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11/21/2012




Introduction to Vines and Wines

         Hort/VE 113 Fall 2012
 Session 19- Sparkling Wine Production




  What are sparkling wines?
• Wines with bubbles
• Mousse




       Production methods
• Méthode Champenoise
  – Thought to produce highest quality wines
  – Small bubbles, long lasting fizz
• Oth m th d
  Other methods
• “Champagne”
  – Wine must be produced in Champagne
    region
  – Term may be used generically




                                                       1
11/21/2012




     Grape varieties, growing
            conditions
• France: Chardonnay, Pinot noir, Pinot
  Meunier
• Champagne district:
  – N th
    Northern-most grape producing district
                  t          d i di t i t
  – Grapes ripen slowly under cool conditions
• Recognizable varietal aromas and
  flavors not necessary in sparkling
  wines




                                                        2
11/21/2012




           Grape Harvest
• Grapes harvested early; less mature fruit

           Chardonnay Pinot noir     Pinot Blanc

 Brix
°Brix      17.8 21.4
           17 8 – 21 4   17.0 20.0 16.5 17.5
                         17 0 – 20 0 16 5 – 17 5
grams/100 0.85 – 1.5     0.9 – 1.7   1.05 – 1.1
mL acid
pH        2.85 – 3.3     2.9 – 3.3   3.1 – 3.2




        Methode Champenoise

• Fermentation in the bottle

• No clear definition in US or France
• Will d i k th wine f
       drink the i    from th same
                           the
  bottle in which the second
  fermentation occurred




Harvest the grapes under cool conditions




                                                           3
11/21/2012




 Creating the Cuvee (base wine)
• Blend of wines
• Selection involves 5-7 weeks of intensive
  blending and tasting (late fall or spring)
• Ideal base wine:
  – Clear, low in color, free of odors or flavors,
    delicate aroma and flavor, dry, low to
    moderate alcohol, high in acidity, light body
• Not great table wines
  – Needs the second fermentation to add
    bubbles




        Creating the Cuvee
• Different grape varieties add unique
  qualities:
  – Pinot noir – used for body and depth of
    flavour
  – Chardonnay – acid and and aging potential
  – Pinot blanc – lengthen aftertaste
• Unusual for cuvee to be a single
  varietal




                                                             4
11/21/2012




First of two fermentation steps
• During the double fermentation,
  several other natural ingredients are
  added to the wine.
• Yeast, usually Saccharomyces, is
       ,       y           y
  added during the first fermentation
  to help the grapes' natural sugar
  convert to alcohol.
• A liquer de tirage, cane sugar melted
  in still champagne wine, is added.




    Fermentation in bottle (second
           fermentation)
• Make the cuvee
• Bottled with small amount of sugar and
  fermenting yeast
• Sealed with
   crown cap
• Stored during 2nd
  Fermentation
  Yeast produce
  another 1.5%
  alcohol




                                                   5
11/21/2012




       Fermentation in bottle (second
              fermentation)
 • In the second fermentation stage, a liquer d'expedition
   is added. This consists of cane sugar, still wine, and
   brandy. The amount of sugar added at this stage
   determines the type of champagne, from sweet to dry.

 • Alth
   Although each vintner has its own standards, the general
           h    h i t    h it         t d d th            l
   guide is as follows:
    – 0.5% solution yields the driest champagne, known as brut
    – 1% is added for extra sec
    – 3% for sec
    – 5% for demi-sec, the sweetest type of champagne.




       Fermentation in bottle (second
              fermentation)
 • Heavier bottles are used (compared to
   table wine)
    – Need to hold back pressure
 • Dark green glass to minimize light
   exposure
    – Otherwise may have off-flavours




  Aging with the yeast/Tirage
• Bottles left stacked to age for 2-4
  years
• During aging:
  – Wine matures as the reactions of bottle
    aging occurs
  – Dead yeast cells break open (autolysis),
    release amino acids into the wine
     • Add to development of
       the wine
     • (toasty champagne bouquet),
     • keep carbon dioxide dissolved




                                                                         6
11/21/2012




               Riddling
• Remove yeast from bottle
• Riddling is used to accumulate the
  yeast at neck
  – Pl
    Placed horizontally
         d h i     t ll
  – Each day, twisted and placed at slightly
    steeper angle
  – Several weeks… when complete, yeast
    settled at neck, bottle is upside down
    (gravity collects yeast in neck)




                Riddling




                Riddling




                                                       7
11/21/2012




                Riddling
• After riddling
  – All yeast sediment is collected in the
    neck on the stainless steel cap




       Mechanized Riddling




    Disgorging/Degorgement
• Removal of the yeast
• Sediment trapped in neck by freezing
• Forced out by pressure when cap is
  removed
        d




                                                     8
11/21/2012




            Degorgement
• Bottles placed neck down in
  subfreezing bath
  – Cold to minimize loss of CO2
  – As neck is frozen, collected yeast
                      ,          y
    sediment and tartrate crystals are
    trapped in small ice cube of wine
  – Bottle is then turned 45° angle and cap is
    removed
  – CO2 pressure pushes the frozen wine and
    sediment out of the neck
  – Loses very little CO2




