Spoto Family Wines said proceeds from its 2017 Oakville Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon with proceeds going to the Napa Valley Community Disaster Relief Fund. For more than 15 years, Spoto Family Wines has been making small batch Cabernet Sauvignon and Bordeaux-style blended wines from their home in Sacramento using grapes from legendary vineyard sites, including Oakville Station in Napa Valley and Beckstoffer Amber Knolls Vineyard in Lake County.
“It’s been an extraordinarily tough year for the industry, and we are dedicated to supporting our fellow Napa community as much as we can,” says Stuart Spoto, winemaker and owner of Spoto Family Wines. “The release of this wine represents the strength and resilience of the wine industry, faced with the pandemic and overcome with fires. Through it all, we are still doing what we do best – making really good wine that adds happiness to daily life.”
Sourced from one of the most historic vineyards in Oakville located due west of the “Welcome to Napa” sign in the heart of the Napa Valley, the just released 2017 Spoto Family Wines Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon is aged for 34 months in custom made Tonnellerie Leroi French oak barrels. With nearly 90% Cabernet Sauvignon from Oakville Station’s vineyard with small but perfect blends of Cabernet Franc, Merlot, and Malbec, this is a benchmark, cult-status Cabernet from the Napa Valley. The wine has an SRP of $150 and production of 100 cases.
Additionally, Spoto Family Wines recently trademarked the term “grappanc” – a combination of grappa and cognac – as they decided to distill wine from grapes that were damaged by the Napa fires in 2017. The Cabernet Sauvignon distillate is currently aging in a neutral French oak and will be ready for consumption in 2022, pending licensing.