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Bespoke by Bergin: Turning the Bottle into the Experience
For more than three decades, Bergin Screen Printing and Etching has set the standard for etched wine bottle decoration. While the bottles themselves have been widely showcased, the meticulous craftsmanship behind them has remained largely unseen, traditionally kept behind workshop doors in Napa Valley. Until now. “As wineries face evolving consumer expectations, the need to provide more compelling reasons to visit has never been greater. We’ve seen our clients actively seeking new ways to innovate, attract guests, and stand out. That’s where this idea started to take shape.” says Savannah Bergin, Director of Operations. With the launch of Bespoke by Bergin, a new chapter in wine hospitality begins, one that brings a legacy craft into the moment and invites guests to become part of it. At its core, Bespoke introduces a new approach to brand expression in wine, one that extends beyond the finished product and into immersive wine experiences. Rather than simp
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Spring Is Coming: Is Your Tasting Room Marketing Ready?
The weather is shifting, trip-planning season is underway, and tasting room traffic is about to pick up. This is the good news. The bad news? If you're reading this and thinking "we'll get to our spring marketing when spring gets here," you're behind. The tasting rooms that stay full from April through June aren't the ones with the best wine or the prettiest views. They're the ones that showed up in someone's planning process three weeks before the trip happened. People don't stumble into wine country on a whim and wander from door to door the way they did fifteen years ago. They research. They scroll. They book. And if your winery isn't visible and compelling during that research window, you're invisible when it counts. The hotel industry figured this out years ago. Marriott doesn't wait until summer to market beach properties. They start running "book your getaway" campaigns in late winter, because they know the booking win
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2026 Press Democrat North Coast Wine Challenge Now Accepting Submissions
On April 7-8, 2026, a collection of esteemed wine professionals will gather in Santa Rosa, Calif., to evaluate entries in the 2026 Press Democrat North Coast Wine Challenge. Competition managers are now accepting entries for the 14th annual NCWC, considered among the most prestigious wine challenges in the United States. This regional competition rates wines exclusively produced and bottled in Northern California’s premier winegrowing region to determine which wines are considered the Best of the Best. Eligible wines must be made from fruit sourced in the North Coast AVAs of Lake, Mendocino, Napa, Sonoma, Marin and parts of Solano counties. This includes any bottled wine labeled with these AVAs as their main source of grapes and whose winery is in California. “The Press Democrat North Coast Wine Challenge is unique in that only wines made from grapes grown in the six North Coast counties are allowed to enter,” says Daryl Groom, chief judge of NCWC. “With that, t
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Every Milliliter Matters: Affordable Filtration for High-Quality Wines
Techniques available to winemakers, especially for those crafting fine white and sparkling wines, have continued to evolve through the years, providing more sophisticated options for fine-tuning the style and complexity of their finished products. Winemakers frequently use cross-flow filtration for clarification and microbial stabilization of wine. The tangential flow of juice across the filter’s membrane surface limits clogging and allows continuous cleaning of the membrane. This technology is well-suited for wineries seeking very fine clarification during post-fermentation processing.  However, its highly automated machinery can be too expensive for smaller wineries, and its high product loss level is more impactful for small batch processing of high-quality wines. “Today, these smaller wineries use cross-flows from mobile services or manual systems, very likely pad filters,” says Massimiliano Buiani, Chief Operating Officer for JUCLAS, USA. “Pad filte
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Addressing Pyrazine in Wine
NAPA, Calif., (Nov. 26, 2025) – VA Filtration Services’ Scientific Approach, Innovative Solutions from Napa Valley At VA Filtration Services, our mission is to empower winemakers to produce wines of the highest sensory quality. One of the challenges in modern winemaking is managing undesirable levels of pyrazines, particularly methoxypyrazines, which can impart green, herbaceous aromas that mask fruit character and complexity. Winemakers are left with two options: cover up the pyrazine (and potentially other attributes) or remove it through advances in pyrazine remediation practices. The Problem: Pyrazines in Wine Methoxypyrazines are naturally occurring compounds in certain grape varieties, such as Cabernet Sauvignon and Sauvignon Blanc. While subtle concentrations can add a sought-after freshness, excessive amounts lead to pronounced bell pepper and grassy notes, often perceived as faults—especially in premium reds. Often pyrazines present in wine due to enviro
