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Ottimino was the eighth and smallest child of his family hence his name creatively constructed from Italian to mean "Little Eight." In 1913 Ottimino left a war torn Italy against his father's wishes to start a new life as a farmer in America. This decision probably saved his life as he was to learn later that most boys of fighting age from his town had perished in the war. The Winemaker:Ottimino's winemaker, William Knuttel, is uncompromising, ever curious, a winemaker’s winemaker. For him, wine is terroir and style and technique, and it is more than that, too. Wine is geography and it is a study in psychology—geography because the land nurturing the grapes stamps a character into the wine, and psychology because the experiences of past winemaking ultimately find their way into the current endeavor. First, vineyard sources are critical, and never to be undervalued. Second—and this sets Knuttel apart from winemakers who lip-synch the marketing mantra “the wine is made in the vineyard—” there is no substitute for experience, intuition and innovation in transforming those grapes into fabulous wine. After all, no one credits the farmer for the wizardry of the chef, though the chef understands perfectly that his dish can be no better than its ingredients—likewise the winemaker, realizing that the growing of grapes is the first step of two in a highly subjective process. You must feel your way through the winemaking, guiding, shaping and molding by instinct, responding to the inherent beauty of the fruit. |
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