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The origins of Trader Joe's and why Americans don't drink more wine
NapaNews ^ | February 26, 2004 | PAUL FRANSON

Posted on 03/04/2004 11:47:11 AM PST by Stone Mountain

The origins of Trader Joe's and why Americans don't drink more wine

By PAUL FRANSON Register Correspondent

At the recent Unified Wine and Grape Symposium in Sacramento, some of us had the pleasure of meeting the real Trader Joe and hearing how he started the cultish chain.

To celebrate its 30th Anniversary, the California Association of Winegrape Growers invited Joe Coloumbe to address at its annual meeting.

Telling a tale worthy of PBS's "Nova," he enthralled the audience about why the Little Ice Age kept Americans from drinking wine, how the breakdown of an international monetary agreement affects the wine business -- and how he started the chain of quirky gourmet stores that upended the demand for California wine.

Why America is a land of beer and booze

He started by explaining why America isn't a wine-drinking country. In short, it's because the Little Ice Age of 1450 to 1850 turned our mostly Northeastern forebears from wine into beer and booze drinkers.

About 600 years ago, the climate in the Northern Hemisphere plummeted for 50 years, and Northern Europe stayed uncharacteristically cold until the middle of the 19th century.

This Little Ice Age replaced the Medieval Warming that preceded it, a time when vineyards grew across northern Europe and even in Iceland and Greenland.

In the 13th Century, French vintners complained that English wine flooded their shores and undercut their prices.

With the cooling climate, however, these vineyards retreated south, and northerners had to satisfy their need for alcohol with grain-based beverages, namely beer.

Of course, with cold temperatures, the wheat crop also failed, so laws were passed prohibiting its use in beer, forcing brewers to use tougher grains such as barley. Germans brewers still cite these old laws in proclaiming the "purity" of their beer made only from barley.

The Czechs learned to add hops to preserve the beer, and the member of the Cannabaceae family added a certain appeal. The public soon developed a taste for this slightly bitter brew.

As technology advanced, scientists learned to boil beer to extract its alcohol, making whisky and other alcoholic beverages possible.

The result: Northern Europeans drank beer and hard liquor, not wine. And since the United States was populated mostly by northeastern Europeans, we became a nation of beer and spirits drinkers, a tradition that still exists. More than 80 percent of the wine consumed in America is drunk by little more than 10 percent of the population.

A warming climate

Joe Coloumbe's ancestors came from Normandy to Quebec in 1665 to escape the cold and were surprised to find that area even colder. Their ancestors eventually made their way to warmed climates; Coloumbe lives in Southern California.

Generally, however, the climate has been getting warmer since the 19th Century. Many blame it on greenhouse gasses, but it should be noted that a similar situation existed 1,000 years ago and natural climatic cycles have existed for millennia. "I believe we're returning to the climate of the late Middle Ages," says Coloumbe.

He notes that with the warmer weather, vineyards in the Northern Hemisphere are sneaking north once again.

Last year was the first when the growing group of vine growers in England didn't have to add sugar to their juice and long-abandoned parts of Northern France are being replanted to vines as they were when the Yonne Valley near Chablis was the primary supplier of wine to Paris.

Closer to home, parts of North America where vitis vinifera grapes were untenable are now flourishing, including Virginia, the North Folk of Long Island and even parts of Canada. Coloumbe even sees a great future for vines on the south-facing shores of Lake Huron.

That climate change has other implications for the wine business.

Coloumbe forecasts that premium wine production will shift to latitudes as high as 50 degrees as locations closer to the Equator become warmer. The Bay Area lies at about 30 degrees, by the way, as are Santiago, Chile and the wine regions of Australia, Argentina and South Africa.

Maybe California wine companies that have invested in Washington are just thinking ahead.

Coloumbe notes that there's little land mass at higher latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere, however, only New Zealand's South Island, Tasmania and Argentina.

He envisions an increasing vinous future for the latter nation's lower reaches. "Argentina has a long tradition of making wine, most not very good, but that's changing."

A bright spot for California growers and winemakers

The second part of Trade Joe's talk concerned why currency rates fluctuate so widely, and in the interest of space, he says that the weak dollar is the best thing that could happen to American wineries.

He notes that the Euro has risen from 87 cents to the dollar to today's $1.30, and he thinks it will hit $1.40. That makes U.S. wine cheaper overseas -- and imports pricier to American consumers.

Likewise, the Australian dollar was at 50 when that nation's imports started flooding our markets. It's now at almost 80 cents. "The Australian dollar was at $1.25 in 1975," he notes. "If it goes to $1.25 again, you can forget about Yellowtail," the fastest growing Australian wine import.

And though the U.S. dollar is weak, he notes that the Argentine peso is even weaker. "Today, Argentina is the cheapest place in the world to grow wine."

Serving the over-educated, underpaid of society

Finally, Coloumbe talked about how he started Trader Joe's.

In 1966, he owned a chain of convenience stores called Pronto Market, but he could see that those businesses were becoming commodities. "I realized I had to change."

In searching for a new business model, Coloumbe discovered a prime customer target: the relatively small group of people with college degrees.

