and the environment that wine achieved if you really appreciated it, and the people that were associated with it all around the world.
He would encourage me. He would say, "Ric, you're doing well, and if you continue to do well, someday the wine business will allow you not only pleasure but affluence, and you will live very well by it." I believed him, and I just felt that he said that's the way it will be, and it has.
Hicke: That's a great characterization of him. him.
You just sort of captured
Forman: It is. I always thought he was very special, which he was. I
mean, everybody felt that way, but I saw it within the first five minutes. I think I have good intuition. Even then, at a young age, I had it. I realized that it was important immediately. So he was the most important.
And Akioshi.
I liked all the others . I remember a guy named Min
Hicke: Min?
Forman: Min. He's a Japanese guy. He was the lab assistant to Hod Berg. He was really encouraging to me. I ended up living with him and his family for a while. He was great guy, a lot of spirit. I think he works for Gallo [Winery] now. He left the university and worked for Gallo, but he was very sharp. Very, very nice to me, and 1 liked him a lot, so he was encouraging.
Dr. [Ralph] Kunke was wonderful. He became a really good friend and my graduate advisor. I liked Ralph a lot. He was so nice to me and also very encouraging. He was fun. We could go out and laugh, and he also taught me a lot and was very kind and reassuring in my research project. So he was very important to me as well. I admired him. A different sort altogether than Amerine, but 1 liked him.
I also felt that [Vernon L.] Singleton was probably one of the most intense and creative professors there. Great precision. He was very serious and had a unique sort of approach that no one really had spent much time on, working on his polyphenolics . I think I took the first class on polyphenolics that he taught. He sort of invented the class, and we were the pioneers of it. I thought that was good.
[A. Dinsmore] Dinny Webb was a great professor, too. He was really nice to me. I remember he'd tell me about how his son was
15
working hard in the chem department, and if you work hard, you make it. He was very fatherly to me about continuing there. I remember having a discussion with him about going to graduate school, and he encouraged it and said that it was a good idea and that you have to work hard, but it will pay for itself in the end.
They were really nice professors. They were very serious, but they were very personable. It was a small department.
Hicke: How many in a class?
Forman: Oh, I think in a graduate class we'd have five, six people in it. My colleagues in the classroom were David Coffrin and Mills Fenghi, Richard Nagaoka, Justin Meyer of Silver Oak, Pete Stern, and Rich Kunde. Five or six others, maybe seven or eight. That was about it.
Hicke: You had an interesting class.
Forman: Yes, yes. You hear some of these names, and we're all around here, still doing it. So it was a good class. It was great.
Hicke: This is graduate school now.
Forman: Graduate school, yes. And it was a little bigger in
undergraduate, of course, because you were mixed with all the other classes—history or one thing or another, which was a mixed bag of everybody, but the campus was neat. I really enjoyed it. It was a nice place to live. I could go both back to the Bay Area, where my family lived, or I could go up to our summer home, which I was halfway between. That was nice.
But I was really getting ready to leave by the time I was in graduate school. I was fascinated with it and did well. I did very well.
Hicke: What year did you graduate?
Forman: I graduated in December, half year, in December of 1969.
Hicke: This was under-
Forman: Graduate school, master's degree.
16
II EARLY WORK EXPERIENCES
Summer Jobs
Hicke: When did you get your bachelor's?
Forman: Oh, I must have gotten that two years previous. By that time- that was six years of school--! was pretty well ready to leave. I had thought about getting a Ph.D., but I thought No, I really don't need that. And while I was in school, I was very fortunate. I had worked for a couple of wineries. I worked for Stony Hill [Vineyard] in 1967. Fred McCrae was very, very good to me. I really admired Fred, and I liked him a lot- -he and Eleanor both. He taught me a lot .
And then I worked for the harvest of '68 at Robert Mondavi [Winery]. That was a wonderful influence as well.
Hicke: We were talking about whether you were going to go for a Ph.D.
Forman: Oh, yes. I just realized that I really wanted to get out and
work. I was lucky because the industry was just beginning to take off at that point, and there were new wineries being established, and they needed winemakers. And so at one point I had Peter Newton, through a relation, actually, on his wife's side--Sloane Upton, who owns Three Palms Vineyard, who was taking some classes at Davis and had met me. He encouraged Peter, Peter had talked to Amerine, and Amerine had suggested that he talk to me.
So he came and interviewed me for the job of building and running Sterling Vineyards, the same time Billy Jaeger came and wanted to know if I wanted to be the winemaker for Freemark Abbey, and Bob Mondavi, after I had worked there a season, wanted to know if I wanted to be the winemaker or at least assistant winemaker at Robert Mondavi. So my God, here I am at school, thinking, Is this what it's really like? How could it be so good?
17
I was really looking forward at that point to getting out and doing something.
Hicke: Yes. Before we get you out, let me back up. Is there anything more to be said about what you did at Stony Hill?
Forman: Oh, sure. There's a lot more. We should not pass that up. That was important. I could go back even further than that. I see in the outline you've made here: what sort of things did I do, what sort of employment did I have while I was growing up? Well, I worked one year--
Hicke: I wasn't going to ask you that because I figured you didn't have any time.
Forman: No, I did. It's kind of interesting. One year I worked on a construction project for a company called C. Norman Peterson. They built sewage treatment plants. That was just straight carpentry construction. I did that one year in high school.
Hicke: Summer?
Forman: Yes, summer. I spent the summer doing that once I was finally too
old to just go to the summer home and sit. Once I had a driver's
license, the family felt I better start working, and so it was good. So I did that one year.
And then the following year I had a wonderful job working at UC Berkeley in the Chem Department storage room. This was the year they were tearing down the old chem building, and so I was busy all year going into all these incredible labs in the old Chem Department. Remember that old brick building? Did you ever see it?
Hicke: I don't think so.
Forman: Oh, my God. It was a wonderful building. It was so much fun. And I can remember going through it even before I worked there, because I used to go up on weekends and go into the building and kind of go in and just befriend some of the research students in there and have fun talking with them. I just loved the building-- the whole smell of it, and the whole thing was utterly fantastic.
I remember the old building that had this glass roof on it and all these steam pots, and all these guys were doing all this research. A professor named Rappaport had a greenhouse, and Rappaport's greenhouse was full of all these poppies. I guess he was doing studies on alkaloids. One of my jobs was to take all these poppies and get rid of them and clean out all these labs,
18
all this stuff. Threw half of the stuff away because it was so old. I just stocked my lab completely with all this stuff. I had so much fun. That was wonderful.
Hicke: How did you get that job?
Forman: My brother's girlfriend worked in the department there. She went to Berkeley, and she said, "During this summer we're going to tear down the old chem building, and there's going to be a ton of stuff to do. Are you interested?" Of course, I could hardly wait. So that was a good job.
And then the following summer I worked at Weibel [Champagne Vineyards] on the bottling line. I thought I was going to work in the winery. I wasn't able to because there just wasn't enough to do, so I ended up doing construction and work on the bottling line there. That didn't last very long.
Stony Hill Vineyard. 1967
Forman: It was the summer after that that I finally worked at Stony Hill. That was then starting to be significant. I was at Davis at that point.
Hicke: How did you get that job?
Forman: Again through Amerine. He'd [Fred McCrae] go to Amerine every
year and say, "I want one of your graduate students or one of your students." He'd be interested in... so Amerine chose me again. I had a great time. I lived in their newly built barn. I was the first person who lived there. It has been used for thirty years since for their Mexican help, but I had the initial live-in. I moved up there and lived down there on the ranch and made the harvest of 1967.
It was extremely enlightening. A lot of things I learned there. He told me the importance of keeping everything clean and having sound fruit. He said, "If you have sound fruit"--
Hicke: Sound fruit?
Forman: Sound, good fruit. "You probably won't make bad wine." I learned that rule very early on. I was introduced to the barrel fermentation phenomenon, which was really not very much dealt with at Davis, so that was fascinating to me. And being introduced to
19
the production of Chardonnay and the way they did it at Stony Hill. It was a very hands-on, very traditional system.
Hicke: Traditional in the sense of the French--
Forman: Yes, very Burgundian system, really, except that he didn't use
Burgundy barrels. He fermented in barrels. I think it has gotten way more traditional now, as are many of the wineries in California. But his approach to it was still, nevertheless, pretty classic. It was a wonderful way to start. Even though I had been taught all this technology at Davis, I was able to do some of the more traditional things along with my ability to point out to him and do various things that I had learned already as far as the technology goes. I helped him, and he helped me.
Hicke: Are you saying that technology and things that you learned at Davis were a little bit different from the way he was doing things?
Forman: Oh, definitely. And certainly influenced me, as did, finally, my ability to travel at an early age on Sterling's behalf. It influenced the way I make wine very, very seriously, and I think it had an effect on a few of the people who saw what I was doing and the way wines are being made now in California.
But anyway, we were all just starting here. He had been doing this for some time, but all the new wineries had just begun, and so they were ready to see what was going on. So that was good.
Robert Mondavi, 1968
Forman: Then going to work at Robert Mondavi the next summer was also a wonderful experience for me. Totally different. Much more technology there. A lot of big, fancy equipment that I otherwise hadn't worked with. Of course, Davis didn't have any pilot plants equipped the way they are now, so I had never seen this equipment. It was a wonderful chance to see how pumps worked and how the presses worked.
Hicke: Was he doing a lot of things that were different?
Forman: Bob was very automated. He was out there buying this equipment, and all the first stuff that had ever come into California. He was using these nice, stainless-steel tanks, which very few people had started using. He had gotten good presses, and he was
20
interested in centrifuges and all the sorts of things that nobody else had really paid much attention to, so he was one of the beginning technologists, really, as far as the California wine business.
I must say, I recall that it was a bit scattered around there. They were always doing too many things at one time. I learned that they were just full of energy and had lots of good ideas but that they probably took on too much at once, and so I learned those were some of the things I didn't want to do in the future, that I wanted to be more organized.
Hicke: More focused.
Forman: Yes, way more focused, to and not to do.
So it taught me at a very early age what
Hicke: Was Warren Winiarski there then?
Forman: Warren was. I'll never forget Warren being on top of the tank and Warren said, "Well, now, Ric, we're going to pump these tanks over." I said, "That's great. I know in theory what it means, but how exactly is it done?" So he and I get up there, and he'd show me this and that and the other thing, and he had really only learned it the year before himself. There was a time that he had come to me and started asking me questions. I remember he used to want to borrow chemicals from me and asked me how this was done and asked me how that was done. So he wasn't really that knowledgeable himself about making wine. He was just really kind of an assistant, learning himself at Robert Mondavi.
Hicke: Was Zelma Long there?
Forman: Zelma? No, she came just a little bit later. It was Mike
Mondavi, me, Warren, Brad Warner had just started there, and a few other guys. That was it. I remember Bob would come out and stand on the press with me and talk about what was going on and what I thought, and we'd taste wines. We had a wine that he bottled before that was a Sauvignon Blanc. He brought it down and said, "Ric, what's wrong with it?" He said, "It's all fizzy." I said, "Well, I'll tell you what's wrong with it, Bob. I think it's got some sugar in it and you didn't sterile- filter it," which was the problem. They were just learning there. They didn't have it down right yet. But they were very excited about the new Napa Valley wines.
21
III STERLING VINEYARDS, 1969-1978
Hiring On
Forman: So then I went back and finished with graduate school and had to make a decision at that point where to start working. The offer that had been made to me by Peter Newton, who was at that time contemplating building Sterling Vineyards, was by far to me the most exciting because it offered me the chance to really do it totally on my own, and I wasn't frightened of that. I didn't really want to go and work somewhere else with someone else. I really had, for some reason or another, enough confidence that I wanted to do it my way.
I never was- -kind of all the way back into my childhood--! never really liked the Boy Scouts, I never really liked camp. I didn't like regimentation, and I didn't like people to have a program for me. I was really more interested in diving in myself and doing my own investigation and kind of running my own show.
Hicke: The views are so much better up there at Sterling! [laughs]
Forman: Yes, definitely. So I wasn't frightened by it. I guess they detected that, and they detected a degree of confidence.
Hicke: Had he talked to anybody else?
Forman: He must have. Yes, actually, they tried Philip Tonne, but they
never got along. The winery wasn't built or anything, but Philip came aboard and was going to do some things with him, but they wore each other out, I think. I guess I was the next one, and I worked.
22
Designing the Plant
Forman: So I graduated in December, and they started off-- Hicke: This is '69.
Forman: In '69. We decided—for the rest of the winter I began doing
research on equipment and traveled to all sorts of wineries and asked lots of questions.
Hicke: Give me an example. Where did you go?
Forman: Oh, I went down to the Paul Masson [Vineyard] plant to look at all the fancy equipment, I spent time with Martini [Winery], I went up to Parducci [Wine Cellars], I went to Gallo, I went to Beaulieu [Vineyard] .
Hicke: Were all these people willing to--
Forman: Yes, they were all very friendly. Bill Fuller was extremely
friendly, at Louis Martini, I remember. And then 1 would travel to the various equipment companies. I remember going to Missouri and looking at the Paul Muir stainless steel company, trying to get an idea of all this equipment. I don't know how really, honestly, I did it, because I didn't really know what I was doing.
Hicke: They don't teach you that in school.
Forman: No, but I realized I had to do it, and I asked a lot of questions and put a lot of ideas together, and I ended up designing this first plant—getting the equipment and ordering all the stuff that I needed.
Hicke: What were your objectives and goals?
Forman: This is kind of how it evolved: By far the most important thing
that really happened was my association with Dick [Richard] Graff, who had come to Newton at the same time I had joined Newton and asked Newton if he would help sponsor Dick in a barrel and winery equipment company that he wanted to get started in conjunction with his running the very small, at that time, Chalone Vineyard. Peter thought that could be very advantageous. He liked Dick. Dick and I had gotten along. We had met each other at school.
And so Dick and I launched off in the spring. I actually got married to Joy, my wife--
Hicke: What was her maiden name?
23
Forman: Dale, D-a-l-e. So I married Joy, and we took off on a honeymoon to France. And then she came home after two weeks, and I stayed for an additional six weeks with Dick Graff, and we researched all of Europe. We went to all these equipment companies, all these barrel companies. We went into Italy and mostly France. Of course, I had practically never been out of California at this point, and so I was absolutely dazzled with the ability to go to Europe and then overwhelmed with what I learned. I mean, I went from this strict chemistry, technological background, other than what I learned at Stony Hill, to seeing what tradition really was. It just struck me, at age twenty-four, completely that that's what I wanted to do. I knew instantly that that was the way I wanted to make wine.
Hicke: What did you do about language?
Forman: I had French in high school, and I had a little bit of a knowledge of French. I'm much better now than I was then. I continued to study it. I'm not fluent, but I can kind of muddle through. But Dick and a purchasing agent for Sterling International, the parent company of Sterling—he spoke fluent French, and Dick spoke quite good French, so we had two French-speaking people on the trip, so it made it pretty easy.
