Tuesday 29 September 2015

Amber Valley Wines Announce New Winery Planning Granted

Amber Valley Wines is pleased to announce that they have had planning permission approved to build a winery at its site in Wessington, Derbyshire, today.  The purpose built winery will hopefully be Derbyshire's first estate winery when it is built and opened. 

Barry Lewis, Director, said,

"North East Derbyshire has a proud history in the English wine revival of the last 50 years, being home to what was once the most northerly vineyard in the world for a time at Renishaw Hall, and the district looks set to continue that history by being home to its first estate winery."

"We are keen to generate local jobs in the village or its immediate surrounds, and contribute to the local economy and add an interesting feature to village life in Wessington."

The winery will provide over 850sq.M of floor space to produce wines, store equipment and provide a possible base for vineyard tours and cellar door wine sales. Once the winery has been constructed, an additional vineyard parcel will also be planted there, to complement the current aptly named Little Vineyard that is already there. 

Duncan Mercer said, 

"This is great news for us and the local economy. In many ways this is the easy part as we now embark upon the journey to securing the investment to built it." 

Tuesday 28 July 2015

Summer Round-Up!

If you’re a vineyard owner or manager the time between May and October is just bonkers, especially tending acres of vines!

Add into that the occasional vineyard tour and event, like the Belper Food Festival and Eroica Britannia. Holidays become something that other people have and you find your fun in things like, oh I don’t know, knocking in vineyard trellis posts, that sort of thing. 

Of course if you’ve been following events here and on our Amber Valley Wines and English Wine Shop Facebook accounts you’ll know we’ve been growing rapidly, selling our first vintage from last year and adding an expanding range of wines etc. We’ve also submitted our winery planning application this year, which has seen a not inconsiderable amount of time and effort (and money) invested.

The English Wine Shop has seen a steady month-on-month rise in sales, and ensuring our own wines made it to customers far and wide, and to local outlets like Hackwood Farm Shop, Croots Farm Shop and, major feather in the cap, Chatsworth Farm Shop. Take a look at our new English Wine Shop website here.

We’ve had volunteers join us in the vineyards too, making short work of winter pruning and, in the Spring, tying down and bud rubbing. Innuendo laden jobs if there ever was!  It is the help of these volunteers we’re most grateful for. You know who you are but let me say, you’ve no idea how much work you’ve helped us get through and your help is greatly appreciated. You’re efforts will hopefully shine through in next years wines! 

That brings me to the subject of weather: distinctly average is how I’d describe it so far this year, not too terrible but not good, despite some blistering days in earlier July. That said we’ve had good flowering, which in some parts of Doehole is still going on. Elsewhere fruit set looks pretty good. How the rest of summer and Autumn develops will determine the quality of the fruit and how it ripens. Overall, I’d say we need good late ripening weather in late September and all of October, perhaps even into November. So it’s fingers crossed!
Vineyard jobs like side shoot management, tucking-in, weeding and spraying happens when it happens at the minute, as weather, especially wind, dictates the pace alongside our work commitments – and as you’d imagine, it’s not as frequently as I’d hope! Thankfully, I’ve got Drew and Bill from the Really Green and Smart Garden Company doing sterling work mowing and keeping the weeds at bay! At the moment I’m concentrating my key efforts on getting the trelliswork work up in the little vineyard and on the western part of Doehole. All this I’m hoping will be done by the end of August. Then it’s into the new vineyard and the new rows in Autumn and that should see us fully caught up! 
Some of you will know that we’ve had some involvement with the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust in helping us look after our Doehole vineyards, after we spotted its wildlife and wildflower potential. This led to the designation of one of our fields as a Wildlife Site. It makes the management of our vineyards a bit trickier but we hope, in the long term, that it will benefit us and the wildlife by requiring reduced pest and weed management. In the meantime I am working to change the management regime in the orchard to encourage more wildflowers. 
Don't forget we're celebrating the signing of 3 new trade accounts for our wine with a summer sale on The English Wine Shop - simply enter the discount code "SCHOOLSOUT" at checkout & receive 15% OFF any order. www.englishwineshop.co.uk
Cheers Barry

Friday 3 July 2015

Amber Valley Wines land at Chatsworth Farm Shop

Exciting news for us at Amber Valley Wines, as our wines have been accepted onto the Chatsworth Farm Shop product list.


