Winery in Carlton, United States
Resonance (Jadot)
500ptsBurgundy-Oregon Dialogue

About Resonance (Jadot)
Resonance is the Willamette Valley tasting room project from Burgundy house Louis Jadot, operating from Carlton's wine country on NW Meadowlake Road. Earning a Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating in 2025, it represents one of the more considered European-to-Oregon crossover ventures in the region, where Burgundian sensibility meets Yamhill County terroir directly in the tasting room format.
Where Burgundy Meets the Willamette Valley
The drive out along NW Meadowlake Road toward Carlton places you in some of the most quietly serious wine country in the American Northwest. The Chehalem Mountains rise to the east, the Yamhill-Carlton AVA stretches across rolling farmland, and the wineries along this corridor tend to announce themselves with understatement rather than spectacle. Resonance, the Oregon project of the storied Burgundy house Louis Jadot, fits that register precisely. The property at 12050 NW Meadowlake Rd sits within a wine region that has spent the better part of four decades positioning itself as the American answer to Burgundy's Côte d'Or — a claim that lands differently when the producer making it actually has roots in Beaune.
Carlton itself has become the commercial and tasting-room hub of the Yamhill-Carlton AVA, with a concentration of producers operating within walking distance of the town center as well as along the surrounding roads. Ken Wright Cellars anchors the town's main street presence, while 00 Wines represents the newer wave of precision-focused producers working with single-vineyard Pinot Noir in the same county. For context on the wider Carlton scene, our full Carlton restaurants and wineries guide maps out the depth of what's available in the area. Resonance occupies its own tier within that geography, one where European pedigree and American terroir are in active conversation.
The Tasting Room Format and What to Expect
Louis Jadot's engagement with Oregon began as an exploration of whether the Willamette Valley's cool-climate conditions and volcanic soils could support the same variety expression the house had spent centuries refining in Burgundy. That question gets answered, in part, through the tasting room experience at Resonance. The format here is shaped by that Franco-American premise: the wines being poured carry Burgundian DNA in their production philosophy, interpreted through Oregon fruit and Yamhill County growing conditions.
The tasting room experience at properties like this one tends to be structured around demonstrating terroir differentiation rather than simply volume. In a region where single-vineyard Pinot Noir has become the dominant currency of prestige, tasting rooms that carry the backing of an established European house carry a specific kind of authority. Visitors are engaging not just with wine from a particular appellation, but with a comparative lens that spans continents. That context changes how the wines present themselves and how informed staff are equipped to frame them.
Booking specifics and tasting formats are not publicly listed at the time of writing, so confirming current availability and appointment requirements directly with the property before visiting is advisable. Wineries operating at the prestige tier in Yamhill-Carlton increasingly work by appointment rather than open-door walk-in, and Resonance should be approached with that assumption until confirmed otherwise.
The Burgundy-Oregon Comparison as the Real Subtext
The Willamette Valley's claim to Pinot Noir seriousness has always rested on a comparison that flatters both sides. Burgundy's Côte d'Or provides the reference point; Oregon provides the evidence that the variety can achieve structural complexity outside its ancestral home. When a Burgundy négociant of Louis Jadot's standing establishes a dedicated Oregon project, that comparison becomes something more concrete than marketing narrative. It becomes a testable proposition.
Resonance earned a Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating in 2025, which places it within the upper tier of recognized producers in its category. That signal matters in a wine region where peer differentiation is otherwise difficult to establish from the outside. The Yamhill-Carlton AVA contains dozens of serious producers, and a rating at this level functions as a marker of sustained quality rather than a single standout vintage. For context on how other serious Oregon producers approach the same territory, Adelsheim Vineyard in Newberg has operated with a multi-decade commitment to the Willamette Valley's northern reaches, while the broader Pacific Coast Pinot conversation includes producers like Au Bon Climat in Santa Barbara, whose Burgundy-influenced program operates from a warmer baseline.
Placing Resonance in the Wider Oregon Tasting Scene
Oregon's wine hospitality has matured considerably over the past decade. The era of barn-door casual tasting rooms has given way to a more deliberate approach among prestige producers, where the visit itself is designed to reflect the seriousness of the wine. Properties in the Yamhill-Carlton and Dundee Hills AVAs increasingly treat the tasting room experience as an extension of the wine's positioning, not merely a retail channel. Resonance, given its Jadot provenance and its 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition, sits within that more considered tier.
