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Great Combo at Kickapoo Creek Winery

Kickapoo 1.JPG
Most wineries in Illinois moonlight as something else. Winery/pie shop. B & B and tasting room. Wine shop/coffee house. Whatever the arrangement, these conjoined operations offer some insight into the mind of the winemaker. My experience is that good wine usually accompanies a good secondary (or tertiary) product. So the absolute value of one’s Chambourcin = the absolute value of one’s fudge, etc.

This brings us to Kickapoo Creek Winery. Their model is Winery/nursery/wedding hall. Sometime back, a friend of mine asked for my future opinion of the wines poured at a wedding he’d just attended. He did not recall which wines they drank. All he knew was they came from the attached winery, and that the white surpassed the red. I had just tasted their Nort Noir port* days before, and it remains one of the best wines I’ve had from Illinois.

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We drove to Edwards, Ill., and tasted through nearly all the wines they offered last week. It’s rather unfortunate that this sign is the first sight you see when you exit off I-74. They did charge a nominal, 33-cent tasting fee per wine. While annoying, many municipalities require it to prevent free booze giveaways. I found all the wines tasted to be well made, balanced and worth the $10-15. What really stood out were the sticky wines. Overall good stuff. It’s fair to note that many of these are available at a local bottle shop. Here’s what I liked best:

St. Croix: It’s rare to see a straight St. Croix. I am not sure if this one was indicative of the natural grape character, but is pretty tasty. This is a higher acid red that’s crisp and medium bodied. Flavors are dominated by plum, pepper and black raspberry. I can see this hanging in for a few more years too.

Nookeynay Meskwaai: No, I don’t remember what the name means. A sweeter red that balances the jammy flavors provided by Chambourcin with spice from Norton and acid from Frontenac. This is the kind of wine that really fits our Midwestern palates. We all claim to only drink dry wines, yet wines like these always sell best for local winemakers. Hmmmm.

Blue Ice: This is a very pure and beautiful expression of Traminette. Floral, waxy and peachy, with layers of flavor and a bracing acidity capable of handling all the sugar in this bottle. Something you aren’t likely to find replicated many other places.

Chamery: An aged Chambourcin that drinks just like fine cream sherry but really holds its own unique character. Sherry lacks the raspberry jam character so pervasive in this wine. It’s perfectly balanced and ready to accompany some aged cheeses and roasted nuts.

*Port carries along so many preconceptions of what the drink should taste of. Great ports are medicinal, spicy and warming. Bad ones, are even more so. And the sordid details of American bullying in international trade agreements means we still get to poach ‘burgundy’, ‘sherry’, port’ and champagne from old world lexicon (and tried tradition). Eventually, even our clout in demanding our way in such mundane concessions will run out. Rather than being suddenly forced to change what products are called, American producers should start naming styles of our own. Besides, we need not compete head on by trying to reproduce old favorites. Classic wine styles offer a guide to what works, but laws are quite loose when it comes to specifics. The freedom attached to our young wine industry should promote innovation, not copycatting.


7 comments

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Your friends at Kickapoo Creek Winery

#1

Thanks for the nice review!  We would love to serve you again! Check out our fan page on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Kickapoo-Creek-Winery/96388353829

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Anna

#2

Well, unless you don’t mind being discriminated, looked down to and just plain mistreated. I strongly warn any foreigners or anyone looking different than local white farmers against this place.
The owner and server exchanged looks when they saw us (speaking other language, one woman is pregnant, OMG!) And they immediately REFUSED TO SERVE us. - guess why? Because of the MORAL REASONS! There is no law that prohibits serving wine degustation to pregnant women in America and nowhere in the world. And also, the statistics show there are MORE birth defects in America then in Europe (where nobody will refuse you alcohol because of high MORALITY). I am a college professor and so are all women in my family. I was with my mother and I don’t wear a wedding ring, because I think it’s ridiculous, but we were obviously being judged based on all that.
 I could sue them, but don’t want to waste my time on such people. Not worth it, stay away. Plain DISCRIMINATION. Well, and the choice of wine didn’t look appealing either. I would never celebrate my wedding there, everything looks plain cheap.

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Robert Knilands

#3

The previous comment is a prime example why anonymous comments are a problem.

Rob McColley avatar featured_post

Rob McColley

#4

TIPS training counsels the licensed establishment to serve the pregnant.

Mark Laughlin avatar featured_post

Mark Laughlin

#5

If a pregnant woman drinking even small amounts of alochol is, in fact, medically harmful to her unborn child, then I’d say that any establishment would be making the correct decision in not serving a pregnant women alcohol.  

I don’t know myself if a pregnant woman drinking even small amounts of alochol is, in fact, medically harmful to her unborn child - Googling the question brought some mixed results.  

It’s an interesting issue that I’d have to reserve judgement on until I knew more.

John Steinbacher avatar featured_post

John Steinbacher

#6

@Mark
By your logic they shouldn’t be serving alcohol to anyone planning to drive. Or on a bike. So I guess this winery must have a pedestrian-only policy. Here’s a good article on the subject - http://www.slate.com/id/2270688/. Regardless, I think this is a moral judgment that the consumer should be allowed to make. If you’re pregnant, having one glass of wine at a local winery is not a big deal, end of story.
@Robert K.
Huh? 

Mark Laughlin avatar featured_post

Mark Laughlin

#7

John,

Thanks for the link to the article. 

I see what you’re saying… makes sense. 

I guess a glass of wine now and then for a pregnant woman isn’t that big of a deal then.  It seems like it should be somehow, but I certainly can’t say why. 

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