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Fermentation with Oak & Designing a Barrel Program Joshua Maloney Red Winemaker Chateau Ste. Michelle
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Overview Fermentation with Oak Goals Factors that influence effect Common Methods Examples Designing a Barrel Program General Overview of CSM Red Barrel Program Evaluation and Evolution of the Program Personal Experiences Not necessarily universally accepted practices
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Fermentation with Oak
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Fermentation with Oak What is the Goal? Affecting Style Level of Expression / Integration Oak Expression – Quantity of Oak Aroma and Flavor, not necessarily quality Oak Integration – Oak aromas or flavors that are virtually indiscernible from the grape aromas or flavors Alteration / Removal of specific aromas Vegetal aromas
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Factors that influence Expression & Integration Type of Oak Toast Level / Oak Source affects type and quality of tannin Relationship between surface area/volume and extraction rate Higher Surface Area/Volume ratio corresponds to faster extraction
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Factors that influence Expression & Integration Temperature Higher temperatures correspond to faster extraction rates They also correspond to faster fermentation rates Condition of the wine % Solids “Clean” wines tend to extract oak faster than “Dirty” wines
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Expression vs. Integration Faster Extraction High expression, Low integration Slower Extraction Low expression, High integration
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Design Oak Fermentation Protocols for different outcomes High Expression / Low Integration Use Chips, not barrels Ferment Warm & Fast Get the juice as clean as possible Low Expression / High Integration Use barrels Ferment cool & Slow Let the juice stay dirty
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Fermentation with Oak is not just for Whites MLF for Reds in Barrel Better integration Cooler barrel room temperatures slow down MLF Safe winemaking doesn’t always make the best wine Importance of monitoring Primary Fermentation and Oak Contact Oak Chips
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Oak Chips and Red Fermentation Goals for Fermentation Differ from goals for Aging Reduction / Elimination of Vegetal characters Little to no perceptible Oak character Addition Rates and observed effect
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Oak Chip Addition Rates Chip Size Desired Effect “Dust / Flour” Small ChipsLarge Chips Reduction in Vegetal Aromas ½ - 1lbs. per ton 1 – 3 lbs. per ton 2 – 6 lbs. per ton Reduce Vegetal Aromas / Add Mild Oak Aroma 1 – 2 lbs. per ton 3 – 6 lbs. per ton 6 – 12 lbs. per ton Reduce Vegetal Aromas / Add Pronounced Oak Aroma and Tannin 2 + lbs. per ton 6 + lbs. per ton 12 + lbs. per ton
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Designing a Barrel Program
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Chateau Ste. Michelle Red Program Overview 44,000 barrels total 2009 Barrel Purchase 6,000 barrels total 75 different barrel types 1/3 French, 2/3 American Quantity determined by case volume Desired (budgeted) % New Oak x Case volume = # of barrels Don’t forget about total barrel needs (i.e. used barrels)
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Evaluation Barrels vs. Grapes Both having growing seasons Variability Both use human hands to be fashioned into an end product If you scrutinize your grapes, you should also scrutinize your barrels Evaluation is key Improving barrel usage Guarding against changes at cooperage Customizing for your purpose
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Barrel Trial Method Create “Mother” Lot Fill multiple barrel types FO Trial / AO Trial / Syrah Trial Evaluate at regular intervals Impressions and impact change over time The best barrel at 6 months might be the worst at 18 months Use evaluations to influence barrel purchases and applications
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Other Points to Consider Taste with your Coopers Show them their barrels in context with their competitors Point out benchmarks, make changes to underperforming barrels Find coopers that speak your language Continual Evaluation and Evolution Keep working with Coopers to get better barrels, even from your top performers Make small changes from year to year
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Thank You Questions? Joshua.Maloney@ste-michelle.com
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