Bill Easton is the proprietor and winemaker at both Easton Wines and Domaine de la Terre Rouge in Amador County, California.
Bill describes an era of post-Prohibition California winemaking that has largely disappeared, and explains why he decided to pioneer Rhone grape varieties in a corner of the state that was little known. Bill also is frank about his stylistic choices, and his decision not to embrace the fashionable 1990s style of big wines.
439: Jean Gonon on Why Every Vintage Should be Different
438: Five Decades of Burgundy with Dominique Lafon
437: Drinking with the Minotaur
436: Patrick Comiskey on the High Highs and Market Lows of American Syrah
435: Samuel Guibert on the Unique Blend of Mas de Daumas Gassac
434: The Transformation of Lodovico Antinori
433: Peter Liem's Insider Guide to Champagne
432: Doug Frost is a Double Master
431: Victor Hazan and the Problem of Italian Wine
430: Becky Wasserman-Hone Gives a Burgundy Tour
428: Swedish Sommelier Totte Steneby on Restaurant Success and Disaster
427: Gianluca Garofoli on One Hundred Years of Verdicchio
426: Giampaolo Venica Remembers a Different Friuli
425: Cherasco Barolo Survives Today Solely Because of Marchese Umberto Fracassi Ratti Mentone
424: The Complete Stephen Brook
423: Elena Pantaleoni Remembers When Making Natural Wine Felt Lonely
422: Christian Moueix on 50 Years of Pomerol and Napa Valley
421: Sommelier Victoria James is a Rosé Believer
420: Michael Garner Remembers the Great Personalities of the Piemonte, including Giovanni Conterno, Bartolo Mascarello, and many others
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