Hicke: That covers French, but what about German? Did you go there?
Forman: Dick was not bad at German. He actually took us to this amazing-- did you ever meet Dick?
Hicke: No.
Forman: Did anybody? They didn't get him before he died?
Hicke: No, we didn't get an oral history with him.
Forman: Oh, what a shame. He was without a doubt the most brilliant man in the industry. Utterly unbelievable.
Hicke: He was on the list, but we just didn't get to him.
Forman: What a shame. He was fabulous individual, unbelievably brilliant, genius-level brilliant, and very, very creative and very innovative and very energetic. Couldn't say enough about him. Incredible man. Awful, awful situation, that accidental death he had.
So we went over there, and we had this tremendous time. I came home with a total feeling then that yes, I was very happy that I had this technological background because it gave me a
24
foundation to know when I was getting over the edge or not with tradition, but the tradition was what I wanted to do, making wine.
Hicke: Can you explain why?
Forman: I don't know. It just had that charisma of something done and
makes you feel that that's what you want to do. I knew I wanted to make wine, but then all of a sudden I realized that when I saw the tradition—both how it looked, how it felt, the hands-on abilities that allow--
Hicke: And the taste.
Forman: And, of course, the taste. I had been impressed with the taste. I wanted to create to those things. I really wanted to create something classic. And so I came home. Of course, my first project was to make Chardonnay, which was the thing coming in first. I didn't have a winery set up yet, and I was frustrated. Equipment was on its way, and they were building all this stuff. Jack Davies at Schramsberg was kind enough and he knew Peter Newton well and said, "Look, you'll have to make it here. The grapes are getting ripe. What are you going to do?"
Hicke: Were these their own grapes?
Forman: Yes, they were Sterling's grapes. Sterling had planted vineyards before they had a notion to do a winery. They ran an extremely successful paper company, Peter Newton had, and this paper company, which was really a bulk-trading paper company — they buy paper in bulk and trade it all over the world, so it was kind of a brokerage business. He ultimately did then set up paper plants in England, but it was very successful. It was based in San Francisco—
Hicke: Just a second.
Hicke: Okay.
Forman: It was very successful. It was based in San Francisco, and, you know, they were of an age and an affluence at that point where they all kind of wanted to get away, as everyone does if you can afford to. They had bought summer home—he and the two officers of the company bought summer homes in the Napa Valley and got involved in planting vineyards. It was fun for them. They were interested in it. And before they knew it, they realized that they could afford it, and they thought it would be fun to build a winery. And that's when I came onto the scene.
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke:
Forman:
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Who were the other two partners?
There was actually only one partner. It was Mike Stone. He was a partner with Peter. And then Martin Water field was their comptroller, but he was very close to them both. He was not a partner, but he had a house up here as well. He actually was one of the men who was most influential in the exterior design of Sterling Vineyards. He, Dick Graff, and I basically designed and put Sterling together.
When you built it up on that hill, did you envision the cable car to get up to it?
No, that was Martin's idea, totally Martin's idea, clever, very clever indeed.
He was very
So anyway, backing up, we built a temporary plant at the bottom of the hill before we had any of the concept of what to do at the top.
First Crush at Schramsburg; Pioneering Barrel Fermentation
Hicke: Did you get the first crush in now?
Forman: Yes, we were starting. I tried to crush and couldn't get the full harvest, or the beginning of the harvest, at the initial plant, which was nothing more than a pad and some tanks sitting out in the open, with a crusher and so forth, and a trailer for an office. But it just wasn't complete in time for the Chardonnay, and so we went up to Schramsberg, where I had had a small relationship a year before because while I was at Robert Mondavi in '68, Sterling had grapes brought to Mondavi to be custom crushed. And then we put them in the new barrels, which I'll never forget, actually, putting into the tunnels previous to the '69 harvest.
I remember Joy and I--and we weren't even married yet--and a good friend of ours, Chick Hudson, had spent a weekend up there because the container of barrels had come in, and we laid all the cardboard down. I remember rolling them into the lower tunnel and being so excited that I had these brand-new, French barrels. Nobody had these barrels in the Napa Valley, and I had this new container of new French barrels. I'll never forget putting them into the tunnel. It was about the most exciting thing I could ever imagine. The charisma of going into a tunnel and having this wonderful new wood and knowing that I was going to put Chardonnay
26
and ferment it in there, which nobody else had ever even dreamed of doing, in new barrels. So I could hardly wait.
We did that actually for the red grapes that we had made at Mondavi, custom-crushed for Sterling's account. We put that wine into those barrels.
Hicke: Cabernet [Sauvignon]?
Forman: It was Cabernet and Merlot. We put that into those barrels. And then the new Chardonnay barrels came. Of course, the previous year they were also put into the barrels. They were not intended to go in with Schramsberg, but we had to because the grapes weren't ripe. And so--gosh!--I had these pumps all set up and everything, and I was going to use their crushing equipment. I'll never forget. I had all this brand-new hose, and I had to lay it from the little crushing and pressing area that Schramsberg had in the upper tunnels all the way down to the lower tunnel, where I was going to ferment the juice. They didn't do that sort of thing. They fermented in stainless up there. But since I wanted to ferment in barrels, I had to go to the lower tunnel.
I remember the morning the grapes came in, and before the grapes came in,, I had all of this hose, this beautiful hose, all laid out from one tunnel to the next. And who comes along but this guy named Hugo. He was actually quite a town character at the time. You can see him in paintings around. But Hugo drove in, wearing these white coveralls, and he drove this old Chevy truck with a little trailer. He had all his equipment on it. Here he comes. He sees the hose across the road, thinks nothing of it, and drives right over my hose and dents it in about ten places and puts cracks in it.
Honest to God, I almost cried. I could have killed the guy. How could you do such a thing to me? I'm all set up, and you know how excited I was, and really my first harvest on my own. And he comes and wrecks it.
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke:
What did you do?
Oh, we taped it up, and I was just sick. I had to buy new hose, and we made it work, but it was an awful start. So we pressed it, and I thought I knew what I was doing.
I have a question before you get too far. kind of barrels these were.
You didn't tell me what
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Forman: These were classic Burgundy barrels, with the wooden hoop and all. It looked just as though you were in a Burgundy cellar. That's what was so exciting.
Hicke: Okay.
Forman: So we got the equipment going, and Jack helped me with the
equipment and so forth. We pressed it and away the juice went, settled it. The next morning it went down into the barrels, and it fermented away, and it made just an absolutely wonderful wine. 1 remember Dick Graff coming up and tasting with me, and we both just smiled and thought, Well, this is it. This is what using these barrels and good grapes and fermentation and so forth does.
Hicke: Was that after three months?
Forman: This was after about a month. It was very good. And then I
remember, at the time, the university was putting on a tasting. It was hosted at Robert Mondavi's. This was the following March. Of course, the rest of the harvest took place, and there's more perhaps that we can talk about, about that, and the rest of the red grapes came in, because the plant was ready at Sterling Vineyards .
But Chardonnay remained up there for some time, because it was fermented there. But we had a tasting in March of the new Chardonnay. There was a number of wineries that participated, the ones that were around- -Freemark Abbey, Beaulieu, Christian Brothers, Martini, Heitz, and us, I guess--and Inglenook. They wanted to taste all the new wines. They thought it would be fascinating for everybody to bring these new wines and taste them.
I was making wine the way I felt that was traditional in Burgundy. I was leaving the wine with the lees, and I was doing things that no one would ever dream of doing: leaving the fermenting in barrels, which none of these people had done; new barrels on top of it all; leaving the wine with the lees; not racking it and getting off all these lees.
So I brought this wine, and my wine was the only one on the table that was cloudy. The rest of the wines had all, of course, as California was in those days: as quick as you could get them filtered, the better; and store them in oak uprights or stainless steel. And so we tasted them all, and I could hardly wait to have everybody taste this wine. Gosh, everybody's wine was so clear, and that made me a little nervous. And then all of sudden, everybody's wine was real polished and fruity, and mine had this sort of stale smell, because I had taken the sample out the day before, and I now know, but anytime a new wine has yeast or any
28
sediment in it, it doesn't travel well. It'll have this sort of stale, metallic sort of smell if it gets sunlight on it. So it had the sunlight on it, and I was just horrified. My wine looked awful. It totally destroyed my sense of security and that I had done the right thing. And I wondered then, "My God, have I stuck my neck out and done something absolutely awful?"
I called Dick, and Dick said, "Don't worry. I've been doing this at Chalone. It works. Don't worry. It's just that you took the wine full of sediment." I knew in theory that was it, but I had a heck of time convincing everybody else there. They all felt so sorry for me because the wine looked awful. You can imagine: my first wine [laughter].
Hicke: Ruined your day!
Forman: More than that! I came home, and my wife just said, "My God, what happened to you?" I said, "I don't know. I think I've blown it. I think I've really made something awful." But I stuck with my guns, I stuck with the traditional method, and eventually fined it, eventually bottled it, and I remember tasting it with all the rest of the wines, and it was so superior. The wine was absolutely elegant. It was just stunning. It was everything I wanted it to be. It truly had that French Burgundian taste.
Hicke: Oh, great!
Forman: So by hanging in there—and then I really had confidence. Other people tasted it and, of course, as we know, barrel fermentation now is being done. But Dick and I were the first people to do it and to really do it properly. It caught on.
Hicke: Documenting those events is one of the reasons we're here. Before we get too far, can you tell me: is there any particular reason that the people at Sterling planted Cabernet, Merlot, and Chardonnay?
Forman: Peter was English and really liked Bordeaux wine, number one. He liked European wine; that's what he grew up with. He saw that Chardonnay was catching on. He knew what Fred McCrae had been doing, and he was a visionary and realized that it would catch on. He knew Cabernet was what the Valley did well with. Obviously, Beaulieu had set the pattern with that, with making world-class Cabernet ever since the forties. So Cabernet was a natural.
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An Early Merlot Varietal
Forman: But he went further and said, "You know, I think Merlot would be a good grape." I wanted to agree with him. I was enthusiastic about it, particularly since I had spent time in Pomerol on the first visit. So I was very much in agreement with him. We even, at his encouragement, tried to bottle one early on, 1969.
Hicke: A Merlot varietal?
Forman: Yes, a varietal. Louis Martini had done one in '67.
Hicke: I just read--I think it was in this morning's paper—that you had the second one.
Forman: Yes, so I had had the second one. It was made in a different style. It was made in my traditional Bordelaise--as I was traditional Burgundian in Chardonnay, I was Bordelaise in my thinking as far as how Cabernet, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc were produced. We had Merlot and Cabernet. We later added Franc and even later, Petit Verdot, at my encouragement. But Merlot was the most innovative, of course, at the time because nobody was even thinking about Merlot; it was all Cabernet here.
Peter said, "They make wonderful wines in Pomerol and St. Emilion. Why don't we bottle some Merlot ourselves? People might be fascinated." I sort of resisted, and then I said, "No, I guess you're right. We will, and I'll try to do something special with it." I did. The '69 was all right, but the '70 was really quite wonderful, and from then on, it turned into an incredibly good wine. It had uniqueness. People thought it could stand on its own. I made a very stylish wine from it.
I remember going into 1978, encouraging [Dan] Duckhorn to get involved with it. Took him to Bordeaux and introduced him to the people. And he really started popularizing Merlot more than, I would say, Sterling did. Then, of course, we know where that has gone at this point.
Hicke: Yes. Well, he made only Merlot for--
Forman: For a while, and that was kind of my encouragement, telling him to do so. Christian Moueix actually went to Davis with me. I wasn't really close to him, but I knew him, and I knew him, and I knew he was an important figure in the Bordeaux region, and became, of course, much more aware of it once I traveled to Bordeaux and visited him now and then. He was kind enough to allow me to spend time in some of his cellars, and so I learned the techniques of
30
racking and brought home for the first time also the Bordeaux system of racking and fining in barrels and racking out of the head of the barrel, using air pressure. Of course, everybody thought, again, I was nuts-- just as they thought I was nuts fermenting Chardonnay in barrels.
But, again, now it's all caught on, and that's, of course, the only way people make classic Cabernet in California now. But I remember even having to convince Dick that this was the way it needed to be done. I remember bringing all of his crews from the various wineries that he had at that point, with the Chalone group. I'd bring them into the cellars and train them how to rack out of the head of the barrel and how to do all the techniques that I learned.
Hicke: Did you actually learn that?
Forman: I was able to work in the cellar at Chateau Trotanoy, Moueix's
cellar. The guys there really showed me exactly how to do it all. They would allow me to do it, and so I learned the physical way of doing it. So it was wonderful. I'd bring these barrels home and drive holes in the head of them. Everybody thought I was crazy to rack a barrel that way. What in the world was I doing, racking that wine with air pressure and coming out of the head of the barrel, doing all these crazy things?
But it made a difference. It made a subtle difference, but it was a difference. It just added that little touch of refinement to what I already felt was important, as blending Cabernet and Merlot and Cabernet Franc and eventually Petit Verdot. I was convinced that a Bordeaux-style wine could be made and even made to a more high degree of refinement than had been done previously in California, by using some of these techniques.
Hicke: Okay. I think we went by these too fast. Could you elaborate on these techniques one by one, and explain how they were done?
Forman: Let's take a break for a minute. Hicke: Okay.
Travel and Research in Europe [Interview 2: February 25, 1999] //#
Hicke: This is February 25th now. We're on our second interview.
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Fonnan :
Hicke:
You made some notes, and I wanted to go back and try to elaborate on some of those topics. I'm hoping that whoever transcribes this is able to pick it apart—like throw them all out on a sheet and then put the like parts together, because we've been a little scattered. I would certainly like to see this whole thing collated, so to speak, so that we have a uniformity of progression, I guess, from where we started through my life as a winemaker.
The transcriber will transcribe what's on the tape, rearrange some of it if you like.
We can
Forman: Yes, that's fine, that's fine. I've done this enough times, and when somebody does it verbatim or they do kind of the flow as it came, it's very disjointed. I don't know whether there was a book or there was something that was done that way, and I was really upset about it, that they didn't take the time to at least get it back to me and let me say that I didn't want to have it sound exactly like that. You almost sound illiterate sometimes if they take it verbatim—because we don't talk the way we write.
Hicke: That's what I was just going to say. You sound perfectly fine, but when you look at it in writing--
Forman: No, no, it doesn't make sense, no no. Conversations don't go the way one writes.
Hicke: Yes. Okay, I'll just kind of let you go your own. Forman: We made a note there.
Hicke: Yes, we wanted to go back to early days at Sterling and talk about your trips to Europe.
Forman: What I saw in Europe, exactly. Obviously, going to school and making the decision to get into the Department of Enology and Viticulture and see it through all the way to graduate school was an important phase and decision in my life. It set me into one direction which was obviously very important. So that was an important decision for me.
