Madeira Flashcards

1
Q

Madiera

A
  • located off the coast of Africa (600 miles south west of portugal)
  • sub tropical island
  • niche products in key EU markets (UK, Germany, Benelux, Nordics)
  • DOP for fortified wines
  • worlds most resilient and longest living wine
  • started as a n unfortified wine
  • capitol Funchal became a natural port of call for ships en route to Africa, Asia, and South America
  • end of 16th century shows the wine industry was well established
  • earlier versions of wine were unstable and deteriorated on the long voyages
  • alc was therefore added to help them survive the long journey’s
  • fortification did not become general practice however until the middle of the 18th century
  • ships on route to india would pick up casks of wine (pipes). people found that it tasted better after pitching and rolling across the tropics in a ship
  • wines that benefited from the round trip vinho da roda became more popular than vinho canteiro, wines matured in the lodges
  • after a wine this became impractival though (1900’s)
  • over the preceeding century, most shippers turned to using estufas, rooms r tanks in which the wine could be artificially heated to simulate the rapid maturation brought about by a long sea journey
  • the finest madeira’s however continue to be aged naturally in canteiros
  • several things crippled the wine economy
  • powdery mildew / odium and then phylloxera
  • non-vinifera vines were planted instead of just using them as rootstocks
  • then came the russian revolution and prohibition
  • now only 6 exporters of madeira
  • Justino’s is the largest producer on the island
  • most recognized brand is the Madeira Wine Company which is composed of Blandy, Cossart Gordon, Lealock and Rutherford & Miles
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2
Q

Tinta Negra Mole

A
  • red skinned grape
  • now called Tinta Negra
  • name for Negramoll on the island
  • dark skinned grape and most commonly planted vine variety on the island of madiera post phylloxera
  • it is a vinifera variety
  • relatively high yields
  • sweet pale red wines which turn amber with the madeira production process and then yellow-green w/ age
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3
Q

Sercial

A
  • portuguese white grape variety
  • know as Esgana Cao on the mainland
  • only 20ha grown on the island in 2010
  • grown on the islands coolest vineyards
  • palest, lightest and driest Madeira’s
  • matures to a rich, yet crisp savory flavor
  • sharp tang of acidic spices and citrus
  • legas RS limit is 18-65g/l
  • tastes bone dry at the bottom end
  • notable for late ripening and high acidity
  • difficulty ripening at higher elevations
  • RS from .5-1.5 Baume
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4
Q

Bual

A
  • sweeter and darker
  • khaki colored miniscus is the give away
  • soft, gentle fruit with fatness and ripeness
  • underscored by a baked smoky complexity
  • elgas RS is 78-96g/l
  • richer than sercial and verdelho but not as sweet as malmsey
  • also known as Boal
  • is the madeira name for Malvasia fina grape
  • most plantings are limited to Boal Cachudo
  • not nearly as limited as the other three noble varieties
  • grown on the warmer sides of the island
  • ripes to acheive higher sugar levels than Sercial and Verdelho
  • 2.5-3.5 baume
  • dark, medium rich rasiny wines retain their acidic verve with age
  • known as Malvasia Fina in mainland Portugal
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5
Q

Verdelho

A
  • became increasingly rare in the post-phyloxera era
  • medium dry style wine somewhere between sercial and bual (with regards to richness)
  • one of the original four vinifera varieties traditionally grown in madeira
  • most widely planted today with 116 acres in 2010
  • musts have modearte levels of sugar and notably high acid
  • produce gold colored wines that deepen w/ age
  • always made in medium dry to medium sweet
  • gives it somewhat more body than sercial
  • RS limits are 49-78 g/l
  • tends to be planted on the cooler side of the island
  • ripens more easily than Sercial, lends itself to making a medium-dry wine
  • 1.5-2.5 baume
  • smoky complexity w/ age
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6
Q

Malvasia

A
  • corrupted and used as Malmsey in english which was long an important style of madeira traditionally based on the Malvasia di Lipari grape
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7
Q

American Hybrids

A
  • Cunningham and Jacquet
  • not permitted in Madeira fortified wines
  • relegated to rustic table wines
  • planted because of their resistance to disease
  • not used as rootstocks
  • planted in the northern part of the island
  • took over after phylloxera and powdery mildew
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8
Q

