June 13, 2009
Midwestern winemakers seek their own label
Page 2 of 2
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"We have to have grapes that are hardy enough to survive a cold winter, and they also have to be disease-resistant because of our humid summers,'' O'Brien said.

In California, 107 viticultural areas already run the gamut from the sprawling 2.6 million-acre Sierra Foothills to the modest 4,000-acre Sonoma Valley.

Recently, though, the naming trend has gone global. Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley and the Snake River Valley in Oregon and Idaho were the most recently designated regions. Nor is designation strictly correlated with production.

The eight viticultural areas in Texas, for instance, number only one fewer than in Washington state, although wine production in the latter is nearly 20 times that of Texas.

In every state, boosters can cite their respective credentials quickly. Iowa officials, for instance, say that their state was once ranked sixth nationwide in grape production.

The year was 1919.

Big as it is, the proposed Upper Mississippi River Valley proposal seems to have excited little outside interest. Northey, the Iowa agriculture secretary, was apparently the only individual to submit written material to the Treasury Department during a public comment period that expired in October.

The Treasury Department hasn't indicated when it might rule.

ON THE WEB

Tabor Home Vineyards Winery Web site: http://www.taborhomewinery.com/

Wide River Winery Web site: http://www.wideriverwinery.com/

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