Four Sisters Winery at Matarazzo Farm is a winery in White Township (mailing address is Belvidere) in Warren County, New Jersey.[2][3] A family produce farm since 1921, the vineyard was first planted in 1981, and opened to the public in 1984.[4][5] It is the third oldest winery in New Jersey.[6] Four Sisters has 8 acres of grapes under cultivation, and produces 5,000 cases of wine per year.[7][8] The winery is so named because its owners have four daughters.[8][9]
History
The winery was started in 1981 by fruit and vegetable farmers Robert "Matty" Matarazzo and his wife Laurie Matarazzo, to earn additional income to pay for their four daughters' college education.[10][11] Founded by immigrants from Italy in 1921, Matarazzo Farm was once known for its strawberry patches, which attracted up to 11,000 visitors during the harvest.[12]
To learn the trade, Laurie apprenticed with Nathan Stackhouse, who was based in South Jersey and had a master's degree in wine-making,[10] while Matty consulted wine growers in Sonoma County, California.[13] The couple invested heavily in building the winery and acquiring equipment from Italy,[10] and soon, wine-making became the main focus of their business.[11] Their first harvest was in 1984, and by 2003, they were producing 12,000 gallons of wine a year and had 23 flavors.[10] Laurie eventually retired and became an Episcopal priest, while Matty continued to run the business with four full-time managers and ten part-time staff.[10]
The winery also hosts monthly events such as wine-tasting and barefoot grape-stomping,[11] and has participated in New Jersey wine festivals each year in September.[14] Each of the eponymous four sisters have had wines named after them,[13] but reportedly have no interest in taking over the business.[10] Matarazzo Farm continues to operate its apple and pumpkin orchards in addition to the winery.[12]
^ abAtticks, Kevin M. (2000). Discovering New Jersey Wineries: A travel guide to New Jersey's wine country. Baltimore: Resonant Pub. pp. 36–39. ISBN9780966871661.
^Ramnarace, Cynthia. "Making the Impossible Possible" in Wines & Vines (15 May 2007). Retrieved 6 October 2013. A review of the wines made by New Jersey's 46 wineries found no other establishment using Delaware, Léon Millot, or Marquette grapes.