Vine/Wine Friday

Harvesting the Mourvedre
Vine: Well it is the end of another year. The Syrah, Viognier, Grenache, and Counoise are gone, picked the week of 20th September. The Mourvedre went on Sunday October 10, 2009. The Syrah production was down about 30%. I checked with a similar vineyard in my area and they were also down in Syrah. But the production was up on the coast so go figure. I don’t think it is anything I am doing here. The Grenache was about the same as well as the Mourvedre. On the quality side, I think all varietals had excellent quality with good flavors and ripe, mild tannins.
By the way, the picture is of the kite-birds I use to try to keep real birds out of the vineyard. I would say they have taken about 15% of the crop especially in the Mourvedre since it is the last thing hanging and they can focus all their efforts on them. I know that many vineyards in Napa use nets, but their land is flatter, and somehow I fear seeing myself tangled up in a net and left for days in my vineyard, which is not a far stretch since I was trapped down there last week after I fell and tore my patella tendon.
This year the major work has been to replant about 15 Grenache and 4 Viognier. I also put in a separate irrigation system for the Viognier because they seem to need more water that the Syrah. I did only two rounds of irrigation except for the new plants this year. Next year I need to replace a couple of Mourvedre and about 10 more Grenache. I have some erosion repair to do before the rains and spread some seed on the bare spots (See Blog: If you Think We Pay Too Much in Taxes). Gophers have not been as active in the vineyard, although I did see a hawk attack one of my kites-birds, so maybe the hawks are helping.

Kite-Birds
I will put down some super phosphate (this soil is really deficient in phosphate), about one pound per plant (yep, 1500#s) before the rains start to let it get washed in over the winter. Other than that things are about done. After the Mourvedre harvest last Sunday, it is time to just watch the leaves turn and enjoy the last of the warm fall days with a nice Rhone in my hand, maybe a leg of lamb dinner to celebrate the end of harvest. Good thing too, because if you read about my fall in the vineyard, I am restricted to the house and crutches for the next month or two.
Wine: The grapes are crushed and fermenting. For the two wineries I sell my grapes to, they have different approaches to crushing and processing the grapes. At Holly’s Hill, the process is fairly typical in that the grapes were delivered directly to the winery and mechanically de-stemmed and crushed. Crushing is a relative term and the idea is to break the skin for free run of juice, but nothing more violent that might extract too many tannins. Usually the crush is stabilized over night and any adjustments to acid and sulfur (to prevent contamination) are made, and then yeast is added along with some nutrients for fermentation. Fermentation will occur in open fiberglass containers and depending on temperature will take about 1-2 weeks. Punch down is usually done three times a day by hand.

Gimp Boy - Working in the Vineyard can be Dangerous
When fermentation is complete, the must will then be pressed to squeeze out all the juices, remove the seeds and skins, and will be racked off to usually large neutral oak barrels for aging with a minimum of racking to extract flavors from the lees. Blending will occur later (my Mourvedre usually goes in the their Classique which is a blend of four vineyards). Mourvedre is typically aged about 11-12 months before it is bottled.
Donkey and a Goat takes a little different approach. Their grapes are hand sorted, (I personally think those little spiders and twigs add flavor), machine de-stemmed, and then they are crushed by foot stomping (pigeage à pied). This method is not just a throwback to un-mechanized times. Some of the best wineries around the world still use this method because the extraction of tannins and other phenolics is perceived to be gentler and more natural. Donkey and a Goat used only the natural yeasts that were in the vineyard to begin with and they ferment in neutral oak vats (no plastic). For the Four-Thirteen that my Syrah, Grenache, and Counoise go into, last year the Grenache, Counoise, and the Mourvedre were co-fermented with the Syrah blended later. The must is punched down about 3-times a day by hand and then aged about a year in neutral oak until bottling,
Both wineries produce a distinctive and lovely wine and you need to taste them so you can decide for yourself which style you prefer. Or if you are like me, what is the appropriate occasion because both are delicious.
Carpe Diem