       Dosage and Corking
• After yeast is removed, small amount
  of wine and sugar and added to top
  off and add sweetness
• Dosage can be cane sugar, wine,
       g                 g ,      ,
  brandy
• After dosage is added, bottle is
  quickly closed with cork and wire cage




             Bottle Aging
• Minimum aging time is 3-9 months
  – Dosage combines with wine to add
    complexity to bouquet
• Don’t undergo same oxidative
  Don t
  reactions as tables wine because of
  high pressure
• Recommended no longer than 10 years
  – Best 3-5 years after release




                                                         9
11/21/2012




 Other methods of sparkling
      wine production
           p




      Charmat Bulk Process
• ~75% of US sparkling wine produced this
  way
• Makes relatively simple sparkling wines
• Low production costs
• Have young, fruity characteristics
• Grape varieties:
  – French Colombard, Chenin blanc, Sylvaner
  – Grapes harvested early
• Base wines for the cuvee roughly meet
  same criteria as those for MC




          Charmat Process




                                                      10
11/21/2012




                    Charmat Process
   • Base wine (fermentation 1)
   • Charmat Process
        – Bulk fermentation (500-1000 gallon)
        – Yeast, sugar added
                   g
   • Filter
   • Bottling Tank: Dosage added before
     bottling
        – Carbon dioxide trapped in wine
   • Bottling Line
   • Finished bottle




                         Methode Champenoise      Charmat bulk process

Grape varieties          Chardonnay, Pinot noir   French Colombard,
                                                  Chenin blanc
Second fermentation      In bottles               In a pressure tank

Ageing on yeast lees     1-3 years                Most likely avoided

Clarification            Riddling/disgorging      Filtering/filtering

Adjust sweetness         Add dosage to the each   Add dosage to the tank
                         bottle                   of wine
Bottling                 Recork the same bottle   Add SO2. bottles filled
                         in which fermented       using a machine
Bottle aging potential   Up to 10 years           For a few months to
after release                                     reduce odor of SO2
Time to complete the     2-4 years                0.5 to 2 months
process




                  Labels and glasses
   • Sweetness –
        – Brut, extra dry, doux
   • Wine glasses
        –SSaucer-shaped
                  h   d
        – Flute




                                                                                   11
11/21/2012




        Labels and glasses
• Methode Champenoise:
  – “Naturally fermented in THIS bottle”


• Ch
  Charmat B lk P
          Bulk Process:
  – Naturally fermented Charmat bulk
    process




       Sensory Attributes
• Appearance:
  – Small, long lasting bubbles
  – Creamy mousse
• A m :
  Aroma:
  – Creamy, yeasty caramelized (burned,
    caramel), nutty (fresh, toasted)
  – Cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, root beer,
    lilac, apple, pear




Champagne videoclip-traditional method

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu6Nm
  q3hbFc&feature=related