The next most important thing that guided me was going to Europe, and so I think it's probably not just enough to say that it dazzled me, but why. I guess it has a lot to do with aesthetics, as much as it does practicality of the matter. Going there and seeing the way the vineyards, for instance, were so neatly laid out to me was very, very meaningful. I liked the symmetry of it all. I was astounded at the thought that the French, who are obviously very economy-minded people, would go to
32
the effort of spending that tremendous amount of money in the close spacing and the elaborate trellis systems and the massive amount of care that it takes to tend these vines .
You see, in the normal course of things in those days in California on an acre of land we had 450 vines. You looked at a comparable plot of land in Europe, and we had 2,000 to 3,000 vines. That's a big multiplier. I now know because I came back with this notion as well. I planted probably the first close spacing at Sterling because of that and because I was fascinated with it and fiddled with it for years. Of course, now, again, the whole Valley is going to this close spacing.
Hicke: Did you look at the soil?
Forman: Well, yes. Also, I was absolutely enthralled, particularly in
Bordeaux and in Burgundy, with the soil types and where they were planting the land. You'd go, for instance, from Bordeaux city up through the Medoc, and you'd see this rather nice, low- lying land. It would be not planted in grapes, in a similar manner that we would see in California or in the Napa Valley where it would be planted in grapes. They only planted areas that were very well drained, and when they were well drained they also had extremely austere soils — these gravelly- -looked like river beds. I thought, Wow, this is interesting, this notion of planting on the austere, not the rich soils. That has to have something to do with it.
Hicke: There's even a winery there called Little Pebbles--! 've forgotten what it is in French.
Forman: Yes, Ducru-Beaucaillou, the Cru of the Beautiful Pebbles, exactly. Ducru has a wonderful plot. So I got to know Bordeaux very well, and I realized that the grandes crus were always on these knolls and always had sort of watersheds that even the knoll itself could drain into it. These were important factors.
It was understood, too, as well, that the close spacings and the no- irrigation there were coupled with the fact that they got more rain. That was just about the time that actually in California we were able to do drip irrigation so that that was a factor that was going to come into play here.
But getting back to what my impressions were—the soil types and the beautiful slopes of Burgundy were down in the palm of the slope, where the soil was both well drained and somewhat rich- -was where all the grande crus were, so I was fascinated with this and realized that-- [pause]
Hicke: Did you take notes?
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Forman: Oh, yes. I have notes and notes and notes I'd write and write, kind of summaries of each trip, at the end of them all. I don't know where they are now, in the archives at Sterling, I suppose.
Then the next thing that 1 think impressed me was just the charm of the old buildings, the old stone buildings. I really liked that. It just had a feel of solidarity and a feel of longevity and of having been there for a long time. It was a tremendous statement to me that wine was important, that it was a tradition, that it was part of their heritage and they were proud of it, and that they really revered it. It was just this national sort of symbol of France and the other countries surrounding it that were involved in wines. So the buildings impressed me. I liked it. I liked the way they were laid out. I liked the charm of them all. I liked just their feel.
Hicke: Are you talking about Bordeaux or Burgundy?
Forman: Both. I loved the little villages were very, very neat--the way they streets, and under every house was garage had a press in it, and that and they made them totally by hand, on top of where they worked, which finally to do here.
in Burgundy. I thought they were tiny and the winding a cellar, and every little they made these small batches
They lived there. They lived is, of course, what I came back
So this whole family feel, this whole approach of living the business, basically, was so different than what I had come away from at school with chemistry labs and research and technical papers and seeing big wineries that have big equipment and kind of corporate-run mentalities in California. So that obviously was just a total opposite of what I expected, and I liked it, and I kept thinking about it. It was one of these charismatic feels that you came back wanting to be part of.
In the cellars, I loved the barrels, which I otherwise had become a little familiar with, having worked at Stony Hill previously, but he had old whiskey barrels and a hodge-podge of things and no French oak and disjointed things that had been there for twenty years before, and I think some of them still are!
So these beautifully made barrels and the fact that many of them were new and the beautiful way they'd be laid out, particularly in the chais of Bordeaux were these long rows of barrels with glass bungs on them, and their hand-done equipment. I remember watching some of the wines being racked. In those days — of course, this was thirty-some years ago—they'd have these hand pumps similar to this one sitting up in the corner there? Do you see that thing?
34
Hicke: Oh, yes.
Fonnan: I bought that there. That was actually a brand-new pump. Those
would add air pressure to the barrel, and the wine would be racked from barrel to barrel. God, I was just fascinated with the hand- tending of these things. It again showed the care of the product and the really closeness that they felt. And that impressed me.
And I looked at these big oak fermenters, and I looked at how they were kept and the various equipment that was so different from the equipment that we have here. The whole package eventually created a new philosophy for me, which otherwise wasn't really well formed anyway, having just come from school. I would have thought that I would have come away with this chemistry, technological, let's go and make the better wine through technology from school because that's all I had known.
And bang! I almost forgot that. It was always in the back of my mind, and I think it's good that it is, because that's something you never get if you don't go to school — you wouldn't get that in the field. So I had this background that gave me security in knowing why things happen, and if there was something wrong, I had the tools to solve the problems and get in and fix it.
Pioneering Winemaking Techniques; Importance of Barrel Fermentation
Forman: But I knew I didn't want to make wine that way. I knew I wanted to make wine the way it had been made in Europe, even though nobody here did it, really, in any true form. And I wanted to try to make a statement here with what we had, with our fruit. Peter Newton at Sterling was thrilled with the idea that I wanted to do that because that was his feeling and the reason wine was a romancing subject to him, and so he said, "Go for it. Do what you need to do."
And then Dick Graff came along and helped me, because he had the same feelings, and he was dedicated to trying to make Chalone into a Burgundian winery. So the two of us did a lot of research together, bought a lot of barrels, studied what they did with barrels. It wasn't just to get barrels but once you had a barrel, what did you do? We brought a number of them in, sold them to a number of wineries, and they always misused them. They didn't get it.
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Hicke:
Forman :
There are certain ways that barrels should be cleaned; there are certain ways that one needed to go into the barrels. The first barrels that were introduced, basically by Dick Graff's company and Sterling and me, were almost always abused because they came with the thought of Yes, this is something we have to change, but they used old technological sort of mentality with the barrels. They'd take fresh wine and filter it, and then put it into these brand-new barrels, and the wine would turn out tasting like sawdust, it was so strong.
They couldn't get the feeling of putting fresh juice into barrels and letting it ferment, leaving it with the lees--this wanting to be clean in California, or get the thing processed. This processing mentality in the wine business had to change. So we slowly talked to people that we sold barrels to and said, "Look, you've got to do this; you've got to that." We ourselves were continuing to experiment with it. We'd go a little bit further each year and take the step one bit more.
It made a dramatic change in what California Chardonnay and California Cabernet began looking like. All of a sudden, there was this extra bit of spice, this extra bit of richness, this intrigue that had not existed before. So we had the fruit, and, of course, the fruit is number one. I suspect and I've always said that 75 percent of the quality of wine is really from the fruit and the vineyard in which it is grown. This 25 percent is what we can do in the winery to take it a step further or to guide it and to make what we're really interested in making. It can be straight, simple wine or it can be fancy wine or whatever.
Before you get too far, let's keep in mind--I know you took other trips to Europe and taught your philosophy and spread it around. At some point, let's go into that.
That is true, right. Where were we? subjects I wanted to talk about?
What were some of the other
1976 Trip with Dan Duckhorn; Other Trips
Hicke: Do you want to talk about your trips with other people?
Forman: I could, sure. Probably the most important trip that I have in mind right now that I took was with Dan Duckhorn. He had expressed interest. We were friends, simply because of living in the same valley and running into each other. He had a really keen desire to make wine. He had gotten into the bench graft business
36
coming from the banking business, of all things. The bench graft business was interesting to him, the viticulture side was interesting. But he wanted to take it a step further for himself as well and wanted to investigate the possibilities in making wine.
And so he asked me if I would give him some guidance. He was fascinated with the Merlot that we were making at Sterling and felt that it had a place in California's wine portfolio, if you will. He said, "Look, take me to Pomerol. You seem to be the one that has gone more than anyone else that I know in the Valley, and you're comfortable with it. You like it, you understand the Bordeaux philosophy maybe more than anyone at this point, and would you take me and show me what's going on?"
I thought that sounded like fun, so we took off. This was probably in 1976, I would think. I lined up a number of visits in Bordeaux. We actually went to Burgundy as well, but Bordeaux is the one that really stuck with him. Had a lot of fun. He was just fascinated in the very same way that I was. The buildings were very interesting, and I think if you look at his building now, he's done a lot to sort of capture that low chai, Bordeaux- facade look.
He immediately grasped the notion that thin-stave, Bordeaux barrels were important, as opposed to just what everybody really wanted, being these thick- staved- -when Californians wanted barrels, they couldn't get away from the thicker-staved sort of bourbon barrels that they'd been using, and so they always wound up with what the Bordelaise called export barrels.
I told a number of people, including Dan--and I think he was one of the first to get it--that the thin-staved barrel was more important, because in making the thin- staved barrel they didn't have to put as much heat with the barrel, and there was a total different flavor of toast. It was what we really liked when we tasted these French wines, this flavor of violets.
**
Forman: So there were little, subtle things like that. He came away
realizing the same things I did when I started: that there was a tremendous tradition there and there were ways of doing things that if you paid attention to it, could make a big difference. And so he came back and started producing Merlot in 1978 from grapes from Three Palms [Vineyard], which was quite a miracle that we were able to get for him, because Three Palms was controlled at that point by Sterling. It still is, for that matter.
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I'm not sure how we did it, but they allowed him to buy a small bit of Merlot—
Hicke: Sterling did? Forman: Sterling did. Hicke: They didn't have a contract?
Forman: They had a contract for life for it. Newton secured that very
carefully. I honestly can't remember the details of how that came about, but he was able to get it. The '78 Merlot was an instant success. He did it properly. I guided him a bit. Phil Baxter at the time was helping him as well. The team of us made a very impressive wine, and he continued to do so and does right up to today with that adherence to Bordeaux tradition, in the same manner that I did.
Hicke: Anybody else? Did you finish with that?
Forman: Yes, I think I said enough. No, actually, I generally went by myself. The other person I've influenced in a massive way--I guess I've done it so often that I don't even recall it, but it seems like part of what I've done—but David Abreu is a very close friend of mine. He's probably the premiere viticulturist now in the Napa Valley as far as premium grapes are concerned. He was a native of St. Helena and really had no formal education per se but was interested in farming and started with—as he came out of the Vietnam affair- -out of high school, Vietnam, and then came back and wanted to do farming and farmed for the H&W Ranch.
And realized that he liked it, was associated with Chuck Wagner at Caymus [Vineyards] and enjoyed his relationship there and the ability to learn from the farming that they'd been doing, and finally decided that he wanted to get into farming on his own and farm for other people as a business—vineyard management company, if you like. So he asked me what I thought about it, because I had become acquainted with him— at this point, it was about 1980--at Newton. I said, "Yes, I'll help you out."
I agreed to join him as a partner in his first venture, which was running the Inglenook Vineyard. And then, about the same time, I said, "You know, David, we have to go to Europe and I'll show you some of the things I've seen. I think you'll be fascinated with it." He was indeed just enthralled with the whole thing. The same concept that hit me in the early seventies hit him immediately, this notion of the French taking the vines and making them literally behave in an entirely different way than we do. This very, very close attention to training, to trellising,
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Hicke: Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
to vine care, and the whole effect on the fruit and the way one deals with the land was impressive to him, and he really, I think, was determined to come back and see if we couldn't put some of these notions to work in the Napa Valley.
I helped him do so and guided him in it. David is a very astute man, and he learns quickly. He's very fastidious, and he developed a whole system of vineyard management around these trips and around our knowledge that we would gather. We would go and spend hours in the vineyards, particularly Bordeaux, and take meticulous notes and take roll upon roll of pictures and talk to the farm workers.
I was, at least at this point--! 'm now capable enough, I guess, in speaking French that I can get some stuff out of these workers. And we found that it was probably almost more fun to talk to the workers than to talk to the owners because they'd tell us different things. We weeded out all of the whys and wherefors of how these vineyards functioned. For eight, ten years now we've been doing this. We've gained a great deal of knowledge.
Do you go every year?
Every year. I went three times last year. So I spend a lot of time in Europe. It's very important. It's very influential on me and how I maintain my philosophy of winemaking.
You learn something new every time?
If you don't learn, you reinforce the old things, and you come back with a strong conviction to continue with what you're doing.
Hedging
Hicke: I'd like to ask a question I've wondered about. In Europe they do something I think they call hedging? They clip the vines right across the top.
Forman: We now own a machine that we bought in Pomerol that does it. All of our vineyards are hedged. When you come through, it looks very much like topiary bushes. They're absolutely perfectly hedged. What we ' re trying to maintain is a meter of growth between the fruiting bud and the top of the canes, and we want about thirteen inches wide, thirteen-inch density canopy, one meter high. So it comes along and hedges the sides and hedges the top. By so doing, we get just the amount of light necessary. What you're really
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Hicke: Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke:
Forman:
Hicke:
after on fruit is dappled light. You want about a leaf and a half, so to speak, of maximum shade over the fruit, so you'd like bits of light hitting the fruit at all times and hitting all of the leaf surfaces.
This idea of this massive, lush canopy that we've had in many California vineyards is absolutely dead wrong. This is the reason the vineyards are so carefully tended and so carefully hedged and have these thin, vertical trellises. It's because they realize that light is the element that's needed for vines to function. They have leaves, and the leaves can't function without light, and so every effort is made to get all the leaf surface exposed to the maximum amount of light. By so doing, you concentrate its effort, and therefore the components of the fruit and the health of the vine.
That's what it's all about, really. Has machine hedging now become more prevalent?
Oh, yes, the machines are coming in here as fast as they can get them in. You'll drive up this Valley, and every close vineyard now is properly hedged. I think we brought the first machine in, but there are a number of them now. Unfortunately, a lot of it on terraces and so forth still has to be done by hand, but all of these vertical trellises are hedged. It's just a matter of practice. Usually three times a year.
I haven't been up here in the summertime for a while.
I'd love to take you and show you the Torvillos vineyard we have. You'd be amazed at how beautiful it is. It looks absolutely like Pomerol. It's a dead copy of every single system, and it's a spectacular vineyard, I must say [chuckling]. I think it's the highest-priced fruit in the Valley, too. David and I own it concurrently. It's just on the ridge above me here.
Where the flag is?
It's a little beyond that. It's twenty acres, for five thousand dollars a ton.
That's amazing! It's unbelievable. What's planted?
We sell the fruit
Forman: Cabernet, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot--all French
clones. We've taken it, so to speak, to the next level, I think, both David and I.
David Abreu's Farming Business
I've taken to Europe-- just as astute. He's a very keen he's very fastidious and comes the principles that he believes
successful business around it, society vineyards. He has the
Vineyards, Staglin Family on the table now, pretty much,
Forman: And David- -getting back to people Dan is very astute, David is very observer and a quick learner, and back and just doggedly adheres to in and has created an unbelievably and now farms what I call all the Araujos, the Harlan Estate, Viader Vineyard, Cogan- -every fancy wine David farms.
