VDN Flashcards
1
Q
Location
A
- Langouedoc and Rousillon
2
Q
Climate
A
- for the most part, warm mediterranean
3
Q
Grapes
A
- Grenache Noir, Blanc, Gris
- Muscat Blanc de Petit Grains
- Muscat of Alexandria
4
Q
Classifications
A
- Ambre
- Rouge
- Tuile
- Hors D Age
5
Q
VDN
A
- made by mutage
- artificially arresting the conversion of grape sugar to alc by adding spririt before fermentation is complete, thereby incapacitating yeasts with alcohol and making it particularly strong, sweet, half wine like w/ grape flavors dominating the wine flavor
- normally made from muscat and greanache
- alc strength between 15-18%
- pot alc of 21.5%
- min RS is 45 g/l for Rasteau and Banyuls, to 100g/l for the various Muscat de ….
- spirit is added when the fermenting must has reached about 6% alc
- the added spirit is considerably stronger than that added to port, around 95% as opposed to 77%
- non-vintage dated VDN’s are common particularly among the Langeudoc Muscats into which little of the previous years output may be blended so as to smooth out vintage variations
- common in Rousillon for age and vintage on label
- mucats benefit from being served young and chilled
6
Q
Soils
A
- dry and poor
- shale and marl
- schist
- some limestone
7
Q
Banyuls
A
- Banyuls and Banyuls AOC
- finest and most complex VDN’s
- made from veritginous terraced vineyards above the mediterranean at the southern limit of Rousillon
- Grenache noir dominate the blends (50% Banyules and 75% Banyuls Grand Cru)
- grapes yeild poorly, often part shrivelled before being picked in early October
- alc added while must is still on the skins
- flavor compounds are absorbed into the young wine, which after 5 weeks of further maceration, is subjected to one of the wide range of elevage techniques (cellar operations between fermentation and bottling.
- much of last century, portion of Banyuls would be kept in glass bonbonnes, sometimes outside, before being transferred to large old wood.
- this oxidative style gave way from the 1970’s or so to a fruitier, earlier maturing style
- occasional reminder of the very austere rancio style of Banyuls sometimes matured in a solera style system
- some Banyuls is made to preserve the heady aromas of macerated red fruits while others demonstrate the extraordinary levels of concentration that can be achieved by Grenache, heat, and time
- only French appellation to offer 20-30 year old wines as a serious portion of it’s total production
8
Q
Maury
A
- one of Rousillons famous VDN’s in the Agly Valley
- cousin to Banyuls
- produced in greater quantity
- soil is high inland schist
- summers are hot and dry, sighty cooler in the west of the appellation (higher)
- VDN’s based on Grenache Noir and it’s other hues
- VDN’s are fast declining in production
- strong sweet Grenache Nour
- Grenache Blanc and Gris used to create ambre aor balnc
- Les Vignerons du Maury dominates production (co-op)
- smaller appellation in the mountains with enourmase potential
9
Q
Beaumes de Venise
A
- village in Vaucluse
- has some excellent high elevation terroirs
- best known for years for it’s unusually fragrant, sweet, pale gold VDN, Muscat de Beamues de Venise
- grown on less than 1200 ha
- southern rhone muscat is made exclusively from Muscat Blanc de Petit grains and occassionaly it’s darker berry mutation
- fermentation is arrested by alc to hit 15%
- can be more delicate and refreshing than most Languedoc Muscats
- apart from Vin De Paille, the muscat is the rhone’s only sweet still white wine
10
Q
St. Jean de Minervois
A
- small mountain village in the far north east of the minervois region that gives it’s name to the langeudoc’s most individual VDN appellation
- made from Muscat Blanc de Petit Grains
- alc is added to produce 15% alc wine w/ 125 g/l RS
- these vineyards are hacked out of the stony limestone and garrigue (herbs and brush) about 825ft above sea level
- grapes ripen a good three weeks later as opposed to the other Muscats that are produced closer to the Mediterranean
- elevation and less reliable weather can affect both quality and yields which often have difficulty reaching the permitted max of 30 hl/ha
- wines are however delicate and refreshing
11
Q
Rivesaltes
A
- in southern france
- two biggest appellations, Rivesaltes and Muscat de Rivesaltes (both VDN)
- Muscat de Rivesaltes, 70% of France’s total Muscat production, can be produced throughout most of Rousillons recognized wine producting areas (even includeing Aude to the north w/ FItou)
