Big Salt To Love Somebody Gewurztraminer 2018 Front Bottle Shot
Big Salt To Love Somebody Gewurztraminer 2018 Front Bottle Shot Big Salt To Love Somebody Gewurztraminer 2018 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

Nina Simone sang those words not with perfection, but with pure emotion - hoping one might feel what she felt. It is the lack of perfection that gives wine meaning, the admission that each year you can only do the best with what you're given. Ovum's best is to capture the imperfections and make them memorable - desirable. Even at the risk of being old-fashioned or forgotten. Sourced from the Gerber vineyard's 40-year-old vines.

Professional Ratings

  • 93
    John House has come out with another splendid gewurztraminer from Gerber Vineyard; its 40-year-old vines predate much of the pinot in the Willamette. This vintage is gewurz in a streamlined form, with dry litchi and lemon scents and a lean, sunny energy that keeps the wine elegant and lithe. It’s a magisterial white for lemon prawns.
Big Salt

Big Salt

View all products
Image for Gewürztraminer Wine content section
View all products

Gewürztraminer, an expressive and aromatically distinctive white grape variety, is considered a noble variety in the Alsace region of France, and produces wonderful wines in the mountainous Alto Adige region of NE Italy. Generally this grape grows well in cooler regions and its natural intensity makes it a great ally for flavorful cuisine such as Indian, Middle Eastern or Moroccan. Somm Secret—Because of a charming perfume and tendency towards slight sweetness, Gewürztraminer makes for an excellent gateway wine for those who love sweet wines but want to venture into the realm of drier whites.

Image for Rogue Valley Wine Oregon content section
View all products

As the the largest region in the greater Southern Oregon AVA, bordering California, the Rogue Valley AVA grows the most diverse array of grape varieties compared to any other Oregon appellation.

The Rogue Valley AVA is actually made up of three adjacent river valleys—not just one as its name suggests—Bear Creek, Applegate and Illinois. These valleys extend from the foothills of the Siskiyou Mountains, a coastal sub range of the Klamath Mountains. Most Rogue Valley vineyards are planted on hillsides at elevations of 1,200 to 2,000 feet where soils are metamorphic, sedimentary and volcanic.

On one end Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec, Tempranillo, Syrah and Sauvignon Blanc benefit from a warm and dry climate. To the west end of the Rogue Valley, cool-climate grapes like Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Riesling, Muscat and Gewürztraminer do best. Dolcetto, Grenache and Zinfandel also grow in the Rogue Valley AVA.

Early European settlers first started growing grapes here in the 1840s, the most famous of whom was a pioneer named, Peter Britt. He also opened Oregon’s first official winery (which later closed in 1907). Today, besides its great wines, the region is known for the Britt Music & Arts festival, which inhabits Peter Britt’s former hillside estate, and the Ashland, Oregon Shakespeare Festival.

Item# 676424