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Home » Wineries » Winery: Sokol Blosser Winery
Contact Information
Sokol Blosser Lane
PO Box 399
Dundee OR 97115

 

Sokol Blosser Winery

United States > Oregon > Willamette Valley > Dundee Hills

Owner

Winemaker

Established

 

The following blog provides additional information about Sokol Blosser Winery.

Sokol Blosser Wine Blog

Wild Chinook Salmon, Alder Smoke & Dundee Hills Pinot Noir

A Boy, His Big Green Eggs & Sokol Blosser Wine

Growing up on the East Coast salmon comes two ways - steaks or filets. Now, that I live in the Pacific Northwest, the Salmon Nation, I know there are many more choices than that! My local everyday supermarket will have at different times Copper River, Sockeye, Chinook, and Coho salmon depending on the time of year. You can buy the whole fish, a side, filets or steaks. In the four years that I have lived in the Pacific Northwest, I found that I love wild caught salmon from cold waters. I have also learned that I prefer to grill/smoke it as a whole piece rather than individual portions. The other thing I've learned from my time in Oregon Wine Country is that nothing goes better with salmon than Oregon Pinot Noir. Sokol Blosser’s elegant, age-worthy and food-friendly style paired particularly well with our wild salmon. Here’s how we cooked our wild, alder smoked Chinook salmon last night.

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Preparation:
We bought a nice piece of wild caught Chinook (King) salmon. We removed the pin bones and lightly seasoned it with herbes d’ Provence, olive oil and Evolution Spice. Make sure you lightly season the fish; this will let the wonderful flavors of the salmon show through.

Grilling:
Our Big Green Egg, Mac, got the call to grill/smoke this wonderful piece of salmon.
• Set up the grill for direct cooking and heat it up to 300˚F.
• Remove and oil the grill grates.
• Add alder chips to the glowing coals in the grill. Alder wood was what the Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest chose cook their salmon. Alder wood adds a nice light smoke flavor to the fish.
• Put the oiled grill grate back on the grill.
• Place the salmon on the grill with the skin side up. Grill/smoke the fresh side of the fish for about 10 to 12 minutes.
• Carefully turn the fish over to the skin side and place on the grill on the edge of the fire ring. Not indirect, but not direct either. Cook for another 15 to 20 minutes or until the flesh flakes with a fork and is still moist inside. Do not overcook. At the Nagle’s this gives us a nicely cooked piece of salmon that is medium-rare.
• Just before you remove the salmon from the grill, squeeze a little lemon juice on the fish.

Wine:
Sokol Blosser Dundee Hills Pinot Noir 2005 was a terrific match for this alder smoked Chinook salmon. The wine has great mouth feel, texture and elegance. While the 2005 is drinking nicely now, I can only think of how it will develop with more time in the bottle. The question we all have to ask ourselves is how much do we buy to enjoy this summer? The second question is how much do we need to buy to enjoy over the next 5 summers? The Sokol Blosser 2005 will last more than 5 years, but not in the Nagle household. This stuff is too good!

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Posted 1 day 8 hours ago by Scott Nagle, Brand Ambassador

Veraison!

Our Pinot Noir clusters are beginning to change color! This is an exciting time for us, as it is the first indicator that Harvest is drawing closer. "Veraison" is the winegrowing term for when the berry clusters turn color, berry by berry, until they are totally purple, telling us it's time to start sampling the grapes for sugar level and maturity.

Alex Sokol Blosser and Winemaker Russ Rosner are pumping air into their bicycle tires to get ready for the many treks they’ll make through the vineyard to sample grapes from each block to make sure sugars levels and flavor are just where they want them to be. Once they give the go-ahead to pick, Harvest will begin.

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A Pinot Noir cluster from our North Concert Block is starting to turn purple.


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After we make our crop estimates, we go through each row of Pinot Noir and drop any underripe fruit, making sure that each cluster left on the vine has the quality complex flavors that we want for our Pinot Noir wines.

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Posted 2 days 10 hours ago by Kitri Culbertson, Marketing Communications Manager

Evo and Med Spotted on Coast

Paparazzi spotted "wine celebutants" Evolution and Meditrina taking a much needed break from their Rat Pack, Wine X partying lifestyle. The brother and sister team made time to rest and relax on Oregon's Manzanita Coast. Rumor has it that they will be partying up and down the Coast for the rest of the Summer. Good times for all!

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Posted 12 days ago by Scott Nagle, Brand Ambassador

Successful Summer Hike

We had and amazing time on our first Summer Vineyard Hike this past Saturday. Though the weather started off questionably, it quickly proved to be the perfect day for a hike. The late night/early morning rain gave us just enough moisture to keep the dust down in the vineyard,which made for ideal conditions. The hikes have proven to be quite popular. We quickly sold out of both of them and have a waiting list for our final one.

