You really admire these Arizona growers. The blood, sweat and tears is never so evident as when you work a day in a vineyard, work a day during crush, or work a day during de-stemming, which Katie and I have been fortunate to do over the years. Once you spend a day in their boots, or in their galoshes, if you will, you have a really good understanding of how much physical labor it takes just to get to a point where you start that maceration process, the fermentation, crafting the wine to where it's going to be, all of this just to get it into the bottle.
You’re also a judge for the annual Arizona Republic Wine Competition. I’ve done it the last 2 years, Katie last year. I’m humbled and blown away by it all. We’re tasting side by side with some pretty savvy palates. You have Mark Tarbell in the house, Greg Tresner, Master Sommelier at the Phoenician, Regan Jasper who does all the Fox wines; really big, big players. I remember thinking in 2013 there’s room for improvement, but some really great Arizona wines. Last year, I felt like there was a 5-year leap between 2013 and 2014 in the quality. I was getting a lot of our desert terroir coming through . I remember just sitting back and thinking, man, we are on our way. I mean, how cool is it right now to have this happening in our backyard and the exceptional quality that is being produced. When you start seeing Arizona in Food & Wine and written up in San Francisco Gate and winning awards, that adds validation and a credibility to what is happening.
Each one of these winemakers have their own personality. Maynard’s wines have become so elegant. I love where his wines are headed. Or Kent Callaghan, whose vines are so old, they have such a richness. I really get a telltale sign of terroir with the wet desert components, desert sage, things like that. There’s Rune out of Sonoita. James Callahan's wild syrah is awesome and he’s making some really cool wines that are both sophisticated and crowd-pleasing.