Hicke: Araujo, did you say? Forman: Yes.
Hicke: I had some Araujo Viognier last night, by the glass, here, and it was marvelous.
Forman: I don't happen to like the variety, but I'm sure if they made it, it's good.
Hicke: I never liked it before, but this was excellent.
Forman: Well, he farms that land in a very, very grand manner. It's very, very expensive. That's another thing about him. I mean, anything that's good I guess is costly. He's expensive, but what you get is what you want, usually. As I said, 75 percent of the quality of these wines comes from the vineyard. Most of it's from the soil and the exposure, and then the vineyard viticulturist tends them, and if he does it properly, he gets the maximum out of the soil and delivers this product to a winery, and there you are: 75 percent of the quality is already in your lap. It's up to you to take it and not ruin it, and to put perhaps your 25 percent of additional effort into it to produce something we hope is very special.
Hicke: I'm gathering that this is another thing you learned in France- - you've been saying all along that this is one of the things you learned in France.
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Forman: Oh, the fruit is so critical. You see this highly delineated area in France, where one plot has its own appellation and has its own sort of level of quality. The stamp is put on it and guaranteed by the government, and the rules are made. You say why? Do they do this just because—is it political? To some extent it was, particularly in Bordeaux, where they arrived at this hierarchy of classification. It was done really on price in 1855, and the expensive wines were the premiere First Growth and on down through the Fifth Growth, according to price. But price really, in those days, by and large related to quality as well, and the quality related to soil, so it does really relate to how good is the piece of ground.
We're starting to do that here in the Napa Valley. You see vineyard-designation labels. We have now zones of appellations-- the Howell Mountain appellation, the Spring Mountain, the Stag's Leap and so forth, the St. Helena appellation. So we're beginning to realize that certain areas produce quality which is distinct and identifiable and is worthy of recognizing, just as the French do, but we haven't even come close to the detail that they spend, looking at it.
Hicke: Is that maybe because they have such small amounts of land to work with?
Forman: They have more than we do. They have a lot more land than we do. It's just that they've been doing it for 300 years and paying attention to it. And I think they take, frankly, their viticulture areas more seriously than we do. The whole community in Europe, once they have a viticultural area which they've known they've had for 200 or 300 or more years, the whole community respects it and gets behind it and doesn't try to out-zone it or change it for the whim of whomever happens to come and live there, the way we're doing in all of our nice regions in St. Helena.
You mentioned coming up here, why we can't cut trees down anymore. There are people who come from other regions and think this is a wonderful Valley. They love the notion that it's a wonderful Valley mainly because it has grapes, but they don't want the grapes; they only want the notion, and they don't realize that you have to support the grapes and that you have to give precedence to the grapes. They are what made the region, they are what we stand for, and they should not be hindered.
And so we have developers who see plots that would make lovely homes and people coming up and thinking, "Oh, I'm in the Napa Valley. This is great. Don't plant any more vineyards. Don't take any trees down. I love it, but I love to be in the Valley." This notion doesn't even come close to being in effect
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in Europe. They highly covet their land. They realize that it's for grapes, and grapes come first. Unfortunately, they don't around here, and we're going to run into a little bit of trouble. But here we are.
Hicke: We'll want to get into it a little more later.
Forman: Exactly. So that's traveling to Europe and what it really did for me and the intensity with which it guided me and formed a philosophy.
I came to Sterling after having had a couple of what the French I guess would call stages, training sessions at Stony Hill and Robert Mondavi.
First Wines of Sterling
Hicke: Now I think we wanted to go back a little over the first harvest and some of those days at Sterling.
Forman: At Sterling, yes. Hicke: Are we there yet?
Forman: Oh, I think we could get there, yes. We've seen how I really
formed my thought process about how I wanted to make wine. And, of course, clearly it sounds and feels to me now like it's always been there and, like, what else? But in those days it was the beginning of a thought process, and so I wasn't totally sure of myself, although I wanted to do it, and I did it. I had to learn going along. I didn't just automatically launch into this notion that I wanted to make classic, European-style wine and there we go, I went at it.
I stumbled and tried various things and tried to see which of them was really very adaptable to our type of fruit and so forth. Made mistakes, clearly, in the beginning. The first harvest was both very exciting and very frightening for me. I had never really been left on my own to do this, and I realized we had spent a great deal of money, totally at my suggestion, and that the owners didn't know how to make wine either but were completely trusting in me.
Hicke: Can you describe what a typical harvest day was like that first time? How you felt?
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Forman: I was nervous from the point I woke up until I went to bed, trying to think about what I should do next. I would plan my whole day out before I got up and go through each step and figure out what I needed to do and hope that I had all the equipment necessary and all of the pieces in line.
I think I learned this technique of planning ahead while I was at school. I had this research project in graduate school. I got into a habit--it was not a very elaborate research project, really. It wasn't really very sophisticated, but I had to invent it and dream it up and guide it. So I learned the habit of every morning before I got up, I'd spend whatever it took to completely think through what I wanted to do and how I wanted to do it and what I was going to need to do it, so that when I started I had this preparedness.
That habit carried over into how I ran Sterling, and it has carried over all my career. I'm able to get a lot done and get it done efficiently and not waste a lot of time, and seemingly [chuckling], for some reason or other, I always manage to get an amazing amount done without having had to stay up all night or work too long. I get things done quickly and efficiently by planning ahead, I think is really what it amounts to.
So I planned ahead, and I had all this equipment, and I actually did a fairly good job, surprisingly, without having had much experience before, other than at Stony Hill and Robert Mondavi, because everything was there, everything worked, everything functioned the way it was supposed to.
I'm trying to remember some of the things we did. I remember all the grapes we had to take, because we had Cabernet and Chardonnay, which they planted new, but we had old vineyards which ultimately we'd rip out, but we had to deal with the wine. Remember, I mentioned to you yesterday there's one called Pinot La Fata. There was a guy named La Fata, which is quite a funny name. There's actually a street in town named after him. Evidently, he was a botanist. He cloned grapes. One of the grapes he cloned, he named after himself. It was Pinot La Fata, and it was this white grape, which is a very funny grape. To me, it was sort of like Sauvignon Vert. It was a very loose-clustered, pale-colored grape with almost no flavor. Anyway, we had to make about ten tons of it. I remember fermenting it and wondering what in the world I was going to do with it. It had no flavor at all.
Then we had some French Columbard which we had to make. I made a whole batch of that. And we had Chenin Blanc that I had to make, and I made a whole batch of that. None of these wines I really knew what to do with.
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Hicke: That wasn't quite your style, was it!
Forman: No, I just fermented them in stainless, and they came out--I could never seem to make a Chenin Blanc that had much flavor; I don't know why. Maybe it was the fact that I really didn't like fermenting white wine in stainless. It went against what I really wanted to do, and I just didn't see the notion of wasting barrel space and expensive barrels on these. We had the grapes; we had to do something with them. So maybe my heart wasn't into it, but I never made really very good wine.
I remember having to sell it all in bulk. We took it down to Hans Kornell. He wanted me to bring it down and put it into a tank. God, I'd never figured out how to close one of these wooden doors on a tank, so old Hans says, "What are you doing?" I said, "Well, I'm trying to close the door." He said, "But you haven't put Seal-Tight around the door." I remember old Hans showing me how to prepare the door.
Then I get it done, and here wine comes from the tank truck in there, and he says, "What in the world are you doing? This wine is dirty." "What do you mean it's dirty? It's new wine." He said, "I don't take wine in this cellar with yeast in it." He said, "What are you doing to me?" I said, "Oh, my God, Hans, I didn't know it would bother you." He said, "I only buy wine that's been filtered."
So I get into a big, big hassle with him. Hans was a very tough character, and boy, he was not pleased with me. I'd filled his whole tank up with this cloudy, yeasty wine. That didn't please him at all. But we got over it.
[tape interruption] Hicke: You were just delivering some wine to Kornell.
Forman: Oh, yes, we did that. Some of the other wines I made—you know, the "69, the Chardonnay we mentioned I had to make up at Schramsberg, and that we've been through that quite thoroughly. That was very exciting, and it ended up turning out to be really quite a nice wine. So all of the ideas worked. From that point on, I wouldn't dream of making a white wine any other way than in barrels. I never have, to this day, thirty-one years later. I've never made any white wine in anything other than fermenting it in barrels. It obviously has stuck with me. I think the notion, as we said yesterday, has caught on, and a few other people believe it works as well.
Hicke: What else did you make at Sterling?
Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke: Hicke: Hicke:
At Sterling in that same year, 1969, we made all these other goofy white wines, as I mentioned, and those were fermented in stainless, but the last to be for me. And then we made Cabernet, of course, and Merlot. We also had some Pinot Noir, which was growing at Three Palms, of all places, the absolute worst place in the world for Pinot Noir to be grown.
Where is it?
Three Palms Vineyard is just on one of the last bends of the Silverado Trail as it comes around to Dunaweal Lane. It's just in back of Sterling. It's a unique swathe of ground, having been sort of criss-crossed over the eons with Selby Creek, and so it's very rocky. It's rocky in the same way that Rhone soils are rocky. It has all these round, river- run, hard rocks, and very gravelly, well-drained soil. It's a super place for grapes, but it's for grapes that require heat and exposure, not sensitive grapes like Pinot Noir. The Cabernet and Merlot and Franc and so forth do marvelously there, but the Pinot Noir was just a joke. I don't know why they ever planted it. That came before me.
So I tried to make Pinot Noir at Sterling. Actually, in 1971 we made quite a unique one. It was a California-style Pinot
Noir. It's still very viable. It's unbelievable, dark, and uniquely spicy and flavorful. It worked, call it Burgundian Pinot Noir, but it worked.
And that was from that vineyard?
Yes, yes. But that only happened occasionally.
It just goes to show the winemaker can do a few things.
It was tannic, I wouldn't
Chardonnay sans Malolactic
Forman: A few, I suppose. I suppose. But the real excitement there was these Chardonnays that I was able to produce, actually, also from an area that really isn't very good for Chardonnay, the Calistoga area, but this treatment in barrels and sur lees and so forth was making very good wine.
I will mention, as long as we're talking about Chardonnay again, that I early on deviated in one very--I suppose you could say strict way from the Burgundian method. Of course, all Chardonnay in Burgundy goes through a malolactic fermentation. While I was being traditional in every manner—from the crushing
and using settled, free-run juice to putting juice directly into barrels, yeasting in barrels, leaving the wine with the lees for up to five or six months in barrels and stirring the barrels — the only thing I decided I didn't want to do was malolactic.
Dick Graff was a real proponent of that. He said that no malo was important. I think in his area in Chalone, it worked because they had high acidity. But I just didn't feel that Chardonnay, particularly grown in Calistoga, had enough acidity to produce a balanced wine if the malo took place. So I always inhibited the malo, using reasonable amounts of sulfur dioxide. I think my wines—well, even today some of them are still viable. I think they were then and still are better in this region for it.
I think the malo has been taken to extremes. It sort of was turned into a buzz word by the wine writers and the notion of having malo on Chardonnay was the thing to do. In only very few places in California, I think, is it successful. I think it turns the wine into an unbalanced product. It makes it overly sweet, with lazy flavors. It doesn't have that distinct, crisp, mineral-y quality that you like in a white wine. And the wines practically don't age at all. Most California Chardonnay are eighteen-month wines.
The no-malo wines I made at Sterling and the no-malo wines I made at Newton and the no-malo wines I'm still making, no matter where the grapes are grown, seem to have tremendous ability to age. I mean, they're ten-year wines easily, in many cases, sometimes more. They do develop this wonderful creme brulee character that you get from malo, but get it with age rather than from the malo, and they retain the acidity, which gives it the mineral quality that you're after.
I really like white wine with acidity. Probably the only Chardonnay that I really am fond of are Chardonnays made in Chablis because they have this nice mineral-y quality. I realize that the California market wants something a little richer, so I do pick the grapes quite ripe. Did at Sterling, did at Newton, have here. And so I get a very rich wine, but this no-malo has at least the wine balanced with acidity, and it manages to handle the oak much better. It certainly ages more gracefully and produces, I think, a final product which has a lot more intrigue.
Actually, I wrote quite a long paper on the subject for the Napa Valley Wine Library. I went into a lot of depth about why you do, why you don't. Somebody was interested in really learning about why, I think, so they could look up—
Hicke: About what date was it?
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Forman: I have it in there, and I'll give it to you. It was kind of a neat article. It really went top to bottom on malolactic with Chardonnay in Europe and California and why it was done, in the same manner we're doing it as an interview, but it turned out pretty well. So I've really been very emphatic about staying with that conviction, that malo is no good for the region that we're in here. I think, actually, the public is now getting a little tired of these massively heavy, oaky, sweet Chardonnays. They're starting to say, "You know, I like these wines that don't have malo." It's coming back in fashion, you know? Don't throw your bell bottoms away.
Hicke: [chuckling]. tt
Forman: I may have started something with the sweet Chardonnay as well. Jess Jackson of Kendall- Jackson [Vineyards] came to me right in the midst of when I was having trouble with my partnership with Newton. Just as I bailed out of the partnership, he asked me to come and consult for him. This was some of the first wines he had made up in Lake County, and he was just getting started with Kendall-Jackson wines. He said, "Ric, I've got some problems. I know you have some problems with your partnership, which I may be able to help you with"--because he was an attorney—and he said, "I have some problems with the wine that maybe you could help me with. Could we trade thoughts?"
I said, "Sure, Jess, I'd be happy to." So I went up there and discovered that he had tank after tank of Chardonnay that had stuck during its fermentation. It was left sweet. I did the best to retrieve as much of it as I could. But in the end, he had let it go for so long that we were unable to get a lot of the wine to go to dryness, and so I encouraged him to buy some wine from Tepiscay, which turned out to be very good wine and so good that he ended up buying the vineyards.
We finally had to make some blends. I told him, "You know, I don't think, Jess, that the public is going to mind this. Why don't you go ahead and blend some of this sweet wine in there? It's not my style, by any means. I can't stand it. But," I said, "I think the public is going to like it." Wouldn't you know it, they flipped over it. It became the new thing, this sort of subliminal sweetness in Chardonnay, and people just went crazy. It was almost the same thing that happened with Bob Trinchero's White Zinfandel. They flipped over it, and it became the new wave in Chardonnay, and Kendall- Jackson was at the forefront with it.
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Hicke: I've heard it said that people like to say they like dry wine but actually —
Forman: Well, they do. Californians--they say warm and want cold; they want dry but really have sweet. We're a soda-pop-bred society, and it's tough for us to get into the real wine-drinking habits and styles that the Europeans have because we haven't been brought up that way.
Hicke: It takes some education.
Forman: Yes, it really does. You really have to know wine to like it. The more you know wine, the less you want these sweet, heavy wines. You want something to reach for and something that has intrigue and something that doesn't assault you when you drink it. Bigger is not better.
