Wednesday, February 25, 2026

L.A., Save the Date | Sunday, May 3 Sonoma Valley's Organic and Biodynamic (S.O.R.B.E.T.) Winemakers To Pour at K&L in Culver City

Culver City, here they come. Last year's historic launch of S.O.R.B.E.T. at Fort Mason spawns a new southern California tasting this year. May 3 is the date.

See the post as intended - at Substack. https://organicwineuncorked.substack.com/p/la-save-the-date-sunday-may-3-sonoma

K&L Wines is bringing Sonoma Valley’s organic, regenerative and biodynamic winemakers (S.O.R.B.E.T.) and wines to Culver City for a grand tasting May 3. It’s the first time this group has poured at a K&L store or in SoCal.

Here all about it on The Wine Makers podcast.

The inspiration for the SoCal tasting came from K&L’s domestic wine buyer Ryan Woodhouse and Bedrock vintner Morgan Twain-Peterson who’ve connected. The Sonoma group had wanted to do a tasting in LA but the logistics were complicated. Thus, a great partnership was born.

K&L is also celebrating its 50th anniversary this year with a number of special tastings. And it is also opening a new store in New York City (announcement TBD).

California Wine Stars to Pour for SoCAL

This year is expected to bring together several dozen wineries, including some of the biggest stars–historic Hanzell, Bedrock, and Winery Sixteen 600, to name just a few.

Organizers pointed out, the S.O.R.B.E.T. tasting will feature a wide variety of wine styles and varietals.

The 2025 event featured 47 wineries pouring to a sold out crowd and also marked the debut of its signature, organic cotton teeshirt

“There’s already quite a few producers that are involved in S.O.R.B.E.T. that we work with and lots that I’m excited to start working with,” said Woodhouse. “I just thought it would great and mutually beneficial.”

S.O.R.B.E.T. started in 2025, after Sonoma Valley organic growers and vintners saw postings on Instagram of sheep grazing at vineyards they knew had just been sprayed with herbicide. (Not good.) They started trading snarky messages privately to their compadres (not the offending vineyard owners), outraged that herbicide loving vineyard owners would inflict this on rented flocks. And that the consumer might think the sheep were being responsibly treated.

As the organically farming community coalesced, they calculated that about at least 20 percent of the acreage in the Sonoma Valley appellation was either certified organic or farmed organically.

S.O.R.B.E.T. ’s Unique Requirement: Pesticide Use Report

To participate in S.O.R.B.E.T. tastings, producers must submit a pesticide use report (PUR) to the organizers showing they have not used any sprays prohibited under organic regulations. Required in California by state law, that standard report is submitted to state authorities annually and documents the sprays each grower uses. Organic farming does not allow synthetic herbicides, fungicides, insecticides or synthetic fertilizers.

Organic certification is not required, but using only materials permitted by organic regulations is a requirement.

The PUR for any property is publicly available from local county Ag Commissioners upon request. (I read them all the time).

Other specialized “eco” tastings have different standards.

• “Sustainable” wines do not require listing sprays used in order to pour at events.

• Raw Wine (a natural wine fair) does not require PURs, calls for organic farming (but does not require proof, partly because only California has PUR proof), does require native fermentation, and caps added sulfites and additives used in the winemaking process.

• Slow Wine does not require organic farming but does require producers to be transparent (in the winery entry in the book), describing materials used for plant protection, weed control and fertilizers on all vineyard sources (not just their own estates). Wines featured in the guide must be farmed without herbicide (though wineries can make other wines with herbicide). Many but not all of the wineries in the Slow Wine Guide farm organically and use only native fermentations.

(Speaking of which, the Slow Wine Guide for 2026 will be out shortly. Stay tuned. It is the last year Deborah Parker Wong and I will be the editors. It is a labor of love for us as well as for the 21 field contributors who work with us.)

Fine winemakers use limited amounts of sulfites, so pesticide use, not sulfites, is a good indicator of grape quality and often the resulting wine quality.

Are Consumers Looking for Organically Grown Wines? K&L Rep Says Yes

Speaking on the podcast, Woodhouse said, “We have a customer base that’s interested in it [organically grown wines], but I also see connection between wine quality and the ideology of folks…I think it makes better wine, growing it this way, making it this way. But I also think that’s not the only factor.”

“It is just better for our planet as well… if it tastes better, great, but we’re also doing a lot of positive beyond making great wine.”

Twain-Peterson said he was on a panel recently with Jason Haas, general manager of Tablas Creek, who he said told the group that among wines that carry the “made with organic grapes” designation, sales were up 15 percent year over year. “Which is in the current market a real thing,” Twain-Peterson added.

