Mary Olson did quite well in the telecommunications business. But when she purchased the Airlie winery in 1997, she was hardly your typical dot-com gazillionaire. Turns out that being loaded with Upper Midwest values was more than sufficient.
"I did a lot of the tractor work myself," said Olson, a native of Osceola, Wis., and, from her time at her uncle's dairy farm, "I knew that farming is up and down. That really comes in handy in Oregon [which has much more year-to-year climate variation than does California]."
And then there's that work ethic and the whole frugality thing. "During recessions, the Midwestern value of saving comes in handy," Olson said during a recent Twin Cities visit. "I've never been overextended, and I've always been willing to work hard.
"The Farm Credit Bureau said they weren't sure how I could do this with our prices, and I told them, 'Well, that's probably OK because we do a lot of the work ourselves.'"
The prices are indeed swell, with Airlie's signature whites all coming in at $15 and under and the pinot noirs at $22 to $32. The three whites currently available in this market -- pinot gris, Riesling and the "7" blend -- are flat-out delicious, refreshing and layered.
A little help from friends
The blend has a bittersweet back story. In 2005, Airlie winemaker Suzy Gagné died from a brain aneurysm. "She had been growing a little pinot blanc and muscat ottonel," Olson said, "and when she died, her husband asked what we should do with it. I said we'll buy it, and we blended it with our five other white grapes."
That heartache produced another positive result that speaks to the tight-knit nature of the Oregon wine community.