White/Sweet Winemaking Flashcards
What kind of adjustments to the winemaking process are common for high-volume, inexpensive white wines?
- Acidification (grapes often grown in warm/hot regions)
- Clarification w/ centrifuge (to ensure fruity flavors)
- Fermentation at low temperatures
- Chilling wine and adding SO2 (to stop MLF)
- Racked off lees and stored in new vessel after fermentation (to avoid lees ageing)
- Adding sugar (grape juice or RCGM) after fermentation to dryness
- Stabilizing, fining, and sterilizing the wine
- Topping off wine with So2 (to minimize the risk of oxidation)
Describe the sweetness levels of Riesling in the main winemaking regions.
Germany: Range of sweetness
Alsace: Mainly dry, sometimes late harvest or noble rot
Austria: Usually either dry or very sweet
Australia: Bone dry (very acidic)
Washington: Dry
New Zealand: Off-dry (fruity)
Finger Lakes: Off-dry (fruity)
What are the exceptions to the standard winemaking options for premium Riesling?
- Use large oak vessels instead of inert vessels to enhance texture and complexity w/o adding oak aromas (done in Alsace)
- Undergo lees contact to add texture and flavors
- Age the wine in old-oak vats for up to 1 year before bottling (done in Alsace, Germany)
Describe Sauvignon Blanc from Pessac-Leognan.
- Winemaking technique is similar to non-aromatic varieties
- Fermented and matured in some oak to round body and add flavor
- Blended with Semillon to gain body and richness
- Matured on lees and undergoes MLF
This style is also common in California and New Zealand (in addition to the standard style)
Describe the winemaking choices for premium, aromatic white wines.
- Monitor SO2 levels during the winemaking process
- Load crushed fruit or whole bunches into the press
- Gentle clarification (settling) to ensure pure flavors
- Use inert vessels
- Cool fermentation temperatures to encourage primary fruit flavors
- Add SO2 to avoid MLF
- Bottle soon after fermentation
When would you want to sterilize filter a white wine?
When the wine contains residual sugar
Sterilizing removes the yeast and bacteria
What happens to white wines fermented at too low temperatures?
Wines develop pear drop aromas
Can fail to capture varietal fruit characteristics
What happens to white wines fermented at too high temperatures?
Wines develop complex, non-fruit aromas
Might lose varietal fruit characteristics
When do you clarify white wines? How do you do it?
Clarify after pressing, before fermentation
Methods: Settling, centrifugation, fining, filtration
Why might you avoid clarifying white wines? When would you do it?
Can avoid clarification to add complexity and a richer texture
Done for wines that don’t need to show pure varietal character
Describe the winemaking options for premium, non-aromatic white wines.
- Crushed or loaded into press as whole bunches
- Sometimes controlled exposure to oxygen to improve ability to age
- Gentle clarification (settling). Solid matter might be left in for complexity and texture
- Stainless steel fermentation (Chablis, NZ Pinot Gris, NE Italy Pinot Grigio)
- Small, new oak barrel fermentation (Cote D’or Chardonnay)
- Large, old oak barrel fermentation (Alsace Pinot Gris)
- Barrel maturation (new oak for Cote D’or and New World Chardonnay, old oak/large barrels for Chablis)
- Stainless steel/concrete maturation to retain fresh, fruity aromas
- MLF for rounder mouthfeel (Burgundy) or to soften sharp acidity (Chablis)
- Less contact (including lees stirring) is common