Linfield University DigitalCommons@Linfield William “Rusty” Gaffney (Prince of Pinot) Oregon Wine History Archive – Oregon Collection Collection 11-24-2012 More Juicy 2010 Oregon Pinot Incoming William "Rusty" Gaffney Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/owha_gaffney Part of the Viticulture and Oenology Commons Recommended Citation Gaffney, William "Rusty", "More Juicy 2010 Oregon Pinot Incoming" (2012). William “Rusty” Gaffney (Prince of Pinot) Collection. Article. Submission 10. https://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/owha_gaffney/10 This Article is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It is brought to you for free via open access, courtesy of DigitalCommons@Linfield, with permission from the rights-holder(s). Your use of this Article must comply with the Terms of Use for material posted in DigitalCommons@Linfield, or with other stated terms (such as a Creative Commons license) indicated in the record and/or on the work itself. For more information, or if you have questions about permitted uses, please contact
[email protected]. princeofpinot.com http://www.princeofpinot.com/article/1269/ More Juicy 2010 Oregon Pinot Incoming In 1988, Robert Drouhin, of the negociant firm Domaine Joseph Drouhin, established vineyards and a winery in the Dundee Hills of the Willamette Valley. He declared that there were only two places in the world he would grow Pinot Noir - Burgundy and Oregon. This initial Franco-Oregon undertaking gave immediate credibility to the Oregon wine industry. Since then, there have been a number of important contributions of Oregon to the success and popularity of Pinot Noir in the New World: * Oregon’s early winegrowers set the nation’s strictest labeling standards in the mid-1970s.