The
Herzog
Story
The
Jewish
people
have
a special
relationship
to wine
that
predates
even
the Romans
and Greeks.
For the
ancient
Jews,
whose
temple
in Jerusalem
was renowned
throughout
the fledgling
civilizations
of the
Middle
East,
wine
played
an important
role
in religious
ritual.
Today,
thousands
of years
later,
it continues
to do
so. Kiddush,
the prayer
over
the wine,
traditionally
announces
the beginning
of the
Sabbath
on Friday
night
as well
as other
holidays.
And
so it
should
come
as no
surprise
that
the Herzog
family
has been
making
wine
for a
long
time.
They
trace
their
winemaking
origins
back
to Philip
Herzog,
who made
wine
in Slovakia
for the
Austro-Hungarian
court
more
than
a century
ago.
Philip’s
wines
were
so appreciated
by Emperor
Franz-Josef,
that
the emperor
made
Philip
a baron.
The Baron
Herzog
wines—a
line
of premium
yet moderately
priced
California
varietals—are
named
to commemorate
the honor.
Baron
Philip
made
both
kosher
and non-kosher
wines.
The kosher
wines
were
made
in a
separate
cellar
and tasted
remarkably
like
his non-kosher
wines.
Indeed,
the wines
were
made
in the
same
basic
manner.
However,
the kosher
wines
required
a Jewish,
Sabbath-observant
cellar
crew.
(What
is Kosher
Wine?)
During
World
War II,
Philip's grandson Eugene hid
his family
from
the Nazis
by moving
them
around
the Slovakian
countryside.
After
the war’s
end,
he emerged
from
behind
a false
wall
in a
courageous
Christian
friend’s
woodshed
to reclaim
his family’s
winery.
But
three
years
later,
the new
Czech
communist
regime
drove
the Herzogs
away
from
their
European
home
for good.
Forced
to leave
with
little
more
than
the clothes
on their
backs,
the family
said
goodbye
to their
former
royal
economic
and social
stature.
Eugene brought the family to America in 1948 after the Holocaust. He
arrived
in New
York
City
with
his wife,
Sidonia,
six of
his own
children
and two
additional
war orphans.
They
moved
to the
Williamsburg
section
of Brooklyn
with
only
enough
money
to rent
a two-bedroom
tenement
flat.
With
his winemaking
skills,
Eugene
found
a job
at a
small
kosher
winery
tucked
away
into
a storefront
on Manhattan’s
Lower
East
Side.
For a
paltry
salary,
he made
sweet,
Concord-grape
wines
in the
cellar.
(European
grape
varieties
for dry
wines
were
not easy
to obtain
in post
World
War II
New York.)
He also
drove
the wine
delivery
truck.
But because
the company
was so
poor,
he was
paid
for his
driving
acumen
in company
shares,
not cash.
For
years
the shares
were
worthless,
but by
1958,
all the
other
shareholders
had given
up their
shares.
They
assumed
the business
was doomed
to failure.
Eugene
and his
sons,
who all
went
to work
at the
winery,
proved
them
wrong.
They
called
their
new venture
Royal
Wines,
in deference
to their
grandfather,
Philip.
In 1985,
the Herzog
family
decided
to expand
their
winemaking
operations
to California,
where
they
make
wine
under
two separate
labels:
Baron
Herzog
and Herzog
Wine
Cellars.
After
twenty
years
of renting
space
in various
wineries,
the family
was finally
able
to build
its own
state-of-the-art
winery
just
south
of Santa
Barbara,
in the
town
of Oxnard.
Here,
under
the supervision
of head
winemaker
Joe
Hurliman,
Herzog
Wine
Cellars
has created
a center
for high-end
contemporary winemaking
in a
tradition
that
dates
back
nearly
six centuries.
For
more
information
on Herzog
Wine
Cellars,
please
see our
web links
on the
home
page,
or e-mail info@herzogwinecellars.com. Our
phone
number
at the
winery
is 805.983.1560
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