Where else can you go where you can not only grab some lunch and buy a designer dress that costs more than a case of wine while trying out 26 tasting rooms? Healdsburg’s square of course, and I accomplished all three of those tasks. The designer dress added to the whole wine tasting experience, of course. At least that’s what I’ve been telling myself… 
Anyway, Healdsburg square is a really eclectic place, complete with tasting rooms, boutiques, bookstores, coffee shops and even a soap company. I had the good fortune to be there on a Saturday when the Healdsburg farmer’s market is also going on, and I got to see another side of the town. While there I stopped into several different tasting rooms, but if I had to pick there are two who stand out in my mind: Toad Hollow and Artiste.
Toad Hollow

I knew I had found a fun place when I walked in and asked for Jim. The gentleman I later found out to be Jim began explaining to me that he was in fact, Debbie and Jim was the woman standing next to him. This fun attitude carries over to the wine. Everything from Risqué sparkling with a toad dancing the can-can on the label to their award winning Rose of Pinot Noir: Eye of the Toad. Jim shared with me the best winery mission statement I have ever heard: “People want value, and they also want good one. One of the missions of Toad Hollow is to provide both.” Especially in today’s economy, we want good wine and a good price. Their Dry Pinot Noir Rose was voted best value by Wine Spectator at under $10 a bottle.
From Toad Hollow I made my way over to Artiste. Everyone I spoke with told me I had to go there and meet the winemaker, Bion Rice. Inside the tasting room I think there is just as much art as there is wine; even on the bottles. Artiste picks an impressionist painting to showcase on their wines. The label explaining what the wine, where it comes from, and who created that particular painting is located on the back.
One of the aspects I enjoyed most of Artiste’s tasting room was the “Artiste Tasting Palette” that consists of a small bite of food to pair with the wine you taste. Another note about Artiste that set it apart from the rest is that they will not create tasting notes for their wines. As I tasted butterscotch on the finish of the mourvedre, I was told that was expressly one of the reasons tasting notes are not written; because each palate is different, and very impressionable.
From Artiste, I drove back into Dry Creek, past the general store, and up to Family wineries where Amphora is located. I was first drawn in by the name. I am a lover of ancient history; especially Greek and Egyptian. The amphora is a long piece of pottery with two handles originating in Greece. The winemaker, Rick Hutchinson was as great as his wine. He has expanded his award winning wine list since the winery’s inception in 1997 to include everything from Chardonnay to Cabernet Sauvignon. I went to visit twice here, and the second time Rick was making custom blends for me out of his barrels according to the wines I said I liked the best. What a guy!

This was the best part of my experience in wine country, I loved the Dry Creek Valley, and what I loved most wasn’t the wine (GASP) it was the people. Of course the overall wine experience was more than I ever could have dreamed of the people were the ones who made the wine tastings fun, they were the ones who told me the best wineries and tasting rooms to go to, they were the ones who showed me around and took me to dinner. As I’ve told my friends, I have never felt so at home. I’d honestly move out there tomorrow if I didn’t have another year left of grad school. Wine is my passion, and it can only keep growing if I’m surrounded by winos like myself.