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On the record ... with Rick Mamoser

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MW: So the drought will result in better wine?
RM: The quality of 2012 is going to be fantastic. The vines like stress and they like drought to a certain extent, but the grapes are more concentrated in flavor when there is less water absorbed into the plant.

MW: Do you specialize in red wine?
RM: The reds are my passion. I like to barrel-age them and it takes a while. It takes time for those wines to mature and develop in the barrel.

MW: It sounds like there is a lot of science involved in wine-making. What is your background?
RM: I am actually an ex-high school science teacher, chemistry and physics. I got my master’s from NIU in biology but they needed more chemistry and physics (teachers) at the school I taught so I ended up getting more hours in those. …Many of my winemaker friends refer to me with their science questions. The science really helps in the wine making. There’s an old saying about winemakers. They say, “If you own a winery you’re a farmer in the morning, you’re a chemist in the afternoon and you’re an accountant in the evening.”

MW: Did you start by making wine at home?
RM: Not until I moved out here about 20 years ago. A neighbor down the road had an apple orchard, so I started making wine during the summers and in the fall when I had some time. I just loved making wine at that point. And then my wife and I, she is a schoolteacher too, decided to try something different. By that time I had been making wine for several years and we just decided to go for it. It was the one thing I made that I liked that other people liked. My family and friends would try it and say, “Wow, this is really good.” Of course, that gives you the confidence to keep on going. I probably made wines from 50 different things and hundreds of batches before going commercial.

MW: So you learned as you went along?
RM: Oh absolutely. I immersed myself in as much education as possible. I read as much as I could, and I went to seminars in California, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, New York and Pennsylvania. …You just never stop learning.


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