, Celebrated Napa winemaker Miljenko ‘Mike’ Grgich dies at 100

Mike Grgich and his wife Tatjana

Grgich was born the youngest of 11 children to Nicola and Ivka Grgić on 1 April, 1923, in the village of Desne, Croatia. His father made wine, and some of his earliest memories were of stomping grapes at harvest. His mother wanted him to get an education and so he left home aged 10, when his schooling in Desne ended, to go and live with a sister and continue his studies.

Grgich had designs on being a shopkeeper. Yet, after living through harrowing experiences during World War II, he decided to follow in his father’s footsteps and become a winemaker. Communism came to eastern Europe, and Croatia became part of Yugoslavia, and Mike went to the University of Zagreb to study oenology and viticulture.

He would flee communist Yugoslavia via an agricultural exchange programme with Germany and, via Canada’s British Columbia, would find his way to Napa Valley in 1958. Having arrived in St. Helena, Grgich would work for Chateau Souverain, and he would eventually meet another immigrant winemaker, André Tchelistcheff. The two would work together at Beaulieu Vineyards in Rutherford.

Eventually, Grgich was hired by a man named Robert Mondavi, who had built the first new wine facility in Napa since Prohibition. In his first vintage, 1969, Grgich crafted a legendary Cabernet Sauvignon at Mondavi. From there, he would go to Chateau Montelena, where he would make history.

The 1976 Judgement of Paris winning white wine, Chateau Montelena’s Chardonnay, was made by Grgich in

This Article was originally published on Decanter

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