Q&A with Team Flâneur
Here are Flâneur Wines we consider ourselves to be flâneurs at our core, passionate artisans joined together by the desire to slow down, observe the world, and create delicious wines. Whether it’s on your next visit to our tasting room or right here in our Q&A, we invite you to get to know our team!
These connoisseurs of life will be sharing their knowledge throughout the year as the collective authors of our 2022 blog posts. Their experience spans from years of winemaking, Michelin star hospitality, impressive wine certifications, international travel, and quite literally, entire life times in the wine industry.
Enjoy getting to know the team through the below Q&A. Stay tuned for more to come!
From Winemaking & Viticulture to Marketing, Sales & Hospitality, Meet the Flâneur Wines Team…

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Grant Coulter
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: There was not a singular moment that catalyzed my decision to be a winemaker but more a confluence of many factors in my life that lead me into winemaking. My grandparents farmed cotton in the central valley of California and my great grandparents were plum and cherry farmers in the Russian River area, so farming was something that existed in my family lineage. I remember being in the fields outside my grandparents house and realizing that farming was a profession. My parents were wine lovers and would often take my Sister Kate and I up to the Sonoma and Napa area when we were kids. I remember haunting the halls of Franciscan, Frogs Leap and Iron Horse while they tasted wines.
Fast forward to my college years, after a couple of failed attempts at a major and fateful call from Dad asking exactly what I was up to, I did some soul searching and realized that winemaking was an actual profession I could pursue. I fell in love with the nexus of science, agriculture, art and food. The rest is a story that is still being written.
Q: In a few sentences, how do you define your winemaking style and philosophy?
A: I make wines I want to drink. Using the best raw materials I use the natural elements of the yeast, bacteria, skins and stems in the hope of creating wines that are multidimensional, thought provoking and most of all delicious.
Q: What is your favorite thing about working with our La Belle Promenade Vineyard?
A: I love its flexibility, LBP is such an incredible Vineyard with soils, aspect and climate perfectly suited to grow world class grapes. I can play around with all kinds of different fermentation techniques and extraction methods and I know at the end of the day I will always make something delicious. It’s like cooking with the best ingredients.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I love a good building project, If I had more time I would love to design and build a house by myself.
Q: What is your advice for someone thinking about embarking on a career as a winemaker?
A: Try to find work with wineries /growers you respect and watch and listen. This will help formulate the ideas and questions you want to answer over the course of your career. And away remember that growing and making the wine is easy, now selling it, that’s another story…

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Anthony Sereni
Q: What do you consider to be the last remarkable Willamette Valley wine vintage and why?
A: 2019 – the wines are so pretty with their subtle floral aroma, balanced earthy notes, high toned fruit, and really enjoyable acidity. But what really excites me are the hidden layers which unfold with proper cellaring. The delicate textures are dynamic and intriguing. These wines showcase some of the best the Willamette Valley has to offer.
Q: What makes our portfolio of wines Flâneur unique to the Willamette Valley?
A: I think our estate vineyards have their own unique story to tell providing two strong counterpoints in wine style. LBP Pinot Noir is floral and fruity, high elevation with lots of dimensions and subtle textural elements. We’re also producing some vibrant and memorable sparkling wines from this site. Additionally, we’re making Aligoté, Grüner Veltliner, Chardonnay, and soon Gamay, something exciting and rare varietals for the valley.
Flanerie is planted East to West, unique in the Willamette Valley. It’s one of the reasons the Pinot from this site is ‘in your face’ in the best way. Flanerie is meaty, earthy, with a different fruit profile (thimbleberry, ripe plum, strawberry, and currants), and texture which welcomes a different style of food.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I love Rollerblading! I’m pretty good; it’s been a love of mine since I was small.
Q: What is your advice for someone thinking about embarking on a career as a winemaker?
A: There’s lots learn and a science based foundation will go a long way. Go travel and work harvest in a variety of places. This will allow you to taste a huge variety of wine styles and find what speaks to you. Traveling is essential: get out there and enjoy your own flâneur!

