Industry Night with Nycci Nellis
A fifth-generation mead maker carries a Holocaust survivor's legacy forward, one bottle at a time. Some stories start in a vineyard. This one starts in 19th-century Poland, survives a concentration camp and a death march, and lands in a tasting room in Mount Airy, Maryland. Rachel Loew Lipman didn't just inherit a winery. She inherited a reason. And if you've ever wondered whether a bottle of wine can hold memory, grief, and joy all at once, this episode of Industry Night, the DC food and hospitality podcast, is your answer. Maryland wine gets overlooked. It shouldn't. Winemaking here dates to the 1600s, and today more than 100 wineries are producing everything from cab francs to Vidal Blancs. But what Rachel is doing at Loew Vineyards goes beyond the glass. She's a DC food and hospitality insider's dream guest: a young head winemaker running Maryland's fourth oldest existing winery, its first kosher winery and meadery, and one of the longest continuous mead-making traditions in the world. This is the DC dining guide and hospitality podcast conversation you didn't know you needed. Rachel Loew Lipman is a fifth-generation mead maker, granddaughter of Holocaust survivor William Loew, and the force behind Loew Vineyards in Frederick County, Maryland. Her family's mead-making roots trace to 1800s Poland. She holds degrees in plant science and communications from the University of Maryland, a winemaking certification from Washington State, and experience in France. In 2025, she launched Maryland's first Star K certified mead. Key Takeaways Mead nearly disappeared from history. Jews were the majority of Polish mead producers before World War II. When 90% of Poland's Jewish population was murdered in the Holocaust, mead essentially vanished from the market. Rachel is bringing it back. The 2025 frost devastated the Mid-Atlantic harvest. On April 20, stagnant air dropped to 23.5 degrees across the region, wiping out primary fruit on over 600 of Maryland's roughly 1,000 grape-growing acres. Loew Vineyards is not making wine this vintage year. Going kosher brought unexpected balance. Loew Vineyards is now Maryland's first and only kosher winery, operating under both a conservative Hechsher for grape wines and a Star K Orthodox certification for meads. The Shabbat restriction forced Rachel, a lifelong seven-day-a-week worker, to finally take a day off. Covid accelerated the Maryland wine boom. When travelers couldn't get to Napa or France, they explored their own backyards. Local wine club memberships surged. Rachel credits that shift, combined with generational farming knowledge, for the best Maryland wines she's ever seen coming out right now. The Wolf Cabernet Sauvignon is the family's most personal bottle. Named for her grandfather's birth name, the wine arrived by kismet. A grower called Rachel with extra Cabernet Sauvignon one month after her grandfather passed. She had never asked for it. She made it for him. "We want to turn wine into memory and connection, and that to me is more the juice being worth the squeeze than anything the market does." - Rachel Loew Lipman "What I love is that you respect the past while looking towards the future, and I just think that's beautiful." - Nycci Nellis, Industry Night Timestamps 00:00 Welcome to Industry Night at The Wharf, DC. 00:20 Introducing Maryland wine and why it matters. 01:21 Meet Rachel Loew Lipman, fifth-generation mead maker. 02:55 The family's mead-making roots in 19th-century Poland. 04:37 Civil rights, the Habsburg Empire, and the first licensed meadery. 05:17 What is mead, really? Polish mead vs. Viking mead. 06:02 How the Holocaust erased Polish mead from the market. 07:28 William Loew: Holocaust survivor, translator, electrical engineer, winemaker. 09:40 The haunting smell of fermenting mead and why he started a vineyard. 10:48 Tasting the Savi: a chenin blanc mead named for family memory. 13:44 Loew Vineyards founded in 1982 on 37 acres in Mount Airy, Maryland. 15:41 Rachel's path into winemaking, from the Bonanza Building to Washington State. 18:33 Joining the family business full time in 2018 and navigating Covid. 22:27 The April 2025 frost and what 23.5 degrees means for a harvest. 25:21 Can you cover the vines? The limits of frost protection. 28:15 What's planted now and the vineyard's revitalization. 30:34 The Mazal sparkling red: dry Lambrusco on steroids, made with carbonic Barbera. 33:31 Carbonic fermentation explained, and why almost no one on the East Coast does it. 35:50 Going kosher: the Agricultural Innovation Grant and the steam generator. 36:52 Why the demand for kosher products was impossible to ignore. 37:13 Two certifications: conservative Hechsher for wines, Star K Orthodox for meads. 41:12 First kosher harvest and the unexpected gift of Shabbat. 44:36 Is the juice worth the squeeze? Being Maryland's first and only kosher winery. 45:33 Where Maryland wine stands today and why this generation is pushing boundaries. 47:25 How Covid drove local wine discovery and tasting room culture. 50:38 3GDC and speaking as a grandchild of a Holocaust survivor. 53:34 Generational trauma, resilience, and what William Loew chose to share. Connect with Rachel Loew Lipman Website [https://www.loewvineyards.net/] Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/loewvineyards] Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/loewvineyards] 3GDC Living Links [https://www.livinglinks3g.org/]
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