Grape sales are following a similar trend, he added, saying that Coastal Vineyard Care’s regenerative specialist Jordan Lonborg (formerly vineyard manager at Tablas Creek) said thousands of acres of grapes went unpicked on the Central Coast–which were not those being farmed regeneratively or organically. “Those were the first to go,” Twain-Peterson said. “It was the conventional stuff that usually is going into more production brand or whatever.”

“That’s the stuff that’s really in the crosshairs right now,” he said. “Here around the valley, we sold all our grapes last year,” before joking, “I have liked for them to be a little bit more expensive.”

MJ Towler (left), host of Black Wine Guy podcast speaks with Winery Sixteen 600’s Sam Coturri at the San Francisco debut S.O.R.B.E.T. event held at Fort Mason

Steeped in Organics | Sonoma Valley’s Unique Winegrowing Culture

Three of S.O.R.B.E.T.s’ founders all went to grade school together, providing some of the initial cohesion that got the group started. That group is Sam Coturri from Winery Sixteen 600, Morgan Twain-Peterson of Bedrock, and Katie Bundschu of Abbot's Passage Winery.

Their parents were all winegrowers and winemakers.

Said Morgan, collaboration is “something that I’ve always loved about Sonoma Valley in general…There is an element of community and an element of how can we collectively differentiate ourselves?”

Sonoma Valley does have the highest concentration of organically farmed vineyards in Sonoma County. Phil Coturri, the long time organic vineyard pioneer (and Sam’s father) has played a major role in evangelizing organic farming in Sonoma Valley (and on Moon Mountain) for close to 50 years.

“There is a very cool movement going on in Sonoma Valley,” Morgan continued, “that I think is very separate from what we’re seeing in other areas…And we want more people to be farming like that. Let’s continue the momentum.”

To that end, the group also offered its first Field Day in Feb. to share knowledge with their neighbors and friends.

Burgeoning Consumer Interest and Education

The biggest task ahead is helping consumers understand why better farming matters.

“I definitely think we see more and more interest in it all the time,” said Woodhouse. “I still think it’s something that needs defining in the eyes of the consumer. There’s a lot of confusion around it, which is another reason why I think doing an event like this is excellent.”

“You got a somewhat captive audience… and a bunch of producers that can speak to why they farm the way they do really well. We’re definitely seeing interest in that, especially with people that are in browsing the stores, like wanting that personal interaction–…it’s a little bit harder to know online and everything else, but we definitely mark wines as organic both online and in-store.”

“I think we’re going to see a huge interest in this event.”

See a list of producers at the S.O.R.B.E.T. 2025 tasting here and photos from the event here.

NEW! Tasting Is Believing | Taste the Difference Between a Conventionally Farmed versus a Regenerative-Organic Wine at My Upcoming Talk and Tasting March 12 At Berkeley City Club

I am giving a talk at Berkeley City Club March 12 where consumers can learn more about why farming matters and compare the difference from a unique trial where EVERYTHING BUT THE FARMING WAS THE SAME.

NOTE: I am mostly now publishing at my Substack, mainly because Google Blogspot changed their technical something or other and it will no longer let me post visuals!!! Please checkout the substack here if you're interested. I will sporadically post the headlines over here from time to time from the Substack but do not count on it.

Would you like to see for your self if the way a wine is farmed affects the taste or flavor? It’s difficult to have the opportunity, but in the last four years, Robert Hall Winery in Paso Robles conducted a ground breaking study designed to compare how conventional/sustainable farming versus regenerative-organic farming affects flavor, yield and costs.

The results have been dramatic both in data collected and in wine taste and price. And you can now find out for yourself by tasting these wines at a special event hosted at the Berkeley City Club March 12.

“The remarkable three-year study compared yields, costs, wine quality and more in a conventionally farmed vineyard and a regenerative organic one (supplemented with biodynamic herbal and mineral sprays and compost). The results show a dramatic difference in water retention, soil respiration, soil carbon, wine quality and yields,” I wrote in this article for Grape and Wine Magazine in Dec. 2024.

I first tasted the farming comparison wines side by side on site in the fall of 2024 at the invitation of Caine Thompson who was then general manager at Robert Hall and the impetus behind the trial. (He had conducted similar trials previously in New Zealand comparing conventional to biodynamic farming there.)

The difference between the conventional wines versus the regenerative wines was not subtle at all.

I am not one to use super flowery adjectives like many of my colleagues in writing about wine, but I do not think anyone could miss the difference in this tasting comparison.

Here is what was used on each comparison vineyard. (See substack version for this data and visuals).

The tasting side by side was an extraordinary experience that so impressed me that I then brought a team of the 15+ wine writers for Slow Wine USA (who all write for the annual book I edit on eco friendly wines under the auspices of Slow Food’s Slow Wine) along with me to a winery-hosted tasting with Thompson (who conducted the study). Some of the country’s best fine wine writers (including my close friend and colleague and sensory professor Deborah Parker Wong, co-editor of Slow Wine USA) were in attendance and could see the wines beginning to change even in Year One of the three year trial.

