Lehigh Loves Oregon Wine – The Story Behind the Flavor with Winemaker Aaron Lieberman from Iris Vineyards
Lehigh Loves Oregon Wine – The Story Behind the Flavor with Winemaker Aaron Lieberman from Iris Vineyards
Sure, Oregon Wine is world-famous for its Pinot Noir. And rightly so, as the area produces incredible expressions of the varietal. But thatâs not all they can do.Â
Award-winning winemaker Aaron Lieberman wants the world to taste and discover all of the incredible wines from the area including Iris Vineyardsâs new Pinot Gris which has won acclaim several years in a row.
Today, Winemaker Aaron Lieberman from Iris Vineyards sits down over zoom to talk about his inspirations, his favorite wines, food pairings and whatâs next for Oregon Wine.
The conversation has been edited for length and clarity. Find the whole conversation on our YouTube channel.
Thereâs so much to go over with you because youâre in a great area of Oregon.
Last year we had the privilege of covering the 2022 McMinnville Wine Classic, your Pinot Gris won Best in Show and Best White varietal.
According to press announcements itâs the first time ever for a Pinot Gris. What was it about that bottle and that year that brought you so much acclaim?
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The vintage we won that on was the 2020, and I think our Pinot Gris is fairly consistent. So I actually personally felt that the 2021 vintage was better than the 2020. What I think is going on there is that in our growing area Southwest of Eugene we have our vineyard in whatâs called the Lorane Valley. Weâre a relatively high elevation vineyard compared to the rest of the Willamette Valley. We get a lot more hang time on our Pinot Gris, which allows more flavor development and preservation of acidity, as well as slower and lower accumulation of sugar.
So we ended up with a higher acid, lower alcohol wine thatâs very expressive in terms of fruit flavors.
I wanna let our audience know a little bit about your background and what brought you to where you are today. Your education in soil and winemaking, but I hope youâll touch on your Peace Corps time, and your work in Guatemala with soil education.
As I was finishing up my Bachelorâs Degree at Oregon State University, I became involved with a couple of different grad students, helping them with their research projects, basically. At the beginning of my junior year [I had already] switched my major from Pre-Vet to Crop and Soil Science.
So the projects I was working on with these grad students involved soil research. One of these grad students had been in the Peace Corps and talked about it frequently and also had a professor who had been in the Peace Corps. They both inspired me to look into it and do it.
I ended up going to Guatemala. The project I worked on was called Corn and Bean Seed Improvement and Post Harvest Management. We were trying to counteract the invasion of commercial corn seed into Guatemala and Latin America. Itâs replacing the land raise varietals or the traditional varietals of corn. We were working with those traditional varietals to improve their performance in the field by selecting the plants that were growing well and were the most disease resistant.
The program started four years before I got to Guatemala, so I was the third volunteer and we were really showing some really good results.
Something I love about winemaking is such a mix of science and magic, or science and artistry. And it sounds like science is very strong with your background and the magic that you bring to the bottle.
Yes, I would agree with that.
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So letâs switch back from Guatemala. Youâve got some great soil types. Letâs talk about how you use the soils in your region to bring such delicious flavor, characteristics and aromas.
In our vineyard, we do have some Jory soils, and I think most people who know about the Willamette Valley know that Jory is the preferred soil in the region particularly for Pinot Noir.
Our vineyard is dominated by Bellpine soil. Bellpine is kind of an analog of Jory, but itâs formed in sedimentary rock rather than basaltic rock or volcanic rock. So thereâs some significant differences in the chemical makeup of the soil that contributes to the flavor difference in our Pinot Gris compared to some others.
The last time I visited, what I heard overwhelmingly from the winemakers is you have to be okay with inconsistency year after year.
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I want my wines to represent the area that theyâre from and the varietal from which theyâre made and different weather during each growing season as part of that representation.
So based on the weather and the level of ripeness of the fruit and what weâre tasting in the grapes before we bring them in, we will make some adjustments to how we do the vinification to try to push it in one direction or another, to be at least somewhat consistent.
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Letâs talk about the wines themselves.Â
Letâs start with the Pinot Gris. The comment I hear the most is white peach. Thatâs new. I usually hear pear, red apple peel, quite a bit of citrus.
Commonly I get stone fruit comments on our Chardonnay. Whether itâs our still Chardonnay or our Blanc de Blanc.
Then thereâs the Brut Rose, the Pinot Noir 2021, the House Red Blend. A lot of people will remember 2020 and how that vintage went for us. I refer to that year as the worst year of my life.
Letâs talk a little bit about what made it such a bad year.
We had beautiful weather during bloom. I started to feel like it was going to be a really great vintage. Weâre seeing a really modest crop load and smallish berries, which leads to more fruit forward. Right around Labor Day, the major fires started. Smoke came into the valley for about two weeks which was extremely disheartening.
In the Willamette Valley that was really our first experience with that level of damage to the fruit. So a lot of people were scrambling, worried, and ultimately didnât produce Pinot Noir in 2020.
We made less than we had planned. We applied some techniques to mitigate the smoke effect.
Can we talk about what you did to mitigate?
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Well, there are two things that helped the most. One, we sent some grapes to California to go through a process called flash. Itâs a kind of thermovinification method where the must is heated to 80 degrees celsius and then pumped into a vacuum chamber that boils at a much lower temperature. The water and the skins of the grapes âflashesâ to steam in the the vacuum chamber. That steam carries away a lot of bad things. Those things are responsible for the bulk of the smoke effect that you might find in a wine.
Then following vintage and some aging, we did some reverse osmosis to remove the smoke effect from the rest of our wine.
At the tail end of vintage, I had surgery for appendicitis. As I was about recovered from that, I got covid right at the end of 2020.