Thanks to the GI Bill, it was growing very fast, and he discovered a very strong relationship between years of education and alcoholic consumption. "It was as perfect a correlation as found in market research," he notes.

Attempting to exploit this group, Coloumbe outfitted a Pronto store with the "world's largest selection of alcoholic beverages."

In those days, California had "fair trade," i.e., manufacturers could fix retail prices. "We had 100 Bourbons, 50 Scotches and the world's largest assortment of California wines." He claims to be the first to give space to brands like Mayacamas, Schramsberg, Souverain and Mirassou in Southern California.

Eventually, Coloumbe found a loophole in the fair trade laws. He acquired an old license so he could also act as a wholesaler and developed a private label program, the precursor of today's Charles Shaw wine, better known as Two Buck Chuck.

Over time, he realized that his stores especially appealed to the over-educated and underpaid, notably teachers, classical musicians, museum curators and journalists. "That group now includes starving Silicon Valley engineers," he jokes. "It became our sacred mission to serve these customers."

It was a winning strategy, especially since the targeted customers has influence out of proportion with their salaries, and love to share their discoveries with others of the same ilk.

He adds, "We built Trader Joe's on wine first, then food. I tasted 100,000 wines, and most weren't wonderful. They were submitted to us by desperate vintners."

Joe Coloumbe left the company 15 years ago, but he notes that Charles Shaw wine is a return to the company's roots. "Is Two Buck Chuck as good as our private label wine of the '70s?" he asks rhetorically. "Eight million cases later, who's going to argue?"

He concluded by saying, "I look forward to trying Carlos T. Shaw from Argentina."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: agriculture; climate; climatechange; culture; globalwarming; godsgravesglyphs; littleiceage; middleages; traderjoes; vineyards; vintners; warming; weather; weatherchange; wine
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To: FeliciaCat
I think my wine drinking makes up for the other 90%.

I like to experiment, but for day to day, I have a large (14oz) glass of Carlo Rossi Chianti. It's not that great, but you can't beat it for 9.99 a gallon.
21 posted on 03/04/2004 12:28:29 PM PST by sandpit
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To: FeliciaCat
I find this hard to believe only 10% of Americans are wine drinkers.

That's not what was said.

22 posted on 03/04/2004 12:29:20 PM PST by Stentor
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To: CatoRenasci
Messed up your spelling, too...(execrable)
23 posted on 03/04/2004 12:32:22 PM PST by Old Professer
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To: Stentor
"More than 80 percent of the wine consumed in America is drunk by little more than 10 percent of the population."

?
24 posted on 03/04/2004 12:35:51 PM PST by FeliciaCat (Life is to short for ugly shoes.)
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To: Temple Owl
ping
25 posted on 03/04/2004 12:43:33 PM PST by Tribune7 (Vote Toomey April 27)
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To: FeliciaCat
"More than 80 percent of the wine consumed in America is drunk by little more than 10 percent of the population." Happy to say, I'm doing my part.
26 posted on 03/04/2004 12:47:57 PM PST by bondjamesbond (John Kerry is nothing more than Ted Kennedy without a dead girl in the car.)
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To: Phantom Lord
I love Two Buch Chuck! It just proves that price is not always an indicator of how good a wine will be.

27 posted on 03/04/2004 12:50:17 PM PST by Bella_Bru
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To: Old Professer; BossLady
Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! Or, as we say nowadays, sorry 'bout that. The nimble fingers weren't so nimble and the M-1 calibrated eyeballs had not been properly adjusted for operator headspace.

But, the point remains nonetheless: California Merlot is almost uniformly flat, lacking in structure and tanin, and sweet to the point of being as cloying as wines like Almaden or Paul Masson 'burgundy' or 'claret' were 40-50 years ago before the varietal revolution. Oh, they have a decent enough nose, but they're devoid of character (thank you San Joaquin Valley varietals programs of the '70s and '80s), have a short entry, blandly flat middle palate, and short to nonexistent finish. When not sweet, sharply acidic where they should be tannic. Faugh!

28 posted on 03/04/2004 1:38:49 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: PBRSTREETGANG
Well, I do have a bit of an unfair advantage over the average wine drinker: my great uncles were all oenologists and California winemakers from around the turn of the 20th century. My grandfather, (whose education was classical rather than scientific and who was on the business side) was a connoisseur whose cellar was full of first quality Burgundy, Bordeaux, Piedmontese and Tuscan wines as well as California wines, from about 1900 through 1961 (limited buying after the 55's). I was lucky enough to pull a lot of corks as a youth with some very knowledgeable men (and women), including the owners and winemakers at many California wineries of the '50s and '60s, and learn from their discussions.

P.S. My absolute favorite underappreciated wine: Inglenook Charbono. I don't think it's made any longer, but the 1941 was as good as any of the '41 Cabernet Sauvignons, and that's sayign something. The '66 and '68 were legendary, the '70 was magnificent, and the '76 is probably just ready to drink. It's a pity no one I know has a bottle anymore.

I remember going into a Trader Joe's in Los Angeles in 1978 and finding three cases of '70 Inglenook Charbono for $20 a case. Wonderful wine!

