In a tiny Northern California town called Vina, there's a winery that's definitely off the beaten track. That might be because this region's better known for olive groves and cattle ranches than grapes. For these, vintners, though, it's spiritual work.

When I visit New Clairvaux winery, two people are filtering wine, getting it ready for bottling. On the surface, they make an odd pair. One is Aimee Sunseri, the winemaker heading up operations here. The other is Brother Christopher Cheney, a monk. He grew up in California's wine country, but never thought he'd make the stuff, until a religious conversion led him to the Abbey of New Clairvaux in 2004, just a few years after the brothers planted grapes.

"Actually, the winery and my vocation have grown up together," he says.

The 20 brothers of New Clairvaux are Trappist monks, a subset of Cistercians. They live in a walled-off cloister, and rarely leave the property.

"There's people who don't understand that. They think, 'What are you guys doing? There are so many needs in the world, and here you guys are wearing your pajamas, singing in a barn,' " Brother Christopher says with a laugh.

He's talking about their long white robes and their beautiful but unadorned plywood church. The brothers spend hours every day in silence and prayer.

"I really believe that it's important that there are people who are totally, 100 percent devoted to prayer," Brother Christopher says.

But the monks need to work to survive. They live off their own labor — not donations — and winemaking is one of their efforts.

Brother Rafael Florez is in the abbey's St. James vineyard, wearing the work uniform of jeans and a navy sweatshirt to prune vines. When he came here from Ecuador 18 years ago, he'd been seeking the right religious order for all of his adult life. He also had no experience with grapes, but he's part of a long legacy of Cistercian vintners. European monks of their order have made wine for nearly 900 years, including at one of the most celebrated wineries in the world, Clos de Vougeot. For Brother Rafael this work and his vocation go hand in hand.

"One thing that has been extremely helpful for me is to know myself by pruning," Brother Rafael says. "What you do with the vines is you're constantly removing what is extra. You remove the extra clusters, you remove the extra leaves and canopy. For what?"

It's so the remaining grapes have space to develop beautifully. Brother Rafael continues, "It's the same with me in my interior life. I need to remove what is superfluous."

Bother Rafael has a lot to contend with on the vineyard. It gets unrelentingly hot here, without the cool nights of other California wine regions. Then there's the soil: deep, moist, and sandy. That seems great to the outsider, but wine grapes do best in rocky soil, where they have to work harder to grow. Brother Rafael says he can spend 20 minutes removing leaves from a row of vines, and when he goes back to the beginning of the row, the leaves have already started to grow back. "It's very labor intense."

Given these conditions, why would a winemaker like Sunseri want to become business partners with the monks of New Clarivaux?

"I like the challenge," she says.

Her family has made wine in Napa and other parts of California for five generations.

"If you make good wines in Vina, you've got to be really good at your craft," she says.

Even better than Leland Stanford. In the late 1800s the railroad baron and one-time California governor created the Great Vina Ranch here, planting 4,000 acres. It was the world's largest vineyard at the time. He did pretty well with brandy, but not with wine.

Sunseri and the monks benefit from air conditioning and lots of other new technology and knowledge. They started by planting grapes that thrive in similar Mediterranean climates, like Tempranillo, Graciano, Albariño and Viognier.

Sunseri has another challenge: The monks make up a majority of the operation's workforce, but they pray seven times a day. The brothers alter their schedule for a few days during harvest, but otherwise, Sunseri works around prayer. She says, unconditionally, it's worth it.

"I really love working with the brothers," Sunseri says. "They fulfill something in my life, and they've got some core values I hope rub off on me." She says there's nothing superficial about them. "They're very understanding, very forgiving, very welcoming."

And, Sunseri says, the brothers have incredibly high standards. That contributes to why New Clairvaux's stock sells out: online, at their tasting room, and through their wine club.

Brother Christopher says engaging with the public like that is part of New Clairvaux's mission, even though the brothers are cloistered.

"You create a sacred space apart and then you invite people into it," he says, all to serve a larger purpose.

"Whatever we make, we want people, when they experience it, to praise God," and experience a sip of wine as a divine gift.



