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Iranian refugee builds world-ranked American winery rooted in heritage and health
News

Iranian refugee builds world-ranked American winery rooted in heritage and health

Jimmie Dempsey
Last updated: December 7, 2025 4:09 pm
Jimmie Dempsey Published December 7, 2025
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NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

One American winemaking family believes exceptional wine doesn’t require shortcuts.

After decades of quiet persistence in their trade, global recognition recently arrived for Maysara Winery, located in the rolling hills of Oregon wine country. It currently ranks as the No. 23 vineyard worldwide.

“We were informed we were chosen [to be among] the top 50 vineyards in the world,” founder Moe Momtazi told Fox News Digital in an interview. 

NASHVILLE’S HIDDEN ‘WINE COUNTRY’ PROVIDES TASTE OF TENNESSEE IN WHISKEY BARRELS

His middle daughter, Naseem Momtazi, president of sales, said, “You can have beautiful American-made, quality-made wines coming from an actual family, an actual farm and an actual story.”

The winery has partnered with the Fox News Wine Shop on a 2017 pinot noir.

Even so, when Moe Momtazi talks about his life, he starts not in Oregon — but in the turmoil of post-revolution Iran. His story of escape, new life in America and, ultimately, a winemaking philosophy rooted in heritage and health, became the foundation for Maysara Winery.

Though he came to the U.S. in 1971 to study engineering, his life took a dramatic spin after he returned to Iran in the late 1970s. “Things got pretty ugly” amid the 1979 revolution, he said.

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“So, in 1982, myself, with my wife — she was eight months pregnant — we escaped from Iran,” Momtazi continued, recalling his “difficult journey” to the U.S. by way of Pakistan, Spain, Italy and Mexico.

The new parents finally arrived in 1983 and initially settled in Texas, where Momtazi applied for political asylum and returned to civil engineering. But farming was his long-term dream.

Middle daughter Naseem recalled her father’s interest in farming.

Moe Momtazi is pictured with his wife, center, and three daughters.

“I remember as a kid, he would just buy small parcels when he could, because they didn’t have much when they came to the United States,” she told Fox News Digital. “With whatever he could save, he would buy land.”

In 1990, Momtazi left engineering and moved his family to Oregon. Seven years later, the family purchased an abandoned wheat farm that would become their winery’s home. 

“It was my mission to farm holistically.”

Today, the property spans roughly 563 acres of “amazing elevation,” daughter Naseem said.

Momtazi’s wife and all three daughters work at the winery.

‘Need to produce better’

From the beginning, Momtazi envisioned a farm built on biodynamic agriculture.

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“It was my mission to farm holistically and just not to use any kind of material from outside,” he said.

The method, grounded in the early 20th century teachings of Rudolf Steiner, emphasizes natural cycles and soil vitality.

A view of the Momtazi family owned vineyards in Oregon, where Maysara Winery is located.

One such unconventional method involves filling cow horns with manure and burying them in the ground.

Naseem Momtazi summed it up as “the most natural, holistic way to produce wine.”

‘MY WHOLE LIFE WAS A LIE’: FORMER VEGAN CHEF SINKS HER TEETH INTO CATTLE RANCHING

She added, “We do need to produce and consume better as people,” tying the winery’s methods to broader concerns about modern food production.

Moe Momtazi is even more uncompromising about how wine should be made.

Moe Momtazi tests a red wine from one of the barrels at his Maysara Winery.

“We absolutely do not manipulate our wine … no use of commercial yeast or enzymes or adjusting acidity or adding sugar,” he said.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

Some customers have told them that their “wine is medicine,” Naseem said, reflecting the differences between Maysara wines and heavily processed wines.

“If you drink too much, you’re going to get drunk,” she added. “But if you consume a moderate amount of our wine, I truly do say that you’re not going to get the same effects. … So much wine is manipulated.”

Moe Momtazi is pictured, left. A bottle of Maysara Winery's Momtazi Family Estate 2017 Pinot Noir is shown, right.

American-made wine

A defining trait of Maysara wines is that they’re aged far longer than most American wines, the family said. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE LIFESTYLE STORIES

“We truly believe in holding back the wines and releasing [them] when ready,” Naseem Momtazi said — noting that Maysara wines aren’t released chronologically. 

“That is not a natural concept for American wine,” she said. 

Learn more about the Fox News Wine Shop here. 

Read the full article here

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