Image of the 48-acre trial site at Robert Hall Vineyard and Winery in Paso Robles, California. Five of these acres make up the conventional "control" blocks in the comparison trial. The other blocks are all regenerative organic.

The study used Agrology’s soil sensor technology to measure some of the soil carbon and temperature differences. You’ll find charts and more info in the article.

More info is also in a followup article in Wine Business Monthly by my good friend Bryan Avila.

The comparison vineyard soil types were the same.

The vinification was the same:

• Native Fermentation

• Add 30ppm KMBS at crush (keep at 20ppm)

• No enzymes added

• No oak added

• No tannin added

• Pump-over once per day

• No inoculation for MLF

• 100% French oak

Here are some of the study highlights:

• Regenerative blocks were cooler than conventional blocks (important to combat heat spikes as well as be more resilient in climate change)

• The winery found a 10 percent in increase in farming costs, but it turned a site with hardpan, dead and dry soil producing a $20 Cab into a now regeneratively organic certified wine it will feature nationwide at Whole Foods for $45.

• Locals could attend quarterly Field Days open to all to observe and ask questions. (Now as an indirect result of the trial, the Paso region has 50+ growers in a One Block Challenge group where they are implementing many of the soil health practices and no longer using herbicides).

A study on the financial aspects of the trial will be presented at the WiVi conference March 12 in Paso.

I have a new article coming out in Wine Business Monthly (in April) presenting three wineries’ case studies on regenerative farming.

EMAILED EVENT COPY


Eco wines are taking center stage these days and growing in popularity. From affordably priced every day wines to collectors’ treasures, there are pesticide free wines for all. In this talk, we will explore some of the reasons why eco wines matter (climate change resilience, taste and flavor, and water retention), certifications to look for, and recommended wines and wineries. We will also briefly explore tour options to learn more about local producers.

Bio
Pam Strayer is a freelance wine business journalist as well as a specialist in organic, biodynamic and regenerative wines. She writes for the wine industry at WineBusiness.com where she covers the latest eco developments. She also writes for consumers and the trade about ecofriendly wines at Slow Wine USA, writing for and editing the major consumer guide to U.S. wines-Slow Food’s annual Slow Wine USA guide, the only source that provides transparency about producers’ wine growing combined with wine expert recommendations.

She also offers trip planning in wine country and leads ecowine tours.

Pam was formerly the editor in chief of Dr. Dean Edell’s health website and later editor in chief for cancer genetics discovery company DNA Sciences led by Silicon Valley pioneer Jim Clark, where she also launched cancer genetics content for WebMD, fueling separate portals for consumers and for clinicians. She has also worked with Stanford Medical School.

A Silicon Valley veteran herself, she has also worked with Apple extensively, produced videos for the UN (its UN50 event in SF) and consulted to leaders at environmental groups, including Huey Johnson’s Resource Renewal Institute as well as 50 environmental directors under Earth Island Institute’s umbrella.

At this event, you’ll hear more about the 2026 Slow Wine guide (covering 400+ wineries and 1,200 wines) and learn why ecofriendly wines matter. Also covered: how wine is changing to adapt to new trends from organic and regenerative, options in non alcoholic or low alcohol wines and why boxed wines really are better (and how to find the best ones).

Enjoy reading her published industry articles at winecountrygeographic.com or her blog Organic Wines Uncorked (1.4 million page views and counting) or better yet at this substack (OrganicWineUncorked.substack.com). (I am no longer publishing new articles at my blog.)

My new articles are only on Substack.

You can also follow me on Linkedin at https://www.linkedin.com/in/strayer/

The evening will feature:

• a 45 minute presentation

• followed by a meal served at small tables of six

• a question and answer session over dessert with tea or coffee

UPDATE: We will also taste new Sauvignon Blanc and Cabernet Sauvignon from Robert Hall (with certified regenerative-organic farming) that will be in Whole Foods nationally. A representative from Robert Hall will also be present at the event.

Registration closes Monday, March 9 at 5pm.

If you would like to attend, please contact me directly to be put on the guest list. (You CANNOT book directly on the Berkeley City Club site.)

The fee to attend both talk, dinner and tasting is $37.

PS If you are coming from out of town and would like a hotel room, the Berkeley City Club also offers accommodations (which include the use of a famous Julia Morgan designed swimming pool).

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Napa's Organic Certification Achieved Major Growth in the 2020's PLUS Who Were the Pioneers? Napa's Organic Certification Timeline 1989-2026

We have move most our publishing over to Substack mainly because we can no longer publish photos here. (Google, what happened?) 

