The story of a husband and wife team making one of the most underrated wines in Napa on Mount Veeder without any other staff.
Richard Nixon, the Cold War, Prohibition, and the insane idea of American Sparkling Wine, this is a look into the personal archives of one of America's most iconic and daring wineries.
One of the founding families of modern day Napa, who helped defined high-quality Cabernet with fruit from their estate on Pritchard Hill, tell their multi-generational story through five bottles.
A winemaking journey spanning 45 years, Cathy Corison has found herself loved by collectors, sommeliers, and critics, but her path wasn't always easy.
Farming, family, and the quest to make real wine in the Napa Valley, Jill and Steve Matthiasson have defied the norms of Napa since the moment they began making wine.
Located in the Santa Cruz Mountains, Ridge has been making single-vineyard wine since 1962. Journey with Paul Draper into the history of the winery and the significance of the '71 vintage in the Judgment of Paris.
Continued from part 1, this episode takes a look into the experimentation of wine at Ridge, White Zinfandel, and the transition from Paul Draper to Eric Baugher.
Carlo Mondavi continues a legacy of winemaking at his Sonoma Coast winery.
One of Napa's most historic wineries kept their winemaking style when everyone else changed.
Globe-trotting winemaker Paul Hobbs has left his mark on four continents and popularized native grape varieties.
A venerated French winemaking family and a French winemaker who found their story in Napa Valley.
Spanning five winemaking generations, this Sonoma family works with vines from the 1800s.
For over a century, six successive generations have made Champagne solely out of Chardonnay.
The incredible true story of the first Native American owned and operated winery in California.
Open to cameras for the very first time, the story of Lafite Rothschild told by Baron Rothschild and Saskia Rothschild through significant vintages that represent the beginning, the triumphs, the hard work, and the personal tragedies—all to show the human condition in a bottle of wine.