Misaligned with reality is the belief that New Mexico, one of the fifty states that comprise the United States of America, is part of the country of Mexico.  Yet this bizarre legacy of poor high school geography education persists.

Rio Grande River Valley in Northern New Mexico – this is actually wine country

A reputable New York accounting firm once prepared my mother’s income tax statements.  They then mailed copies of these tax returns to her for review.  Unfortunately, they sent them not to New Mexico, USA, but to – Mexico.  The country.  Days later the envelope was returned.

The monthly magazine New Mexico has a column titled, ‘One of Our 50 is Missing,’ which details these stories, which are legion.  For example, residents of New Mexico routinely phone Washington DC regarding a job they may have applied for, only to be told, ‘we only accept applications from the United States’ before the phone hangs up.

It doesn’t matter.

The long, rich, and varied history of New Mexico gives its residents a full sense of pride and identity.  They don’t care what others think, and laugh when others believe they are a different country.

Even though all 50 states of the United States produce their own wines, many winemakers in several states, or regions of these states, are undecided as to which grape suits them best.  The Napa Valley of California has Cabernet Sauvignon, while Missouri has Norton.  The Finger Lakes region of New York has Riesling.  But what about northern New Mexico?

Driving from Santa Fe to Taos this afternoon, I saw a sign that made me jam on the brakes, pull over, and park in a gravel lot.

The sign read: Black Mesa Winery.

Continuing a Four Century Old Tradition

I parked, walked inside and soon talked to the owner, Jerry Burd.

“I was living in California, Modesto, tired of what I was doing.  I had a farming background from Loveland in Colorado.  I thought that if I want to own a vineyard, California was not the place [too expensive], so I moved to Oregon and realized that working for someone else would not give me freedom. So the boss taught me winemaking.  After that I wanted to get back to this part of the country.  And here we are.”

Jerry took over the winery in the year 2000, and has more than doubled the wines produced to thirty – including Chardonnay, Sangiovese, Pinot Noir, Petite Sirah, and Zinfandel.

“There’s the creativity, the getting dirty, the chemistry, and the magic that keeps you humble.

Jerry abandoned California and Oregon to make New Mexican wine

“I bought bottling machinery, and now also bottle for four other wineries around here.  I guess the challenge is producing a consistent wine in such a fashion that it’s better every year.  The greatest competition is myself.  I’m the competition, and I’m the biggest challenge.

“The future?  New Mexico is doing some really neat wine.  We’ve been doing it for 400 years!”

[In the year 1633, Spanish colonists began producing sacramental wines in Senecu in what is now New Mexico.  They thumbed their noses at a Spanish law that forbade grape planting in the New World in order to protect the agricultural market for Andalusian farmers back in Spain.  Since then, wine has been part of New Mexico’s heritage.]

Jerry continued.

“This Velarde Valley connects to Espanola along the Rio Grande River.  We see the potential for more wineries and a lot more grapes.  We’re fortunate being between Santa Fe and Taos, because they both have so many tourists.  Our future is here.

“I’m planting Pinot Grigio, Syrah, Montepulciano and others.  But Malbec is being planted up and down this valley and seems to be taking off.  I’m hoping that Malbec and Tempranillo are what New Mexico will be known for.”

I sampled a Viognier (which won three gold medals in a Napa Valley competition last year – two for the wine, and one for the label produced by Jerry’s wife, Lynda), and a Sauvignon Blanc that smacked deliciously of grapefruit.

Craftsmanship = Winemaking and Label Art
Nice job, spouse.  We make quite the team.

After that I sampled a Tempranillo, and a Syrah.  Both were peppery, and the Syrah was smooth enough to make me think I might be in California’s Central Valley instead of New Mexico.

Nice job, Jerry.

I keep remembering what he said about creativity, chemistry, getting dirty with work, and the ‘magic that keeps you humble.’

Sage words.

Although northern New Mexico has yet to find its wine identity, the people of New Mexico know theirs.  Much of the rest of the country has yet to learn that New Mexico is a member of their family…filled with magic.

http://www.blackmesawinery.com/Home

Sundowner Syrah in Adobe Country

This Post Has 3 Comments

  1. Wow! Guess we better add a few more NM wines to our repertoire! Great photos!

  2. I love the shadow in the glass. He’s diving head first into the wine. Looks yummy.

  3. Thanks all…Jerry the owner wrote me an email, saying:

    “very, very nice—thank you–and especially for mentioning my wife Lynda–we wouldn’t be near the winery we are without her talents.”

    Nice to hear that the two form a powerful pair.

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