We'll
keep this as laymanesque as we can. As grapes grow,
they get riper (like all fruits). This means that the
sugar level keeps increasing. This is what causes a
ripe fruit to be sweeter than an unripe one. Grapes
need a moderate climate, long ripening periods and no
rains before harvest to really give their best. These
factors combine to determine if a year is a vintage
year or not. As the grape ripens, the winemakers will
check regularly to see if the correct sugar levels are
reached. The winemakers would ideally like the grape
to remain on the vine as long as possible in order to
maximize ripeness. The wine-grower on the other hand
would like to bring the crop in quickly. This is due
to the fact that rain during the harvest is likely to
make the grape watery and therefore impact the resultant
wine.
Hence once everyone agrees to harvest, it becomes race
against time. This is common for all wines. The distinction
between wines- white, red, rose and sparkling is due
to the differences in the subsequent processes.
White
wine making
White
wine can be made from grapes that are either white
or red. That's because the colour of the wine
comes from the pigment in the skin of the grapes
and if the winemaker removes the skin before the
wine is made (i.e. the juice is fermented) the
grape will remain white. After the grapes are
picked they are de-stemmed and crushed in a large
machine.
The
juice now called free run juice is run off separately.
The stems and the skins are then pressed to get
more juice and then left behind. Next the juice
is fermented. Fermentation is a process whereby
the yeast converts the sugar in the juice into
carbon dioxide and alcohol. The carbon dioxide
escapes and the alcohol remains. The resultant
liquid (called must) is aged for a while longer
to let all the sugar turn into alcohol.
The Bottling Hall
The
yeast cells die and fall to the bottom of the
fermenting vessel and are called "lees". Normally
these are removed by letting them settle to the
bottom and draining off the clear juice (a process
called racking). Some winemakers will let them
be and these are those wine which will have "aged
on its lees" on the label (sur lie in French).
The wine now has to age. For most white wine this
is done in steel vats so that the flavours of
the wine come through. A lot of Chardonnay though
is aged in oak barrels. The wine will then be
racked (if not done already) and fined- a process
whereby all extra floating particles are removed.
It is then bottled and may be aged further or
drunk.
Vat
Room
Red
Wine making
Red
wine is made with the same process except for
one basic difference. The skins of the grape are
not removed until the juice is fermented. The
juice, therefore, spends much longer in contact
with the skins. This results in two things. The
colour, from the pigments in the skin, get into
the juice. More importantly, since the skins contain
a lot of tannins, these too get transferred to
the wine.
Tannins
are those substances, which leave your mouth feeling
dry when you drink strong black tea. They
are important to wine as they help it age. When
the fermentation is over the skins are separated.
Makers of fine wines will keep it for another
week or so. After this all the other processes
are similar to those of white wine except that
red wines are normally aged in oak
Rose
Wine making
Rose
wine is made in one of two ways. In the first
method, the red grapes are crushed and the skins
are kept with the juice for a very short while.
The rest of the process is normal. The other way
is to blend a little red wine with the white.