Rich Smith Award of Excellence Presented to Emily Hodson of Virginia

SACRAMENTO, CA, January 29, 2025 —The ninth annual Rich Smith Award of Excellence for outstanding contributions to the American grape and wine industry was presented today to Emily Hodson, the winemaker at Veritas Vineyards and Winery, a co-owner of Flying Fox Vineyards and Winery, and an active leader in the Virginia wine industry.

The prestigious award annually reflects the spirit and accomplishments of the late Richard (Rich) Smith, founder of Valley Farm Management and Smith Family Wines in California’s Santa Lucia Highlands wine region in Monterey County. Rich was first and foremost a family man, but also a successful grape grower and winery owner, and a highly respected colleague known for the combination of passion, commitment and collaboration which helped advance the American grape and wine industry.

Ever since Rich passed away in December 2015, three organizations—WineAmerica, National Grape Research Alliance (NGRA) and Winegrape Growers of America (WGA)—have collaborated with Rich’s family to present this annual award since Rich had been a loyal member of all three groups. The 2025 award was presented at WGA’s annual Leadership Luncheon during the Unified Wine & Grape Symposium in Sacramento.

“We are honored to have Emily receive the 2025 Rich Smith Award,” said Jason Smith on behalf of Rich’s wife Claudia and daughter Kacy. “Her love of science, her drive and passion for the Virginia wine industry are at the core of what Rich did throughout his career. Emily is the perfect addition to the growing list of accomplished winners of the award. Congrats, Emily!”

Emily learned the art of winemaking from her father and the science from Virginia Tech, where she earned a degree in enology under the guidance of Dr. Bruce Zoecklein. She learned about the importance of vineyards in the equation from her uncle. In addition to her winemaking duties at Veritas and Flying Fox, she produces wine for several other wineries under custom crush arrangements. Her wines have won numerous awards in major competitions, helping to put Virginia on the map as a serious wine region.

When Dr. Zoecklein retired as the state enologist, Emily was part of the creation of the Virginia Winemakers Research Exchange, which gives local winemakers access to regional production-scale research facilities. They conduct hundreds of educational sessions and winemaker research projects under the guidance of a research enologist, giving scientific discipline to the process. It has resulted in Charlottesville, VA, and the Monticello AVA receiving the 2023 Wine Region of the Year at Wine Enthusiast Magazine’s Annual Wine Star Awards.

Emily also led the charge, starting in 2021 (with her colleague Ben Jordan), to execute the VWB’s vision to develop winegrape varieties that are resistant to downy mildew. (Grape pathologists commonly refer to Virginia as Ground Zero for downy mildew, as it has the ideal moist, temperate environment for it to spread.) The VWB set aside $1 million for the first phase of the project, and Emily figured out who to talk to get it off the ground. Virginia recently signed a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with USDA-ARS and brought on a highly qualified grape breeder—Dr. Surya Sapkota, an alum of the NGRA-initiated VitisGen project focused on powdery mildew resistance—to begin this work and take Virginia into a more sustainable future. Emily remains a key industry advisor on the program.

Due to her many contributions, Emily was honored as the Virginia Wine Person of the Year in 2017. She also represents the Southeast Region of the U.S. on the NGRA Board of Directors, and is the organization’s Vice Chair.

“Emily’s commitment to her family and the broader wine community reflect qualities which make Rich Smith’s legacy so powerful,” said Jim Trezise, President of WineAmerica “While always attentive to their own businesses, Rich and Emily are natural-born collaborators working to make the common good even better.”

“Emily is a rare leader who leverages science as a means to advance the industry,” said Donnell Brown, President of NGRA. “Her brainchild, the Winemakers Research Exchange, has given her fellow Virginia winemakers a launchpad for experimentation and innovation. With it, they’ve lifted the state to the status of wine region to watch—and invest in—even by vintners in Bordeaux, as we saw this past summer. And the grapevine breeding work she spearheaded will help sustain the state’s wine industry long into the future. Emily’s legacy is already taking shape, right before our eyes.”

Representing the Winegrape Growers of America, Colleen Frei added, “Emily’s engagement with others to foster relationships across the industry in support of advancement through research and collaborative problem solving is tremendous. Her steadfast efforts to further the grape and wine community align with Rich Smith’s amazing legacy.”

The actual Rich Smith Award is a solid bronze medallion depicting Rich holding a glass of wine in a vineyard mounted on a large wooden back, emblazoned with the words, “Rich Smith Award of Excellence,” plus “Passion, Commitment, Collaboration” and the name of the recipient.

Prior recipients, starting in 2017, were: John Martini, Anthony Road Wine Company, Finger Lakes, New York; Pete Downs, Family Winemakers of California; Jerry Lohr, J. Lohr Vineyards & Wines, Paso Robles, California; Jim Trezise, WineAmerica, Washington, DC; Donniella (Donnie) Winchell, Ohio Wine Producers Association; Tom Davenport of National Grape Cooperative; Marty Clubb, L’Ecole No 41, Walla Walla, Washington; and Nick Dokoozlian, GALLO.

For media inquiries:
Jim Trezise, WineAmerica, jimtrezise@nullwineamerica.org
Donnell Brown, National Grape Research Alliance, dbrown@nullgraperesearch.org
Colleen Frei, Winegrape Growers of America, colleen@nullwawinegrowers.org
Jason Smith, Valley Farm Management, jsmith@nullparaisovineyards.com

 

The “Genuine” Rich Smith Award, presented annually to persons exhibiting the same qualities of passion, commitment, and collaboration.
Members of the Smith family and sponsoring organizations present the Rich Smith award to Emily Hodson (third from left)