We’ve thoroughly enjoyed presenting an array of wines from US growers over recent weeks. Some of these are icons, others emerging stars, but all show the integrity, soul and sense of place that International Fine Wines champions. Today, we unveil a heady mix of hidden gems that shows the scope of their brilliance beyond their best-known work. From Oregon’s Willamette Valley, we kick off with single-vineyard Riesling from Tualatin Hills biodynamic pioneer Montinore alongside Pinot Gris from Dundee Hills legend Eyrie Vineyards, which planted this variety all the way back in 1965. From the southern Napa Valley, Ashes & Diamonds delivers a bright, elegant 50:50 Semillon/Sauvignon Blanc homage to Domaine de Chevalier’s whites. And from Beau Rivage—the Golden State side project of wine writer William Kelley—we have a tense and profound Clarksburg Chenin Blanc.We return to Willamette for bright reds from Teutonic and Eyrie. The former is the brainchild of Barnaby and Olga Tuttle, who craft Mosel- and Alsace-inspired wines from Oregon’s highest, chilliest sites. Borgo Pass Vineyard’s bell-clear, nervy, spicy Meunier shows why these cool wines are such hot property. And from Eyrie once more, we present the Sisters Vineyard’s supple, mineral Trousseau and Trifolium, a ménage-à-trois of Pinot Noir, Trousseau and Meunier. The only red produced from the testing 2020 season, Jason Lett managed to conjure “the poster child for balance”, according to Wine Enthusiast.And we finish with the rarest treasure of all: Napa living legend Philip Togni’s Vin de Constance-inspired sticky-red unicorn from the super-scarce Black Hamburg grape. When the land of the free cuts loose with creativity, the good times flow. Plenty of those await you here!