From Andrew Morrison of Scout Magazine:
THE 1.6 MILE DINNER

Orofino is owned by John and Virginia Weber. The attractive pair don’t fit the profile (John is an ex-school teacher and Virginia is a former nurse), and there’s a few nodules on my palate that really appreciate that. They make very good wine and do it in an eco-friendly way with a winery built of strawbales (the only one of its kind in Canada). Set on the high road above the winding Crowsnest and Cawston, it feels recessed enough to be granted middle-of-nowhere status. Backing up to the vines as it does under a sunset-lit, rocky massif, the beauty of its environs can freeze first-timers in their tracks. Add in several long tables dressed in silver and stemware, plus plenty of genuinely friendly locals, and you get the picture of what was about to go down. The cooking we knew was going to be amazing, the setting was all kinds of pretty, and we came with appetites for both.

Cam and Dana put out a marvellous spread of squash blossoms filled with confit zucchini and rosemary; smoked pork with cippolinis and apricots; salad of haricot vert and cider vinaigrette-drenched beets with sauce gribiche; wood-oven chicken with shaved fennel and peaches; loin of lamb rubbed with marjoram; grape leaves stuffed with lamb shoulder; lamb leg massaged with espelette pepper and roasted garlic; and a few other fabulous things besides (not to mention a plum wine zabaglione to finish us off). Nearly all of the ingredients had been sourced within 1.6 miles of Orofino, and the wines…well, the wines came from where we were sitting; happily outside in the stillness of a perfect BC summer night.

WESTERN LIVING MAGAZINE - September 2011
Sweet Valley High By Remy Scalza

Life in the Okanagan’s shadow isn’t always easy. The Similkameen Country, an isolated and starkly beautiful river valley tucked between the Cascade Range and the Osoyoos desert, has long been little more than a pit stop for travellers bound for the lakes and vineyards of interior British Columbia-a place to gas up the car, stock up on peaches at dusty roadside fruit stands and then blast on through to better-known destinations. But wineries have proliferated in the last decade, with top vintners attracted by the cheap land, spectacular setting and uniquely arid climate (Master of Wine Rhys Pender recently chose the area to start his first grape-growing adventure). With grapes has come the first generation of progressive restaurants and B&Bs, keen to highlight the valley’s deep green roots and wide-open spaces. Lodging still skews to what is euphemistically called "homey" and nightlife...well if that’s your thing you’d best look elsewhere. Still this place of steep cliffs and flat valleys feels poised to be the next big thing.

Onto the Grapes
Expect no tour buses or fanny-pack-wearing throngs outside Orofino Winery (2152 Barcelo Rd., Cawston, 250-499-0068, orofinovineyards.com), a six-acre boutique operation in Cawston. Former high-school phys-ed teacher John Weber built the winery in 2004 on a shoestring, forming the walls out of 890 straw bales-an ecologically and financially sound move. These days, he supplies his trademark riesling and big bold reds to some of Vancouver’s better restaurants, including Hawksworth in the Rosewood Hotel Georgia.

Orofino Named to the "A-Team"

Our winery was named to the "A-Team" in the current issue of Vines Magazine. The magazine asked a group of Sommeliers across the country a number of questions including their list of "go-to producers". Orofino was the only Canadian winery to be put on the list! We are thrilled to have been singled out for making delicious wines at fair prices!

 When asked to identify the most underrated wine region, the sommelier panel identified the Similkameen Valley as one of three emerging regions! (New York State and Greece being the other 2 regions). The Similkameen is THE happening place in Canada`s wine scene!!!   

Orofino Releases 2010 Whites, 2009 Reds
John Schreiner


John and Virginia Weber, the owners of Orofino Vineyards, celebrate the 10th anniversary this year of their arrival in the Similkameen Valley to operate a six-acre vineyard.