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Jaime Cantu
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: Growing grapes didn’t start as a passion for me; at first, it was just a job. But the more I did it and the more I learned, the more I became personally invested in the land and the vines. Last year was my 32nd vintage. With 32 years of industry experience, I’m fortunate to have worked with several well-recognized growers and winemakers.
Q: What is our farming philosophy?
A: Our farming philosophy is to grow organic. This means, Flâneur does not use harmful pesticides, and we do not irrigate our vineyards.
Q: Can you explain the seasonal life cycle of a vine throughout the year?
A:
1. Bud break – represents the beginning of a new cycle
2. Bloom – represents the fruit setting
3. Lag phase – the phase when we will know how much fruit we will have at harvest
4. Harvest – the picking of our fruit and final step
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I enjoy spending time with my son and grandkids and I enjoy flying planes.
Q: What’s the most rewarding part of your job?
A: The most rewarding part of my job is to see our customers enjoying our wines and showcasing the vineyards.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Russell Lichtenthal
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: During Culinary school I took a few wine classes and really enjoyed them. I continued taking wine courses on my days off while working as a line cook in NYC. A couple of years into cooking, a front of house position came available at the hotel I was working at. The F&B Director suggested I take the position, and after a year if I didn’t enjoy it I could always go back to the kitchen. I was 25. I am still in the front of the house today.
Q: Can you tell us the history about why the company is named, Flâneur Wines?
A: The owner of the winery, Marty Doerschlag, named it so. He had just sold off his shares of the family business he helped build up, considerably. After nearly 20 years of working nose to the grindstone, he took a year or so off before starting the next phase of his life. In any event, came across the word Flânuer in the financial book, “The Black Swan”, and thought it was the perfect name for a winery. Wine is all about getting lost in conversation with friends, discovering something new, traveling to a distant land through a drop of juice.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I speak Mandarin
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: Anytime I am in a city, one that I know, or one that I have never been to. In either case, I tend to walk around neighborhoods with the intent of getting a little lost; wandering in and out of eateries and pubs.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Amelia Dobbes
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: I was technically born into it. My dad, Joe Dobbes, has been a Winemaker here in the Willamette Valley all my life. Consequently, I grew up in the vineyards, bung hunting in the barrel room and helping out with harvest. After studying Marketing and International Business in school, I worked at my family’s winery, Dobbes Family Estate. Once I turned 21, I “officially” joined the tasting room, helping with harvest, and then in marketing. In between I spent some time working as a harvest intern for different winemakers and in distribution for Southern Glazer’s Wine and Spirits.
Q: How would you describe a modern day Flâneur?
A: To me, I like to think of a modern day Flâneur as a solo backpacker traveling through a new city. Moving slowly, taking it all in. They may not know where they are going to wander next but they are taking in the beauty along the way. They live a simple life in reality but aren’t strangers to enjoying the finer things on occasion. Like a beautiful glass of wine at a hole in the wall restaurant along their adventure.
Q: How do you predict the Willamette Valley wine industry will change in the next 10 years?
A: It’s growing every day and I don’t see signs of slowing. Thus, as the Willamette Valley gets more and more national and international recognition, the more investment we will see. Such as, tourism, new wineries and innovative/sustainable farming and winemaking investment. Pinot Noir is here to stay as our mainstay but I do believe we will see new varietals taking up larger shares of total plantings as our climate changes.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I fell into a fermenter of Pinot while doing a punch down when I was seven so my dad named the wine after me.
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: When I spend the day exploring a new city.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Kellie Campbell
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: I was living in Australia, working at a beautiful little Italian restaurant and had my first ah-ha wine which was a 1987 Barolo. Believe it or not, I still feel like I can taste it. When I moved back to PDX to finish my degree, the Italian restaurant that I worked at took us out to Wine Country for a staff appreciation day. Our first stop was Domaine Drouhin. The rest is history…
Seeing the family history and culture of the Willamette Valley made me fall in love. It involves non-stop education, experiences and a beautiful community of people who work and collaborate together.
Q: What is unique about the Flâneur Wine Club?
A: Every single person in this club is truly a part of our family. Everyone is connected in so many ways and the friendships and connections are long lasting. Additionally, we curate wines specifically for our wine club that you will never see outside of the tasting room.
Q: What would you consider to be Flâneur Wines’ Flagship Wine?
A: Personally, the La Belle Promenade Chardonnay. This wine continually surprises people even when they step into the tasting room with the idea that they don’t enjoy Chardonnay.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I lived in Australia for a year and studied Modern Greek for two years.
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: When I am traveling abroad. There is something about being in another country or place that brings out a completely different side in me.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Tyson Theese
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: I started out as a premium & import wine sales rep in Wisconsin.
Q: Why the Willamette Valley?
A: I find Pinot/Chard the most compelling/interesting varietals. I also love all Oregon has to offer for outdoor activities, as well as the overall approachability of its wine culture. Wine is for everyone, and Oregonians do a great job of living out that belief.
Q: You hold some pretty impressive wine certifications, can you tell us the hardest and most rewarding part of your certification journey?
A: I would say the hardest season of pursuing those certifications was when I lived outside of a wine region, with very little wine culture around me. All my studying was done out of books and by myself. The most rewarding moment was becoming a Certified Sommelier. It was a very full-circle moment in my life that reinforced many decisions that I had made to pursue that certification.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I have two tattoo sleeves.
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: When I am sipping wine out of a camp mug, at the top of a mountain.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Mindy Casteel
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: My family was involved in the wine industry and I started to work in the tasting room at Bethel Heights Vineyard in 2011.
Q: What is your favorite part of working in the Grain Elevator in downtown Carlton?
A: Seeing everyone’s faces when they walk in and see the historical space.
Q: What would you describe to be the key identifying traits of the portfolio of Flâneur Wines?
A: Balanced. Grant does a beautiful job every year of creating really balanced wines regardless of the vintage.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: I vastly prefer white wine over red wine.
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: I try to really live in the moment and appreciate the now, observe the beauty of how life unfolds.

Q&A with Flâneur Wines’ Sandy Willats
Q: How did you get started in the wine industry?
A: After a few decades working in advertising and owning my own consulting business, I was feeling burnt out and in need of a change. Not ready to stop working altogether, I wanted to immerse myself in my passion: wine. My husband and I have always loved Oregon and especially Oregon Pinot Noir so it was an easy choice to move to the valley and start making connections. A few resumes and interviews later, I found my home at Flâneur!
Q: What is your go to explanation when asked, “What does Flâneur mean?”?
A: While it literally means “curious stroller”, I like to think of it as the deliberate choice to slow down and enjoy the life that is in front of you.
Q: Can you tell us your favorite thing about our two estates, Flanerie Vineyard and La Belle Promenade Vineyard?
A: Flanerie has the potential to produce these beautiful, dark brooding Pinots that are so complex and long lived. La Belle Promenade is such a breathtaking vineyard and the views are spectacular. Her wines are equally romantic and luscious.
Q: What is a fun fact about you?
A: Not wanting a conventional wedding, my husband and I eloped and got married in Tuscany.
Q: Where/when in life do you feel you most embody your inner Flâneur?
A: Whenever I’m at the coast, I can wander aimlessly up and down the beaches for hours.