Anchored Roots “The Summit” Red Blend 2018

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Eric and Amy Gale are the owners and sole full-time employees of Anchored Roots, Door County, Wisconsin’s newest winery, founded in 2020.

The couple make an ideal front-of-house/back-of-house duo. Amy grew up in Milwaukee, with hospitality at the forefront of her career path. Her initial focus was event planning, from non-profit fundraisers and catering, to corporate events and weddings. This was followed by experience in tasting room management at Airfield Estates in Prosser, Washington.

Eric was born and raised in Luxemburg, Wisconsin. Perhaps predictably, while he was growing up he worked summers at a neighbor’s 60-head dairy farm.  However, his academic bent led him to a Bachelor’s degree in biology with a minor in chemistry.  He then pursued a Masters in Viticulture at Washington State University.  After graduation, he landed a job at Chateau Ste. Michelle, Washington state’s oldest winery.  His primary responsibility was overseeing the Cold Creek vineyard, Ste. Michelle’s first, originally planted in 1972.

Eric and Amy Gale

Although their lives in the wine world were nurtured in Washington, when they decided to open a winery of their own, Wisconsin beckoned.  As Wisconsin natives, they both grew up spending time on the Door Peninsula with families and friends, and they felt that the story of Door County terroir was worth telling.

Eric believes that 80 to 90 percent of a wine’s quality resides in the grapes.  He sources his from growers in northeastern Wisconsin as well as from growers he worked with while in Washington.  However, because of his commitment to local sourcing as well as transit challenges, Anchored Roots also has a six and a half acre estate vineyard where he is experimenting with a dozen cold-weather varietals. The first planting in 2020 of three acres of vines included Marquette, Frontenac, Itasca, St. Croix, St. Pepin, Petite Pearl, La Crescent, and Louise Swenson. In 2021, an additional three acres were planted with Adalmiina, Frontenac Gris, and L’Acadie Blanc, as well as an expansion of the Itasca, Marquette, and Petite Pearl blocks. In 2023, came a 1/2-acre planting of Frontenac Blanc. Eric expects his first estate harvest in the fall of 2024.

The Anchored Roots winery.

A voracious reader, Eric is largely self-taught as a winemaker.  This has freed him from many of the hide-bound traditions and prescriptions of the wine industry.  The winery is steam sanitized, reflecting his commitment to cleanliness.  He practices dry farming, which simply means growing grapes without adding additional water. This requires both patience and nerve, as the grower is at the mercy of natural precipitation.  He relies on Integrated Pest Management, also known as integrated pest control,  a broad-based approach that integrates both chemical and non-chemical practices for economic control of pests. The winery uses no capsules on the bottles, as Eric feels this is both a needless waste and expense.

Perhaps Eric’s biggest innovation is in the use of wood in his winemaking.  Because new oak barrels can cost around $1400, many small wineries use wood chips for aging their wines, or forego wood entirely.  However, Eric uses Squarrels, a rather goofy yet apt name for a product from the Minnetonka Brewing and Equipment Company.

The Squarrel

The Squarrel is a reusable square stainless-steel frame that uses individually-cut flat staves. The staves are American White Oak or French Oak (although there are plans to offer additional species), in cross-cut or uncut wood, and four toast, or char, levels. Replacement staves are delivered in shoebox-like shipments, greatly reducing transit costs. Traditional barrel staves are about 35″ long, but since the Squarrel staves are 14″ long they are essentially scraps from the barrel-making process, further reducing costs.

Eric states that the Squarrel offers the best of both worlds for a small producer.  It is much more cost-effective than a traditional barrel (the infinitely reusable frame is about half the cost of a barrel), but offers more integrated oak texture and flavor than wood chips, especially because the staves can be custom toasted.

Moving forward, the Gales plan to invest in even more innovative winery equipment, to expand the vineyard acreage, and explore new varietals, especially those suited for sparkling wines.

Anchored Roots “The Summit” Red Blend 2018

When it comes to wine tastings, my friends and I have occasionally discussed the “resort effect.”  You’re on vacation, you’re relaxed, you decide to visit some local wineries.  You enjoy the wine and buy a few bottles.  Days or weeks later you get around to opening one of those bottles and you exclaim, “What was I thinking?!  This juice is awful (or at least disappointing).  Sometimes called the Cape Cod of the Midwest (to locals’ chagrin), some Door County wines are certainly susceptible to the resort effect. Eric Gale’s selections seem to be immune.  He is making serious wines, to be enjoyed whether on vacation or after a stressful day at work.  

This wine is a blend of 76% Syrah, Eric’s favorite varietal, and 24% Merlot, both from Washington’s Columbia Valley AVA.  In the glass it is a moderately transparent deep red, with a tinge of brick on the edges.  The subtle nose features dark fruit.  On the palate, there is an intentional Old World restraint, offering flavors of black currant, violet, cocoa, black pepper, and oak.  The savory profile is supported by gravelly tannins.  ABV is 14.2%.

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