Sweet Homecoming For Napa Valley, with 18.7 Million reasons to celebrate

 

It is the most exhilarating weekend of the year in Napa Valley, overflowing with euphoric anticipation, filling the balmy June air with excitement.

 

Auction Napa Valley (ANV) seems to be everyone’s favorite charity event. Since its inception in 1981, the Napa Valley Vintners Association, which operates Auction Napa Valley, has raised and donated more $120 million to local community causes.

 

The 34th Annual ANV, titled “Sweet Home Napa Valley,” had a pair of gargantuan shoes to fill. Last year, the most watched wine auction in the country, broke its own previous record, raising $16.9 million for healthcare and children’s education programs. The wine community brimmed with happy anticipation, combined with a hint of trepidation.

 

Saturday evening the world learned that they need not have worried. Auction Napa Valley set a new record by raising $18.7 million dollars, surpassing the previous record by 10% and solidifying ANV reputation as the most prestigious and highly effective wine-charity auction in the US.

 

Multiple lots earned over $400,000, with several prominent vintners becoming top bidders themselves. Prior to the main event, many participating vintner/hosts went all-out to support the four-day event by hosting pre-parties or winery sponsored dinners prepared by private Chefs. The barrel and live auctions were, once again, runaway successes.

 

After a head spinning final tally and an extravagant epicurean journey (with lots of culinary and winemaking celebrity sightings) one wonders what makes this auction so incredibly special? Is it the presence of Margrit Mondavi, widow of the late Robert Mondavi, who has been involved with every wine auction from its inception? Is it the sight of Thomas Keller, Michael Chiarello and Masaharu Morimoto greeting guests and chatting away with fellow chefs? Is it the rivers of extraordinary wines, freely poured? Is it the ostentatious, one-of a kind lots, such as the Star of Africa pendant studded with 100 diamonds encased in a fluid-filled sapphire orb? Or is it the opportunity to experience the debut of Bill Harlan’s Promontory Estate wine?

 

I think not. What makes this event special is that it is an event by the community, for the community; permeated with the pure spirit of neighbor helping neighbor.

 

This large scale, theatrical production, takes over a year to plan and countless individuals to execute is a real coup d’etat. Although it appears effortless, this formidable task brings together seasoned auctioneers, chefs, winemakers, and industry luminaries, all bound together by copious amounts of goodwill. It’s where worlds intersect; billionaires meet volunteers, community leaders assist vintners, and police officers donate their time. It’s a place to see and be seen, with charity being the greatest equalizer.

By the Numbers:

 

  • 500 Vintner members
  • 1000 Vintners participated
  • 1000 Barrel Auction guests
  • 100 barrels of predominantly 2012 Cabernet. Total $1.694 million.
  • Top Lot: Brand Napa Valley at $83,050 (followed by Shafer Vineyards: $55,200 and Continuum Estate: $52,750)
  • E-auction open to everyone: 175 lots. Total $490,000. Top Lot: Continuum Estate, Freemark Abbey and Staglin – $21,000
  • 50 live auction lots, 5 hours of bidding. Total 16.6 million. Seven lots were doubled to accommodate the under-bidder.

Top Live Auction Lots were:

 

Fund-a-Need

 

Total raised: $3.8 million, 100 bidders energetically raising their paddles, with highest contribution of $1 million by billionaire Kieu Hoang. A Vietnam-born U.S. citizen, Hoang is pharmaceuticals executive and a believer in the link between wine and good health. Having already spent $240,000 for a lot that included a jeroboam of 2010 Ovid, dinner for eight, and the services of famed architect, Howard Backen, Hoang seemed elated to contribute more to his new wine home base.

 

Promontory Estate wine offering by Bill Harlan: $600,000

 

Acquired by a vintner and philanthropist Lee Anderson, this lot entitles Anderson to the lifetime title of “First Mailing List Customer” as well as ten cases of the first ten vintages of wine produced by Promontory.  The lot included a  2009 – 2013 double magnums vertical and accommodations at Meadowood.  For good measure, the lot also included lunch or dinner for thirty at the estate.

 

Opus One: $550,000

 

Next year’s auction Chairs, enticed five couples to pay $110,000 each for a trip to Bordeaux, a visit to Château Mouton-Rothschild, Mondavi’s partner in Opus One, five large format bottles of Opus, and VIP packages to Auction Napa Valley 2015.