Our wines will be available in the shop from next week - available to you good people and the thousands of tourists that visit the estate & farm shop every year.


Chatsworth is a great addition to our trade partner list, don't forget you can also get our wines at the following outlets :

  • Croots Farm Shop, Duffield.
  • Hackwood Farm Shop, Radbourne (nr. Mickleover).
  • Hartington Cheese (The Old Cheese Shop), Hartington.
  • Huntely Green Deli, Cromford.
  • Marsh Green Farm Shop, Kelstedge (nr. Ashover).
  • Doctors Orders Pub, Sherwood.

Support your local produce heroes, shop local shop at the above outlets.

Our wines are of course also available online direct from ourselves :


Cheers
Duncan & Barry

Tuesday 16 June 2015

Winery Plans - Update

Further to our post earlier in the year, and some subsequent amendments to make this a full agricultural application, here are some details of our winery application :

15/00287/FL | Application for a winery building, associated hard standing and small ancillary COSHH storage | Land Approximately 150M To The East Of Stanford Back Lane Wessington.

We would encourage our supporters to go online at North East Derbyshire District Council to make comments. You can click on this link to see the plans and make comments :


We welcome any questions you may have you can contact us via our website in the usual way. 

Or email  barry@ambervalleywines.co.uk

Cheers Barry

Thursday 21 May 2015

Amber Valley Wines shortlisted for first award

We're pleased to announce that in the very first competition we've entered since releasing our wines we have been shortlisted in the "Food & Drink Producer" category for Derbyshire.

The Great Food Club are launching their inaurgural awards and we're shortlisted with 2 other Derbyshire producers - Croots Farm Shop & Lindsay's Still Room.  Tough Competition.

Thanks to all who voted for us, and now it's a judging system during the summer so wish us luck!

All other shortlisted companies & categories can be seen here : CLICK HERE

We must have done something right !  No doubt a lot of you already know, but if you don't then you can get the product right here CLICK HERE


Monday 11 May 2015

First Vintage Arrives

Well the wait is finally over - after setting up Amber Valley Wines 4 years ago, planting the main site 3 years ago we have our very first wines.

This really is an amazing feeling, and we can testify that the wines have come out superb - we're really chuffed with them and we're sure you will be too.

The Lindway White has developed as an Off Dry crisp white - with superb floral & citrus notes both on the aroma & palate. This will be a real pleasure to drink on it's own or with fish & pasta dishes. (Click the picture below to buy now).



The Lindway Pink is bursting with English Summer Berries again on both the nose & palate - we've kept it down to an Off Dry to avoid the sweet continental style pink's. Well balanced this will be a real crowd pleaser at your summer BBQ's. (Click the picture below to buy now).



As we've said before this being our very first commercial harvest it won't hand around for long - it's a small bottling run and a fair amount was snapped up in the pre-sale we ran at harvest time.

If you want to impress your friends this year with wine from Derbyshire - now's the time.



Monday 27 April 2015

Know The Grapes We Grow - Pinot Noir Precoce

Over the last couple millennia grape varieties have been crossed and changed to make all the modern grape varietals possible, but frühburgunder (/frūeh-bur-gūn-dur/) has remained unchanged for over 2000 years. It stands alone. 

Frühburgunder is the German name for the grape varietal called “pinot madeleine” in French and also sometimes “pinot noir précoce.” It is by far the oldest pinot and the others, such as pinot noir, pinot gris, and pinot blanc, share no ancestry with frühburgunder. 

It is a noble grape that is as rare as it is special, albeit is a favoured red grape in England due to it's earlier ripening.

The German name frühburgunder literally means that it is a pinot that ripens earlier relative to other pinots. “Burgunder” is used in German to mean a pinot because pinots are grown with well-known success in Burgundy, France and the German word for early is “früh.” 

Frühburgunder ripens usually in mid to late September with medium öchsle measurements. 

That is a couple weeks before the grape varietal spätburgunder (/shpāt-bur-gūn-dur/) (pinot noir) which means the “late pinot.” Frühburgunder is typically an intensely colored medium tannin red wine with pronounced strawberry, over-ripe cherry, blackberry and red currant tones. 

As frühburgunder ages it typically develops licorice and plum tones and then sweet wood and nutty nougat later.