An
American Viticultural Area is a designated
wine grape-growing region in the
United States distinguishable by
geographic features, with boundaries defined by the
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB),
United States Department of the Treasury. The TTB defines AVAs at the request of
wineries and other
petitioners. There were 190 AVAs as of May, 2008. Prior to the installation of the AVA system, wine
appellations of origin in the United States were designated based on
state or
county boundaries. All of these appellations were
grandfathered into federal law and may appear on wine labels as designated places of origin, but these appellations are distinct from AVAs.
American Viticultural Areas range in size from the Ohio River Valley AVA at across four states, to the Cole Ranch AVA in Mendocino County, California, at only . The Augusta AVA near the town of Augusta, Missouri was the first recognized AVA, gaining the status on June 20, 1980.
Unlike most European wine appellations of origin, an AVA specifies only a geographical location from which at least 85% of the grapes used to make a wine must have been grown. AVAs are more similar to the Italian Indicazione Geografica Tipica than other European appellation of origin systems. American Viticultural Area designations do not limit the type of grapes grown, the method of vinification, or the crop yield. Some of those factors may, however, be used by the petitioner to justify uniqueness of place when proposing a new AVA.
Requirements
Current regulations impose the following additional requirements on an AVA:
- Evidence that the name of the proposed new AVA is locally or nationally known as referring to the area;
- Historical or current evidence that the boundaries are legitimate;
- Evidence that growing conditions such as climate, soil, elevation, and physical features are distinctive;
Petitioners are required to provide such information when applying for a new AVA, and are also required to use USGS maps to both describe (using terms from the map) and depict the boundaries.
Once an AVA is established, at least 85% of the grapes used to make a wine must be grown in the specified area if an AVA is referenced on its label.
State or county boundaries — such as for Oregon or Sonoma County — are not AVAs, even though they are used to identify the source of a wine. AVAs are reserved for situations where a geographically defined area has been using the name and it has come to be identified with that area.
A vineyard may be in more than one AVA. For example, the Santa Clara Valley AVA and Livermore Valley AVAs are located within the territory of the San Francisco Bay AVA, which is itself located within the Central Coast AVA.
Current areas
The following is a listing of AVAs, broken down by region:
List of California AVAs
Central Coast and Santa Cruz Mountains
All of these AVAs are included in the geographic boundaries of the
Central Coast AVA with the exceptions of
Ben Lomond Mountain AVA and
Santa Cruz Mountains AVA, which are surrounded by, but are specifically excluded from, the larger regional AVA.
Central Valley
Unlike other regions of California, there is no large regional AVA designation that includes the entire
Central Valley wine growing region.
Klamath Mountains
These AVAs are located in the southern
Klamath Mountains of far northwestern California.
North Coast
All of these AVAs are included within the geographic boundaries of the six-county
North Coast AVA.
Sierra Foothills
All of these AVAs are contained entirely within the geographic boundaries of the
Sierra Foothills AVA.
South Coast
All of these AVAs are contained entirely within the geographic boundaries of the
South Coast AVA.
List of Pacific Northwest AVAs
A list of American Viticultural Areas (AVAs) in the
Pacific Northwest states of
Oregon,
Washington, and
Idaho:
List of East Coast AVAs
A list of American Viticultural Areas (AVAs) on the
East Coast of the United States:
- Catoctin, Maryland
- Cayuga Lake, New York
- Central Delaware Valley, New Jersey & Pennsylvania
- Cumberland Valley, Maryland & Pennsylvania
- Finger Lakes, New York
- Hudson River Region, New York
- Lake Erie, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania
- Lancaster Valley, Pennsylvania
- Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania
- Linganore, Maryland
- Seneca Lake, New York
- Shenandoah Valley, Virginia and West Virginia
- Southeastern New England, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island
- The Hamptons, Long Island, New York
- Virginia's Eastern Shore, Virginia
- Warren Hills, New Jersey
- Western Connecticut Highlands, Connecticut
- Yadkin Valley, North Carolina
List of Central US AVAs
A list of the remaining American Viticultural Areas (AVAs), not on the West or East Coasts:
- Alexandria Lakes, Minnesota
- Altus, Arkansas
- Arkansas Mountain, Arkansas
- Augusta, Missouri
- Bell Mountain, Texas
- Escondido Valley, Texas
- Fennville, Michigan
- Fredericksburg in the Texas Hill Country, Texas
- Grand River Valley, Ohio
- Grand Valley, Colorado
- Hermann, Missouri
- Isle St. George, Ohio
- Kanawha River Valley, West Virginia
- Lake Michigan Shore, Michigan
- Lake Wisconsin, Wisconsin
- Leelanau Peninsula, Michigan
- Loramie Creek, Ohio
- Mesilla Valley, New Mexico and Texas
- Middle Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico
- Mimbres Valley, New Mexico
- Mississippi Delta, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee
- Ohio River Valley, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia
- Old Mission Peninsula, Michigan
- Ozark Highlands, Missouri
- Ozark Mountain, Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma
- Shawnee Hills, Illinois
- Shenandoah Valley, Virginia and West Virginia
- Sonoita, Arizona
- Texas Davis Mountains, Texas
- Texas High Plains, Texas
- Texas Hill Country, Texas
- Texoma, Texas
- West Elks, Colorado
See also
References
External links