 

Araujo Estates: $520,000

 

Araujo Estates’ new owners, The Pinault Wine Group, offered a whirlwind trip to Bordeaux, including tours of Château Latour, Margaux, Pessac-Léognan, St.-Emilion and Pomerol.  Also included was a 6-liter bottle of Araujo for the winner’s cellar.

 

Raymond Vineyards: $840,000 (Winning bid $420,000, doubled for two separate winners)

 

The charismatic Jean-Charles Boisset, with the help of his friend Harvey Weinstein, offered the winning bidder an unforgettable night at the Academy Awards, including a private jet, evening gown, tuxedo, an Oscar after-party, a VIP table, and plenty of chances to hobnob with Hollywood elite.  Also included, were double magnums and a Salmanazar of Raymond Vineyards Generations Cabernet.

 

Casa Piena: $420,000

 

In addition to a couple of delicious double magnums from proprietors Carmen and Gail Policy’s Casa Piena, the winning bidders are entitled to four tickets to the 2016 Super Bowl in Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, as well as a pre-Super Bowl party with the NFL Commissioner.

 

Chappellet Vineyard: $410,000

 

Blakesley and Cyril Chappellet offered a “traveling in style” package, that includes a ten-day trip for four to New Zealand, business class airfare, lodging, ten dinners in NZ, a lavish dinner for 24 in Napa Valley, and four double magnums of Pritchard Hill Cabernet Sauvignon.

 

Lokoya: $400,000

 

If you would rather visit Australia, this package included a ten-day trip to for two, including a helicopter tour of Adelaide, private winery tours and sixteen bottles of wine.

 

Gargiulo Vineyards, Silver Oak and Twomey Cellars: $400,000

 

This lot included a trip to Colorado’s Diamond Tail Ranch, four Fender guitars, four target rifles, four fly rods, meals by Charlie Palmer, entertainment by Grammy Award winner Billy Dean, plus three wines offered by the Duncans and Gargiulos.

 

Mayacamas Vineyards: $660,000 (Winning bid was $330,000, doubled for two bidders)

 

Mayacamas Vineyards, recently acquired by Charles Banks (former Screaming Eagle partner), offered a stunning historic collection of wine, including a magnum from 1964 and five jeroboams from 1978, 1989, 1997, 2002 and 2013, as well as a six-decade vertical tasting. Also included, were two dinners for twelve prepared by Blackberry Farms’ Chef Joseph Lenn, as well as a two-night stay for six couples at the Mayacamas estate on Mt Veeder.

 

Napa Valley Vintners and Lexus: $580,000 (Winning bid $290,000, lot doubled for two separate bidders)

 

This lot included a three-day cycling adventure for two couples in the Great Smoky Mountains, four customized Panatela bicycles, 48 bottles of Napa Valley wine, tickets to the Tour de Smokies, accommodations and meals at Blackberry Farm in Tennessee and use of Lexus vehicles.

 

Darioush and Robb Report Magazine: $440,000 (Winning bid $220,00, paid by two separate bidders)

 

Judgeship for the 2015 Robb Report Car of the Year and 2015 Culinary Masters Competition, five-night stay at Four Seasons Maui, five-night stay and Four Seasons Bora Bora, and dinner for five couples with Darioush and Shahpar Khaledi.

 

One of the most intense foodie lots, Colgin Cellars, offering four double magnums and a dinner for 50 at either the French Laundry or Per Se, sold for $340,000.

 

For those looking for fantasy and once in a lifetime adventure, this was a playground like no other. International destinations, such as France, Australia and New Zealand lots were clear winners; but so were the “sweet home” lots.

 

David Alan Bernahl, founder of Coastal Luxury Management, who produces Pebble Beach Food and Wine (among many other luxury wine and food events) attended the event; even he was impressed! No slouch when it comes to top notch food and wine events, his appraisal of ANV was sky high.

 

I had a chance to spend some time with Sex in the City star, Kyle Maclachlan, who was in town filming Anthony Bourdain’s new show, The Getaway. This show follows celebrities into their favorite locations. He was filming a segment inNapa’s famous bakery, Alexis Baking Co. He briefly stopped in at ANV. Himself a vintner in his native Washington state, he spoke eloquently about the importance of giving back to the community: “It’s not just the right thing to do, it’s an important part of connecting with and supporting one another.”

 

All in all, ANV demonstrated the generosity of those who love to this very blessed spot. One can’t argue with success, and, certainly, one can’t argue with love for your extended family and community.…home indeed, is where the heart is.

 

Congratulations, ANV, you deserve it all.

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