29 posted on 03/04/2004 1:56:32 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: Phantom Lord
There will always be good cheap wine. If you pay more than 25$ for a bottle, you're not doing your homework---essentially you're paying for a label.
30 posted on 03/04/2004 2:06:20 PM PST by stands2reason
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: FeliciaCat
I actually prefer the taste of good beer to wine, though I rarely drink either. (Wine gives me heartburn, beer the burps.) I drink girly mixed drinks with liqueurs. My fave -- 1 1/2 - 2 shots butterscotch schnapps, 1/2 shot light rum, fill with chilled coffee and cream on the rocks.
Yummy!
32 posted on 03/04/2004 2:12:09 PM PST by stands2reason
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To: Stone Mountain
Distillation of spirits for whiskey and its Celtic precursor is widely acknowledged to have begun in ancient times, not following some climatic change in the 1400s as the article states. In fact a written record from the middle of that century details the delivery of 1500 bottles of aquavitae (whiskey) to a certain Monk.

Touted for its varied medicinal uses, whisky was even said to cure lisping. One can assume from this that were professional wine tasters around even then. I have tested this anti-lisping theory my self for 35 years and will, after a bit more study, be ready to pronounce it true.

33 posted on 03/04/2004 2:22:43 PM PST by wtc911 (Roe v. Wade will end only if proof of a "gay" gene is found, to our national shame.)
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To: Phantom Lord
I just got a bottle of the two buck Chuck and it's very good. I am more of a beer drinker but beer is one of the worst things to drink due to it's glycerin index (sugar) which turns right to fat. Drinking More wine and booze now :-)
34 posted on 03/04/2004 2:35:05 PM PST by Moleman
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To: AnnaZ; feinswinesuksass
The debate rages...heheh.
35 posted on 03/04/2004 3:01:02 PM PST by Bob J (www.freerepublic.net www.radiofreerepublic.com...check them out!)
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To: CatoRenasci
Agreed! I find many Cali wines these days terribly acidic tasting primarily due to the high amount of alkaloids in the soil. Forget varnish remover, use one of these wines! Blech!

Have you given the Coppola wines a whirl? I received the 1998 Diamond Series Claret and Merlot as a gift and the 2000 Director's Series Chardonnay and Merlot as gifts. As a general rule, I find all of them to have a strong oaky flavor which seems to overpower the fruit notes.

36 posted on 03/04/2004 3:18:37 PM PST by BossLady
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To: CatoRenasci
Cato,
You sound like you got introduced to wine at seminary. In vino veritas.
37 posted on 03/04/2004 3:39:51 PM PST by TEXASPROUD
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Comment #38 Removed by Moderator

To: BossLady
The Coppola "diamond series" wines are well-made and usually decent, a cut above what used to be called "sound commercial wine" in the trade. I agree that they seem to be overly oaky, but I'm not sure why since they are usually bought-in wines. Over-oaky can come from new barrels, and, especially from American oak rather than Nevers or Limousine oak. I can't imagine Coppola putting bought-in wines in his expensive French oak barrels, unless he uses the wines to season the barrels before he puts serious wine in them. I'll have to ask my cousin who has a bottling operation and has bottled for Coppola. Back around '96 I actually watched some of that wine being bottled.

I have enjoyed the Claret in a couple of vintages. I wouldn't know about the Merlot. IIRC, I was not thrilled with the Chardonnay, the oak reminded me of cardboard. Often they are not made from grapes on the estate, or even with his own wine (when it says "vinted and bottled by" you know the named producer did not make the wine, he bought it and finished it, perhaps blending it.

39 posted on 03/04/2004 7:43:32 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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To: TEXASPROUD
You sound like you got introduced to wine at seminary.

That would have been difficult, as I never attended seminary. Actually, it was just sitting with my great uncles and grandfather and their friends, drinking and discussing wines of various degrees of seriousness. Also going visiting with my grandfather (and sometimes one or more great uncles) to various wineries to have luncheon or dinner with the owners or winemakers. Everyone would bring interesting old wines, and interesting old wines would come out of the winery's vaults.

My grandfather had a fairly large stock of '28 and '29 first and second growth Bordeaux, which were very popular as benchmark wines to have alongside old California wines. The '35s and '37's were good, the '41s probably the best vintage in California in the 20th century (but there were only a handful of ageworthy cabernet sauvignons then: BV reserve, Inglenook cask, Simi reserve, Martin Ray, Louis Martini Special Selection, but the BV and Inglenook cask are -- for me -- the greatest California cabs I have ever drunk. Although having the complexity of age, they still had significant fruit, perfect structure and plenty of tannin left when I drank them in 1960, in 1966, in 1970 and in 1978.) The '47s were excellent, as were some '55s and '57s. In the '60s, '66 and '68 were the oustanding years, and 1970 was a close runner up to 1941.

40 posted on 03/04/2004 7:57:33 PM PST by CatoRenasci (Ceterum Censeo [Gallia][Germania][Arabia] Esse Delendam --- Select One or More as needed)
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