Vineyard 29 takes its name from its address on Highway 29 in St. Helena, but the identity of the wine goes far deeper than a street number. Founder Chuck McMinn, a Silicon Valley technology executive, purchased the property in 1989 and spent years developing the vineyards before producing commercial quantities of wine. The estate includes some of the oldest Zinfandel vines in Napa Valley, planted in the late 19th century, alongside newer Cabernet Sauvignon plantings. McMinn converted the estate to biodynamic farming in the early 2000s, using principles derived from Rudolf Steiner’s agricultural philosophy to farm in harmony with natural cycles and build genuine soil health over time.
Silicon Valley Money Meets Napa Soil
Chuck McMinn built his fortune as an executive and board member at several major technology companies before purchasing the Highway 29 property in 1989. He was drawn to an old vine Zinfandel block that had been producing fruit since the late 1800s, making it one of the oldest continuously farmed vineyard sites in Napa Valley. McMinn expanded the property over the following years, planting Cabernet Sauvignon in addition to the existing Zinfandel and converting the entire estate to biodynamic farming in the early 2000s. He brought in David Abreu, Napa’s most respected vineyard manager, to oversee the farming and worked with a series of talented winemakers to develop the wine style.
The heritage Zinfandel vines at Vineyard 29, planted in the 19th century, produce one of the most distinctive and least-replicated wines in all of Napa Valley.
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Start the quizBiodynamic Farming and the Vineyard Philosophy
Biodynamic farming treats the farm as a self-contained organism, cycling nutrients through compost preparations, timing vineyard work to lunar and cosmic rhythms, and avoiding synthetic chemicals entirely in favor of preparations derived from natural sources. McMinn adopted the practice because he believed it produced genuinely healthier vines and more authentic wine flavors than conventional or even organic farming. The results at Vineyard 29 are notable: the biodynamic certified estate produces fruit with unusual concentration and complexity, and the old Zinfandel vines in particular have responded well to the more careful, attentive care that biodynamic management requires. David Abreu’s team manages the daily farming under McMinn’s direction.
The Estate Wines: Cabernet and Heritage Zinfandel
Vineyard 29 produces three estate wines in very small quantities. Aida Cabernet Sauvignon, named for McMinn’s wife, is the flagship, a structured St. Helena Cab built from estate blocks planted in the 1990s and aged in French oak for 18 to 22 months. Cru Cabernet is a second Cab bottling using different blocks and a slightly different farming approach, often showing a more approachable early character. The Aida Heritage Zinfandel is the most unique wine in the portfolio: fruit from the 19th-century vine plantings, producing a deeply colored, richly structured Zinfandel with dried fruit, pepper, and earth character that bears no resemblance to the jammy, high-alcohol Zins that dominated California production in the 1990s and 2000s. All three wines are produced in quantities typically under 1,000 cases.
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Find your pairingFood Pairing at Vineyard 29
The Aida Cabernet, with its firm structure and dark fruit character, is a natural companion to roasted and grilled red meat. A prime rib with au jus, a braised lamb shank with roasted root vegetables, or a dry-aged New York strip with compound butter all give the wine’s tannins something to work against while the fruit and oak detail fills in behind. The Heritage Zinfandel is unusual enough to merit its own pairing strategy: the wine’s dried fruit and pepper notes pair well with spiced and smoked preparations, including house-smoked brisket, pork ribs with dry rub, and charcuterie boards built around hard salami and aged Gouda. The structural complexity of the old vine Zin also handles game meat and duck surprisingly well.
Taste the Oldest Zinfandel in St. Helena
Vineyard 29 tastings are by appointment only on Highway 29 in St. Helena. Use the pairing tool to find the right food match for heritage Zinfandel or estate Cabernet, or take the quiz to discover which Napa style suits your palate.
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