Visit our mobile site

The Globe and Mail

Jump to main navigation
Jump to main content

News Search
Search Stock Quotes
Search The Web
Search People at canada411.ca
Search Businesses at yellowpages.ca
Search Jobs at eluta.ca

Beppi Crosariol's Decanter

Meet Howard Soon, wine master of the Okanagan

Beppi Crosariol | Columnist profile | E-mail
Globe and Mail Update

When the tourists descend on Vancouver for the Olympic Games later this month, many will dine at fine restaurants and marvel at the quality of the local wine. How times change. Howard Soon, senior winemaker for Andrew Peller Ltd. in British Columbia, recalls a more infamous winter beverage that was all the rage on the slopes 30 years ago. It went by a nickname: “Ski-hill wine, that’s what we called it,” he said of Schloss Laderheim, an inexpensive white wine, on a visit to Toronto last week.

Mr. Soon helped craft the German-style riesling blend at Calona Vineyards during Canada’s jug-wine era. Apparently, it was sweet and light enough to sip mountainside between runs without fear of a nasty tumble – Gatorade with a happy kick. “You could drink buckets of it,” he said.

If anyone embodies the quality revolution in B.C. wine that’s taken place since the sip-while-you-slalom era, it’s Mr. Soon. This month he will celebrate his 30th year in the business, overseeing the Western Canada operations of Grimsby, Ont.-based Andrew Peller, which owns the Calona, Sandhill and Red Rooster brands in British Columbia as well as the Peller, Hillebrand and Thirty Bench. And unlike athletes, who tend to peak early in life, Mr. Soon, 57, is at the top of his game. Last fall, Sandhill was named Canadian Winery of the Year by Wine Access magazine for scoring consistently high ratings in a blind tasting by experts from around the country. “It took us 30 years to get winery of the year,” Mr. Soon said.

That honour is in my opinion overdue. Sandhill, based on a European model, specializes in wines produced from single vineyards rather than blends from multiple sites. Ranging in price from about $16 to $36, the wines have come to be benchmarks reflecting the diverse microclimates of British Columbia’s sun-blessed Okanagan Valley. To me, the wines stand out as much for their seamless texture as their subtle balance of flavours. And despite premium positioning, they tend to represent excellent value in their price categories, particularly the white-label offerings that cost between $16 and $20.

This month marks another milestone for Sandhill. Until now, the 13-year-old brand’s limited production has been consumed almost entirely in the West. But growth in vineyard holdings and deals with contract growers has enabled Sandhill to expand eastward to the large Ontario market. The excellent Sandhill Chardonnay 2007 will become a permanent listing in March at the LCBO at $16.95, while the Merlot 2007, at $19.95, has been launched with more limited distribution at the LCBO. More Ontario listings are scheduled to follow in coming months, though there are no plans yet for Quebec or the Atlantic provinces.

If Mr. Soon can be called the senior statesman of B.C. wine, he doesn’t exactly fit the stereotype of a Canadian wine-industry pioneer.

Born and raised in Vancouver, he is the grandchild of Chinese immigrants from Canton province. A degree in biochemistry from the University of British Columbia earned him a job at Labatt, where he trained as a brewmaster and eventually settled in the quality-control department, with stints in London, Ont., Saskatoon, New Westminster, B.C., and finally Winnipeg. “I got kind of tired of the winters in the Prairies,” he said.

A wine-appreciation course sparked an interest in the fledgling wine industry and a move to the Okanagan, where he applied for a job in Calona’s quality control lab in 1980, graduating to assistant winemaker the following year.

While a string of beer strikes had helped convert many consumers to wine, Mr. Soon’s decision was still a leap of faith. Jug-style wines and rustic-tasting, winter-hardy grapes based on native North American varieties represented the bulk of domestic production.