Harvest Date Flashcards
Define harvest.
When the grapes are picked, marks the end of ripening
Traditional harvest date?
100 days after the beginning of flowering
Why is potential alcohol less relevant today?
- warmer climate speeding up sugar development
- better viticulture, enabling grapes to ripen more successfully
- more focus on aroma and tannin development
Impact of weather on harvest decision?
Untimely rainfall around harvest may force an early harvest to avoid dilution and rot of the grapes
Three ways ripeness is measured?
- sugar levels…potential alcohol
- titratable acidity
- tannin and flavor development
How is sugar in grapes measured?
Using a refractometer (handheld or digital)
- Brix, a measure of dissolved solids, is the most common scale
Typical sugar level range for dry wine?
19-25 Brix (equivalent of 11-15% abv)
Method for calculating acidity?
Titration or pH meter
How to detect flavor and aroma ripness in grapes?
Tasting is the most common method. High tech analysis can be used, but is expensive.
Importance of harvest date for wines that have RS?
- some harvested late to concentrate sugars in the grapes
- some need hand-harvesting over several passes through the vineyard to select the most botrytized grapes at that time
- some grapes can only be picked when temperatures reach below certain levels (Icewine, Eisweint)
What is extended hang-time? Why is it controversial?
The amount of time grapes are left on the vine after ripening.
Con: overly alcoholic and unbalanced wines, lacking in natural acidity and having over-ripe fruit
Pro: Critics reward these wines with high scores, consumers like them