Both from Swift Current in Saskatchewan, John had been a teacher and Virginia was (and still is) a nurse. There was not even a great deal of farming in their backgrounds, let alone growing grapes. Yet they have succeeded brilliantly as wine growers, making small volumes of excellent wine that sells out quickly after its release.

They are original thinkers. The winery they opened in 2005 is housed in a building made of straw bales. Unique among Canadian wineries, it was built at moderate cost. The natural insulating quality of the bales minimizes the winery’s energy consumption and its environmental footprint.

It is hard to say whether that motivates consumers with a green sensibility to buy Orofino wines. The Webers do not make a big deal about their values, largely preferring to let the wines speak for themselves.

The wines are good, as I found during a tasting with John of the recent releases from Orofino. These included two whites from the 2010 vintage. That year, John says, was “fantastic for whites – and for reds if the work was done properly in the vineyard.” The white varieties matured at slightly lower sugar levels than in the previous year; alcohol levels are a little more moderate but the flavours of the wines are not compromised.

Here are my notes.

Pinot Gris 2010 ($19.90 with a production of 165 cases). Orofino drew grapes for this wine from two Similkameen growers not far from the winery. The juice remained on the skins for several hours after crushing, picking up more flavour and the slightest of bronze hues before being fermented in stainless steel. The result is a cleanly focussed wine with flavours of citrus, pear and apple and with a crisply dry finish. John believes it is the best Pinot Gris he has made. 90.

Riesling 2010 ($19.90 with a production of 710 cases). John did not say so, but I think this the best Orofino Riesling yet. He drew on three Similkameen vineyards for the fruit, including the 21-year-old vines at Orofino, which give the wine a fine mineral backbone. While the aroma is still restrained (time in the bottle will develop that fully), the wine is packed with flavours of grapefruit and lime. The wine fermented to natural dryness, ending up with a tangy, refreshing finish and 12.3% alcohol. 90

Pinot Noir 2009 ($31.90 with a production of 70 cases). This wine is made entirely with estate-grown grapes. John has four clones of Pinot Noir in four different blocks, one of which is 22 years old. The volume amounts to about three barrels, one of which was new French oak. The wine, which is unfiltered and unfined, spent 16 months in barrel before being bottled. It begins with appealing aromas of spice and strawberries. On the palate there is more raspberry and strawberry, with toast and spice from the underlying barrel notes. It has an attractive silky texture. 90.

Red Bridge Merlot 2009 ($25 with a production of 650 cases). Five vintages ago, John began buying Merlot grapes from Chris Scott’s five-acre Oak Knoll Vineyard at Kaleden. He likes the grapes so much that this remains the permanent exception to his sourcing only Similkameen fruit. Ironically, the wine is named after the red bridge across the Similkameen River at Keremeos. This is an appealing wine, with aromas and flavours of blackberry, blueberry and plum. The dense, chewy texture of the wines reflects that Scott cropped the vines about 2 ½ tons an acre – when Merlot is often cropped nearly double that. This big, ripe wine has 14.7% alcohol but has so much substance that the alcohol is not hot. 91.

Beleza 2008 ($33.90). This wine was already released last year, winning several awards. It is a blend of 60% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Sauvignon and 10% each of Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot. Unfiltered and unfined again, it spent 16 months in a combination of French and American oak. It begins with aromas of currants and chocolate, continuing to flavours of plum, black cherry, vanilla and spice. It has substantial weight on the palate and ripe tannins that will allow it to age well for another five years. 92.

Orofino has two other 2009 reds not yet released, a Syrah and a Cabernet Sauvignon from a nearby vineyard called Passion Pit. You can imagine what the local teenagers did there before vines were planted.

BELEZA 2008 - TOP 10 OF THE YEAR!!! Jurgen Gothe has named Beleza 2010 as one of the top 10 BC reds of the year in his December 16th "Uncorked" article in The Georgia Straight . Kudos was also given to the sold-out 2007 Petit Verdot Reserva. 