This story is part of the series California Foodways, funded, in part, by Cal Humanities. Reporter Lisa Morehouse produced this story during a fellowship at Hedgebrook, a residency for women writers.



Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

Up in Northern California's Tehama County, the soil is unfit for growing grapes. And the temperatures are all wrong. So you might think it would take a miracle to make wine there. Instead, a group of monks is relying on hard work and craftsmanship. Lisa Morehouse reports.

LISA MOREHOUSE, BYLINE: The two people working at this winery this morning in the tiny town of Vina seem like an odd pair.

AIMEE SUNSERI: This is the game plan, Christopher. I'm going to turn this on.

(SOUNDBITE OF WINE FLOWING)

MOREHOUSE: One is winemaker Aimee Sunseri.

CHRISTOPHER CHENEY: OK, that's it.

SUNSERI: Perfect.

MOREHOUSE: The other Brother Christopher, a monk.

CHENEY: We're basically filtering this wine and getting it ready for bottling.

MOREHOUSE: He grew up in California's wine country but never thought he'd make the stuff until a religious conversion led him to the Abbey of New Clairvaux in 2004, just a few years after the monks first planted grapes.

CHENEY: Actually, the winery and my vocation have grown up together.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MONKS: (Singing) Hallelujah.

MOREHOUSE: The 20 brothers here live in a walled-off cloister and rarely leave the property.

CHENEY: There's people who don't understand that (laughter). They think, what are you guys doing? I mean, there are so many needs in the world, and here you are wearing your pajamas, singing in a barn. (Laughter).

MOREHOUSE: He's talking about their long, white robes, their plywood church and the hours they spend singing, praying and being silent.

CHENEY: I really believe that it's really important that there are people who are totally, 100 percent devoted to prayer.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MONKS: (Singing in foreign language).

MOREHOUSE: But the monks need to work to survive. And though this is their first winemaking venture in the Americas, there's a nearly 900-year-old history of Cistercian vineyards in Europe.

(SOUNDBITE OF ELECTRIC PRUNING SHEARS)

MOREHOUSE: Wearing jeans and a navy sweatshirt, Brother Rafael uses electric pruning shears to thin out vines at the abbey's St. James vineyard.

RAFAEL FLOREZ: What you want is only two clusters.

MOREHOUSE: Originally from Ecuador, Brother Rafael had never grown grapes before. Now, he says, it helps his spiritual growth.

FLOREZ: One thing that has been extremely helpful for me is to know myself by pruning. You remove the extra leaves and the canopy, for what?

MOREHOUSE: For the remaining grapes to have space to develop beautifully.

FLOREZ: And it's the same with me, you know, in my interior life. I need to remove what is superfluous.

MOREHOUSE: He's got to contend with unrelenting heat and a loamy soil that's not ideal for grapes. Given these conditions, why would a winemaker like Aimee Sunseri get into business with the monks of New Clairvaux?

SUNSERI: I like the challenge. If you can make good wines in Vina, you've got to be really good at your craft.

MOREHOUSE: And Sunseri has an additional challenge. The monks pray seven times a day. But she says working around their schedule is worth it.

SUNSERI: I really love working with the brothers. They've got some core values that I hope rub off on me.

MOREHOUSE: She says there's nothing superficial about them.

SUNSERI: They're very understanding, very forgiving, very welcoming.

MOREHOUSE: And she says they have incredibly high standards. That contributes to why New Clairvaux's stock sells out - online, at their tasting room and through their wine club. Back at the winery, Brother Christopher says engaging with the public like that is part of New Clairvaux's mission, even though the brothers are cloistered.

CHENEY: You create a sacred space apart, then you invite people into it.

MOREHOUSE: All to serve a larger purpose.

CHENEY: Whatever we make, we want people, when they experience it, to praise God.

MOREHOUSE: And experience a sip of wine as a divine gift. For NPR News, I'm Lisa Morehouse in Vina, Calif.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MONKS: (Singing in foreign language).

MONTAGNE: This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Renee Montagne.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

And I'm Steve Inskeep. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.