                                                  12

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Lecture 19 w ine

  • 1. 11/21/2012 Introduction to Vines and Wines Hort/VE 113 Fall 2012 Session 19- Sparkling Wine Production What are sparkling wines? • Wines with bubbles • Mousse Production methods • Méthode Champenoise – Thought to produce highest quality wines – Small bubbles, long lasting fizz • Oth m th d Other methods • “Champagne” – Wine must be produced in Champagne region – Term may be used generically 1
  • 2. 11/21/2012 Grape varieties, growing conditions • France: Chardonnay, Pinot noir, Pinot Meunier • Champagne district: – N th Northern-most grape producing district t d i di t i t – Grapes ripen slowly under cool conditions • Recognizable varietal aromas and flavors not necessary in sparkling wines 2
  • 3. 11/21/2012 Grape Harvest • Grapes harvested early; less mature fruit Chardonnay Pinot noir Pinot Blanc Brix °Brix 17.8 21.4 17 8 – 21 4 17.0 20.0 16.5 17.5 17 0 – 20 0 16 5 – 17 5 grams/100 0.85 – 1.5 0.9 – 1.7 1.05 – 1.1 mL acid pH 2.85 – 3.3 2.9 – 3.3 3.1 – 3.2 Methode Champenoise • Fermentation in the bottle • No clear definition in US or France • Will d i k th wine f drink the i from th same the bottle in which the second fermentation occurred Harvest the grapes under cool conditions 3
  • 4. 11/21/2012 Creating the Cuvee (base wine) • Blend of wines • Selection involves 5-7 weeks of intensive blending and tasting (late fall or spring) • Ideal base wine: – Clear, low in color, free of odors or flavors, delicate aroma and flavor, dry, low to moderate alcohol, high in acidity, light body • Not great table wines – Needs the second fermentation to add bubbles Creating the Cuvee • Different grape varieties add unique qualities: – Pinot noir – used for body and depth of flavour – Chardonnay – acid and and aging potential – Pinot blanc – lengthen aftertaste • Unusual for cuvee to be a single varietal 4
  • 5. 11/21/2012 First of two fermentation steps • During the double fermentation, several other natural ingredients are added to the wine. • Yeast, usually Saccharomyces, is , y y added during the first fermentation to help the grapes' natural sugar convert to alcohol. • A liquer de tirage, cane sugar melted in still champagne wine, is added. Fermentation in bottle (second fermentation) • Make the cuvee • Bottled with small amount of sugar and fermenting yeast • Sealed with crown cap • Stored during 2nd Fermentation Yeast produce another 1.5% alcohol 5
  • 6. 11/21/2012 Fermentation in bottle (second fermentation) • In the second fermentation stage, a liquer d'expedition is added. This consists of cane sugar, still wine, and brandy. The amount of sugar added at this stage determines the type of champagne, from sweet to dry. • Alth Although each vintner has its own standards, the general h h i t h it t d d th l guide is as follows: – 0.5% solution yields the driest champagne, known as brut – 1% is added for extra sec – 3% for sec – 5% for demi-sec, the sweetest type of champagne. Fermentation in bottle (second fermentation) • Heavier bottles are used (compared to table wine) – Need to hold back pressure • Dark green glass to minimize light exposure – Otherwise may have off-flavours Aging with the yeast/Tirage • Bottles left stacked to age for 2-4 years • During aging: – Wine matures as the reactions of bottle aging occurs – Dead yeast cells break open (autolysis), release amino acids into the wine • Add to development of the wine • (toasty champagne bouquet), • keep carbon dioxide dissolved 6
  • 7. 11/21/2012 Riddling • Remove yeast from bottle • Riddling is used to accumulate the yeast at neck – Pl Placed horizontally d h i t ll – Each day, twisted and placed at slightly steeper angle – Several weeks… when complete, yeast settled at neck, bottle is upside down (gravity collects yeast in neck) Riddling Riddling 7
  • 8. 11/21/2012 Riddling • After riddling – All yeast sediment is collected in the neck on the stainless steel cap Mechanized Riddling Disgorging/Degorgement • Removal of the yeast • Sediment trapped in neck by freezing • Forced out by pressure when cap is removed d 8
  • 9. 11/21/2012 Degorgement • Bottles placed neck down in subfreezing bath – Cold to minimize loss of CO2 – As neck is frozen, collected yeast , y sediment and tartrate crystals are trapped in small ice cube of wine – Bottle is then turned 45° angle and cap is removed – CO2 pressure pushes the frozen wine and sediment out of the neck – Loses very little CO2 Dosage and Corking • After yeast is removed, small amount of wine and sugar and added to top off and add sweetness • Dosage can be cane sugar, wine, g g , , brandy • After dosage is added, bottle is quickly closed with cork and wire cage Bottle Aging • Minimum aging time is 3-9 months – Dosage combines with wine to add complexity to bouquet • Don’t undergo same oxidative Don t reactions as tables wine because of high pressure • Recommended no longer than 10 years – Best 3-5 years after release 9
  • 10. 11/21/2012 Other methods of sparkling wine production p Charmat Bulk Process • ~75% of US sparkling wine produced this way • Makes relatively simple sparkling wines • Low production costs • Have young, fruity characteristics • Grape varieties: – French Colombard, Chenin blanc, Sylvaner – Grapes harvested early • Base wines for the cuvee roughly meet same criteria as those for MC Charmat Process 10
  • 11. 11/21/2012 Charmat Process • Base wine (fermentation 1) • Charmat Process – Bulk fermentation (500-1000 gallon) – Yeast, sugar added g • Filter • Bottling Tank: Dosage added before bottling – Carbon dioxide trapped in wine • Bottling Line • Finished bottle Methode Champenoise Charmat bulk process Grape varieties Chardonnay, Pinot noir French Colombard, Chenin blanc Second fermentation In bottles In a pressure tank Ageing on yeast lees 1-3 years Most likely avoided Clarification Riddling/disgorging Filtering/filtering Adjust sweetness Add dosage to the each Add dosage to the tank bottle of wine Bottling Recork the same bottle Add SO2. bottles filled in which fermented using a machine Bottle aging potential Up to 10 years For a few months to after release reduce odor of SO2 Time to complete the 2-4 years 0.5 to 2 months process Labels and glasses • Sweetness – – Brut, extra dry, doux • Wine glasses –SSaucer-shaped h d – Flute 11
  • 12. 11/21/2012 Labels and glasses • Methode Champenoise: – “Naturally fermented in THIS bottle” • Ch Charmat B lk P Bulk Process: – Naturally fermented Charmat bulk process Sensory Attributes • Appearance: – Small, long lasting bubbles – Creamy mousse • A m : Aroma: – Creamy, yeasty caramelized (burned, caramel), nutty (fresh, toasted) – Cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, root beer, lilac, apple, pear Champagne videoclip-traditional method http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xu6Nm q3hbFc&feature=related 12