Sherry Flashcards
Oxidative aging
Oloroso, PX, and some Muscat Sherries
Amontillado ages oxidatively after biological
Can mature oxidatively over 30 years
Alcohol can rise to 22%
Sherry Styles - Naturally Sweet
Sweet wines that undergo oxidative aging
Mostly used as a component
Sherry Grapes
Palomino - low acid, lacks obvious aromatics
Pedro Ximenez (PX) - lacks aromatics, thin skin suits well for sun drying (sweet sherries). Can be grown in a neighboring region…
Muscat of Alexandria - only a small amount, used for sweet sherries
Sweetened Styles
Pale cream - short biological aging then sweetend with RCGM. Similar to fino but have flor character
Medium and Cream - diverse category
Medium - characters of both oxidative and biological
Cream - oxidative characters only
Flor - Biological Aging
Flor yeast produces acetaldehyde
Needs the right alcohol, temperature, humidity
The Flor needs to be kept alive and maintained
It looses freshness after bottling, so need to drink
Sherry Styles - Oloroso
Oxidative aging only
Brown color, full body, toffee, leather, spice, walnut
Becomes concentrated with age
Sherry Styles - Amontillado
Biological aging followed by oxidative
Refortified after biological to 17% and fed into new Amontillado solera
Amber or brown, less body than Oloroso
Very distinctly complex from both effects
Sweet style
Picked and then sun-dried to raisins
Press and ferment, yeast sticks, fortify to 17%
Sherry Styles - Palo Cortado
Rare sherry, characteristics of both Amontillado and Oloroso
Blending and Finishing
Often multiple soleras combine to balance
Most undergo fining and filtratin but now there’s a move for less intervention
Solera maturation
600-L oak barrels ‘butts’, used on unfortifieds first
Only filled 5/6 full, kept cool. Up to 14 levels
Bottling taken from bottom level, partially only
Space is topped from level above (mixed tank)
That space is then topped, continuously, with new wine added at the very top level
Solera is the bottom, 1st criadera is next, 2nd…
Sherry Styles - Pedro Ximenez (PX) and Muscat
Deep brown and lusciously sweet, often 500g/L
Jerez, Spain - Climate
Southern Spanish town Jerez de la Frontera
Hot, sunny, mediterannean but vineyards on the coast so they get a cooling ‘poneinte’ ocean wind
Highly chalky deep soil ‘albariza’, gives water holding capacity to survive hot dry summers. Forms crust in summer that prevents evaporation
Dry style
Palomino, press quickly to avoid oxidation
Ferments 20-25C (make neutral) to 11-12%
First classification - biological vs oxidative aging
Lighter wines from cool areas > biological
Fortified with 96% neutral spirit
Biological - fortify to 15-15.5%, allow flor to grow (wait a few months), make sure it’s OK for the solera and the put down
Oxidative - fortify to 17%
Sherry Styles - Fino and Manzanilla
Only biological aging
Pale lemon, citrus, almonds, herbs, bready notes
Tangy or salty and do not age