Blandy

A
  • Charles Blandy bought up mature stocks of wine during the powdery mildew outbreak in 1852
  • contributed to their success as a wine firm
  • difficult years in the early 20th century saw the formation of the Madeira Wine Company which the Blandy’s joined in 1920 eventually aquiring controlling interest
  • now known as the Madeira Wine Copmany, it includes all the British madeira firms (Cossart Gordon, Leacock, and Rutherford & Miles
  • one of the largest producers on the island
  • Symington famuly acquired controlling intereset in 1988, investing a lot into improving winemaking and marketing. In 2011 the Blandy’s regained controlling interest and are actively trying to revive the madeira category
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9
Q

Justino’s

A
  • largest single shipper of madeira bottling under names like Cruz (largest single brand of Madeira in France
  • established in Funchal in 1870’s
  • operates from a modern industrial premesis outside the city
  • company was formerly known as Justin Henriqes but was renamed to avoid confusion w/ Henriques & Henriques
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10
Q

Bastardo

A
  • black grape
  • very rare
  • great potential quality grape
  • needs a revival
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11
Q

Terantez

A
  • almost extinct
  • white grape variety
  • highly perfumed, rich and powerfully flavored
  • makes tangy sweet medeira
  • highly regarded and older vintages can still attract top prices
  • needs a revival
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12
Q

Complexa

A
  • experimental deeper colored softer alternative to Negramoll
  • variety bred from Castelao / Tintinha, Muscat Hamburg in the 60’s
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13
Q

Climate

A
  • tropical
  • hot humid w/ mild winters
  • cooler on the north side of the island
  • high rainfall on the northern side of the island where it’s more mountainous
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14
Q

Soils

A
  • Fertile volcanic
  • ash and rock which is basalt
  • rich in potential soil nutrients
  • well drained
  • red / gray basalt
  • darker rocks help radiate heat during the night
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15
Q

Viticulture

A
  • difficult place to grow grapes
  • vineyards planted on step like terraces called poios which are carved from the red / gray basalt bedrock
  • most newer vineyards are cordon trained on low trellises
  • low trellises help raise the canopy above the ground to reduce fungal diseases that thrive in this damp sub-tropical climate
  • powdery mildew and botrytis are a constant threat
  • viticulture only possible through elevation
  • mountain tops in perpetual clouds leading to 3 times as much rainfall at peak elevations
  • irrigation channels called levadas now extend to over 1200 miles supplying 1600 growers farming 1250 acres of vinifera authorized to produce madeira
  • mechanization is rendered impossible by both the terracing and the small size of the vineyard plots
  • cultivation costs have risen and many plots on the south part of the island look to be sold as property while vineyards in the north containing american hybrids have been abandoned
  • Tinta Negra / Negramoll principle grape (rarely have the keeping qualities of those based on the noble varieties)
  • noble varieties are making somewhat of a comeback
  • the american hybrids are not permitted in madeira wines
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16
Q

Grape Varieties

A
  • Tinta Negra / Negramoll
  • Sercial
  • ## Malvasia
17
Q

Trade structrues

A
  • IVBAM

- formed in 2006 and merges the Wine Institute w/ the embroidery and handcraft institute

18
Q

Vinification

A
  • production revolves around the use of the estufa system
  • estufagem process has been improved over the years, starting w/ stainless tanks and in larger sizes for volume production
  • hot water circulates through a stainless steel coil in the middle of the tank or in a jacket, heating the wine to 130 for at least 90 days
  • process monitored by IVBAM which controls other of the countries traditional industries
  • other type of estufagem (Madeira Wine Company exclusive) takes place in 158 gal wood casks or lodge pipes which are stored in warm rooms heated byt hte nearyby tanks or by steam filled hot water pipes
  • temps range between 86-104 degrees and wines develop over a longer period of time (6 months to a year)
  • a much more gentle process and reserved for premium wines
  • the very finest madeiras are made without any artifical heating at all.
  • small stockholders refuse estufa and leave their winesto age naturally in 600l pipes stowed under the eaves of the lodges in Funchal heated only by the sun
  • vinhos de cantiero mature in cask for at least 20 years however some can remain for over a century before bottling and destined for vintage lots
  • biggest issue is lack of quality base wine from the lack of vinifera varieties.
  • the noble varieties are hard to grow and in short supply (sercial, bual, verdelho, malvasia and Terrantez)
  • most wines not made from the versatile Tinta Negra
19
Q

