Germany Flashcards
What percent of German Sekt is inexpensive, high volume wine?
Over 90%
What are the 4 quality levels of German Sekt?
Sekt, Deutscher Sekt, Deutscher Sekt bA, Winzersekt
German Sekt
Wines made from the tank method. Typically made with a range of base wines sourced from OUTSIDE of Germany. Most grapes/must comes from inexpensive regions of Southern Europe, and made sparkling in Germany. They can only be sold 6 months after second fermentation has started, with a minimum of 90 days on the lees, or 30 days if the lees are stirred. German Sekt is Non-Vintage.
Deutscher Sekt
Sparkling wines made from German-grown fruit. Wines can be made via Tank Method or by Traditional Method. These wines are light in fruit intensity and contain no autolytic notes. Sweetness level is typically brut or Extra Dry with noticeable residual sugar. They are acceptable to good in quality, and inexpensive in terms of price.
Deutscher Sekt bA
bA is a common abbreviation of bestimmter Anbaugebiete, “of a defined region.” This is sparkling wine related to the general quality catagory, Qualitatswein bestimmter Anbaugebiete, quality wine from one of the 13 defined wine-growing regions. The name of the Anbaugebiete must appear on the label. bA wines can be made by Tank Method or Traditional Method.
Winzersekt
Winzersekt (Winzer = Winegrower) refers to a sparkliong wine which is estate-bottled, uses only grapes grown on the estate, is made by the Traditional Method and is kept for a minimum of 9 months on the lees. It is most typically made with riesling, but a range of other varieties can be used. The vintage, grape variety and producer name must appear on the bottle. Wine are typically brut in style, and are very-good to outstanding.
Perlwein
More commonly known as ‘Secco,’ this wine is made via the Tank Method or by Carbonation. The grapes or must are sourced from inexpensive locations. Wine is typically below 3 atmospheres of pressure. These wines are ultra cheap and do not attract tax.
The Growing Environment & Grape Growing - Sekt
Grapes are grown in high volume areas in souther Europe. Low aromatic grape varieties from Italy, Spain & France are typically used. Grapes are usually crushed at the point of origin, musts are chilled and transported by truck or train to Germany.
The Growing Environment & Grape Growing - Deutcher Sekt, Deuthscher Sekt bA and Winzersekt
Grapes are typically picked early for sparkling wines. with under-ripe grapes being selected out. Single variety wines are most common (traditionally riesling), however blends based on Chardonnay & Pinot Noir are also made. Wines can either be hand harvested or machine harvested.
What is Germanys grape growing climate?
Cool, Continental
German Sekt Tank Method production
First fermentation is carried out at low temperatures to retain freshness of fruit. Wines are then blended to ensure consistancy across batches and within the style of the brand. Second fermentation is conducted in tanks with the higher quality wines being aged on the lees for 3-6 months. The tank method means that large volumes of wine can be made and released after a relatively short production cycle, reducing cost and prices.
How are most German sekts’ made?
German grown grapes are made into base wines, then deliver to large Sekt-producing specialist companies for the second fermentation.
The Traditional Method (In Germany)
Wines are made via the Traditional Method, either with Chardonnay & Pinot Noir or with Riesling. If Riesling is the base wine, producers tend not to undergo malolactic conversion. Due to Rieslings distinctive floral aromas, it is typical for Trad-Method producers to undergo as short lees aging time frames as possible (unlike all other regions), in an attempt to not over shadow Riesling delicate floral aromas.
Wine Law (German sparkling)
Sekt must be produced though second fermentation (no carbonation). It must have an alcohol content of at least 10% abv and a CO2 pressure of at-least 3.5 atmospheres. Wines labelled Sekt can be made from base wines from grapes grown in any EU country. For tank method Sekt wines, the period from tirage to release from the winery for sale must last for a minimum of 6 months with a minimum of 90 days on the lees. The period of lees aging can be lowered to 30 days if the wine is in a tank with stirrers.
How long must Sekt wines made with the Traditional Method age on the lees?
Minimum 9 months.