OROFINO BELEZA ($33.90)

"Another glorious blend, fronted by lots of Merlot. Huge, ripe fruit, too many flavour components to try and identify them all, but that might be a nice after-dinner party game, so get the magnum ($80) and everyone can participate."
www.straight.com/article-364252/vancouver/time-round-years-best-domestic-reds

MACLEAN'S magazine

Jennifer Cockrall-King, July 8, 2010

Photograph by Jeff Bassett

Over the trill of songbirds in their 2.2-hectare vineyard, John and Virginia Weber acknowledge that the Similkameen Valley in British Columbia's southern interior—home of their Orofino winery, opened in 2005—might be the least well-known of B.C.'s appellations.
(Vancouver Island, the Fraser Valley, the Okanagan Valley and the Gulf Islands are the other four viticulturally distinct grape-growing regions in B.C.)

Only a 30-minute scenic drive over a mountain pass from the well-travelled Okanagan wine routes near Penticton, or a sporty, twisting 20-minute detour from Oliver or Osoyoos along the U.S. border, the Similkameen Valley is one-twentieth the Okanagan's size and, until very recently, home to so few wineries it remained well below the radar. However, Orofino's sophisticated Bordeaux-style reds and crisp, mineral-edged whites, as well as stellar offerings by neighbouring Herder Winery (opened in 2003), Seven Stones (2007), and Cerelia (2009), have the insider wine crowd buzzing—even if they're not quite ready to throw the Similkameen name around at a dinner party.

“When we first arrived here in 2001,” recalls Virginia Weber, “there were three wineries. Now there are 10.” In other words, just enough to make a day of wine-tasting in a 30-km stretch that makes up the Similkameen wine route. Signage and other amenities are lacking, so a good GPS and an up-to-date guidebook are very helpful. Since 2009, the newly minted Similkameen Wineries Association has been working to put the Similkameen on the Canadian wine map through local events and at major wine shows.

“Similkameen wines aren't new. We have 20-year-old vines here at Orofino,” smirks John Weber, when asked why his wines are so good for such an undiscovered region. Traditionally, it was more of a grape-growing region that supplied high-quality grapes to Okanagan wineries. The few estate wineries that did exist earlier didn't win the valley many fans either. But in the last few years, a new breed of winemaker has moved in. They are (for the most part) young and ambitious, asserting themselves as a quality-obsessed appellation, not just an accessory to the Okanagan next door.

It's no big secret why Big Vino and mass tourism haven't taken over the Similkameen. It's not for the faint of heart, both for wineries and visitors alike. Lacking the moderating “lake effect” of the 135-km-long lake that runs through the Okanagan, summer temperatures can reach above 40° C in July and August. Notorious afternoon winds sweep through the narrow valley daily. And thanks to the steep mountains and clear skies, the nights cool off dramatically. It's a brutal landscape that really only appeals to the most intrepid of winemakers and winery visitors. It also is the key to being able to produce some of Canada's biggest reds and best whites.

“Grapevines need the swings in temperature,” explains veteran B.C. wine writer John Schreiner. “Otherwise, the acidity can be burned out of the grape if it stays hot continuously. With the cooling off at night, you get the bright fruit flavours.” Schreiner's books are essential companions for anyone interested in the province's next big (little) winery. “The Similkameen also has lean soils,” he continues, “and it would be difficult to overproduce on these soils. With potatoes, that's not a good thing, but with grapes, it is.” In other words, less fruit per vine yields more concentrated flavours and ultimately better, more complex wines.

As it emerges from the shadow of the Okanagan juggernaut, that is one of the biggest hurdles Similkameen wines now face. The productions are so small most good wines don't make it out of the region. Almost none make it out of B.C. And with barely the critical mass of wineries to make it a destination in itself, it will have to rely on the draw of having the Okanagan next door for a while longer. It's a complicated relationship, but not without precedent in the wine world.