Malmsey

A
  • grown in the warmest of areas at lower elevations around Camar de Lobos
  • subvarietas are Candida and Babosa which ripen to produce very sweet wines gaining richness and concentration with time in cask
  • sugar readings are beteen 3.5-6.5 baume
  • rarely cloying, balanced with high acidity
  • some of the most resilient wines that will keep in cask and bottle for a century or more
20
Q

Winemaking

A
  • tradition was shippers buying must from growers who trodden grapes in legares
  • most now buy the grapes and legares are no longer used
  • ferment in large 6600 gal stainless steel or concrete vats
  • noble varieties pressed seperately from negramoll
  • malvasia and bual fermented on skins
  • sercial and verdelho seperated from skins before fermentation
  • higher quality wines made by arresting fermentation w/ 95% grape spirit
  • brings abv up to 17-18%
  • malvasia and bual are fortified early in the process leaving RS 7 baume
  • Verdelho and Sercial fermented until almost dry (may be sweetened later with either vinho surdo (sweet mistela fortified to 20% before fermentation) or abafado (drier wine arrested at a later stage)
  • cheaper madeira’s are fortified after they have passed through the estufa process as to avoid any evaporation that occurs.
  • Wines sweetened after fortification and adjusted w/ caramel
  • wines age is counted at the point the estufagem has completed
  • no more bulk shipping allowed
  • most wines were named after their principle grape but that’s changed and since EU requires a varietally labeled wine to contain at least 85% of the varietal, most have been renamed to Dry, Medium Dry, Medium Sweet, Medium Rich, Rich, Sweet
21
Q

Madeira Classifications

A
  • Bulk (granel) is 30-40% of total win production until shipments were suspended in 2002. only those wines that are denatured (spiced with salt and pepper ) can be exported in bulk
  • 3 yr old are sometimes designated as “Finest”. bottled after estufagem and aging in tank (rarley wood). All are based on Negramoll and Complexa grapes
  • 5 yr old reserve is blended having either all or some undergone estufagem in tank. portion likely to be aged in cask. most made from negramoll and complexa. some are made from noble grapes.
  • 10yr old special reserve is a wine which the youngest component is around 10 years old having aged in cask, usually in estufa tanks. wines are mostly made from the noble grapes and labelled accordingly
  • Extra reserve is rarely seen but is a blended 15yr old wine
  • 20,30,40 yr old wines rarely designated as such. wines usually from a single year w/ 20 years of age qualify as vintage
  • Solera wines began in the 19th century but was abused and prohibited. Now reintroduced, wines must be from a single year of which not more than 10% can be withdrawn in any one year. Must is replenished with a wine of similar quality. Maximum number of additions being ten after which all the wine in the solera must be bottled at the same time
  • Colheita / Harvest are wines from a single year bottled after spending at least 5 years in cask. Effectively vintage wines which share the same individuality
  • Frasqueira (vintage) are wines made from a single year. must age in cask for a min. 20 years. many spend considerably more time in weed spending the later years in glass carboys before bottling. the wines are extremely resistent to oxidation and may be kept in bottl for many years. Sercial is capable of many decades bottle ageing. many keep the bottles standing upright as to reduce the risk of poor or tainted cork spoiling the wine
22
Q

Henriques and Henriques

A
  • controlled by French importer and distro group La Martiniquaise
  • founded by Jose Henriques in 1850
  • partnership was created in 1912 after his death with his sons (hence Henriques & Henriques)
  • by 1925 the firm concentrated non shipping it’s own wines instead of supplying them to other shippers
  • Henriques & Henriques is teh only madeira producer to won vineyards
  • they make the full range of classified madeiras
23
Q

Barbeito

A
  • entered the business later, in 1946 which was a dark time
  • during WWII production and sales virtually halted
  • US market disappeared, shipping wine was impossible to the UK due to u-boats and there was a ban on prtugues glass bottles that were poorly made
  • Mario Barbeito went around the island buying substantial stocks of priceless old vintages from important familities
  • let all those age and built the business around more modest Madeiras
  • his daugher Manuala took over in the 1970’s and begain selling these vintage wines
  • 1795 Terrantez, 1834 Malvasia 1863 Bual make regular appearances at auction
  • this created a lasting reputation for the Barbeito name among collectors
  • Manuala’s son has taken over in the 1990’s and created a Signature series which are small lots based on finding the best varietal expression and vineyards
  • all wines marked with complexity, acidicty and balance