Champagne Making Flashcards

1
Q

Sparkling Styles - levels

A

Brut Nature 0-3 g/L

Extra Brut 0-6 g/L

Brut / Bruto / Herb 0-12 g/L

Extra-Sec / Extra-Dry 12-17 g/L

Sec / Dry / Trocken 17-32 g/L

Demi-Sec / Med Dry 32-50 g/L

Coux / Sweet 50+

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2
Q

Sparkling Styles - Type

A

Non-Vintage - wine from more than 1 vintage, stadard offering, displays house style

Vintage - In Champ, only the best years. Other areas may allow some % from other years

Rose - made by blending or by maceration. Color can be adjusted in liqueur d’exp

Blanc de Blancs - from white grapes only

Blanc de Noirs - from red grapes only

Prestige Cuvee - best wine from a producer, small but important especially in luxury tier of Champ

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3
Q

Sparkling Harvest Requirements

A

Harvest low in sugar, base wines 10-11% abv

Second ferment adds 1.2-1.3% ABV

Harvest high in acid

Harvest with flavor ripeness to avoid green and herbaceous character

Warm regions ripen too rapidly, with sugar climbing and acid falling fast

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4
Q

Handling Grapes and Juice

A

Premium: typically hand picked to retain whole berries

Value: typically machine harvested for volume – need to pick fast

Press ASAP on arrival, gently, minimize skin contact

Especially with BLACK GRAPES

Whole bunch pressing helps avoid crushing

Many EU regions regulate max pressing pressures and yield

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5
Q

Traditional Method - 6 Steps

A

First Fermentation - making the base wine

Blending

Second Ferment - Liqueur de Tirage

Riddling

Disgorgement and Corking - Liquerur d’ Expedition

Bottle Aging

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6
Q

Traditional Method - First Ferment

A

Often fermented in temperature controlled SS tanks, some use vats or barrels

Completely dry, neutral, high acid

May undergo MLF or maturation in oak

‘Reserve’ is base stored for future years to blend

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7
Q

Traditional Method - Blending

A

Used to produce house style consistently

Improve the balance of the wine

CHA brings citrus fruit, finesse, longevity

PIN brings aromas, red fruit, body

Enhance complexity

Reserve wines bring dried fruit

Oak brings in texture and spice

Many small lots add to blending options

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8
Q

Liqueuer de Tirage

A

Wine

Sugar

Yeast

Nutrients

Clarifying agent

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9
Q

Traditional Method - Second Alc Ferment

A

Blend is made and includes LIQUEUR DE TIRAGE

Wine, sugar, yeast, nutrients, clarifying agent

Blend is bottled, closed w crown cap

Stacked horizontally in cool, constant temp cellar

Slow ferment takes place

Alc increases by 1.2-1/3%

CO2 is generated (creates sparkle) 5-6 atm

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10
Q

Yeast Autolysis

A

Second ferment completes and yeast die, making sediment

Yeast breaks down, releasing compounds

Bread, biscuit, and toasty notes

Yeast breakdown can take up to 4-5 years, but up to 10 years – time is important

Lees contact helps maintain freshness

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11
Q

Riddling

A

Move the bottle from horizontal to vertical

Yeast sediment moves down to an insert in the crown cap

By hand traditionally – PUPITRE – up to 8 weeks

Modern – gyropalette – simulates hand riddling mechanically in a few days

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12
Q

Disgorgement and Corking

A

Neck of bottle submerged in cold brine, wine freezes, bottle upright, crown cap is removed, sediment (and capsule) is ejected

Wine is topped with Liqueur d’Expedition and corked

Mix of wine and sugar (Dosage)

Wine will also be added to top the bottle properly, note this is a chance to re-balance, add complexity

Cork added and wire seal

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13
Q

Liqueur d’Expedition

A

Mixture of wine and sugar after disgorgement

Dosage is the sugar added at the final corking

Determines final sweetness level

Balances acidity and helps flavors develop

Can be a second blending opportunity to balance

Some wines without dosage

Brut Nature or Zero dosage

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14
Q

Bottle Aging

A

Often, after disgorgement, a few months bottle age integrates

Most premium wines can benefit from further aging

Most sparklings aren’t vintage dated

Some producers now include disgorgement date

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15
Q

Transfer Method

A

Wine is made, blended, and second ferment occurs in bottle

Bottle is disgorged to tank under pressure

Wine is filtered, LIQUEUR D’EXPEDITION is added into the blend

Rebottling occurs in a fresh bottle

Gives good quality sparkling at a cheaper price

Easy to ensure consistent quality

Often states ‘Bottle Fermented’

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16
Q

Tank Method

A

Good for retaining flavors of the grape

Muscat, Riesling, fruity style wines such as Proseco

Cheaper, faster, less labor-intensive

With care, high-quality sparkling can be made

Base wines made, typically no MLF

Base, yeast, sugar, nutrients, and clarifying agents are added

Pressure vessel is used to ferment, CO2 dissolves in the wine

Wine is clarified and bottled under pressure

Yeast autolysis character isn’t often seen

17
Q

Asti Method

A

Used for sweet wines from Asti in Piemonte, Italy

Only one ferment, in a pressurized vessel

CO2 initially allowed to escape

Partway through (~7% ABV), vessel closed and CO2 stays

Ferment stops at 5-6 atm, and chilled

Ferment is filtered (CF) under pressure and pressure packaged for immediate sale

18
Q

Direct Carbonation

A

Base wine is pressure carbonate, pressure packaged

Cheap, easy, fast

Good for preserving fruit character/ varietal wine types