Inside the winery, August and his wife Sara showed us the make room, and indulged all of our nerdy curiosities.
Adams County Winery makes over 20 (!!!) wines, many of them sweet and fruity, similar to styles typically made at cooler climate wineries. Their most famous is Yankee Blue, a blueberry ice wine that nearly always sells out. August showed us the blueberries chilling for their next batch. They handpick the berries from the winery's own blueberry patch, nestled under a bird net.
The winery boasts some cutting edge technologies, including a cross-flow filtration unit,
a new giant steam cleaner (with an enormous plug),
a fully automated bottling line that can bottle up to 1100 botttles per hour,
and a rocking chair made from an old aging barrel.
In the tasting room, we tried some of the wines. (August hasn't worked a vintage yet, so none of these wines are truly "his." He has made a Riesling, I think from frozen juice.)
After our sampling, we got a wine slushi (Tutti Frutti--notice it it Reid's hand), and checked out the milk vats the winery used to use for winemaking that now sit behind the barn in the PA sun.
The highlight of our visit was a sneak peak tasting of the winery's estate grown Lemberger. Deep red, fullbodied yet fruity with notes of raspberry, this wine will stand out in the flimsy cold climate red category.
August--with his intelligent approach to winemaking--is certain to produce some outstanding wines in the very near future. I'm so excited for August and Sara!