The Portland International Cider Cup announces winners
The Portland International Cider Cup awards ceremony took place last night, the culmination of the annual competition held by the Northwest Cider Association that represents ciders across the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia. Unfortunately unlike the past two years, we weren’t able to attend in person last night (it’s a fun party) for the live results, but the press release is out announcing the winners—and you can now view the full PICC 2019 winners list on the site as well.
Here is the press release announcement:
The competition was fierce, the decisions are in, and the winners are delicious! Eight lucky Pacific Northwest cideries took home fourteen gold medals at the Northwest Cider Association‘s 7th Annual Portland International Cider Cup (PICC) awards tonight. 2 Towns Ciderhouse won the competition’s highest honor and the Cup—the Best of Show Award.
At a joyous party at Ecotrust in NW Portland, over 100 cidermakers and industry supporters came together to celebrate the best ciders crafted in the Pacific Northwest, a region that is home to a quarter of the country’s cidermakers and boasts residents who drink more cider (per capita) than anywhere else in the United States.
“We’re honored and excited to win the Best In Show award,” said 2 Towns Ciderhouse’s chief cidermaker, Dave Takush. “The Portland International Cider Cup is a prestigious award in one of the strongest cider regions in the country. It means so much to us that our vision of craft cider has resonated with our community. We owe a big thanks to our team for their hard work, our growers for producing the highest quality fruit and to our industry peers for laboring every day to elevate the quality and excellence of Pacific Northwest cider.”
The competition itself was tight. Hosted at Square Mile Cider on April 7, this year’s PICC saw so many submissions that it grew exponentially, entering almost 190 competition ciders from British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. Ciders were evaluated by 60 experienced industry judges.
Within the twenty four categories sampled, judges found ciders in only fourteen categories worthy of gold medals:
- 2 Towns Ciderhouse, Oregon: Best of Show for 8th Anniversary (Heritage Dry), and gold medal for Strawberry Haze (Fruit-Other),
- Bauman’s Cider, Oregon: Loganberry (Fruit-Cane), Peach Raspberry (Fruit-Stone), Stephen’s Sweet (Modern Sweet), and Old Mule (Spiced),
- Independent Cider, Washington: Sno Gem Dry (Modern Perry)
- Liberty Ciderworks, Washington: Lafayette (French), Kingston Black SV (Single Varietal Bittersweet/Bittersharp)
- Runcible Cider, Oregon: Hop Ya’ll (Hopped)
- Snowdrift Cider Co., Washington: Red (Specialty), Cornice (Wood/Oaked)
- Swift Cider, Oregon: Original Hard Apple (Modern Dry Cider)
- Tieton, Washington: Lavender Honey Cider (Botanical)
These fourteen ciders went on to compete in the Best of Show round, in which the head judges from each round found the 2 Towns 8th Anniversary to be the best of the best.
Independent Cider (Dryden, WA) won the the Best New Cidery award, which carried with it a $500 prize. Awards were given to Snowdrift Cider Co. (Wenatchee, WA) and Liberty Ciderworks (Spokane WA) who tied for Small Cidery of the year and Runner Up for the Cup, Bauman’s Cider (Portland, OR) won Medium Cidery of the Year and 2 Towns Ciderhouse (Corvallis, OR) again won Large Cidery of the year. The full list of medalists and past cup winners can be viewed on the Northwest Cider Association website.
“The goal of this competition is to up the game for cidermaking in the Northwest as a whole,” says Emily Ritchie, executive director of the Northwest Cider Association. “Cidermakers get the chance to taste their fellow makers’ best work and be evaluated by well-trained, knowledgeable judges – and they love it! We have more competitors than ever before. When you see a PICC gold medal on the grocery shelves, you know it’s the best.”
Congratulations to all of the winners!
Make sure to seek out some of these winning ciders and cideries during Oregon Cider Week.