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In 1976, the
first vineyards were planted at Amalthea Cellars. Founder Louis
Caracciolos infatuation with winemaking began as a young boy making wine
in the cellar of his Italian immigrant grandfather. Emilio brought the art from
The Old Country at the age of thirteen to the southern New Jersey
town of Blue Anchor at the turn of the century. Being exposed to the charm of
winemaking at an early age ignited a passion that continues to this day at
Amalthea Cellars. Caracciolo often says of his philosophical grandfather,
I came on the scene with an unlit torch and my grandfather passed the
flame.
While attending Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York for
his degree in Food Science and Technology far from Emilios Old
World techniques he began to work on his style in small batches of wine
in his dormitory room! He used his never ending respect for archaic winemaking
techniques to study modern enology still unaware that Amalthea lied in his
future. In 1972, he bought the farm where Amalthea is located and the rest as
they say is history.
Thirty years ago, the conversation was that even
if the east coast could grow the classic wine grapes of Europe (Cabernet
Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay, etc.) there were no decent winemakers to
translate such grapes into fine wines. It was against this background
conversation that the young food scientist created the winery as an
experimental station. The two underlying parallel commitments that
have never changed are: Which great wine grapes flourish naturally in the
southern New Jersey climate and soil? and Which style and technique of making
and blending the wines will best showcase such grapes?
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