Chapter 5 - Winemaking Flashcards
1
Q
What are the five steps of winemaking?
A
- Crushing: splitting grape skins to release some of the grape juice
- Pressing: crushed grapes are squeezed to extract as much liquid as possible
- Alcoholic fermentation: Yeast added, produces alcohol and CO2. Stops when sugars are eaten. Result is a dry white wine
- Storage or maturation: storage is the time prior to bottling, maturation in e.g. oak may take longer
- Packaging: Glass bottles most common
2
Q
What are the six steps of red wine production?
A
- Skins of black grapes included to extract colour and tannins
- Crushing, alcoholic fermentation, draining, pressing, storage, packaging
3
Q
What should you do with the cap of a red wine during alcoholic fermentation?
A
- Tannin and colour extraction from cap that lots on top of fermenting grape juice needs extra steps
- Punching down: plunger used to push cap down into the liquid
- Pumping over: liquid from bottom is pumped up through a hose
4
Q
How do you make dry rosé wines?
A
- Short maceration: black grapes are used, fermenting wine is drained from the skins after a few hours
- Blending: blending red with white wine (not permitted in Europe)
5
Q
How do you make dry white wines?
A
- Grapes are crushed, skins disposed off
- Crushing, pressing, alcohol fermentation, storage/maturation, packaging
6
Q
How do you make dry sweet wines?
A
- Concentrated grape sugars: yeast cannot eat all sugars, e.g. Tokaji Aszu from Hungary
- Removing yeasts via filters
- Killing the yeast: fortification (raise alcohol level to 15-20°). Alcohol kills yeast
- Add sugar from grapes
7
Q
What are the options of a winemaker to adjust wines?
A
- Adjustments: small adjustments in amount of sugar/acid in grape juice
- Sugar: increase sugar levels in grape juice
- Add acid
- Temperature changes during fermentation: red (20-32°), rose (similar to white, short maceration), white (12-22)
- Stainless steel/concrete vessels: for fermentation and storage
- Oak vessels: aromas depend on age and size of barrels as well as toasting (sweet-spice and charred wood aromas). New oak vs. old oak. Watertight, but not airtight
- Oak alternatives: oak chips (cheaper)
- Malolactic conversion: add buttery aromas after alcoholic fermentation carried out by bacteria. Riesling (usually prevented), Chardonnay (may benefit from it)
- Lees: Yeast dies and falls to the bottom of wine, often kept to add body and extra flavours (biscuit, bread)
- Blending: use different wines to ensure consistency or complexity
8
Q
What happ
A
- Most wines don’t get better in a bottle
- Fruit flavours are replaced with vegetal notes
- Some wines do benefit from aging in a bottle
- Changes to white wine: lemon to gold to amber colour. Intensity of colour becomes deeper. Tertiary characteristics such as dried apricot, honey, nut and spice
- Changes to red wine: ruby to garnet to tawny, paler in intensity. Tertiary aromas such as fig, prune, meat, wet leaves. Deposits can form. Wine will be served decanted typically