Hicke: It's an intellectual challenge.
Forman: It definitely is, and unfortunately, the current wine writers are promoting again this massive character, and it really saddens me. It's something I think we could end with, but I'm deeply worried about—but that's a subject to wrap up with, I think.
Hicke: You were talking--
Forman: We've worked Chardonnay and my theories and developing ideas on how it evolved for me throughout the various places that I've worked.
Different Techniques Required in California Vineyards
Forman: The Cabernet is, of course, very, very important, too. We did
make Cabernet and Merlot at Sterling. I tried my best to produce something that was different than what had been produced here. I tried to take what I had learned and observed in Bordeaux and see what it did with the grapes here. I think it was more challenging than the Chardonnay. It's odd that the Chardonnay should have turned out to be immediately recognizable as a Burgundian style and that it was easier.
The Cabernet turned out to be a much bigger challenge. The flavors were more diverse, depending on the vintage. I didn't, let's say, get it quite as quickly with that, or what I tried didn't work as well as I'd wanted it to. I had to continually experiment with those. I'm trying to remember the 1969 wine.
Hicke: Yes, what was wrong with it?
Forman : Well, some of the problems with it- -I don't think I really
understood thoroughly the maturity level that was necessary. I don't think I really got that for a long time on these red grapes. In Bordeaux, the grapes don't ripen quite as readily as they do in the Napa Valley, and so these grapes are staying on the vine for a long time, and they're being picked in Bordeaux sometimes by need, because of the weather, and sometimes simply because they are mature—with less sugar, but yet the grapes are fully mature, meaning that the tannins have softened, the flavors are fully developed, the anthocyan and pigments are there, and even though the grapes are 22, 21-1/2, 22-1/2 sugar, they are mature.
So I was assuming that perhaps this was enough in California, and picking the grapes with 22-1/2, 23 sugar was really picking green grapes in most circumstances. And so the tannins were hard, and the flavors were somewhat green. It just wasn't that round, supple wine that you were looking for. And so I had to learn this. Gradually, as I went along, I did learn it. I began picking, by 1973 on, much riper grapes.
In some cases it required grapes that were 25, 26 sugar, which was not what I was after with alcohol, and I would add a bit of water to it, which was legal and is still. But I realized finally that California ripened grapes brought sugar on quickly, but it didn't necessarily ripen the fruit. And so I was having to, again, stick my neck out and say, No, I know everybody is traditionally picking Cabernet at 22-1/2, but if we have a healthy vineyard, it needs to be more than that. So I really did try it, and I think some of the wines from 1973 on actually are still very, very viable, and they're delicious.
Hicke: Did you have a vineyard manager?
Forman: No, I did pretty much that myself, guided some of the people.
Towards the end there, we did take someone on, but I began guiding the vineyard as well as the winery.
But I'll tell you one of the things I did then that I now have learned much later on in my career that was a mistake: even though I realized the grapes were not mature and required much more sugar and time on the vine to reach maturity, the chemistry still bothered me. I didn't like seeing these high pH's and low acidities. And so I was in the practice of adding a great deal of acid to these wines, both before fermentation and after. The wines were--phew! --they were powerful wines. They had this pretty strong hit of acid, combined with a fairly forceful, full flavor--
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granted soft, big tannin, but just the same, they required so much time to finally soften.
I'm now realizing that these acid additions aren't necessary, that the wines really do become balanced with a little less tending to the acidity and that they do age fine and they do hold up and have a stable cycle in their development, so I've backed off a bit from that. I think a lot of California winemakers have. I think we were in the practice, as I was, of worrying too much about the pH.
Hicke: As a result of your classes in enology?
Forman: Oh, yes, it's a result of what you learn in school, that pH is
very important to control the microbiology of the wine, the color of the wine, and that it's very risky to have a wine that's somewhat out of balance in pH. But if you look at the Bordeaux wines, they all have relatively high pH's. I don't know why early on I didn't get that. It's something that really kind of bypassed me. I didn't pay enough attention to it. And it took time to learn.
Hicke: You had to wait ten years to see what happened.
Forman: That was it. I think it's amazing how some of the wines at
Sterling are still very, very viable and wonderful. I don't think they might be had I not added so much acid, but I think they would have been nicer wines earlier on. So it's just something that you learn over time. You force yourself to change, even though you have this thing in the back of your mind that tells you, "Oh, but be careful; you know the risks that go along with leaving a wine with high pH," but again you say, "But I want the flavor," so you weigh back and forth and try it. If it works, you go with it.
It's kind of this risk winemaking, really. To go out and get these grapes fully mature and leave them in a somewhat natural state is very risky. But it's in the end, if it works, the ultimate flavor, what you're really after. That's what I think premium winemaking is all about. It's knowing how to deal with the risks and guide it along and avoid the risks because you know what's going on with the wine, in order to get the product that's very special in the end. It's easy to do it in a safer manner, but the end result is not a very exciting wine.
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Taking Risks, and a Hands -On Management Technique
Hicke: One thing that I wanted to ask you about was taking risks, because you're taking enormous risks.
Forman: Yes, you take a lot of risks. You take a lot of risks leaving these wines with the lees, the Chardonnay. You take a lot of risks keeping them on the vine for a long time. You take a lot of risks in the cellar with wines that are perhaps not exactly at the right acidity level that would guard them against microbiological problems, and so forth. But if you're aware of the danger points and know how to watch for them and prevent them by simple attention, you can get through it.
Hicke: So you just have keep things clean?
Forman: Well, you have to keep things clean, and you have to--you know,
it's really one of the reasons I spent so much time myself in the cellar at Sterling. Sterling only had usually three guys helping me. They were high school graduate kids, basically. They had no technical background. There was never an operation in the cellar that I wasn't there doing it myself. It's finally why I decided to leave. I just got tired of making 75,000 cases by myself.
But I would be there. I would do it. I would make sure that all the rackings were done properly. I would make sure that when they topped, they topped properly. I knew the chemical analysis of the wines because I did it all myself. I had no lab assistant. I did everything. And I watched over every single part. I would climb all over the racks and taste the wines. I would be everywhere, at every point, and do all of the jobs right along with the cellar crew. I was part of the cellar crew. I would run the press always by myself. I never let anybody else run it. I did all of the important steps--! was there to do it and finally decided I just couldn't do it anymore, and so I left.
It's still that way [sighs]. Here I am, fifty-four years old, and I'm still running this winery by myself. I have no employees—at this one, none. I'm getting a little tired of it, and I'll be glad when my son comes to join me. But this is the point I'm trying to make: I can, for instance, rack Chardonnay and the last, final racking- -because I fined it so carefully--! can do in a manner that will allow me to filter the wine through a .45 micron filter. I do this because, of course, I have no malo fermentation and I have to sterile-filter the wine to assure myself that in the bottle the odd malo bacteria doesn't begin growing .
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Hicke: Forman:
But if I were to allow just, you know, a normal cellar crew --a Mexican cellar helper or an American, it doesn't make any dif ference--they wouldn't take the care. They wouldn't know how to run that pump. They wouldn't be as mindful of the last barrel as they are the first barrel. But if I do it myself—because I know if I don't get it right, I'm going to suffer the consequences — I get it done. And so I can take risks where I wouldn't dream of allowing someone else in a winery to take risks because I know what to look for and I'm guiding it.
These are the differences. They add up to this ultimate quality. It's hard to articulate and hard for people to understand. I used to, for instance, sell some of the fruit that I finally bought a vineyard from, Star Vineyards. I'd sell it to Shaw [Charles F. Shaw Vineyard and Winery] and I'd sell it to--I think Ridge [Vineyards] bought some. Who else bought some? I can't remember. A few people bought it.
But particularly at Shaw, where I was consulting, I'd tell them all what to do. Of course, there, because I was a consultant, I wasn't doing it. I'd tell them to do precisely what I do myself here, and when I'd taste the wine, they were two different wines. Unless you do it yourself, it's not going to work. And so I've been very strict in adhering to that principle all my life and career. I think my wines, no matter where I've made them, kind of have my stamp on them.
Again, I don't know how I can articulate what it is I do. I just do it. I do it myself. That's probably the most important point. And there are lots of little details along the way that it probably would never even be able to talk about because I do them so patently that I can't remember that I do them.
Do you keep notes?
Yes, I have a log. They hated me when I left Sterling. I never kept any notes, and so there was nothing to guide anybody after I left about what went on. I kept it mostly in my head. But since I have been here, I keep a log. It's fascinating. I make notes on my impressions of things; obviously, the analysis of things; and all of the important things — the weather, what it was like at the time, what went wrong, what went right, why, what would I do next. I mean, it's a whole thing. Sometimes my mood--it's almost like a diary. I've got two volumes of it, which do give this detail. It would be fun for people to read if they could read it [chuckling] .
I think [Andre] Tchelistchef f did this and had sort of a treatise on how he made wine. I don't know whether it's written
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or it's available, but I bet it would be fascinating. But yes, you're right, that does tell you how I think and how I make wine because I do write these things down.
Sterling Wines in the Early Seventies
Forman: So I made some Cabernets that were interesting at Sterling. Oh, I'll never forget: The second year I had one of the biggest disappointments in my career, I think. I had two real serious problems with wines that I produced—two outright, total failures.
One was the 1970 Cabernet. I did allow those grapes to get very ripe. I guess I was catching on quicker than I think I was. And the vintage of 1970 was rare in itself because we had that severe frost, and it knocked the crop down. I think we had twenty-three straight days of frost. You know, there wasn't enough water. There just wasn't enough fuel. There wasn't enough anything to take care totally of all the fruit. So everybody was dealing with a tiny harvest.
It was a very warm year, and we made just very extracted, very delicious, wonderful, wonderful wines--one of the best vintages the Napa Valley had seen in many years. I managed to spoil the whole batch, which was shocking. How it happened: At the time, we were growing, and we had ordered some oak upright tanks, which I was thinking—because of the size that Sterling was going to try to achieve — that we had to put wine right after harvest into oak upright tanks for a period of time, because I didn't think we were going to have space to have all the barrels.
I was going to see what would happen if I aged wine in oak upright tanks for a year and then in barrels for the second year. I've since given up that practice and realized that it's not the way to go. But it was part of my— I didn't want to do it, but I had to compromise in some respect so that I could get everything into the program that they wanted at Sterling.
We ordered these tanks from a company called Marcheve in France. Clever old Marcheve delivered the tanks and installed them just in time for the harvest, so I really didn't have a lot of time to pay attention to the quality of the tanks. For that matter, they looked fine. I soaked them up, rinsed them out, and bang! --put the new harvest into these tanks.
Within a week, the wine starts smelling like smoked bacon. I thought, "My God, what in the world is this?" There were great
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Hicke: Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
Hicke : Forman:
concerns. I of course took the wine out of the tanks, but by then the wine had this smoky taste. It was almost a creosote taste. I had Tchelistcheff over, I had some of the professors from the university over, and we looked at the tanks. We finally decided that what had been done was the wood that had been used to make the tanks was not properly air dried. It was green. In the process of firing the tank and bending it, this green wood produced this creosote-like character in the wood. It wasn't recognizable just smelling the tank. It really kind of had a smoky, normal tank smell, but the minute you put wine into it, it extracted it from the depths of the wood where this creosote stuff had been formed. And so the entire batch was ruined, one of the best wines. It would have been very exciting in my career.
It was bad, but it wasn't that bad, so we put it in barrels and we aged it. Today I never would have bottled it, but we were not sophisticated enough, nor was the public sophisticated enough, to know it. So we decided to try it. We bottled it, and, God, every time somebody would taste it, they'd say, "You know, I really like the flavor of this" because the flavors were great. The richness, I mean, the extract. "But what's the smoky character?" I can't imagine how we allowed ourselves to do it. I always knew it, and I would always cringe.
Even today, once or twice a year today, still, somebody says, "You know, I've got a bottle of that 1970 Cabernet. It still has that smoky character." I thought, "Oh, my God, do you have to keep reminding me of that?" It was devastating to me to think what happened. So that was a terrible one.
Did you have recourse to the barrel maker?
Oh, yes. We sued them, and we got a lot of money out of them. We got all new tanks and everything, but still, the wine was — they lived with it financially; I have to live with the fact that the wine is still out there. I just dreaded it.
What could have been.
Yes, what could have been a wonderful vintage. What it did was it made me more alert. You learn by mistakes, and clearly I made a lot of mistakes when I was starting out.
What mistake was that?
Oh, I should have paid more attention to the way the water tasted, but I hadn't enough experience. I just didn't have enough experience to know that those flavors weren't going to be right. I hadn't smelled enough new tanks, you know? Where was I going to
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get the experience to do that? I had only been making wine for two or three years. So I was inexperienced, and it was my fault for not probably realizing that it was different and that perhaps I should have somebody else taste it.
But 1 was under the gun also. The wine was there; we had no place to put it. One of those things you say, "Oh well, I guess it'll be all right," when you shouldn't have. I didn't have the maturity level or the experience to deal with it. Clearly, today I wouldn't do it. But then, there we are. That's how we learn.
And I'll have to say, on Newton's behalf and Stone, the owner and everything—they realized that I had made a big mistake, and they were very decent about it and never once really reprimanded me, never once. They were very good to me, I'll have to say. They really were. 1 was lucky that way.
So we went on. And then 1971 rolled around, and we had ten days of rain before the Cabernet was harvested, so that was a disaster.
Hicke: The Chardonnay was okay?
Forman: The Chardonnay was fine. The Chardonnay was wonderful wine. But the red was—no, that was '72; '71 they just never got ripe again. I don't know. We had too much crop, and we made this very thin wine that had an aroma of orange peel. I'll never forget it. God, I thought, when am I ever going to make good wine here? I was really starting to wonder.
Sixty-nine was an experimental year; '70, I destroyed with the smoky tank; "71, the grapes never got ripe. Seventy-two, we had ten days of rain. The only wine I made in '72 that was really spectacular— and today it is still a wonderful wine— was what I called Merlot but in fact it was 60 percent Merlot and 40 percent Cabernet— 60 percent, and in those days you could call it if it was 51 percent. What it was was pre-rain grapes. It was the Bare Flats Merlot and the Three Palms Cabernet. These were both just wonderful wines, very intensely dark, very concentrated, fully ripe. I put them into all new barrels, and they handled the wood fantastically, and the wine today is miraculous. It's amazing how wonderful it is.
So that was successful, but the rest of the wines were terrible. At least that made me feel good. And then, in 1973, we had a normal year. I'd had plenty of experience to know when to pick and when not to pick, and I decided as well to finally launch into what we would call the Sterling Reserve, and I would pick the best lots from each vintage and make a small quantity of wine
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which would go directly into barrels instead of into the uprights first and would be treated precisely as the wine was treated in Bordeaux, which was something I had wanted to do ever since day one. But I really couldn't do it until I felt that the grapes were ripe and until I had had enough experience.