We all met at 10am and set out for a 2.5 mile hike from the bottom to the top of our Certified Organic Vineyards. Along the way we stopped for wine amongst the vines, information on farming, winemaking and geology. Cellar Club members brought friends, family and their four legged friends.

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The first stop we tasted our 2007 Sokol Blosser Pinot Gris. (Which was heavenly.) We then headed up to Red Ridge Farms where we tasted their delicious olive oil and toured their almost completed, olive oil press and event space. (If you have not been up to Red Ridge Farms, you must make a stop the next time you are out in the Dundee Hills. They have a beautiful nursery with sweeping views of the Red Hills.)

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Next, we headed back down for a glass of our 2005 Dundee Hills Pinot Noir, followed shortly by a picnic buffet amongst the vines where we tasted our Evolution, Meditrina and 2007 Rose of Pinot Noir.

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By the end of the day, we had made some great new friends, caught up with some old ones and left with large smiles on all of our faces. Thanks to all of you who made our first hike so special. For those who did not make it in to these hikes, don’t fret, we will most certainly be doing this again soon.

-Hiker Knapp


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Posted 13 days ago by Michael Brown, Direct Sales Manager

A Steak with the Best of Both Worlds!

A Boy, His Big Green Eggs & Sokol Blosser Wines

When you stroll up to the butcher counter and you are trying to decide on which steak to buy, the choices at times can be difficult. You know your wife loves the tenderness of filet and you love the texture and flavor of the NY strip. Well, there are two cuts of steak that can make both people happy, the T-bone and the porterhouse. These bone-in meats have the NY strip on one side of the bone and the filet on the other side. What’s the difference between the T-bone and the porterhouse you ask? Well, simply put, the porterhouse tends to have a larger portion filet than the T-bone. A great, grilled steak and a happy wife, the makings of a very enjoyable evening!

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Preparation:
Season your T-bone with fresh cracked pepper, rosemary and olive oil. Cover and refrigerator over night. Remove from the refrigerator 15 minutes before grilling and season with sea or kosher salt.

Salad:
Caramelize some onions with herbs de Provence, add pitted olives and hold warm until the steak is resting off the grill. Just before serving the steak add baby arugula to the onion and olive mixture. Season with salt and pepper, drizzle with olive oil and balsamic vinegar. Mix together until arugula starts to wilt. This takes less than a minute. Divide the arugula salad on the dinner plates and top with blue cheese (we used Rogue Creamery Blue Cheese from Southern Oregon). While my first choice is fresh and local, Maytag Blue from Ohio or Colston Basset Stilton from England would do very nicely. Blue cheese not your thing? Try it with your local goat cheese, or Coach Farms in Hudson Valley, or Humboldt Fog from the Bay area.

Grilling:
Our Big Green Egg, Medford, grilled this well seasoned T-bone for about 3 minutes a side a 650˚F+. I grilled the steak without the rosemary on the meat for the first side. After I turned and flipped the meat and added the rosemary sprigs on top of the meat while the second side cooked.. We removed the T-Bone when the meat was medium-rare. We let the meat rest for a couple of minutes, then removed the meat from the bone. We sliced the filet into strips and fanned it out on the dinner plates. We then did the same with the NY Strip.

Wine:
Tonight it was my wife’s choice. Did she choose the Shafer Hillside Select, the Pio Cesare Barolo or our beloved Meditrina? No, tonight her choice was the Sokol Blosser 12 Row Pinot Noir 2003. For those of you who have had the rare pleasure of enjoying Pinot Noir from this 1 acre site, 12 rows, 60 vines per row, a little gem in the middle of our vineyard; it is a treat to say the least. During harvest 2003, Mother Nature gave us one of the warmest growing seasons of recent history. It took this usually expressive part of our vineyard and as Emeril would say, kicked it up a notch. Our winemaking team took the power and ripeness of this vintage and blended its strengths with the finesse and elegance that is Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir. I think of Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir as elegant, age-worthy and food friendly. The 2003 Sokol Blosser Pinot Noirs, especially the 12 Row, I think of a blend of power, restraint and finesse. This pumped up Sokol Blosser Pinot Noir from 2003 is a great steak Pinot Noir! Get some while the last bottles still exist. Call Rodolphe in the Tasting Room at 503.864.2282 x 10, he may have a few bottles stashed away.

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Posted 23 days ago by Scott Nagle, Brand Ambassador

Presents from the Vineyard

Don't you just love presents? I know I do. Birthdays, holidays, giving, receiving... I like it all. And we've been blessed at Sokol Blosser by so many little presents lately, all from a very unlikely source...