The comparison set for a visit here is instructive. On the California side, properties like Accendo Cellars in St. Helena and Aubert Wines in Calistoga operate at allocation-driven prestige levels where the tasting room experience is highly curated and access is limited. Alpha Omega in Rutherford and Artesa Vineyards in Napa represent the larger-format end of prestige California tasting experiences. Oregon's version of that tier tends toward smaller scale and greater informality, but the underlying seriousness is comparable. Resonance occupies that Oregon prestige tier with the added layer of Jadot's Burgundy credentials as framing.
For visitors building a Yamhill-Carlton tasting itinerary, placing Resonance alongside a producer from a contrasting tradition is worthwhile. The Adelaida Vineyards approach from Paso Robles, or the Rhône-focused work of Andrew Murray Vineyards in Los Olivos, offers a useful reminder of how different the Oregon Pinot framework is from the rest of the American West Coast's fine wine production. The contrast sharpens what Resonance is actually doing.
Among producers with European foundations working in American appellations, the challenge is always to avoid the tasting room becoming a lecture about origins rather than an experience of place. The better properties in this category let the wines do the cross-referencing. Alexander Valley Vineyards in Sonoma and Alban Vineyards in Arroyo Grande each demonstrate how a strong production philosophy can translate into a tasting room experience that feels grounded in its specific geography rather than in its reference points. Resonance, sitting in the middle of Yamhill-Carlton's most expressive growing terrain, has the raw material to do the same.
Planning a Visit
Resonance is located at 12050 NW Meadowlake Road in Carlton, Oregon 97111. The property sits within the Yamhill-Carlton AVA, which is approximately an hour's drive southwest of Portland. Phone and website details are not confirmed in current public records, so visitors should plan to verify access and appointment requirements through direct inquiry or updated listings before making the drive. Spring and early autumn are the peak visiting seasons for Willamette Valley wine country, when both harvest activity and visitor programming tend to be at their most concentrated. For a fuller picture of what Carlton offers beyond Resonance, including dining and other producers in the area, the EP Club Carlton guide covers the region in detail. Properties with European heritage operating at the prestige tier, from Achaia Clauss in Patras to Aberlour in Scotland, each demonstrate how a producer's origin story shapes the physical experience of visiting. At Resonance, that story runs from Beaune to the Chehalem foothills, and the tasting room is where those two coordinates meet.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the must-try wine at Resonance (Jadot)?
- Specific current releases and tasting menu compositions are not confirmed in public records at this time. Given the Jadot house's Burgundy foundation and the Yamhill-Carlton AVA's reputation for cool-climate Pinot Noir, the estate's Pinot Noir program is the logical focal point of any visit. The 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition signals consistent quality at the production level, though confirming which specific wines are currently being poured in the tasting room requires direct contact with the property.
- What's the defining thing about Resonance (Jadot)?
- The defining characteristic is the direct connection to Louis Jadot, one of Burgundy's most established négociant houses, expressed through a dedicated Oregon tasting room in Carlton. That European-to-Oregon lineage is not common in the Yamhill-Carlton AVA, and the 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating confirms the project is being taken seriously within formal evaluation frameworks. It places Resonance in a small peer group of producers with both old-world pedigree and verified American appellation credentials.
- Should I book Resonance (Jadot) in advance?
- Given its Pearl 2 Star Prestige rating in 2025 and its position within the Yamhill-Carlton AVA's prestige tier, advance planning is strongly advisable. Prestige-tier Oregon tasting rooms increasingly operate by appointment rather than walk-in, and arriving without a confirmed booking risks being turned away, particularly during spring and harvest season. Contact details are not confirmed in current public records, so verifying booking procedures before visiting is a practical first step.
- How does Resonance's Jadot connection distinguish it from other Willamette Valley producers?
- Louis Jadot's involvement in Oregon makes Resonance one of the few Willamette Valley properties where the production philosophy is directly connected to a centuries-established Burgundy house rather than to a domestic origin story. Most Yamhill-Carlton producers draw on Burgundy as an inspiration or reference point; Resonance draws on it as a direct institutional lineage. That distinction is substantiated by the 2025 Pearl 2 Star Prestige recognition, which positions it in the upper tier of appellation producers regardless of origin.
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