Hudson River Valley Wineries

This blog is dedicated to news, events, profiles and reviews of fine food and wine in the Hudson River Valley. We especially feature and spotlight the burgeoning wineries of the Hudson River Region. We accept and will relay information about releases, events, festivals and any toher happening related to food and wine in the Hudson River Valley. Send pertitnent information to hudsonriverwine@yahoo.com

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Location: Catskill, NY, United States

Carlo DeVito has traveled around the US, France, Spain, Chile, Canada, and Italy. He has been a publishing executive for more than 20 years. He shepherded the wine book program of Wine Spectator as well as worked with Kevin Zraly, Oz Clarke, Matt Kramer, Tom Stevenson, Evan Dawson, Greg Moore, Howard Goldberg, and many other wine writers. He has also published Salvatore Calabrese, Jim Meehan, Clay Risen, and Paul Knorr. He has also publisher such writers as Stephen Hawking, E. O Wilson, Philip Caputo, Gilbert King, James McPherson, Michael Lewis, David Margolick, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., John Edgar Wideman, Stanley Crouch, Dan Rather, Dee Brown, and Eleanor Clift. He is also the founder of Hudson-Chatham Winery, co-founder of the Hudson Berkshire Beverage Trail, and former president of the Hudson Valley Wine Country. His the author of more than 20 books including The New Single Malt Whiskey, Big Whiskey, and the forthcoming The Spirit of Rye. https://carlodevito.wordpress.com/

Friday, July 17, 2015

HUDSON-CHATHAM WINERY TANNERSVILLE NOW OPENED!

 
Hudson-Chatham Winery Tannersville is now opened! The new branch store of Columbia County's first farm beverage business has now opened a store and wine bar on Main Street in Tannersville, NY! Tastings, sales, food stuffs, and local cheeses are available!

Tuesday, July 14, 2015

Catskill Eats Raves About Hudson-Chatham Winery Tannersville!

Catskill Eats
Wine Tasting Room Joins Greene County Craft Food Boom
Hudson-Chatham Winery joins Mama’s Boy Burgers, American Glory BBQ and other new businesses in Tannersville. Also, a new brewpub is coming to Windham.
A Columbia County winery has crossed the river to open a tasting room in Tannersville. Photo by Catskill Eats
An established Columbia County winery has crossed the river to open a tasting room in Tannersville, the newest of several eating and drinking establishments that have recently debuted in the Greene County mountaintop village.

Hudson-Chatham Winery, which has been making award-winning wines using all New York State grapes since 2008, is scheduled to pour its first tastings this Saturday, July 18, barring any last-minute paperwork delays with its state permits, said Carlo DeVito, who operates the Ghent, N.Y., winery with his wife Dominique.

“We’re really excited to be here, and to throw the doors open and start pouring,” said DeVito, who hosted an open house over July Fourth weekend to show off the tasting rooms and lounge area, which will have a wine bar feel.

The tasting room will be open from noon to 5 p.m. on Friday, Saturday and Sunday to start, and will adjust its hours as the business develops, DeVito said. It will offer tastings of its own wines, bottle sales and special events featuring other local and regional products such as bourbon. It is not a restaurant, but will offer a cheese plate showcasing crackers, breads and cheeses from Columbia and Greene counties. Other prepared foods that Hudson-Chatham develops with fellow Hudson Valley producers, such as jams, will also be for sale. The DeVitos saw an opportunity to bring their products to a Catskills audience that might not travel to the main winery, and also a chance to tap into a ski crowd that will boost business in the winter months, which are slower at the winery.

“We feel like we can offer something that’s not available in the area now,” DeVito said. “We were seeing so many good stores and restaurants and other purveyors coming into Tannersville, and thought, ‘This is the place we want to be.'”

The Hudson-Chatham Winery's Tannersville location will host tastings of its own wines each weekend, as well as events featuring other producers and live music. Photo by Catskill Eats
 

The Hunter Foundation purchased the building, which previously housed a candle shop, and then rehabilitated it in collaboration with the new tenant, bringing a black-and-white decor that echoes the original winery’s design. In addition to the interior space, there is also a spacious patio around back, which will offer outdoor seating.
The building, which was formerly home to a candle shop, now sports a rear patio for outdoor seating. Photo by Catskill Eats
 

The new tasting room joins several other new spots that have opened in recent months or are scheduled to launch soon in and around the Tannersville/Hunter/Windham area of Greene County. They include two other Hunter Foundation projects, American Glory BBQ and Mama’s Boy Burgers. American Glory BBQ, just across the street from the new winery building, is closing in on its first anniversary, having opened in August 2014. Just a few blocks away, Mama’s Boy Burgers leapt off to a roaring start this summer, drawing lines from day one, along with early praise from big media like New York Magazine and Food + Wine. Located in the old Smiley’s ice cream building at 6067 Main St., Mama’s Boy Burgers is the brainchild of Michael Koegel, who has operated Mama’s Boy Market in Phoenicia for five years.
 
