Adler Fels Winery is a California winery based in Sonoma that produces over 100 different wine labels in addition to production under its own Adler Fels brand. These include private labels for various restaurants, hotels and retailers.[1]

Adler Fels
LocationSanta Rosa, California, United States
Other labelsCoastline, Kitchen Sink, Totally Random, Eye Candy, Coyote Creek and Leaping Lizard
Founded1979
Key peopleDan O'Leary, GM
Harry Parducci Jr., Director of Winemaking
Dana Fehler, Marketing and PR Manager
Parent companyAdams Wine Group
Cases/yr610,000
Known forGewürztraminer
Sauvignon blanc
VarietalsGewürztraminer, Sauvignon blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot, Pinot noir, Muscat (grape and wine), Syrah, Zinfandel, White Zinfandel, Red Blends, White Blends, Riesling, Pinot grigio, Sweet Red Blends
Websitewww.adlerfels.com

History

edit

Adler Fels Winery was founded in Sonoma Valley in 1979 by David and Ayn Coleman. The winery soon established itself as a producer of Sauvignon blanc, Gewürztraminer and Chardonnay from Sonoma County, with a particular emphasis on Russian River Valley. Adler Fels later expanded their sourcing to include varietals from Napa Valley and other premier appellations throughout California.[2] In 2004, the winery was purchased by Adams Wine Group.[2]

Lawsuit

edit

A wine line under the name Cabzilla used an image resembling too much like Godzilla and was sued by Toho for copyright infringement. The suit ended with the company being forced to dump all of the wine.[3]

Production and distribution

edit

In 2008, Adler Fels has a sales volume of 450,000 cases, ranking it as the 27th top winery in the United States by Winebusiness.com. Among the labels produced by Adler Fels include Coyote Creek, Coastline, Big Ass and Leaping Lizard.[2]

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Daniel C. O'Leary Named Vice President and General Manager at Adler Fels Winery". Winebusiness.com. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  2. ^ a b c "The Top 30 U.S. Wine Companies of 2008 - Profiles". Winebusiness.com. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  3. ^ Kravets, David (November 24, 2008). "Think Godzilla's Scary? Meet His Lawyers". Wired – via www.wired.com.