Substack subscriptions are free. (Or paid if you would like to support us, which we need, due to the state of wine magazine ads and the loss of our freelance clients).

 https://organicwineuncorked.substack.com/p/napas-organic-certification-achieved

Groundstar Vineyards Aims to Become First Certified Regenerative Organic in Sta. Rita Hills AVA

Groundstar article is published on our Substack newsletter. See it here and subscribe (free or paid). 

We are no longer able to publish photographs in our posts here (thanks Google, I don't know what you did)...so subscribe to our substack. Thanks.

Friday, February 6, 2026

Profiles in Courage | American Agitators Film a Loving Portrait of Fred Ross, Sr., Organizer Extraordinaire and Self Described Social Arsonist, Who Mentored Cesar Chavez and Delores Huerta

Feb. 2, 2026

At a sold out screening, an enthusiastic Marin crowd filled the hall in Larkspur for a rare screening of the life of Fred Ross, Sr.

(Above: Fred Ross, Sr., with Delores Huerta)

He was tall and lanky and handsome-raised a Southern California surfer-and certainly not the likeliest candidate for a life organizing farmworkers to vote and unionize.

Organic Wines Uncorked is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber on substack. 

But Fred Ross, Sr.’s life and significant achievements did not deserve to go undocumented, and the result, thanks to fine archival research and the filmmaking team headed by director Ray Telles (a Berkeley filmmaker whose earlier work has portrayed farmworkers’ fight for social and fair wages) is a compelling and magnificent–and very timely–reminder of how effective organizing and social movements can be…they can indeed move mountains, as Ross, Sr.’s life demonstrates.

To read the story go to the FREE substack newsletter here. (Having trouble posting visuals here, so I am migrating to substack.)

https://organicwineuncorked.substack.com/p/profiles-in-courage-american-agitators

Organic Evangelist and Luminary Dai Crisp of Temperance Hill and Lumos Honored in Oregon Wine Awards

Dai was a leading light for me (as he’s been to so many others) when I was trying to find my way into the organic circles of Oregon wine back in 2011. Being organic was still thought to be a bit dicey back then, and on my first professional visit to the Willamette Valley, organic growers were few and far between. Dai very graciously toured me through the amazing vineyard that is Temperance Hill, showing me its many microclimates and different exposures.

He’s been instrumental in sharing his knowledge and spreading the gospel about organic viticulture with many. The first Oregon Organic Winegrowing conference held in 2025 grew out of a conversation he had with Lemelson wine grower Rob Schultz. I was so fortunate to be invited to the conference and to cover it for WineBusiness.com. Here’s the article I wrote then, “Coffee, Collaboration and Community: Oregon Grower Group and Grand Cru Vintners Launch First Organically Grown Wine Conference,” which begins thusly…

A New “Grange Hall” Fueled by Coffee

It all started when Rob Schultz, who oversees Lemelson Vineyard’s seven, certified organic vineyards, and organic superstar grower Dai Crisp–he famously converted and certified the entire 100 acre Temperance Hill vineyard organic back in 2012-2014–were attending a viticulture event back in 2022.

“We were sitting together at the back, and they were talking about IPM–the basics, right? And here we were, two organic growers. I thought, ‘there should be an organic one of these.” Dai said, “There should be, and you should start it. I’ll call these people. You call those people. ‘Oh, cool.’”

GO TO the same story on substack to SEE THE PHOTOS https://organicwineuncorked.substack.com/p/organic-evangelist-and-luminary-dai. [Google has made it impossible for me to insert visuals here on blogger much to my chagrin.]

In the photo, Dai looks on at a session at the 2025 Oregon Organic Winegrowing conference held in McMinnville. The conference will be held again this year April 20-21 in McMinnville.

It’s no wonder that Dai is receiving the Founders Award from the Oregon Wine Board (press release below), after growing grapes for the greatest names in Oregon wine for 26 years at Temperance Hill. All organically. And at a time when that was even more uncommon.

Back in 2014, Wine & Spirits magazine called him “Grower of the Year” for his work at Temperance Hill. Today there are 29 wineries on the client roster. Today he’s handing on his knowledge of organic growing and building community.

• For those who want to continue the knowledge transfer and fun community, the 2026 Oregon Wine Growers Conference will be held April 20-21 in McMinnville.

• More info at https://www.organicwinegrowers.com.

Here’s a great interview with Dai from 2025 in which he describes how he transitioned from an interest in theater to his career in wine…and why Temperance Hill is called Temperance Hill. (You will never guess). He also recounts the story of the testing the spore trapping tech that saved a million vineyard sprays in Oregon alone and is now used globally. 

CONTINUED ON FREE SUBSTACK POST...https://organicwineuncorked.substack.com/p/organic-evangelist-and-luminary-dai.