So we created this Sterling Reserve, and it was to be the first year in my career to make wine the way I really wanted to, as it was made in Bordeaux. From that point on, we made Sterling Reserve, and going from there to Newton and from Newton to here, I have made only that style wine — avoided the upright portion, used only new barrels, and used the barrel-racking techniques and the fining in barrels and so forth.
That was really wonderful. And thankfully, the vintage turned out to be beautiful. The '74 rolled around, and it was even better. The '74 Reserve today is still one of the classic '74 wines. It's wonderful wine. And we really went along, and life was getting better.
Hicke: What about the Sterling regular, other than the Reserve?
Forman: Even the regular is nice, yes. They're both nice. But the
Reserves are very special. The Reserves were the wines that were the pick of the litter, so to speak, and went directly in the barrel. So I stuck my neck out and made the blend early on, which was also very untypical of California. I still do it. It's pretty much what would happen in Bordeaux. So the Reserve wines were wines that aged as the final blend and were very much hand- done wines—usually bottled unfiltered. I still bottle wine sometimes filtered, sometimes not, but I pay attention to the microbiology and let that be the determining factor of bottling, rather than the clarity.
I've managed to master fining to a point where the wine is always clear— and that's a subject that I'd love to talk about later, about clarity of wines and filtration. I have a real opinion on that at this date.
Hicke: Do you have anything to do with determining the price niche or the marketing?
Forman: Newton did that. This will be fun for people to hear. I remember when we came out in— oh, I guess it was—when was it? Between '69 and '72. I remember having a very important discussion with Newton and Stone. My opinion finally was asked, and I remember being astounded at what they wanted to do and was not for it but ultimately gave in to it, and that was how we were to price the Merlot.
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They said they wanted to charge five dollars a bottle for it. I [chuckling] said, "You can't charge five dollars a bottle for it. Nobody will buy it. That's way too expensive." [laughing] Isn't that classic? I said, "Beaulieu Private Reserve is four- fifty a bottle. How in the world do you think you're going to charge five dollars a bottle and have people swallow that one?" Isn't that amusing?
Hicke: That is. How things have changed!
Forman: Now if you don't charge seventy- five dollars a bottle, you haven't arrived to the party yet. It is a very amazing thing to look at and realize that this was twenty- five years ago, and we were looking at five dollars as being a high price to charge. God, what has happened!
Hicke: Did it sell?
Forman: It sold. Everybody loved it. Merlot was popular. It really charged right along.
[tape interruption]
Forman: We were discussing the wines at Sterling and the Cabernets and how they evolved and how I finally managed to get, by 1973, both ripe grapes and a system and finally a wine that I was really happy with because I was doing it the way I had originally observed in Bordeaux and I wanted so much to do myself.
Hicke: Can you tell--I guess you must be able to--what it's going to taste like in fifteen years?
Forman: Well, you can get some idea. I don't know if I was able to then. I think I can now. I don't know. I'm able to--as any experienced winemaker is--I'm able to look at brand-new wines, wines that have just finished malo, perhaps, and look through all of the fresh fermentation, yeasty, odd aromas and see what's behind it, look at the texture, the structure, and the flavors and the aromas and see what might go together and determine what the final product will be like.
Hicke: You have to be able to do that in order to blend it, right? Forman: Yes, you do. You definitely do. II
Forman: So Sterling was really becoming very exciting for me. I was getting confidence in myself by the time the '73 vintage was
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completed. I saw then that I could deal with the volume, that I could produce unique wines. I was beginning to understand the vineyards, I was understanding the maturity level that was necessary, Sterling was becoming recognized as a new producer of quality wine, so I was having fun. We were planting new vineyards. I was getting more involved in viticulture.
Hicke: Deciding what to plant and where?
Forman: Well, I made those decisions along with the owners. We talked about it. We knew what we wanted to produce. I think we made some mistakes in the early days, planting so much Chardonnay up there, but it still made a very unique wine. It was sought after and it had its own style, so it wasn't perhaps as bad a mistake as you'd otherwise think.
Plant and Equipment
Hicke: We never really talked about the building, designing the winery.
Forman: Yes, designing the winery was a lot of fun. It was really
fortunate that we were able to start the winery on nothing more than an open pad and a tilt-up building at the bottom of what was going to be the secondary winery, the final winery. I could test this equipment that I had. It was never going to be in its permanent location, so I could change it, I knew, if it was wrong.
Actually, we bought a used press. I can't imagine why we kept it for as long as we did. We bought the old Wilma-style bladder press. I think we bought it from Robert Mondavi. Yes, exactly. It was the press that I had used at Robert Mondavi. They were upgrading. They bought a Bucher, which I wish we had had the good sense to buy, and we bought Robert Mondavi's old press.
And we bought a brand-new Healdsburg Machine [Co.] crusher and a Healdsburg piston pump for the crushing equipment. And then we bought Miiller and Valley Foundry fermenting tanks- -of course, with all the temperature-control jackets and so forth, which were relatively new in those days but available, at least.
Hicke: You made all these decisions?
Forman: Yes, I had to go around, find these companies, and decide on where to put the valves and what type of valves to have and what kind of pumps to get and so forth. So we bought pretty much what was
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available in those days. It was rather standard equipment: piston pumps, centrifugal pumps, and the bladder press, the Healdsburg Machine crusher- -which was a good crusher; it's a very good crusher. There are better crushers now available, of course, but in those days it was a very decent crusher—very, very well built, very easy to clean, relatively gentle on the fruit.
So we designed this plant with tanks ranging from 10,000- gallon capacity down to 3,000-gallon capacity, with stainless steel wine lines and must lines going to all the tanks. It was quite fun installing all of this and seeing how it worked. We operated it for- -let's see, '69, '70 and '71, and in '71 we began building and designing the winery that's now at the top of the hill. The old pad then became, after the new winery was done, a warehouse.
To build the new winery, obviously, we wanted to put a great deal of thought into it- -more, certainly, than we had on this pad to get started at the bottom. Again, I did a lot of research, traveled to Europe, looked at more detail with the equipment that was available, talked with people around here about what they liked and what they didn't like.
Dick Graff at that point had started working with Newton on his barrel project. He and I would do the research for it and gather barrels and so forth in Europe to sell in California. Dick and I would spend sessions together, laying out a winery on this unusual, sloping hill that we thought would be functional from the point of view of making wine. We worked on the interior design.
A fellow named Martin Waterfield, the comptroller for Sterling International Paper, Newton's company, was a very clever sort of amateur architect, I guess you could say. He put a facade around the interior working design that Dick and I had worked on. So we came up with this sort of segmented winery that stepped down the hill, where we had at one level the fermentation and crushing. We put the crusher in a pit so that we didn't have to elevate the grapes coming up out of the receiver hopper, which I thought was an important thing and something that I had observed in Bordeaux and thought that that would be important, so that was unique.
And we went from there into levels that dropped slowly down the hill. We had barrel rooms. I had observed in some of the — I'm trying to think where I saw this. I knew we had to stack barrels. I hated the thought of having to do it, but I knew we had to conserve space and stack barrels. But I didn't want to stack barrels on top of each other. I guess I did a lot of research on material handling companies. They had available at the time what we call a cantilevered rack. I was the first,
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certainly, to bring those into the Valley and thought that this had to be a much better way to store barrels than to stack them one barrel on top of the other.
I wanted to be able to get to the barrels, I wanted to be able to roll the barrels upside down and wash them, I wanted to be able to get into each barrel and inspect it. And so I was determined to find a system of stocking barrels without actually putting them on top of each other. These cantilevered racks really worked. They were both more attractive to look at and very, very functional.
Hicke: Can you describe them?
Forman: It was an upright beam with arms going off in opposite directions. On these arms, rails were attached. These beams were built of such a strength that they were able to actually extend out and hold the weight of a line of barrels on top of them. They were really just an upright post holding a series of rails.
Hicke: Over the lower line?
Forman: Yes, and we had them five high. So the barrels were in fact
stacked five high, but no barrel was ever touching another barrel. They were stacked on these double-sided, cantilevered racks. They were really wonderful.
Hicke: Where did you get them?
Forman: I can't remember who supplied them, but there was a metal
fabricating company who put them together for us. They were used in other industries to stack pallets on. I think, actually, I saw them at the McGraw-Hill Paper Company. I remember going there and looking at forklifts and noticing these racks and saying, "You know, these racks might be useful for barrels." And sure enough, they did work. I think other people began using them. That was a nice touch.
So Dick and I laid it all out and figured that it would work. We hired Keith and Associates—they were structural engineers--to draw and design the building. I guess one of his original buildings on wineries was Chappellet [Winery] , so he had had some experience putting wineries together. We all worked together and came up with what today is Sterling Vineyards and hasn't really changed, really, since then.
It worked. It worked very well. It worked to the point where I only required three cellar workers and myself to finally, when I was there, produce up to 75,000 cases in the winery. It
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worked really well. We crushed everything and operated the winery and bottled the wine, did all of the necessary functions with relative ease. I think it was laid out very, very nicely. Dick and I were quite proud of ourselves, in the end, for having put a winery together that was so simple to run.
Hicke: And efficient.
Forman: It was efficient. It was really efficient.
Hicke: I think you said it was Martin--
Forman: Martin Waterfield?
Hicke: Yes, who designed the cable car.
Forman: Yes, he knew that we had to be involved in tours. He was an
astute observer of the Valley and the way it was changing. He realized that it was going to be very tourist-oriented. Newton, actually, in his economy sort of sense of how the wine business should be run, said, "I think if we do this right, we can sell all of the wine out of the winery." And so they decided—wrongly, but they decided to gear the winery up so purposely around tourism that if it was, they thought, properly done, the wine need not be marketed in any other area. Well, of course, that proved to be dead wrong.
But at least they got the function of the winery to the level where it really was an exciting place to visit. Martin conceived of this self-guided tour because he thought that the tours that currently were available in the winery were boring and people didn't want to be herded around. So he said, "I think we can design this whole thing with catwalks and gantries and a fun ride up to the place, where people will treat this as a destination point and really have fun, and also be educated."
He was absolutely right. People loved it. I think today, still, it's probably one of the most fun places to visit. So he got that right. We did a lot of right things there and in the end made some pretty exciting wines, towards the latter part of when I was still working there. I'm sure they still are. I think the wines are different today, but I think they're very good wines. They don't look like the wines I made. I know that. But, then, why should they?
Hicke: Well, you didn't leave any notes.
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Winemaking at Sterling Mid- to Late Seventies
Forman: No, I didn't. That really irritated them. God, I'll never forget. A guy named Theo [pronounced TAY-oh] Rosenbrand was chosen to take my place, along with Sergio Traverse, so they hired two winemakers to take my place- -why, I'm not sure- -but they did. They were just infuriated to think that I left absolutely no notes. Theo thought it was absolutely ridiculous- -Theo, of course, was the chief cellar master under Tchelistchef f at Beaulieu, so he had been responsible for really doing all the mechanical things necessary to make all the Beaulieu wines. So he came with a lot of training. He thought that the way I had made wine at Sterling was total nonsense. He couldn't understand the barrel-to-barrel techniques, and he couldn't understand fermenting Chardonnay in barrels—all of the things I did, he said didn't work.
I remember he made the first wines there, and they were almost total flops compared to what had been made there. I thought that was very amusing. And they ultimately did—because I left a guy in the cellar named Bill Dyer, who became, actually, the chief winemaker there some years later. But he brought them back to making wines the way he and I had made wines. I think they found that it worked a little better with their fruit and with the way the winery was laid out.
Hicke: He was there, watching you?
Forman: He was. I trained him. I had a most unfortunate circumstance, oh, about three years before I left. I had a cellar crew who-- well, I don't know. Maybe because I spoiled them. Who knows what the reason was? Maybe because they were not old enough to really understand what they had. But they became disgruntled with the pay scale and the benefits and one thing and other, and they just got more and more difficult to work with. I suddenly realized that they weren't doing what I really wanted them to do. Or, if they were doing it, they were doing it begrudgingly.
And so I said, "You know, guys, "--I didn't even check with Newton or Stone about doing this, but I took it upon myself, which was probably a little lofty, thinking back at it, but at any rate, I said, "Guys, I don't think this job is really a happy one for you anymore, and I'm suggesting that I think you better leave." So I fired the entire cellar crew [laughing], and I was left with absolutely no one. Newton and Stone were aghast to think that I did it.
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Today, of course, we would have had the labor boards on our heels in no time. But I think, really, thinking back on it, it was probably the right thing to do as far as what evolved from it. This fellow, Bill Dyer, came strictly sort of off the street, realizing that I needed some help. He had the desire to make wine. He'd fiddled around at working in the cellar at a winery in Soquel, down in the Santa Cruz area. But he was really just a philosophy major from University of California at Santa Cruz, I guess. A really very likeable guy and a guy who was very sharp and very eager to learn and very enjoyable to work with—a step above the fellows that I had been working with, only because he was more educated.
And so he jumped in with me, and we quickly found some more cellar crew, one of whom was Dennis Johns, who of course has gone to work at St. Clement [Vineyards] and made wonderful wines there. And a couple of other guys. We kept at it, doing what I had done in the past. Bill was a very quick learner, so that when I left by 1978, Bill had fully taken charge and knew what was going on. While they hired Theo and Sergio to run the place, they were short-lived there, and finally they sent Bill to school part-time at Davis and had Bill stay, and Bill was the chief winemaker for Sterling for a long time, up until about a year ago, when they fired him—for what reason, I'll never know. I think it was a big mistake. But it was, as I told him, probably the biggest relief of his life. He has since agreed with me [chuckling].
Hicke: What's he doing now?
Forman:
Hicke: Forman:
He's consulting. Domaine Chandon.
His wife, Dawnine Sample, is chief winemaker at
I was wondering if that was the same Dyer.
It is, it is. Bill is a terrific guy. Bill has a very good head on his shoulders and a very good knowledge of how to make wine. I think they were crazy to do what they did, but that's a corporation for you.
Decision to Join Newton
Forman: So that was Sterling. By 1978, I had kind of run my stay there. I had been there for ten years. I got interested in producing wine on a smaller level. Newton had come back, having left two years previously, when they sold the winery to Coca-Cola and said, "Ric, would you like to do a winery together? A small winery.
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You design it. Let's go back to what you really want to do, make the classic wines that you want to make. We'll go out, we'll find some land, we'll design the winery you want the way you want to design it, and we'll be partners in this operation, not employer- employee."
I thought, "My God, this is wonderful." My wife at the time didn't think it was so wonderful because she had trouble with Newton's somewhat controlling attitude towards me. I was pretty much mesmerized by him and would kind of follow him and do anything that he wanted to do. That was a serious problem for me and my family, but I--rightly or wrongly—went ahead and did it anyway, and joined Newton.
Hicke: Before we get to that, were there any major changes when Coca-Cola bought the winery?