Fortunately â21 and â22 were very similar to 2020 and how the vintage started and ended up, we had some really beautiful fruit and beautiful wines. Iâm really excited about â22 based on what we have in barrel right now.
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Some people approach wine from a food and wine pairing point of view. Iâm not sure if you are a chef or a home cook, but do you have any suggestions for great food pairings for some of your bottles?
I think with our Pinot Gris, I really enjoy seafood.
Itâs really good with salad. Brut Rose, I always say if youâre making a dinner and youâre not quite sure what wine to serve with your dinners sparkling wine is always a a crowd pleaser. Itâll go with dishes from salad to steak or pizza. The acidity of sparkling wines makes them really versatile in any kind of food. Fatty foods in particular pair well with more acidic wines, kind of a palette cleansing.
For our Pinot Noir, traditional pairings like salmon and chicken.
When youâre going through a year, from growth to harvest, what are the traits or elements that get you excited saying itâs gonna be a good year?
Last spring we had a couple of fairly severe frosts after bud break and it was an interesting year because of that. We ended up, to everyoneâs surprise, with a vintage that was quite nice and yields that were not really affected by the frost. The vines bounced back with their secondary and tertiary buds set fruit, set a really good crop. We got a nice batch of wine out of it.
If we get into harvest in the rainy season, sometimes your hand is forced and the grapes start to get ripe, the skin softens an they become more susceptible to botrytis and other bad things that you donât want.
But â22 was nice. We werenât really forced right up until the end. Around October 20, we had the first big rainstorm come in. 20% of our fruit still hanging. We brought most of it in before that big rain.
But I think we had really good ripeness even at that point.
Youâve been doing in-person and zoom wine tastings, do you have a favorite part of that wine tasting process?
My favorite part, without a doubt, is just when I see somebody tasting my wine and the look on their face shows me that theyâre really enjoying it. Thatâs a big reason why Iâm in this industry, what we do makes people happy.
Do you have a certain memory of including either your wine or someone elseâs wine in a great celebration?
Several memories. My father and I had a wine business of our own from 2002 to 2015. [A few years in] we had a celebration at a steakhouse in Portland. I ordered a Puligny Montrachet off the menu. I still remember that wine quite vividly and how impressive it was. That changed my mind about chardonnay in some ways.
In Oregon, thereâs a lot more chardonnay coming out of the Willamette Valley now is a good thing, but itâs still been an uphill battle for producers to get that chardonnay wine passed the gatekeepers, the distributors.
You go to a distributor and theyâre like, âEverybody drinks California Chardonnay or white burgundy. They donât know about Oregon Chardonnay. And when you say Willamette Valley, everybody thinks Pinot Noir, which is great. But weâve kind of pigeonholed ourselves with that. There are a lot of other nice things that can come out of this valley like Pinot Gris and Chardonnay. So we have some work to do on the marketing and publicity to let people know.
Any lessons your winemaking team has learned this past vintage that you can share?
 I think that happens every year. Letâs not assume that I know everything because I learn stuff every year as well.
One of the things that I really stress with people who are working for me during harvest, is the importance of fermentation temperature.
Itâs with white wine, with aromatic whites in particular. You really have to keep the temperature under control. Yeast likes to get hot and ferment fast, so you have to keep those ferments cool, whatever the method is if youâre in stainless with jacketed tanks or if youâre in barrel and youâre taking the barrels outside at night or wetting them down to keep the temperature down. Itâs super, super important.
With the white wines, you get a temperature or a fermentation thatâs too hot and you end up with a wine thatâs like generic white wine. It doesnât have varietal character left in it, thatâs something I stress a lot.
Then when you talk about red wines, the style of red wine that youâre making is so dependent on a lot of things, but temperature is a big thing. So if you do a cool ferment on a red wine, youâre going to have a red wine thatâs fruit forward and aromatic, but itâs not going to be very extracted. Itâs not gonna have a big tannic backbone to it. In that way it would be out of balance.
Like with our Willamette Valley Pinot Noir, we do a couple of different fermentation methods that end up having different peak fermentation temperatures and then we blend them together to get a wine that is crowd pleasing, easy balanced. So one of my big things is temperature.
Are there any topics in winemaking that you wish got more attention?Â
The fact that I donât do this alone. If I didnât have a team behind me doing the right thing and supporting production in the winery, starting with our vineyard and our vineyard manager, who is amazing, grows amazing fruit, all the way through to the marketing team selling the wine or promoting the wine and the sales team selling the wine. I think itâs really important for people to understand that itâs really a team effort. Iâm the winemaker, I get the publicity, I get the recognition but thereâs no way I could do it by myself.
Iâm sure you talk to young winemakers all the time. Is there one huge piece of advice you would give a young winemaker from all your experience?
A big thing would be, and Iâve made this mistake when I was a young winemaker, if youâre about to do something to a wine and you think you know what youâre doing, but youâve never done it before, make a phone call.
Ask another winemaker that maybe has had the experience and has done that. Youâve got a 5,000 gallon tank of wine and youâre gonna do some kind of adjustment that youâve never done before. Get some information first.
Building network, building community, reaching out to those with either more experience or more diverse experience.
Yes. And in most wine regions, it is a community and people are happy to share their information to help the next guy out. Because ultimately, if weâre all making really good wine in the Willamette Valley, that enhances our reputation as a region. So I think it would be a big mistake for us not to share information.
Letâs talk about where people can find more information.Â
On Iris Vineyards website and social media. Our website is IrisVineyards.com and our handle on every social site is @IrisVineyards.
So thank you again for your time, and it was, it was great to have this conversation.Â
Thank you, Joe. I really appreciate your time.