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On the record ... with Rick Mamoser

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MW: Is that because you don’t think people appreciate Illinois wine enough?
RM: The biggest thing winemakers in Illinois are trying to overcome is the idea that the middle of the United States can’t produce high-quality wines to the extent that New York can, or California, and that’s simply not true. …There’s a lot of great wine potential in the Midwest. Part of my job is to make the best wine possible with the best grapes possible to share with people and let them know that we are making high-quality wine.

MW: What kinds of wine do you make?
RM: They’re not all sweet wines. The three wines we won “best of show” with are all barrel-aged dry reds. We do make sweet wines because there’s a whole new area of the market that are drinking sweet red wines. If you notice nationally, sweet reds, which you couldn’t find on the market five years ago, are becoming more and more popular. In fact, moscato is the fastest-growing variety in the United States.

MW: Where do you get your grapes?
RM: The grapes are from southern Illinois. I like the dry red grapes down there. We bring them up and I just love making the wine right here in Genoa.

MW: Is the northern Illinois climate not as good for growing grapes?
RM: The northern Illinois climate is not good for the kinds of grapes that people are familiar with – cabernet, merlot, chardonnay, sauvignon blanc, shiraz, pinot noir, pinot grigio – these can’t really grow in the Midwest. …The key is making good-quality wine, but not necessarily with the varieties of grapes they are familiar with.

Some of my whites do come from northern Illinois. …People don’t realize that there are 300 varieties of grape wines in the classic wine-growing regions of Spain, France, Argentina, Chile, Yugoslavia (now Kosovo), Germany. There are a lot of grape varieties out there that are not the top five or 10 that people think of, but they really make high-quality wine and that’s what gives a lot of variety to this industry. You never get tired of drinking wine because there are so many choices out there.


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