- Production zone is generous but excludes thos vineyards that product Banyuls
- 2012, 7k acres were dedicated to production of the strong sweet wine
- Muscat de Rivesaltes is the only Muscat VDN which may be made from Muscat of Alexandria ans well as Muscat Blanc a Petit Grains (once unpopular for its degenration and unreliable yields, new clones much better). low trained vines, often difficult to work w/ on try terraces around 1 ton an acre. Quality has been tried to be improved despite the Alexandria domination
- New techniques include skin contact and mutage on the skins
- Muscat de Rivesaltes should be drunk young and cool. already on sale the spring after harvest
- Rivesaltes has the ability to be even more complex
- made in all different colors and styles based on the terroir
- sweet heady can be made from Grenache Blanc, Noir, and Gris, Maccabea and Vermentinoand the two muscats
- Varietal Rivesaltes permitted (Maccabea to Grenache Noir) Vinified w/o skin contact or with to leach max color and tannin
- fermented in stainless steel and bottled young or fermented and aged in wooden casks of all ages an dzies, sometimse in a solera format
- some taste of rancio, exposing them to heat and light, others store in bonbonnes for ageing
- Rivesaltes cannot be released until 16 months after harvest
- taste of rasisins, coffee, chocolate, fruits, nuts
- Like Banyuls, can partner well with chocolate
- Ambre (fermentation musts separated from pulp in an oxidative medium, )(white or gray grape, after mutage, raisied in oxidative environment for 2 years in vats or oak)
- Rouge (maceration of the must during all or part of fermentaion using 75% grenach noir)
- Tuile- made with all black / white varietals. wines aged in barrels in an oxidative environment for at least 2 years. can be kept in cellar for long time (50 years)
- Hors D Age (out of age) corresponds to longer or shorter breeding times
Vinified almost entirely from Grenache Noir at cool temps to retain lively fresh fruit characteristics w/ some skin contact for color
- MOst are aged oxidatively from periods of time that vary according to their classifications
- Hors D Age can be added to ambre and tuile wines that have been aged for at least 5 years. most are aged longer, even up to 20 years
12
Q
Rancio
A
- tasting term describing the deliberatley maderizing of wine by exposing oxygen and or heat to it
- wines may be stored in barrels in hot storehouses or under the rafters in a hot climate (as for some Rousillon VDN’s)
- some left in bonbonnes outside subjected to the changing temps of day and night
- wines have an additional powerfull smell reminischent of overripe fruit, nuts, and melted or rancid butter
- flavor compounds said to arise from Maillart reaction of sugars w/ amino acids by oxidation
13
Q
Muscat
A
- all sorts of skin color, size and names
- used in dry and sweet wines, even sparkling
- creates wines that are golden to brown in color
- most need relatively hot climates
14
Q
Muscat blanc petit grains
A
- naturally aromatic, well suited for VDN designed to be drunk young
- oldest and finest producing wines of the greatest intensity
- berries and seeds small and round as opposed to oval larger berries like Muscat of Alexandria
- not necessarily white in color. they are pink, red, black berried versions
- colors can vary vintage to vintage
- no fewer than 60 synonyms
- yields more conservatively than other Muscats
- sensitive to a wide range of diseases
- naturally limited it’s cultivation
- very widely distributed
- overtaken Muscat of Alexandria to become the most common white grape in Rousillon
- in France’s Beaume de Venise, St. Jean de Minervois
- known as Brown Muscat in Australia for Rutherglen Muscat (it’s the darker skinned grape)
15
Q
Muscat of Alexandria
A
- grown both as wine and table grapes
- wine is distinctly inferior
- hot climates it thrives and produces a good yield of extremely ripe grapes
- chief attribute is sweetness
- cooler climates, output can be seriously affected by coulure(excessive shedding of berry ovaries around flowering), millanderage(excessive number of seamless berries) and fungal diseases
- wines tend to be strong, sweet, unsubtle
- aroma is very grapey
- slightly feline overtones of geranium
- indication of lack of finesse is the fact that the grape is used for other things other than wine like table grapes and or raisins, distilled for pisco
- dominant muscat in South Africa