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  1. Domaine Lepovo was founded in early 2025 by Svetozar Levovski, with longtime friend and winemaker Marijan Bozinovski taking on the role of director. Located in the quiet hills of Foster Valley, just outside San Fierro, the winery was created with a clear purpose: to share the tradition and soul of Tikves winemaking with a new and curious audience. Svetozar grew up surrounded by vineyards in Macedonia. The wines of the Tikves region were part of everyday life, full of depth, strength, and history. After moving abroad and spending years working in the wine world, he saw a chance to build something that connected his roots with his future. He found that opportunity in San Andreas. Foster Valley offered the right balance of climate, soil, and scenery. With its cool air from the nearby coast and its gently sloping terrain, it felt like the perfect place to grow bold, expressive wines. Together with Marijan, who brought decades of winemaking knowledge from both Macedonia and California, they began planting vines and building the estate from the ground up. Domaine Lepovo focuses on native Balkan varietals like Vranec, Kratoshija, and Temjanika, alongside select international grapes. Every decision, from the vineyard to the cellar, is made with care and purpose. The wines are produced in small batches to preserve character and reflect the land they come from. But this winery is about more than just the wine. It is about heritage, memory, and sharing a story. The name Lepovo comes from a village near the Tikves region where Svetozar's grandparents once made wine by hand. In many ways, this project is a continuation of that family tradition, reimagined in a new landscape. Domaine Lepovo was built to open a door between two worlds. It is a place where the history of the Balkans meets the energy of San Andreas. Through each bottle, the winery invites people to discover the flavors, textures, and spirit of a region that is still largely unknown to many wine lovers. From the first vine planted to the first bottle poured, the vision has remained the same: to honor where we come from, embrace where we are, and create wines that speak for themselves. Every bottle of wine you’ve ever had began with grapes growing under the sun. Months of sun, rain, wind, and waiting. The vines are watched closely. Winemakers walk through the rows every day near harvest, tasting the grapes, testing the sugar, waiting for the moment when they’re just right. Not too sweet, not too sour. Just ready. When that moment comes, the vineyard comes alive. If it’s a small winery, it’s often done by hand. Crews head out early, sometimes before sunrise, clipping bunches and dropping them gently into bins. In bigger operations, large harvesters do the job in a fraction of the time. Either way, the grapes are rushed straight to the winery. Once they arrive, the grapes are sorted. Nobody wants leaves, rotten berries, or stems ending up in the wine. For white wines, the grapes are pressed right away to separate the juice from the skins. The juice goes into a big tank, and the skins are discarded. For red wines, it’s different. They crush the grapes and let the juice sit with the skins for a while. That’s how red wine gets its color and those bold, rich flavors. The juice, now called must, goes into fermentation tanks. This is where the magic happens. Yeast, either natural or added, gets to work eating the sugar in the juice and turning it into alcohol. The tanks bubble and hiss as fermentation kicks off. The whole winery smells amazing. Like fresh fruit, warm bread, and something alive. For red wine, there’s this thick layer of grape skins that floats to the top during fermentation. Winemakers have to mix it back in every day, either by punching it down or pumping the juice over the top. It's messy, hands-on work, but it's key to getting color, texture, and flavor. After a week or two, fermentation slows down, and the wine is ready to be pressed. The liquid gets separated from the solids, and what comes out finally starts to look and smell like real wine. From there, some wines go through another process called malolactic fermentation, where the sharp, green-apple acidity turns smooth and buttery. A lot of reds go through it, and some whites too, like Chardonnay. Now comes the waiting game. Aging. Some wines are aged in stainless steel tanks to keep them crisp and clean. Others go into oak barrels, which give the wine extra flavors like vanilla, spice, smoke, and toast. The barrel room is quiet, cool, and smells like wood and wine. Months go by. Sometimes years. During aging, winemakers taste constantly. They might decide to blend different barrels together, or mix in another grape variety to balance things out. Wine isn’t just chemistry. It’s instinct, experience, and gut feeling. When the wine is finally ready, it’s filtered, bottled, labeled, and packed. Bottles go out to stores, restaurants, or directly to people who’ve been waiting for that vintage to be released. Then one day, someone opens a bottle. Maybe it’s a special dinner. Or just a Tuesday night. They pour a glass, take a sip, and in that moment, they’re tasting everything. The vineyard. The weather that year. The decisions the winemaker made. The hours of labor nobody ever sees. That’s the real story of wine. Not just the process. It’s the people, the place, and the time it all came together.
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