House Independent Producers Chardonnay
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Description
Description
House Independent Producers Chardonnay is an unoaked, 100% Chardonnay from Washington State's Columbia Valley AVA in a standard 750ml bottle. Often described as the closest thing to a Chablis-style white produced on the American West Coast, this wine leans into crisp acidity and pure fruit expression rather than oak influence — a deliberate stylistic choice that distinguishes it from the majority of domestic Chardonnays.
Quick Facts: Varietal: 100% Chardonnay | Origin: Columbia Valley AVA, Washington State | Style: Unoaked | Producer: HIP (Christophe Hedges / Hedges Family Estate) | Closure: Screwcap
Production & Heritage
House Independent Producers — commonly abbreviated as HIP — is a project from Christophe Hedges, a member of the respected Hedges Family Estate winemaking family on Red Mountain. The Chardonnay is sourced entirely from the Dionysus Vineyard at Sagemoor Farms, one of the oldest and most established vineyard sites in the Columbia Valley. True to its terroir-driven philosophy, the wine sees zero oak contact at any stage of production, allowing varietal character and site-specific minerality to come through unmasked. The screwcap closure further reflects this precision-oriented approach, eliminating the risk of TCA taint and preserving freshness.
Tasting Notes
Aroma: Ripe pear and crisp apple dominate the nose, followed by subtle layers of banana, pineapple, and lychee. Quieter notes of straw and custard emerge as the wine opens in the glass.
Taste: The entry is fruit-forward with pear and green apple sweetness, giving way to a medium-bodied mid-palate with rounded viscosity. Wine Enthusiast noted "a pleasing sense of tension between the fruit and acid," and that tension is the wine's defining trait — ripe fruit balanced by a bright, mouth-watering saline acidity that keeps each sip focused and clean. A subtle caramel undertone adds just enough richness without mimicking oak.
Finish: Medium in length, with clean pear and apple flavors carrying through to a crisp, mineral close. The lack of oak means nothing masks the finish — it simply fades cleanly, leaving behind refreshing acidity.
How to Drink HIP Chardonnay
Serve chilled between 45–50°F to let the fruit and acidity shine; this is a wine built for drinking without intervention, so a simple pour into a white wine glass is ideal. For cocktails: try it in a White Wine Spritzer, where its acidity holds up against soda water without going flat; in a French 75 variation (substituting Chardonnay for Champagne), where its pear notes complement gin botanicals; or in a Kalimotxo Blanco, a casual Spanish-style mix with lemon soda that benefits from an unoaked wine's clean profile.
Best For
- Chardonnay drinkers who dislike heavy oak or buttery styles
- Weeknight dinners with lighter fare like roast chicken or seafood
- Introducing someone to terroir-driven Washington State wines
- Warm-weather sipping as a crisp alternative to Sauvignon Blanc
Frequently Asked Questions
What does HIP Chardonnay taste like? HIP Chardonnay delivers pear, apple, and light tropical fruit flavors balanced by brisk saline acidity, with no oak influence shaping the palate. The overall impression is clean, medium-bodied, and mineral-driven.
How does HIP Chardonnay compare to French Chablis? HIP Chardonnay has been called the closest West Coast equivalent to Chablis, sharing the same unoaked purity and acid-driven structure, though it tends to show slightly riper, more tropical fruit character than most Petit Chablis or village-level bottlings from Burgundy. Both prioritize minerality and restraint over richness.
Is HIP Chardonnay good for sipping on its own? Yes — the absence of oak and the wine's balanced acidity make it highly drinkable as a standalone pour, especially when well-chilled.
Where is HIP Chardonnay made? HIP Chardonnay is produced in Washington State's Columbia Valley AVA, with fruit sourced from Dionysus Vineyard at Sagemoor Farms, one of the region's heritage vineyard sites established in the 1970s.
What foods pair well with HIP Chardonnay? Grilled halibut or other flaky white fish, which mirror the wine's clean finish; roast chicken with herbs, where the acidity cuts through richness; fresh oysters, complemented by the wine's saline quality; goat cheese salads, where tangy cheese echoes the wine's bright acid; and light pasta dishes with lemon-butter sauce, which align with the pear and citrus notes.
What sizes does HIP Chardonnay come in? HIP Chardonnay is available in the standard 750ml bottle with a screwcap closure.
Is HIP Chardonnay worth the price? HIP Chardonnay sits in the entry-level to mid-range tier for Washington State wines, and its single-vineyard sourcing and terroir-focused production make it a strong value compared to similarly styled unoaked Chardonnays and entry-level Chablis at comparable or higher price points.
Why HIP Chardonnay?
What sets this wine apart is its uncompromising commitment to an unoaked style using fruit from a specific, well-regarded vineyard site — Dionysus at Sagemoor Farms — rather than blending across anonymous lots. In a domestic Chardonnay landscape still dominated by buttery, barrel-fermented examples, HIP takes the opposite path and executes it with clarity. The Hedges family name behind the project brings decades of Columbia Valley winemaking credibility. For anyone searching for an American Chardonnay with the restraint and acid backbone of a good Chablis, this is one of the most convincing options available from Washington State.
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