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And so it begins! Our harvest is off to an slightly early start, beginning with the Chenin Blanc on August 24. This is a particularly exciting beginning because the growing season is one of the best we've ever seen. Geoff Gorsuch, our Winemaker, has been amazed at the nearly textbook conditions, remarking: "Warm, mild days, cool nights, no rain. It just doesn't get much better than this! Let's hope Mother Nature continues to smile on us!" Please check here frequently for updates and see our vintage update for more detailed information about the 2007 growing season.
August | September | October

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First day of crush!Crushed and pressed 9 tons Chenin Blanc harvested at 22.8% sugar |
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Chenin Blanc racked and innoculated |
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Crushed and pressed 7 tons Sauvignon Blanc harvested at 23% sugar |
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Geoff "stirred the wine" to give the yeast more air.
We cold ferment most delicate whites to enhance the fruity flavor. Cold fermentation will make the Chenin Blanc wine smell and taste very much like Chenin Blanc grape juice. The yeast works slowly in the cold environment, much like trying to get bread dough to rise in the refrigerator.
The hand-picked grape clusters are fed into a machine called a crusher-stemmer. Crushing is a misleading term because it implies that we smash the grapes. Smashing them will cause bitterness. Instead, rubber-tipped batons gently knock the grapes off of their stems. The grapes are then run through soft rubber rollers to break their skins and release the juice so we can begin fermentation. Yeast is added to the juice, causing the sugar in the grapes to convert to heat, CO2 and alcohol.
In
general the term refers to clarifying the wine by pumping it through
a medium such as cellulose, diatomaceous earth or a synthetic membrane,
leaving fine particles behind. At this stage of production, the
lees filtration is a very loose filtration designed to remove dust
and grape solids that may impede fermentation or contribute off
odors.
Geoff adds the yeast.
The
conversion of tart malic to soft lactic acid, caused by bacteria
either native or added. Diacetyl is a by-product of the malo-lactic
fermentation that contributes a buttery flavor and a bit of weight
to the wine and is most often associated with Chardonnay (but not
at Goosecross). Virtually all red wines undergo Malo-lactic
fermentation, but the effects are not nearly as noticeable as they
are with whites. It is often called a secondary fermentation, because
it usually follows the primary fermentation.
The press separates the liquid from the solid. It's like a big strainer. Once the wine has drained off, pressure is applied to the skins and seeds remaining in the press to get more of the liquid out, hence the term "press."
As the skins rise to the top of the tank during fermentation, Geoff mixes them back in to the fermenting wine by circulating wine from the bottom over the top. He will do this several times a day until the fermentation is over in about a week or 10 days.
Solids have been allowed to settle and the clear wine moved into another tank.
Geoff will chill the wine so much that the yeast goes dormant and the fermentation stops, in order to retain the residual,
unfermented sugar in the finished wine.
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