“It was a great location. People were clamoring for Smiley’s to reopen, and it was just a great opportunity,” Koegel said. While Tannersville already had plenty of coffee shops, including the excellent 1-year-old Twin Peaks Coffee & Donuts on the eastern edge of town, Koegel correctly predicted that an ice cream shop would hit a niche. Desiring to operate year-round, however, he paired Jane’s Ice Cream and 26 flavors of soft-serve custard with local grassfed Angus Beef burgers sourced just a few miles away at JJF Farm in East Jewett. Fries, salads, shakes, floats and a couple of sandwiches round out the menu, resulting in a Shake Shack, In-N-Out Burger feel to the place, but with a unique Catskills atmosphere–and a giant ice cream cone on the roof. Mama’s Boy Burgers opens daily at 11:30 a.m., and closes at 9 p.m. during the week and 10 p.m. on the weekends, and it is often slammed from open to close, Koegel said.

“Businesses are booming in Tannersville,” said Anne Jakubowski, the Hunter Foundation’s executive director. “There’s been a lot of activity here in a short amount of time.”

The 18-year-old nonprofit, whose mission is to boost economic development by using private funds and federal grants to purchase and rehabilitate old buildings in the Hunter area, also celebrated the opening of a new pharmacy, Wellness Rx, in the Astor House building in Tannersville last month. The foundation has also purchased the old Villa Maria resort and is currently conducting a feasibility study to examine options there, Jakubowski said.

Each of the four newly opened businesses is an expansion or spin-off of an existing business outside of Greene County; the original American Glory is in Hudson, and the first Wellness Rx is in High Falls. That’s a sign that Tannersville, with help from the Hunter Foundation, is drawing successful business owners to take a chance, said Jeff Friedman, the executive director of the Greene County Chamber of Commerce.

“Tannersville is growing quickly and steadily,” said Friedman, noting several other new businesses opening in nearby towns. Among them: La Patisserie Normande, a French pastry shop at 5339 Main St. in Windham; Karen’s Country Kitchen, a new breakfast and lunch cafe in Hunter Village Square, which began as a food truck last summer; and Hunter Mountain Brewery, a restaurant that opened at 7261 Route 23A between Hunter and Tannersville in May. Hunter Mountain Brewery is not making its own beer yet, but has the set up to do so eventually. In August, yet another brewery, Hammo’s Brewpub & Lodge, is scheduled to open at 39 Goshen Road in the hamlet of Hensonville, within the town limits of Windham.

Since breweries, wineries and distilleries make up a large percentage of the county’s growing business base, Friedman’s organization is working to establish a Greene County Beverage Trail. The chamber has applied for a state grant to set up a program showcasing beer, wine, cider and spirits made from Catskills and Hudson Valley farm products, similar to the trail that Schoharie County is set to launch Aug. 1.

Hudson-Chatham Winery will be happy to join in, DeVito said.

“There is a lot going on with artisanal beverages in Greene County right now that people don’t know about,” he said. “It’s a great time to get in on the ground floor of all the exciting things happening here.”

http://catskilleats.com/2015/07/13/wine-tasting-room-joins-greene-county-boom/

Friday, July 03, 2015

Clinton Vineyards, Hudson-Chatham Winery Highlighted in Mainstreet magazine

 
Journalist Paige Darrah wrote a fantastic article about wine in the Hudson Valley focusing on two producers - Clinton Vineyards and Hudson-Chatham Winery. In it Darrah writes, "It is the golden age of Hudson Valley wine. In recent years...the Hudson Valley's wine making status and cache' have been on the rise."
 


 



Thursday, July 02, 2015

Capital Region Living magazine Raves About Hudson Berkshire Beverage Trail

 
Capital Region Living magazine in it's July 2015 issue, raved about the Hudson Berkshire Beverage Trail as one of the best day trips to do this summer!! Fantastic!!!


Hudson Valley magazine Highlights Hudson Valley Wineries July 2015!

 
This is why we LOVE Hudson Valley magazine! A 12page feature on the wineries of the Hudson Valley. Also an interview with yours truly. It's a great summer to tour the valley and experience the wineries! Fantastic! Congrats to all the wineries!!!