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Unlocking Flavor in Sparkling Wine: Join ATPGroup for a Trial Tasting at WIN Expo
Sparkling wine is one of the most expressive and technically demanding wine styles. Its character begins with the grape variety, the vineyard, and the production method, but the final sensory signature depends heavily on yeast. Yeast acts as the invisible winemaker, shaping aroma, flavor, texture, and bubble structure throughout both primary and secondary fermentations. Different strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae behave very differently under the challenging conditions of sparkling wine production. Low pH, increasing alcohol, and high pressure create an environment where only the right strains thrive. Equally important, each strain varies in its ability to create and release the flavor compounds that drive complexity and define style. When secondary fermentation takes place in the bottle and is followed by proper riddling, the yeast has an even greater influence on the final profile. To help winemakers better understand the impact of yeast selection, ATPGroup conducted a focused tria
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Growing High Quality White Winegrapes
The conversations I have about quality tend to focus on red wine. This is especially true in California, where Napa Cabs have historically garnered high prices, followed up by Coastal Pinot noirs and red Rhones. Honestly, in most places I’ve been where the climate allows for ripening red grapes, the reds are the main event with the whites being more of a warm-up act or even an afterthought. As a result, we know a lot about how to grow red grapes for quality – and less about how to grow whites. Consumer tastes are shifting though, and the big reds of yore are taking a back seat. Drinkers want lower alcohol wines with a lighter style and wineries are taking fewer risks with wine they can turn around in under a year. As a result, white varieties are in hot demand. If you’re a grower who can’t sell your grapes, you may very well be considering grafting some of your reds over to white.  So how do you grow a good white? In many ways whites are harder than their r
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The Art of Wine Color: Five Trends Shaping the Perfect Pour
Wine is as much a visual experience as it is about taste and aroma. The color of a wine plays an important role in shaping consumer perceptions, influencing purchasing decisions, and defining quality standards. In today’s evolving wine industry, color management is more critical than ever. Here are five key trends shaping the way winemakers approach wine color in 2025 and beyond. 1. Consumer Expectations: The Color of Quality When it comes to red wine, consumers have a deeply ingrained expectation of what the color should look like. From vibrant ruby hues in youthful reds to deep garnet tones in aged wines, color is often associated with quality. Whether purchasing a high-end bottle or an everyday table wine, consumers instinctively assess the color before taking their first sip. For winemakers, ensuring a wine’s color aligns with these expectations is key to maintaining brand trust and market appeal. 2. Varietal Typicity: Color Must Match Variety and Region Wine drinker
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Mobile Bottling - Precision, Cleanliness, and Care
Bottling day is more than just a finishing step - it’s a defining moment. The wine you’ve nurtured through harvest, fermentation, and aging is finally ready to meet the world. At Peregrine Mobile Bottling, we don’t just understand that moment - we respect it. We know how much time, labor, and heart goes into making great wine. That’s why we’ve built a mobile bottling service focused on three core values: advanced technology, uncompromising cleanliness, and genuine care. These aren’t just buzzwords to us. They guide everything we do - from the moment we pull up to your winery to the last case we help you stack. Let’s take you behind the scenes of what makes Peregrine Mobile Bottling different - and why more wineries across Napa, Sonoma, Mendocino, and San Joaquin counties are choosing us as their trusted bottling partner.Technology That Protects Your Craft Our bottling lines are designed with today’s winemaker in mind: precise, efficient,
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The Power of a Winery Blog: Driving Traffic and Wine Club Sign-Ups
Before someone joins your wine club or buys a bottle of your wine, they need to feel something. Not about wine in general—about your winery. They need to understand who you are, why you do what you do, and what makes your wine, your story, and your experience different. The challenge? That kind of trust doesn’t happen from a homepage, a product listing, or a one-off Instagram post. It takes time, space, and a story worth telling. That’s where a winery blog comes in. Your blog isn’t just another marketing checkbox—it’s a tool that builds relationships, earns trust, and moves visitors toward the next step: joining your wine club, booking a tasting, or becoming a loyal fan. A Blog Creates Trust Before the Sale Wine clubs are about commitment, and commitment starts with trust. Younger consumers, especially Millennials and Gen Z, don’t just buy wine; they invest in brands that align with their values and identity. A winery blog is where you can sho
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