JOHN SCHREINER ON WINE

August 25th, 2010

For full story go to www.johnschreiner.blogspot.com

Orofino Vineyards has achieved a modest cult status since opening in 2005, hence the occasionally aggressive prices. In a career change, John and Virginia Weber moved from Saskatchewan in 2001, taking over a partially established vineyard. Some of their vines are almost 20 years old and it shows in the depth of the wines. They have also persuaded several neighbours to plant grapes, notably Bordeaux reds to support Orofino's complex blends.

Orofino 2009 Riesling ($19.90) has immediate appeal with aromas of citrus and tropical fruits. Full on the palate, the wine delivers flavours of apricots and citrus fruits, with a well-balanced kiss of sweetness. 90.

The winery's Pinot Noir 2008 ($31.90) is delicious, rich and silky on the palate, with spicy aromas and flavours of strawberries. 90-91. The Red Bridge Red 2008 ($24.90) is 100% Merlot from a vineyard in Kaleden. The wine shows the classic lush texture that one wants in Merlot – long, ripe tannins. The flavours of plum, black cherry and coffee are framed subtly with oak. The wine has a lingering finish. 90.

The Beleza 2008 ($33.90) is the winery's Meritage blend, 60% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Sauvignon, 10% each of Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot (Beleza means beauty in Portuguese, we are told). Aged 16 months in new French and American oak, the wine is still tight; if you can't cellar it for a few years, decant it. It begins with an interesting sage aroma. On the palate, there are flavours of currants, coffee and vanilla. 88-90.

The winery also has just released two small lot wines. Petit Verdot Reserva 2007 ($45 and most of the 50 cases have been sold). The wine begins with perfumed spice and fruit aromas. On the rich palate, there are notes of red currant and raspberry. 89-90. The winery also has released 100 cases of Cabernet Sauvignon Reserva 2007 ($40), a bright and expressive wine with a firm texture, hints of cassis and an attractive finish of sweet fruit. 91.

OROFINO BELEZA ($33.90)

The word means “beauty” or a perfect feeling or moment in Portuguese, and the outstanding Keremeos winery gave its Meritage-style wine that appropriate name. Mostly Merlot (60 percent), plus Cabernet Sauvignon (20 percent), and Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot (10 percent each), it sat in oak for almost a year-and-a-half and came out inky-dark, all unfined and unfiltered. A special-dinner treat: rich and heady, it loves well-cooked rare meats and maybe even an after-dinner cigar if you do that sort of thing. Available primarily at the winery, sometimes in magnum too.

- Jurgen Gothe The Georgia Straight Thursday, August 12, 2010


RUBY SUITCASE WINE BLOG


May 30th, 2010

"Orofino riesling takes top wine of the night!"
http://www.rubysuitcase.com/index.php?s=Orofino

THE BACK LABEL

for Savour Life Magazine
Rob Dobson, April, 2010

RIESLING BLIND TASTING
Each time we've conducted a blind tasting at Savour Life, there have been some interesting and unexpected results. However, our recent blind tasting of Rieslings had our jaws hitting the floor when the wines were revealed and the results tabulated. Read on...

SAVOUR LIFE RIESLING TASTING – RESULTS

1st – Orofino Riesling 2007 (British Columbia; $20, purchased from the winery). This wine was produced by Saskatchewan natives John and Virginia Weber from their 18 year old vineyard in the Similkameen Valley. The scores ranged from 82 to 87.5 with an average of 84.7 points. Everyone on the panel liked this wine, with Ken scoring it highest for its “fruity, almost green apple, nose”.

2nd – Eroica Riesling 2007
3rd – La Frenz Small Lots Riesling 2007
4th – Studert-Prum Wehlener Sonnenuhr Kabinett 2004
5th – Wild Goose God's Mountain Riesling 2007
6th – Ex Nihilo Riesling 2006
7th – Tantalus Old Vines Riesling 2005
8th – Penfolds Eden Valley Riesling Bin 51 2007
9th Domaine Huber Bleger Riesling 2007
10th- Pentage Riesling 2006