I often pick up things, see their value, and take it for exactly that. The face value of chaptalization is that when you add sugar to your must you can increase SG/brix, and thus ABV in your final product. Simple, and all you really need to know.
Well, today I did some reading, and I learned a thing or two. Many of you likely know this, but for those that don't...
Previous to around 1777 a wine was just what you got from the grapes available. It was a crap shoot, really. Weather and all the other variables involved dictated your final alcohol percentage. In 1777, the French chemist Pierre Macquer discovered that adding sugar directly affected the alcohol percentage, not sweetness. It wasn't until later, 1801, that Jean-Antoine Chaptal began advocating for its use to fortify and preserve wine, however, he was the original and main proponent of it.
So long story short, why do we use such a strange term to increase SG with sugar to bump our ABV? Well, cause Chaptal said so, and if you want a higher ABV you will have to chaptalize your must.
It is also illegal in some areas... CRAZY!
Argentina, Australia, California, Italy, Portugal, Spain and South Africa all prohibit it, and there are stipulations surrounding its use in many regions.
Some areas require it to be noted on the label if the ABV is not 'natural'. It seems so strange to me to take the control out of the process, and the need to note it? Who cares how the ABV got there?
In warmer climates where over ripening is a concern watering down and increasing acid may be required to balance the must to the sugar levels, but don't you even think about adding sugar to balance it in the other direction. That is absolutely criminal.
Anyway, that is what I learned in school today.
Well, today I did some reading, and I learned a thing or two. Many of you likely know this, but for those that don't...
Previous to around 1777 a wine was just what you got from the grapes available. It was a crap shoot, really. Weather and all the other variables involved dictated your final alcohol percentage. In 1777, the French chemist Pierre Macquer discovered that adding sugar directly affected the alcohol percentage, not sweetness. It wasn't until later, 1801, that Jean-Antoine Chaptal began advocating for its use to fortify and preserve wine, however, he was the original and main proponent of it.
So long story short, why do we use such a strange term to increase SG with sugar to bump our ABV? Well, cause Chaptal said so, and if you want a higher ABV you will have to chaptalize your must.
It is also illegal in some areas... CRAZY!
Argentina, Australia, California, Italy, Portugal, Spain and South Africa all prohibit it, and there are stipulations surrounding its use in many regions.
Zone | Allowable increase[2] | Maximum ABV from chaptalization[2] |
---|---|---|
A | 3% ABV (24 g/L)[10] | 11.5% (white), 12% (red)[11] |
B | 2% ABV (16 g/L) | 12% (white), 12.5% (red) |
C | 1.5% ABV (12 g/L) Zero in Italy, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, and regions of southern France | 12.5%–13.5% depending on region |
Some areas require it to be noted on the label if the ABV is not 'natural'. It seems so strange to me to take the control out of the process, and the need to note it? Who cares how the ABV got there?
In warmer climates where over ripening is a concern watering down and increasing acid may be required to balance the must to the sugar levels, but don't you even think about adding sugar to balance it in the other direction. That is absolutely criminal.
Anyway, that is what I learned in school today.
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