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California castleBy Paul E. KandarianAs Daryl Sattui bent his lanky, 6-foot-5-inch frame to fit through an arched stone doorway in his Napa Valley Castello di Amorosa in Calistoga, Calif., a metaphor could not help but spring to mind: Is this guy in way over his head?
The great hall is majestic – 22-feet high, 72-feet long
and 30-feet wide – able to host 180 people, boasting a 500-year-old fireplace
and floor-to-ceiling wall frescoes hand painted by Italian artisans that took a
Michelangeloan-like year and a half to complete.
Below ground are a labyrinth of wine chambers –900 feet long in all - smelling sweetly of the casks bearing the fruits of the vines from the rich earth above. Escape tunnels are here as well, as are dead ends. At one point in our walk, the impish Sattui sent me into a hallway that got smaller and went nowhere.
Something this large might seem to indicate a rich guy’s out-of-whack ego, but Sattui is as immensely likeable, soft spoken and low key as they come. Take the tour of the castle, you may well run into him as he tidies up after a tasting, and he’ll be happy to regale you with the nuts and bolts of how the castle was designed and built, but more importantly about the wine that is made there.
“And,” he admitted sheepishly, “it’s partly I just don’t know why. I just wanted to do it.” He’d never designed anything bigger than a doghouse in his
life, he said, calling himself a closet architect. He built the castle mostly to
showcase his quality wine, and he seems to know whereof he speaks:
Designing the castle came after numerous trips to Italy to
get ideas, and poring over thousands of and blueprints of other castles
to make sure he got it right.
“I didn’t care to rush it, I enjoyed the project and I certainly didn’t do it for the money, though I’d hate to go broke,” he said, then admitted “no prudent businessman would ever do this.” He may not be prudent, but he’s decidedly different. The San Jose State University graduate started up V. Sattui in 1976, opening a deli to sell meats and cheese as well, something no other winery was doing. Others thought him crazy, he said. Now most do and it’s a huge part of the winery business.
“I thought it would make me rich,” he shrugged. “But I didn’t know the shoe business. I was trying to make a buck a pair and I really should have been making more. But I just wanted people to have these shoes.”
“I’m at the point in my life where I want to do the things I want to do,” he said with a shrug. People might say I’m nuts, but I don’t care. I’ll be dead in 15 or 20 years, but this will be around a lot longer.”
“I want people who are serious about wines to come here,” he said. “I thought if I built something beautiful to showcase it, they would.” (Castello di Amorosa, 4045 North Saint Helena Highway, 707-942-8200. Tasting only, $10; tasting and tour, $25. For information, visit castellodiamorosa.com) PHOTO CREDITS: Paul E. Kandarian |
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