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Yep, those are our Vineyard Rodent Patrol feral cats (Baby Girl, Filbert [aka Tweedledum], Sniffles, Big Tig, TJ [aka Pickles]), and the gifts we've been getting have been of a unique sort. Every morning, as I walk from my car to the offices at Sokol Blosser, I take a deep breath of the fresh farm air, watch the vines on the hillside swaying gently in the breeze, and try not to step in a present. Voles have been the most common offering, followed my moles and then birds. Often not whole. Often not recognizable. But hey, presents are presents, and who am I to turn my nose up at a gift? Our vineyards are certified organic by Oregon Tilth, and our Rodent Patrol does a very efficient all-natural job of "managing" the rodent population in the vineyard.

I like to think that my shrieks are like saying thank you to our feline friends, in a very loud and horrified way.

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Posted 4 weeks ago by Kitri Culbertson, Marketing Communications Manager

International Pinot Noir Celebration!

... and what a celebration it was! Thanks to everyone who joined us at Sokol Blosser for IPNC events. Check out these great pictures from lunch in our Winery on Saturday, featuring dishes from Chef Adam Stevenson of Seattle's Earth & Ocean. Cheers!

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Posted 4 weeks ago by Kitri Culbertson, Marketing Communications Manager

Italian Sausage, Pepper & Onion Sandwiches

A Boy, His Big Green Eggs & Sokol Blosser Wine

This quick dinner choice always reminds me of walking the Boardwalk in Atlantic City on family vacations with my parents. It brings back memories of looking at the ocean, people watching and eating hot sausage sandwiches. I can feel the sun and smell the salt air as I write this. Fun times in AC.

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Preparation:
Cut up onions and peppers and place in a pan with holes in the bottom, so your chopped veggies do not fall between your grill grates. Add some salt & pepper, rosemary and a couple of chopped garlic cloves. Sauté on the grill until soft. We cooked our peppers and onion at the same time we cooked our Italian sausage. Depending on your set up and fire your peppers and onions my cook faster than your sausage. This time ours were done at the same time.

Salad:
Susan and I mixed up a baby arugula salad with a balsamic vinigrette, rosemary and garlic. We found some left over caramelized Walla Walla onions in the fridge, which we also added.

Grilling:
Our Big Green Egg, Medford, cooked up this Boardwalk Stroller of a Sandwich. Set up your grill with the fire at one end of the grill. Place your sausage of choice directly over the hot coals. Place your perforated sauté pan on the grill, but not directly over the flame, more indirect heat. Stir your onions and peppers and turns your sausages till done. We cooked everything at about 400˚F for about 10 minutes. This is truly a quick and easy meal. I think we were even able to lightly toast the rolls for the sandwich as well. Alright, maybe 15 minutes all in.

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Wine:
Now, I know we have been drinking Evolution and Meditrina a lot as we grill this Summer. I do know that Evolution and Meditrina are wines that most of the my friends across the country can get. I know I said I would try not to pair our Summer grilling food with Sokol Blosser wines most people can not get, but tonight cried for a Sokol Blosser Rosé of Pinot Noir. I know you can’t get it on the East Coast, but that doesn’t make this “Pink Nectar” any less tasty and refreshing. Think of it this way, you have the AC Boardwalk and we have all the limited Sokol Blosser wines you can’t get. Come out and visit, the first bottle of Rosé is on me! Wa, see you August 1st. Ribs, Rosé and Pinot Noir are already planned for that evening. See you soon my friend!

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Posted 4 weeks ago by Scott Nagle, Brand Ambassador

Bocce and Sokol Blosser Wine

Well, I tried something new from Sokol Blosser the other day and I found it very blog-worthy. This year, Russ Rosner, our Winemaker, tasted one of the components originally slated to go into our beloved Evolution and thought that it was something special. So, not only did this surprising juice help make Evolution what we all know and love, but Russ decided show some of this special stuff off by itself.

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So for the first time that I know of, Sokol Blosser bottled an Early Muscat. Early Muscat is a type of grape that for me has wonderful aromatics of tropical fruit, true grape flavors in the mouth with some nice weight to it. Sokol Blosser’s Early Muscat 2007 (available in our Tasting Room; if you're interested in getting a bottle, call us!) is a nice refreshing glass of white wine that wakes up your taste buds and gets your nose and brain thinking. Cheryl and Rick Proulx, my wife Susan and I tried out a bottle while playing a spirited game of bocce. Sokol Blosser Early Muscat and bocce a nice combination.

Oh, I almost forgot to mention, the guys beat the girls in bocce with a come from behind victory! Sokol Blosser Early Muscat inspired no doubt.

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Posted 4 weeks ago by Scott Nagle, Brand Ambassador

Chef Drew Lockett at Sokol Blosser

Chef Drew Lockett from Aquariva created a delicious feast at Sokol Blosser Winery for an IPNC dinner. Check out this HUGE Umbrian truffle he used in the meal! Cheers!

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Posted 4 weeks ago by Kitri Culbertson, Marketing Communications Manager