Forman: No, not really. Coca-Cola went right along with whatever 1 wanted to do. I had complete control there. See, Stone stayed on with Coca-Cola. So I still had part of the old feel there. He became the president. I reported to him, and it was no different, really, than reporting to him and Newton. So no, the Coca-Cola crowd didn't bother me at all. They had plenty of money, they would spend money, they would do what we needed to do, they bought a nice new press, which I loved. Finally, I didn't have to stand on that awful old press that I'd had for so many years. So no, they were a good thing for me.
Hicke: What did Newton do? You said he left at that point.
Forman: He left. Newton is a very proud man. The minute he left, he
really didn't think highly of Sterling anymore. He kind of looked a bit askance at Coca-Cola, I think--the whole concept of it all. I think he was proud to have owned Sterling, but having backed out of it, I think he was left a bit empty-hearted when he realized that he had put all this effort and really wanted it to work and then, because it was not making financial sense at the time, had to bail out of it. I think he was saddened by it, but he didn't want to admit it, that he really did want to be in the wine business.
He and I still had a good relationship together, and so he thought, "Well, let's do it. Maybe Ric is ready to leave, too." And so he pretty much enticed me to leave. I would have stayed at Sterling, but he enticed me to leave because it sounded like a better deal.
Hicke: What year was this?
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Forman: This was 1978. I finished the harvest of '78 at Sterling, and in November gave notice and left. They were not very happy with it all, but they were very understanding, and what can you do when somebody feels like they need to go on? It's probably pretty amazing that right out of school I stayed at a place for ten years and did get it established and well on its way, so I didn't really feel like I left them in the lurch. I had a fully trained cellar crew that knew what was going on. I helped them pick the winemakers that were to carry on the operation. I didn't leave them a lot of notes, but I was there to talk to them. They managed just fine without me.
So I went on to join Newton and was very excited about it. Unfortunately, my wife was not, and that caused a lot of trouble. But I was excited about the project and put a massive amount of energy into developing Newton Vineyard.
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IV NEWTON VINEYARD, 1978-1982 [Interview 3: March 3, 1999] it
Vineyard Property
Hicke: We just had gotten up to the beginning of Newton Vineyard. I know you had also been buying property here, but maybe it would be easier to come back to that when we talk about your own business.
Forman: Let's start with Newton. I was at Sterling for two years without Newton. Newton sold to Coca-Cola. Coca-Cola remained. Newton suggested that I probably stay there as he left; it would help him, he said. I was wanting to make life easier for him because I still had allegiances to Newton, not to Coca-Cola.
Hicke: Why would it have made it easier for him?
Forman: He didn't want to leave them in the lurch without somebody to run the property. They knew I was capable of running it, obviously, since I helped build it and ran it practically by myself. He said, "Stay. They want that. I'll talk to you about possibilities later," and so I agreed to stay.
About a year into my first year with Coca-Cola, Newton suggested that perhaps it would be fun to join as partners; why don't I start looking for property? I did. I looked at a number of pieces of property and ultimately found 750 acres of property above Madrona Avenue in St. Helena. It was a hilly property owned by the Meyer family.
Hicke: Was it planted?
Forman: It had no grapes on it, although—it was very funny--the realtor that showed me the property said, "Look, I don't know whether you're after grapes or not, but this property certainly has no possibilities for grapes." I said, "Show it to me anyway." I said, "I don't quite follow. Do you see over there in the brush?
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What do you think those are?" He said, "Oh, those are grape stakes." I said, "Sure they are. There were grape stakes probably during Prohibition, but the whole place has been taken over by forest," which is typical of many hillside locations. I said, "I know it doesn't look like it's easily plantable, but I see lots of potential here."
Hicke: Is it on this side? [pointing to map]
Forman: Yes, it's looking directly over—it's all the hillside land up there. So I said, "I think it does have potential," and told Newton so, and of course we looked at it together and thought a great deal about it. He ultimately made a bid and bought it.
Hicke: May I ask how much he paid for it?
Forman: I don't think he paid a lot. I think he paid about $750,000, and it was 750 acres, about a thousand dollars an acre, which is unheard of, of course, today. Not very much was usable for vineyard, of course. We managed to get--oh, I must have planted fifty acres of it. I think he has planted an additional twenty. So it's not a high percentage of plantable land, but just the same, it was a very good deal. It had two homes on it.
So there we were in 1978, in the spring. He bought the property, and asked, of course, formally at that point if I would join him as a partner. I was thrilled with the idea. My wife was not thrilled with the idea. I probably should have listened to her. In retrospect, that was a plea on her part that I didn't pay close enough attention to, and I realize it now and didn't then. I was so enthusiastic about the possibilities of really being an owner in a winery and launching off into a project which would challenge me and which would be of a scale that I could control. The whole scope of the thing was utterly about as exciting as it could be for me.
And at that point I was still getting along personally, myself, with Newton. My wife, as I said, feared him. I didn't fear him. I found him exciting. He stimulated me and created the enthusiasm, and he was very instrumental in making me think and making me stretch, and so I wanted to do it.
And so I said yes. I gave notice to the people at Sterling, one of whom happened to have been his former partner in Sterling International. He remained at Sterling after Newton left as well.
Hicke: Michael Stone?
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Forman: Michael Stone--and became the president. He soon left as well and went into the Department of the Army, serving under [President Ronald] Reagan as the Undersecretary of the Army.
They were not terribly pleased that I was leaving, but I think understanding. Being a large corporation, Coca-Cola, they had seen people come and go, and they realized that I had been there for ten years and that obviously it was what I wanted to do, and that's what I had to do. So they said, "Go, and have our best wishes," which I thought was decent.
I jumped right in with Newton directly after the harvest of 1978 at Sterling. So I completed the harvest at Sterling, and on November 1st left, so the wines were just pressed and just into cooperage. I left them in the hands of Bill Dyer, whom I had trained over the last three years and had complete confidence in. And I helped them find replacement winemakers, as I mentioned earlier in the interview here, that I felt could help—one being Theo Rosenbrand, Tchelistchef f 's key cellar worker at Beaulieu. And the other, Sergio Traverse , was someone I had known for quite a few years and who at that point, I think, was working at Concannon [Winery] .
So here we are, starting the winter off in November of 1978. having to figure out what to do with this basically 750 acres of raw land.
Hicke: It was hillside.
Forman: Very hillside. There wasn't a flat piece on it. I don't think we got one flat piece of vineyard on it. Everything was terraced or in one angle or another, running up a slope or down a slope.
Planting the Grapes
Hicke: What was the soil like?
Forman: The soil was varied. Some of the soils had a lot of clay. There were other faces that had red decomposed shale. There were sandstoney soils. We had many exposures, we had many elevations. We basically had to take the hill and look at it as little, faceted pieces of land that we could get. It was a massive challenge for me. I had run vineyards at Sterling, but not as seriously as I had to take this one on. I had used my technical background from school to kind of interject ideas on what I thought of crop level and pruning styles, but I had never really
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gotten involved seriously in a planting project, nor in choosing varieties, clones—well, we didn't do too much clonal selection in those days—but rootstocks.
And the fact of the matter is there weren't very many rootstock selections, either, because we only used one, obviously, which is why the Valley is falling apart. AXR was the rootstock of choice and availability at the time.
Hicke: So you planted everything on it?
Forman: Unfortunately. It has all been replanted at this point. I really had a big challenge on my hands. I had to first go out and find somebody whom I felt confident in who could put a team together. I had met a guy named Lupe Maldonado, a dear friend still today, who had been at Sterling, and I had kind of watched at Sterling and realized that he had more intelligence than the average Mexican vineyard worker. Spoke fluent English, which was helpful. He just had a nice personality, and I liked him. So I asked him if he would be interested in joining us. He was.
So he and I put a team of employees together and jumped right into looking at what was plantable and what wasn't. We found a fellow who had worked with Sterling, clearing land on the Diamond Mountain property, who was willing to come and start clearing for us. In those days, there were no permits required. We just charged ahead. And so we took all slopes that we figured were farmable and where we could contain erosion and could farm in a relatively safe and rational manner.
Knowing that there wasn't any flat, we had to look at all hillsides. We didn't try to take things that were too severe right in the beginning, just the more gentle slopes, and started clearing. The winter was mild that year, and we cleared almost all winter long and were ready to plant quite a bit of it in the spring.
We developed the lake that was already on the property—put a bigger spillway in it, got more water into it, and put this elaborate system of irrigation--!1 11 never forget. I thought I was really more of a plumber than anything that year. I had to put in miles and miles of irrigation system and had to overcome huge pressure differences going from the lake all the way up to the top of the mountain. We were dealing with pressures of four and five hundred pounds per square inch, which is enormous on big pipelines. So we had pipes breaking all the time.
I had to figure out how to put ditches through the mountains and how to put thrust blocks in— things I never had to deal with
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before — and how to put irrigation systems in, and valves. On top of it all, how to lay out these properties. I was trained by a guy to work with a transit and to work with eye levels and to lay out terraces—none of which I had ever done before. But Lupe and I kind of were taught and taught ourselves and somehow laid out all of these terraces.
I hired another friend, whom I had met at Sterling, who was still a very close friend and who does all of my soil contracting work, Gene Boiadjieff [pronounced BOYD-jeff ] , B-o-i-a-d-j-i-e-f-f . He's a terrific guy. Very, very bright and capable man with heavy equipment. And so he came in and did all the terracing. We put in drainage, and we put in the irrigation, we put in the stakes, we put in the trellis system, and phenomenally were ready to go and planted a great deal during the summer of '79.
Hicke: Okay, I have to ask you a little bit more. How did you decide
whether to do the terracing up and down or around? And I want to know what kind of grapes you planted.
Forman: Okay. We had done quite a project just before I left at Sterling, at Diamond Mountain. A guy named Chuck Saunders helped lay the property out for Bill [William] Hill, who had started the project and then we ended up finishing it once we bought it from Bill Hill. So I contacted Chuck Saunders— who was quite a character, I must say— and he came over. He and I basically did most of the layout together until I figured I had caught onto the technique, and then Lupe and I finished.
We just took a hill and in those days pretty much went with the contour. We'd use a hand level or a transit and follow the contour around and put marking stakes every twenty- five or fifty or a hundred feet, wherever the visual ability allowed. These allowed, then, the tracker to come in and cut terraces to our marks .
Hicke: The terraces were how wide?
Forman: Oh, generally the terrace ended up being about eight feet wide but, of course, depending on the slope, the distance between terraces could be anywhere from nine feet to fifteen feet. The steeper the slope, the more distant the terraces would be because you had to take a cut and form a toe.
Hicke: Would that plant one row of vines?
Forman: That would only plant one row of vines. It's very wasteful of
land, really, I've since learned, and I almost never cut terraces now. We go straight up and down the mountain. At the same time,
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I came and did my property here, because I had purchased this piece. I put terraces on this piece. Well, I have since replanted this piece, and I wiped all the terraces out, and I go straight up and down the hill, as they would in France. You actually end up having less erosion by going straight up and down the hill. You move and disturb much less soil, and you get far greater density and more use out of the land. I didn't know that in those days, and so we cut all these terraces, and there they are. They still remain.
Varieties—we knew we wanted to do Cabernet and Chardonnay-- Cabernet meaning we wanted Cabernet, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot, which I had at that point determined were all very valuable as blending grapes in and amongst themselves.
Hicke: Did you keep them separate in the plantings?
Forman: Oh, yes. We planted separate slopes, slopes that had the most
extreme exposure and austere soil to Cabernet; the more clay-like soils, we planted Chardonnay on. One particular soil that was very rocky, I felt the Franc would do well on. We switched it around here and there. Of course, most of the production, most of the planting was Cabernet, because we wanted the Cabernet to dominate.
We planted no Chardonnay on the property. However, we did decide that we wanted some Sauvignon Blanc and planted a fairly good hillside with Sauvignon Blanc. In retrospect, I think it would have been much better to plant Cabernet there. I think at this point, since they replanted, they did put Cabernet there.
Hicke: Why?
Forman: It made interesting wine. Well, it was red soil, fabulous
exposure, and would have produced very high-quality red grapes, I think.
Hicke: Which would have been a better use of the property?
Forman: Much better use, but Newton wanted Sauvignon Blanc, and I was fascinated with Sauvignon Blanc. We had no idea at that time where to get quality Sauvignon Blanc, so we decided to plant our own. Considering what you can get for a bottle of Sauvignon Blanc, it was a bum choice financially. I'm sure it has been changed at this point. Interesting working with the grapes, but--
Hicke: Is that because you wanted the Bordeaux varieties?
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Forman: Yes, we wanted a Bordeaux theme, but we also realized that we
should think Chardonnay. We bought the Chardonnay from a vineyard at that time that was called the Adamson Vineyard. It was down in Rutherford. I since have purchased that vineyard, and I own it now, along with Reg Oliver. We're general partners in the vineyard we now call Rutherford Star.
I produced at Newton the first harvest for that vineyard in 1980, and it was spectacular wine, and it's still very good wine; it hasn't gone over the hill yet. Eighty-one and '82 were all- some of the best Chardonnay I ever made. They were really very good wines. Extremely rich, extremely long lived, and very concentrated — that wonderful French Meursault sort of creme brulee character.
I determined that I liked that vineyard very much, which, after having left Newton, was very excited to be able to buy, along with Reg Oliver, who is by far the largest owner of the vineyard; he owns the highest percentage of it. But it has been a great vineyard to work with. It has been the vineyard that I've made almost all—and certainly now, all of the Chardonnay for Forman Vineyards from.
Hicke: Let's go back to '78 and '79.
Forman: It was quite amazing that I left Sterling in '78, joined Newton in November of '78, cleared and planted in the spring of '79 the vineyard, as well as designing, building, and completing the winery for the harvest of '79. I don't know how we ever did it. I have no idea how we did it.
This is what happened and what I'm sure my wife realized was going to happen: Newton totally mesmerized me as to grabbing hold of this project, making it happen, and making it happen today, rather than tomorrow. And so I worked nonstop to the point of, of course, forgetting that I had another life; i.e., my family. So that began to fall apart, which was unfortunate. I did succeed in finishing the winery.
Building and Equipment
Hicke: Let me ask you about building the winery.
Forman: The winery was an immense task. We determined that we wanted
underground cellars. They've since dug tunnels, as have I on my property, but we didn't know that the technology really existed
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then. I insisted that I wanted an underground cellar, as did Newton, so that we could have better control of humidity and more natural control of temperature.
We had a semi-hillside location that we chose to build on. We found an excavation company that came in and carved, literally, a notch into the hill. We put the cellar in the notch, and then we put a very strong roof on the cellar, and we buried it with about six feet of soil. It did manage to keep the cellar fairly cool. We ran into a severe humidity problem, however, that I had never experienced before and ran into a lot of trouble with in the 1980 harvest. I'll explain that in a minute.
But the cellar was unique. It had compartments that we could keep at different temperature levels during harvest, which I did have air conditioning for because I realized that if I was going to ferment, I had to keep the cellar very cool, so we had compartments for temperature control and a very simple, straightforward layout for a winery that was designed to produce, we thought, no more than about 8,000 cases.
