You miss perusing the grocery store aisles at a leisurely pace. You miss eating out. You miss being served. You miss curling up on a friendās couch to gossip, drink a glass of wine, and eat some snacks. You miss freedomāthe freedom that comes with being able to do whatever you want, when you want.Ā
But thatās gone for now, because of COVID-19, so what are you supposed to do?Ā


Maybe you can take solace in the fact that itās now OKānay, even acceptableāto drink wine alone in your house because you can tune in to a virtual wine tasting for a little education, libation, and socialization. Plus, you can support your local wineries while you get drunk on your couch and listen to people talk about what youāre drinking (and appreciating, too).Ā
The Santa Barbara County Vintners Association teamed up with the Wine Militia to bring the areaās wines to social media feeds everywhere. Every Monday and Thursday in April, a local winemaker will hit the Instagram Live airwaves around 6 p.m. to taste through a collection of wines picked specifically for the task. Cambria Winery headlined the first virtual tasting of the month, starting with the 2018 rosĆ© made from Juliaās Vineyard pinot noir.
Cambria winemaker Jill Russell told Instagram Live watchers on April 6 and Wine Militia founder Lamar Engel, who joined her for the tasting, what that particular wine was all about: āsingle vineyard rosĆ© … lower alcohol, higher acid … slow, cool stainless steel fermentation.āĀ
This rosƩ is a love letter to the vineyard from which it came, a block of pinot noir grown, tended to, and picked for the specific purpose of becoming a rosƩ.
āRosĆ© made with intent. … Sometimes rosĆ© can be an afterthought, and I love that you are purposed to make rosĆ© from a single block,ā Engel told Russell as they tasted the wine from their respective places, separated by many miles, but joined together in a sip of pink deliciousness via Instagram. āThis is awesome, by the way. Iām afraid of this wine, by the way, because itās one of those wines that takes me by surprise.āĀ
They talked surprises, soil, labels, people, wine and winery history, vineyards, and more for about 45 minutes while about 100 people tuned in.Ā
Russell later told the Sun that she enjoyed being able to chat with Engel about the wines and see the responses that were coming in from viewers over Instagram. She said sheās been tuning into other wineriesā virtual tastings as well, friends and colleagues who are sharing stories.
That sort of sharing makes everything feel a little bit more normal. Telling stories is part of what winemakers do, not just in the end product, but sometimes by stopping in to the tasting room to chat with customers about what went into each bottle. Whether itās soil, weather, harvest, or aging, each vintage has a story to tell, Russell said.

āWe are all working with the land, and thereās a lot of things that are out of your control, sometimes, and the one thing you can do is really relay that time and message,ā Russell said. āI really miss that. … But this virtual thing is pretty fun. Everybody is pretty vulnerable and emotional. And then itās OK if you are too. It just kind of helps with the connection.āĀ
Russell is lucky in the fact that she still gets to go to work every day. She gets to drive in to the winery and see the people who are like family to her. As the state considers the agricultural industry to be essential, the winery is still doing its thingāalthough people are working more in staggered shifts and from home when they can. But, of course, the tasting room is closed.Ā
This time of the year is one of the most exciting times at the winery, she said, because they are currently working with three vintages: 2018, 2019, and 2020. Cambria just bottled some of its 2018 wines, the 2019 wines have finished their malolactic fermentation and are ready to taste for what comes next, and the 2020 grapes are growing.Ā
āThe weatherās been a little up and down, but weāre already thinking about that vintage and ordering barrels for 2020 and thinking about that next harvest,ā Russell said. āWeāre kind of thinking about three different vintages at once.ā
On the marketing side of the winery, according to Cambria Winery Vice President of Marketing Shilah Salmon, they are trying things they never would have tried before. This includes getting Russell in front of a camera for virtual tastings on social media.Ā
āOur job in wine right now, is one, to keep the wheels on the bus, and two, to keep people happy,ā Salmon said. āThereās the business side. Can we keep the tasting room open and can we keep our employees? … But thereās this other side. You know, wine is the thing that makes people happy.ā

So Salmon is trying to keep people engaged with the wineryāand of course, āhopefully spending money, because thatās part of our job.ā And itās how wineries stay in business. In March, when the stay-at-home orders were issued due to the pandemicās spread, people were stocking up on wine to get ready and sales were really good, Salmon said. But Aprilās outlook is unclear. Like Cambria, most wineries are selling and shipping wine (some wineries are shipping for free) or selling online or over the phone for pickup at the winery.Ā
āWeāll see what happens,ā Salmon said.Ā
When people are afraid like they are now, when times are uncertain like they are now, Salmon said, people donāt spend money.Ā
So she seeās one of her jobs as just giving people an excuse to relax, a chance to forget a little. And virtual tastings, virtual happy hours, and the hashtag #cambriaonthecouch are all ways to do that. As is a DJ virtual dance party that just happens to feature Cambria wines.
Relaxation is one thing that those social-media-based events can foster, and facilitating connection is another. Not just from consumers to the winery, but for the winemaker, to the people who drink their wines.Ā
āPeople are just kind of craving that connection right now, and weāre trying to fill that,ā Salmon said. āMost winemakers love talking about their wine and their vineyards so itās a good outlet for that. The winemakers are getting something back to be connected to people at the end.āĀ
Editor Camillia Lanham is all about doing as much as possible from the couch. Send your food and wine treats to clanham@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Apr 16-23, 2020.

