 | His father came from Burrton, Kansas, and his mother, South
Pasadena, California. His parents served in the Foreign Service from
1944 until 1970. Spencer was born in Vienna, Austria, and spent his
boyhood in Brazil.
While riding a horse on a
family vacation in the state of Rio Grande del Sul, Spencer came upon a
catch of unfermented grape juice cooling in a mountain stream. The
memory of that taste stayed with him. After his parents were posted
stateside in 1965, Spencer attended Bethesda-Chevy Chase (Maryland)
High School and won a basketball scholarship to the University of
Virginia, where he earned a degree in religious studies.
He
worked as a waiter and sommelier in a “serious” restaurant for three
years. “No one realized what was on our wine list,” he recalls. “We had
1969 Echézeaux and Romanée-Conti for $18 and $45 and 1962 Chateau
d’Yquem for $25. I tasted a lot of great wine.” Intrigued by food, in
1977 he decided to investigate the vanguard restaurants of France and
learn to cook. “I wanted to see if they were all they were cracked up
to be. I was soon convinced.”
Spencer returned
to his former restaurant, this time as its chef de cuisine, until 1982
when he invested a small inheritance in his own wine wholesale and
import business. Eventually Spencer added five salespeople, expanded
into D.C. and West Virginia, and specialized in great artisanal
producers from California, France, Italy and Spain. Asked once how he
could possibly sell so much Ojai wine, Spencer replied, “Either it’s
good or it’s not. If it’s good, it pretty well sells itself.”
Early
in 1993, during a visit to Viader Vineyards & Winery, he met the
winery’s marketing consultant, Elizabeth Pressler. Later, she would
recommend the wines of several of her Napa Valley clients to Spencer.
As a result, he was the first Mid-Atlantic distributor of so-called
cult wine producers like Araujo and Harlan Estate.
In
July, 1994, he met with Elizabeth on business, and then accompanied her
to dinner at the newly re-opened French Laundry. “We had a great time
and afterwards ended up just sitting in her backyard on lawn chairs,
talking and watching shooting stars.” Spencer returned home, but a
three-year long-distance romance had begun. In 1997, the couple
married.
Spencer had sold his business in 1996,
but agreed to stay on as a consultant. So Elizabeth moved to
Charlottesville, Virginia, commuting to Napa Valley every other month
to meet with her clientele. One day just over a year later, Spencer
declared that they should move to California, and Elizabeth agreed.
They
settled in St. Helena, and Spencer began plying his new trade,
winemaker, initially by blending purchased wines. “He has an excellent
palate,” Elizabeth says, “no doubt enhanced by his cooking experience.
His palate memory is terrific, and his blending ability seems to be
innate.”
As Spencer scoured the wine country
for outstanding fruit sources, Elizabeth was visualizing their winery
concept and describing the label she would soon design. Elizabeth
Spencer released its first wines from the 1998 vintage. |