30 November 2010
ML Results
I just thought I would let you know that the ML sheets are looking good. The Marechal Foch, first three columns on the left are finished, there is no dot in the middle, and will soon get sulfur. The last two barrels of pinot noir, right edge of right page are done or almost done and they are closest to the heater. Isn't it interesting what a little warmth can do. I am going to put a heater in the middle of the row now to try and help everything else.
29 November 2010
After the Turkey
As far as in the winery, things are going smoothly which is good as I have no space today as all the wine is still out from the Thanksgiving weekend, though Barry is fast taking care of it. The Riesling needed a lot of food but it finally is smelling good and seems to be happy and chugging along nicely. I think the Pinot gris and Gewurztraminer are almost done. I'm going to spin them out with the centrifuge so that I can evaluate them better as well as get a more accurate sugar reading. As the wine finishes up I use Clinitest tablets to check the sugar, same as doctors use to check sugar in urine. I also need to check the progress of the ML on the pinot and the foch in the barrel room. The cold snap definitely dropped the temperature in there, even in my little fort, so I think I am going to have to beef up the heater. I have a better one here next to me in my office and I think I'll move that one out to the barrel room. We'll see after I get the results back from the ML sheets tomorrow.
Labels:
dogs,
ML,
Thanksgiving,
Whites
18 November 2010
Double, double toil and trouble
Fire burn, and cauldron bubble.
Macbeth Act 4, scene 1, 10–11
Ahh, who knew that winemakers would get to quote Shakespeare while going about their work. Today I inoculated the Riesling, it has warmed up to 48F which should be fine. I will turn the chilling system on to keep it from going over 55F during fermentation, especially a concern early on when the yeast is gearing up and both the food source, i.e. sugar, and nutrients are plentiful. I'll probably have to add nutrients in a few days after the yeast have eaten everything the grapes supplied. If the yeast don't have enough nutrients to build healthy cells then they scavenge from either themselves or other yeast cells which can lead to reductive aromas in the wine. Not pleasant and a problem I would then need to treat. Right now the juice smells almost like a glass of fresh sweet tea. I'm looking forward to seeing what develops.
Macbeth Act 4, scene 1, 10–11
Ahh, who knew that winemakers would get to quote Shakespeare while going about their work. Today I inoculated the Riesling, it has warmed up to 48F which should be fine. I will turn the chilling system on to keep it from going over 55F during fermentation, especially a concern early on when the yeast is gearing up and both the food source, i.e. sugar, and nutrients are plentiful. I'll probably have to add nutrients in a few days after the yeast have eaten everything the grapes supplied. If the yeast don't have enough nutrients to build healthy cells then they scavenge from either themselves or other yeast cells which can lead to reductive aromas in the wine. Not pleasant and a problem I would then need to treat. Right now the juice smells almost like a glass of fresh sweet tea. I'm looking forward to seeing what develops.
16 November 2010
Today is a good day
I also lost some time last week setting up our new office computer. The hard drive on our old one up and died and true to form no one had backed up in forever so much information has been lost. I must say though that not much very critical and we had a surprising amount of information in e-mails or on random disks so it hasn't been too bad and has actually provided some much needed housekeeping. The scary day was when two days later Mary thought she had lost our contacts file, the backup of which was on the now dead office computer. Ten years of customer information on about 3000 names just magically gone, that was a little nerve racking. Fortunately my guru husband got me pointed in the right direction and we were able to recover the files after only a little blood, sweat and tears and now Mary might be more serious about backing up her own machine which is the only place all the company bookkeeping files are kept. I guess that is one of the appeals of cloud computing, someone else is holding your information for you. I also had to replace the ballast in one of our winery lights. I had no idea what I was getting into when I lifted off the reflector! I guess 4 bulbs need a lot of wires and then we have a motion detector on it as well. It was a little uncertain at one point but with the help of the internet which provided schematics on both the light and the motion detector I was able to get it up and running. Now it just needs to be rehung, I need the forklift for that.
So other than that things are quiet. I have to do some publication redesigning because of the lost files, not necessarily a bad thing and we are setting up a new website. I don't quite know when it will be up but when it is I'll move the blog there. Our web design people think it is for the best and apparently I shouldn't have it in two places so I hope you will all follow me. I don't really know how fast it will happen but I will be sure to post a link here so that you can follow me with only one extra click. I might even be able to put the 'follow me' link on the new page, I'll have to look into that.
02 November 2010
Time for an Experiment
So this year having plenty of both space and time I decided to try draining the fermentations to new totes and then pumping the wine to barrel. I was able to use gravity to drain the fermentation bins and the press like normal but did have to pump the wine after the settling to the barrels. Pumping is actually an easier way to fill barrels than with gravity because the flow is controlled by a remote and there are fewer overflow mistakes. The reason for going to the hassle of settling the wine now before going to barrel is that the gross lees that I had to rack the 2009 pinot noir off of back in March never gets into the barrel. There will still be some settling of lees as the wines are far from clear and I plan to rack the wines again after ML is complete but what I hope is that most of the reductive aromas that can become a problem will never get a chance to form in the wine and I won't be having the treat the wine later. I think this is a good example of my hands on/hands off philosophy. I can handle the wine less now but it may cause me to have to be harder on the wine later. As it turned out I am really glad I settled the wine first because already in two of the totes the lees that had settled had some off aromas.
Labels:
barrels,
ML,
Pinot noir,
Whites
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