We had a very neatly designed, octagon-shaped crushing pad directly above the cellar, with around the perimeter of the octagon, all the fermenters. We bought some really neat--at that time, we thought — crushing equipment. The Demoisi crusher had just come out. This was the latest technology. Came from the experiment station in Beaune [France], for crushers. It was indeed a very good crusher and remains to be so today, one of the two best crushers.
We bought a membrane press, which was just being offered on the market as the latest technology in pressing, which it indeed was as well and still remains to be. So we had great equipment- nice, small fermenters; good crushing equipment. I designed self- tilting gondolas which we would haul through the field, and we could harvest one-ton batches, which was very convenient, I thought, for quality. We got to the crusher in a matter of minutes from picking.
So everything was done on a smaller scale than at Sterling and more in keeping with the tradition that I experienced in Europe and tried to experience at Sterling, and now felt fully capable of having a complete handle on.
Hicke: You mentioned that you took new role in viticulture. Is this what you're talking about: the complete designing of the vineyard and all that?
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Forman: Yes. I'd never been used to the fact of having to design
irrigation systems and actually install them myself, to the level of involvement in planting and to the level of involvement in layout. I was really for the first year a viticulturist, in every sense of the manner—from actually doing the physical work to doing the layout to ordering all of the supplies. I learned a lot by doing it. I learned how to be a good viticulturist. Even though I had the technical background from school, I had none of the practical background, but I learned in a big hurry.
Lupe was very helpful to me. He came with a lot of experience and a lot of knowledge. The two of us, I think, did a fine job. I would have done it differently today than then, but we always continue to learn if our eyes are open. Things change. Ideas change. Today we would plant the vineyard closer. We'd use European clones. Obviously, the rootstocks have changed dramatically. The trellis systems are no longer T trellises; we use vertical trellis systems. We no longer terrace grapes; we go straight up and down the hills. The irrigation systems are somewhat different, although we're still using the drip irrigation. Fertilizer injectors are now available. I mean, it's almost like night and day today, compared to then.
But since I've continued to plant vineyards and actually joined David Abreu in his original days, with his vineyard management company, and helped him along through our visits to Europe, we have both evolved together, and our viticulture is leaps and bounds ahead of what it was in 1978.
Cooperage: The Forman Barrel
Hicke: What about cooperage?
Forman: Cooperage--! really have stuck with the same coopers from day one at Sterling through my current practices at Forman Vineyard. We liked Nadalier then and introduced Nadalier into California, and I'm still using a high percentage of Nadalier barrels for the red wine. Always chateau barrels, what we call Chateau Barrique. It was actually a barrel that I invented. I liked the thin-staved Bordeaux chateau barrel, because I felt that the flavor was different than the export barrel they were selling when we originally introduced them into California.
I realized that the smoky, harsh taste of the transport barrel that they wanted to introduce into California was too strong, and I wanted to try some of the chateau barrels. Did try
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them, found that the taste in the chateau barrels was much more similar to what I noticed the wines of Bordeaux in Bordeaux tasted like, realized that the thin staves had a lot to do with it. They were less difficult to bend, took much less fire, and acquired a far different flavor because of the firing technique.
So I ordered these barrels. And for some time, the barrels, of course, came in the traditional manner, with the chestnut hoop on them, and they looked very fine when you had a non-humid cellar. But in the humid cellar, these chestnut hoops fell apart within months. So I said to Jean- Jacques, "How about giving me the same barrel, but instead of the chestnut hoops put a wide hoop on the ends." He said, "Great, I guess we'll call it the Forman Barrel, so when you order we'll know what they are."
And so they did, for about three years, and then other people started seeing these barrels and wanting them. They actually started selling a large percentage of these barrels to the point where now, I think, almost all of the barrels are being purchased chateau-type, rather than transport-type. Of course, they had to change them from Forman to something else, so they're now calling them Chateau Barrique.
Hicke: And you didn't get a patent!
Forman: No. They're even starting to use them in Bordeaux now. A small point, but I did start something.
Hicke: Fabulous! Do the thinner staves allow more air through?
Forman: Perhaps there's a bit more. That could be part of the factor as well. But there's a dramatically different flavor. So that was the Bordeaux barrel.
I've used other people's barrels. I've used Demptos, I've used Sorie, I've used Sylvan, and I'm using a mixture of other barrels that I find with subtly unique characteristics, and very nice as a blending component with, always, Nadalier. I always use some Nadalier.
But on the Chardonnay side, I prefer the thicker-staved, Burgundian barrel, and I've found through experimenting with many different coopers that I go back always to Francois Frere as being the flavor that I like best and that matches my style of Chardonnay best. These have a totally different flavor than the Bordeaux barrel. They're very thick-staved. They have a smokier, more cinnamon-like character, much more aggressive character, I would say. But it somehow brings out that toasty, creme brulee character from the fully ripe Chardonnay that I like.
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Hicke: What about the reds?
Forman: The reds, always in Bordeaux, the Bordeaux thin-staved barrel.
That also seems to be more appropriate. It has a more violet-like character, a more vanilla-like character, and that seems to blend better with the red wines, Cabernet, than that cinnamon sort of smell that the Burgundy barrels have.
Hicke: I'm going to turn this over.
Winemaking Techniques
Hicke: In your winemaking, were you doing anything different from what you had done at Sterling?
Forman: I started doing things a little differently. The Chardonnay was handled pretty much the same, except for the fact that we were picking in smaller batches, we were using the Demoisi crusher, and in fact, yes, I would say there was one dramatic difference. The Demoisi crusher had the ability to take the de-stemming device out, and so I was crushing whole clusters, just crushing the whole clusters without de-stemming them, so we were crushing with whole clusters. This gave us a clearer juice, added a bit of tannin material from the stems, and I think did add a different quality aspect to the juice and wine than I was getting at Sterling.
The barrels were the same. I would say that the other unique aspect of handling the Chardonnay at Newton versus Sterling was that I would leave the wines in barrels with lees for a much longer period of time. At Sterling I was in the habit of taking the wine off the lees within a month after fermentation. At Newton I experimented with leaving the wine on the lees. Dick Graff and I were experimenting with it at the same time, and I think we were certainly some of the first to try this.
Found that it added a very nice character to the wine. It lengthened the flavor of the wine and added that toasty Chardonnay flavor that we were all looking for, that sort of richness that they were getting out of Burgundy that we never seemed to be able to get and that this was helping us with. So I would leave the wine with the lees for up to six months before we'd rack it. So the combination of stems versus no stems at Sterling, and leaving on the lees for six to six-plus months was, I think, quite a deviation.
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Hicke: When you say it lengthened the flavor, does that mean it lasts longer on the palate?
Forman: It's both an actual flavor, and it's the texture that it gives. I think it gives richer texture to the wine, and it gives that toasty sort of autolysis character that you get from champagne. Champagne, after all, is sitting with the lees in the bottle, in bottle- fermented champagne, for as much as five years. We get that really toasty, autolyzed yeast character which is, again, a flavor as well as a richness.
The same thing is happening to Chardonnay, sitting with the lees in the barrel. It did prove to make the wine far more sophisticated. It's obviously being used extensively today with anybody who's serious about making Chardonnay. But it was considered fairly unique and a bit out there in those days. It was considered to be risky. Actually, it was barely even considered! People didn't even know about it. We experimented with it. Other people heard about it and were interested in it at the same time, and, just as barrel fermentation caught on, so did the sur lees technique catch on.
Other practices that I experimented with were adding no sulfur dioxide [S02] to the juice before fermentation, something I didn't do at Sterling but I did at Newton. The juice would oxidize severely in the press, but this oxidized, polyphenolic material would settle out during the settling process, and after fermentation, the wine would become clear, and I think more clear than had we added S02, which we've discovered is to be expected. And I think it would be less prone to oxidation after fermentation, and it seemed to have less bitter characteristics than wines fermented with sulfur dioxide.
The risk was that malo would start. I never would — at Sterling, Newton, or Forman or anybody that I would ever consult for- -encourage malolactic in white wine. The sulfur would have to be added directly after fermentation. But I did like the result of it. I'm trying to think why I steered away from it, because I have steered away from it. In fact, this last harvest I was going to experiment again with it and, in the fury of the harvest, never did. I had other things I was working on.
Hicke: Are you talking about malolactic?
Forman: No, I'm talking about the addition of sulfur with white juice. I think I was worried basically about the lactobacillus infection, because there was a real upswing of it in the early eighties or mid-eighties and into the nineties. So I began worrying more about that than the oxidation or non-oxidation of polyphenolics.
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So I started adding sulfur again when I began working with my Chardonnay at Forraan Vineyard. But it's an interesting technique, one I plan on fiddling with again.
Where are we?
The 1979. 1980. and 1981 Wines
Hicke: Well, we've only gotten up to 1979, as far as I know, the summer. When was the first crop?
Forraan: The first harvest was '79. We bought Chardonnay, as I mentioned, from Adamson and liked it very much. We bought Cabernet from--oh, where did we buy it from?--oh, some of the Carmine grapes. The Chalone people offered us Cabernet, and we bought some from the Sea Ranch, which is now the Disney property, Silverado Vineyards. We bought Cabernet Franc from the Frediani Vineyards up in Calistoga. We bought some Cabernet from Spotteswood [Winery] . And we bought Merlot from the Silverado Vineyard Ranch, and we bought Merlot from the Narsai David Ranch. We bought Chardonnay also from the Pun Ranch in Rutherford. And we bought Sauvignon Blanc and Semillon from the Polisa Ranch down in Yountville. I think those were pretty much all the grapes we purchased, obviously in the first year.
The '79 wines were pretty attractive, I think. Because of the problems that I later had with Newton and because of the difficulties that the whole project was creating for me in my private life, with my family, my memories of a lot of actual happenings of fermentation, the season, the experiences, the way the wines turned out are not as clear in my mind as times at Sterling or times after Newton.
I would say that one of the most serious problems that I ever encountered with wine—compared perhaps equally to the scope of the problem that we had at Sterling with the smoky tanks- -was the catastrophe with the 1980 Cabernet. As I mentioned, we had a very humid cellar, and in 1980 I determined that I wanted to warm the cellar for the completion of malolactic in barrels of the red wine. I also decided that it would be interesting to use glass bungs as I had seen used in Bordeaux.
What I didn't realize was that the humidity and heat and glass bungs, which were constantly in contact with the wine but not creating a tight seal, were posing a very serious threat to the spoilage of the wine from introduction of acetobacter. Within
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one week of putting the wine into barrels, which was basically directly after fermentation, I noticed that the cellar every morning had this odd, acetobacter smell. I would look at the bungs and, sure enough, there was a little ring of slime around the bung.
I would immediately every day clean the bungs, thinking that I was dealing with it and that it wasn't getting into the wine. By the second week, the aroma was still there and so I realized I had to deal with this and that I was creating something unnatural in this environment of humidity and heat and using the glass bungs. And so I replaced the bungs, but at that point the wine had already jumped up to almost the legal limit of volatile acidity.
I caught the problem, but I didn't catch it in time. It was sickening to me because the wine was a spectacular wine. The 1980 vintage was going to be--just as the 1970 vintage at Sterling—was going to be a wonderful wine. Because of the rapid production of acetobacter, I actually—well, I think I pretty much almost spoiled the wine.
Hicke: You can't innovate, I think, without having things like that happen.
Forman: Today we have the equipment. We have osmosis filters that could get rid of the VA [volatile acidity] very readily. In fact, I know a lot of wineries who make very, very high quality wines who use these for either dealcoholization or getting rid of the volatile acidity, particularly wineries who age longer than two years in barrels. It's very useful.
That didn't exist then, and I was trying to do some very clever things that backfired on me. I learned a lesson, brutally. Actually, it was in that year that the silicone bungs came out from Europe. Of course, that solved the problem immediately, sealing the barrel very tightly. But it was too late, and it was one of those very sad lessons that I learned.
The wine was not so seriously affected—it was sold in bulk --but it was spoiled to the point where I could recognize it, and I wasn't that proud of it. It was kind of like the '70 Cabernet. It was the second year out. We needed a product to sell; we did bottle it, and a lot of people liked the wine. But we held most of it back. I ended up taking the wine back during the dissolution of our partnership, as part of the settlement of our partnership, and developed a label around it, which I still use today.
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I had to take the wine. It was bottled. So I had to call it something. I didn't know what, really, to call it. I wasn't going to put it under Fonnan. We obviously couldn't put it under Newton. My winery is on Big Rock Road, so I thought, "Well, what '11 I call it? I think I'll call it Chateau le Grande Roche, Big Rock." It was cute enough. I developed and designed kind of an attractive label. As I say, I still use it for grapes that I buy.
We sold the wine, and, actually, it became very popular at that point. I sold it at a pretty reasonable price--! think five dollars a bottle. All the places I sold it to, the people actually loved the stuff. So I turned a disadvantage into an advantage by selling it at a reasonable price. It had been in the bottle at that point long enough. It wasn't all that bad. It just wasn't the wine that Newton and I really wanted. It wasn't a disaster wine, but it wasn't our premium wine that we were looking for.
I took it, and I sold it, and forgot about it. Hicke: It worked.
Forman: But anyway, getting on to further things at Newton: The red wines were fermented in these small tanks, kept separately, put into pretty much all new barrels every years. My racking system that I had developed at Sterling and learned in Bordeaux was used and strictly adhered to: racking out of the head of the barrel, egg- white fining in the barrel. Really nothing too different from what I had done at Sterling.
Dissolving the Partnership
Forman: And I made some very nice wines '79, '81, '82. The wines were really quite delicious. The Merlot was very wonderful. These were all from purchased grapes and really by the time I realized that I had to leave Newton, the grapes that I had planted were just coming on, so I never really got to harvest any of the grapes that I planted. I gather they make quite a nice wine.
Hicke: Did you design the label?
Forman: No, Sua Ha designed the label, Peter's wife. I had nothing to do with the label. Obviously, these were part of the problems. By the time '81 rolled around, we had had two vintages. My wife was pretty fed up with the whole affair, of me having to spend so much
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time there. The wine label was supposed to be Forman Vineyard, and Newton decided he didn't want it to be Forman Vineyard; it was going to be Newton Vineyard.
I lived with that, but I also realized that there were other things going on that were not probably going to work out for the better for me.
Hicke: He must have told you that it would be under your label.
Forman: He had. He made a promise. We even had stationery made. It's funny. And then that changed. Well, 1 could see how he was developing the property and how much money it was costing and that we probably never were going to become profitable, and that the fact that we were never going to become profitable was not a concern to him but obviously it was to me, because if I was to ever really realize the benefits financially from this massive amount of effort that I put into it, it would mean that we would have to become profitable.
I just didn't see it happening. So for better or worse- there were other things that went on that are not necessarily at this point even necessary to discuss, but obviously, differences arose, and I was no longer comfortable there. And so, in the fall of 1982, just after the harvest of '82, I informed Newton that I no longer wanted to be a partner with him and that I