AmRhein Wine Cellars

AmRhein Wine Cellars in Bent Mountain, Virginia produces 100% estate-grown wines from volcanic-granite soils. Signature releases include the 2017 AmRhein Melange, the 2019 Cabernet Franc and a rare Vidal Blanc ice wine. Under winemaker Steve Bolleter the estate crafts German-influenced varietals, Petit Verdot, Aglianico, Traminette, balanced between barrel aging and crisp stainless-fermented whites. A string of Virginia Governor’s Cup medals underscores their quality. Expect minerally tension, brambly dark fruit and preserved citrus across flights, with outdoor patios overlooking the Blue Ridge Parkway. Note: the tasting room closed June 30, 2024; inquire about allocated bottles, private appointments, and limited library releases before visiting.
- Address
- 9243 Patterson Dr, Bent Mountain, VA 24059

AmRhein Wine Cellars is a permanently closed winery at 9243 Patterson Dr, Bent Mountain, VA 24059, known for estate-grown wines from volcanic granite soils and elevations from 1,200 to 2,600 feet. Onsite acreage and two additional estate parcels in Franklin and Botetourt counties let the estate choose the ideal site for each variety, Petit Verdot and Aglianico on warmer exposures, Vidal Blanc and Traminette higher and cooler, so every bottle reads like a mapped parcel. The Bent Mountain vineyard at 2,600 feet gives wines a brisk acidity and stony core; the Franklin County site at 1,900 feet supplies red-clay richness; Botetourt’s 1,200-foot block adds warmth and ripeness. Those terroir contrasts define AmRhein Wine Cellars’ estate-driven identity and make tasting flights distinctly geographic and textural.
Visitors encountered layered wines that married Old-World varietal stewardship with Virginia’s climatic range, and the estate’s proximity to the Blue Ridge Parkway yielded vistas paired with each tasting. The Amrhein family founded the estate in 1995; production commenced in 1999. Winemaker Steve Bolleter has overseen the cellar program, translating the family’s German-influenced philosophy into hand-pruned vineyards and focused cellar work. AmRhein emphasizes 100% estate-grown fruit, selective harvests and a barrel program for reds and select whites; Vidal Blanc is used for a specialty ice wine in favorable winters.
The winery received one award, including silver for the 2017 AmRhein Melange. Annual production historically ranged between 3,000 and 7,000 cases. The family-run operation sustained a regional following through blends under the Eclectic label and single-vineyard bottlings. Signature wines tell the estate story in bottle: the 2017 AmRhein Melange is a red blend aged in a judicious mix of French and American oak, offering complex layers of black cherry, graphite and dark spice with medium-plus tannins.
The 2019 Cabernet Franc and 2019 Petit Verdot show concentrated varietal profiles, berry-driven aromatics, savory herb tones, and structured mouthfeel, each benefitting from extended barrel maturation and tight vineyard selection. The estate’s 2019 Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Grigio present crisp, mineral-accented whites that maintain fresh acidity through cool-site picks and stainless fermentation; the Vidal Blanc ice wine arrives only in select vintages when winter conditions permit, concentrating honeyed apricot, preserved lemon and saline minerality. AmRhein’s Eclectic blends allow the vintner to combine varietals for balance and complexity, and limited library releases from smaller lots have been made available to mailing-list members and private collectors. Production notes emphasize hand pruning, small-lot fermentations and a balance between neutral and new oak driven by varietal needs.
The tasting experience at AmRhein Wine Cellars mixed relaxed hospitality with varietal education. Architecturally, the property leaned into functional cellar spaces, a barrel room for aging and outdoor terraces oriented toward mountain views, an experience that paired the wines’ mineral backbone with clear ridge-line panoramas. Private tours and small-group events allowed access to barrel tastings and blending discussions, and vineyard walks demonstrated microclimate differences across elevations. While cellar tours emphasized practical winemaking, fermentation vessels, barrel selection, and estate bottling, visitors often left with an understanding of how site, vintage and oak choices shape each bottle.
AmRhein Wine Cellars closed its public tasting room on June 30, 2024 due to health-related reasons affecting ownership. The winery is closed, so visits and releases are no longer available. Check for limited library releases, allocated seasonal bottlings, and owner-approved private tastings when planning a trip. For collectors and travelers interested in estate-grown Virginia wines with clear site expression, AmRhein Wine Cellars offers a legacy of measured production, Governor’s Cup recognition and varietal breadth, from Aglianico and Petit Manseng to Petit Verdot and Vidal Blanc.
The estate has not announced a reopening plan. AmRhein Wine Cellars remains part of Bent Mountain wine history.
In Context
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| AmRhein Wine CellarsThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Winery | , | |
| Valhalla Vineyards | Winery | , | |
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