Great post! And I appreciate all the follow-up!
I’m a homebrewer just about to start my journey into wine. I brew a lot of mixed fermentation, spontaneous, and brett beers and am excited about the idea of doing a spontaneous wine. I’ve tried to gather as much information as I can about tips on spontaneous but there isn’t much out there.
Congrats on getting started in wine! The limited amount of practical info I was able to find was one of the inspirations for this post. I know it’s not for everybody but I figured there’d be a few curious people out there looking for information/experience as I was (still am).
Anyway, I’m likely going to obtain about 100-150 lbs of Sangiovese from a commercial vineyard. They aren’t biodynamic or organic certified, however, there should still be plenty of wild stuff on there, correct?
There should be. My vineyard is definitely not organic. Not because I wouldn’t like it to be, I’ve just learned that it’s not possible if I’m going to have a part-time hobby vineyard in Virginia. I spray with Mancozeb, Captan, and Myclobutanil at regular intervals (respecting pre harvest intervals). In spite of that I’m kicking off my fourth spontaneous ferment and haven’t had an issue yet.
I hear how risky spontaneous wine is, but not much evidence to back that up as long as quality processes are implemented…controlled fermentation, minimal oxygen post fermentation, etc.
Agreed. I’ve seen a lot of warnings about the risk but no actual negative experiences being related, though I’m certainly open to hearing about them. As you said, keep things reasonably clean, limit oxygen post ferment, etc. I’d suggest that includes limiting rackings as well. For now I’m racking once off the gross lees then two weeks before bottling, unless there is an H2S or other issue. This seems to be the protocol of a lot of the natural wine producers I follow and it seems to be working so far. I’ve seen theories and a few academic papers suggesting that fermenting on stems and/or lees contact may help reduce the need for SO2 additions. My personal preference is to limit or eliminate SO2; not for health or philosophical reasons, but for the microbiological diversity and related flavor potential. Again, not suggesting anyone else do this if they’re not comfortable with it, that’s just me and the wines I’ve enjoyed the most have been low or no added sulfites.
I hear great things about prolonged skin contact, and increased extraction with higher ferm temps, but worry about oxygen pickup if it finishes too soon. I figure a slow lag phase with spontaneous fermentation can help with this. However, how do you balance ferm temperature? From my understanding, a typical red ferment is 70-85, with higher temps promoting more extraction, but making fermentation quicker. I’d ideally want ~2 wk skin contact time.
I wanted a long slow ferment too if you saw at the beginning of this thread, though it didn’t work out exactly as I hoped. I suspect that was because I used the pied de cuve starter so ended up inoculating with a pretty healthy wild culture and going to dry after only six days. I still left it on the skins for another week with no issues. This year I’m not using a starter but crushing and letting everything start on its own and have had nice, slow ferments of about ten days to two weeks. I personally think you’re good macerating for another week after you get to dry as the must is saturated with CO2 and other antioxidants, but theoretically you want the keep the cap wet. (I say theoretically because I’ve seen a study where they actually observed less VA with no punch downs).
I don’t control the temperature but ferment in my cellar which stays in the mid 60s in the summer and my must temps seem to stay around 70. I think letting the ambient yeast do their thing at the activity and alcohol levels they are comfortable with help with that, whereas relying only on saccharomyces from the beginning may result in a more vigorous ferment at higher temperatures. The non-saccharomyces yeasts are always far more abundant and kick things off while the saccharomyces population slowly builds to finish things off. If you have the temperature control ability and wanted to, I know some natural winemakers will ferment in the 70s for the most part then let it finish warmer at the end. I honestly don’t know what that gets you but it’s an option if you wanted to couple a longer ferment with some warmer temperatures at the end to get the extraction you’re looking for.
Full disclaimer: all of this is based on my limited experience along with a few theories/opinions and some research, YMMV. If you’re looking for more info in English, I’ve found this blog to be full of interesting practical details from mostly French winemakers that practice ‘natural winemaking’ techniques:
Wine Tasting, Vineyards, in France. I learned of a technique one winemaker in the Loire uses where he fills an amphorae full of whole clusters of Cabernet Franc submerged/topped with juice from previously pressed grapes to eliminate oxygen and leaves them sealed until about Christmas before pressing. I may try that with a sample of my Marquette next year if I get a large enough harvest.
I hope this is helpful and look forward to hearing about what you decide to do and how it turns out!