A few weekends ago, I bottled two batches of wine. Finally got to capsules and labels this weekend.
Batch 1:
The first was wine from 100 lbs of locally grown Cab Franc that my wife and I picked in 2021. Honestly, I didn't have any hopes that this wine would be drinkable. After fermentation, I had 6 gallons of light bodied, light color cab franc that I planned to barrel age. Problem #2, my barrel is 8 gallons.
Looked around the wine room and it hit me - I bet the FWK Petite Sirah would give this wine sufficient body, color and the added flavor I was looking for. With a 75/25 blend, it went in the barrel for 6 months.
I didn't care for the flavor coming out of the barrel. Given the constant shortage of clean bottles in my basement, I figured I'd just leave it in the 7-gallon carboy for a while. A year later and it was still sitting on the floor waiting. So I decided to give it a taste, figuring I'd probably just flush it and clean the carboy. To my surprise, it was very drinkable.
My litmus test is Mrs. Mann. I never tell her what it is. I just hand her a glass with wine in it and say "here, taste this." I got a, "Hey, this is good. What is it?" Fine, I committed 35 Bordeaux bottles to the effort.
I name my wines after songs I enjoy. With this one - blending Pennsylvania and California wines - I thought a little Beatles was in order. "Come Together."
Batch 2:
The second was the FWK Chardonnay. This was one that came about after Matteo addressed the dark color issue (though I don't recall exactly what he did to address it). Anyway, I started this one between Thanksgiving and Christmas, and it's been on a spiral of French oak since New Years. I haven't tasted it since before I racked it and it was good then.
It still had some residual CO2 at the final racking. I was surprised. But, we racked and it made it to the bottle.
I gifted a bottle to friends and suggested it sit for a few months. These folks are big fans of Rombauer Chard and prefer their chard with enough oak to spit splinters. It only got through a few weeks before they pulled the cork this past weekend.
Here's the quote I got this morning: "I'm in love with this chard. Sell me some." Words every winemaker hopes to hear.
I'm an Ed Sheeran fan. "Tenerife Sea," spoke to me while I was bottling... So, who am I to argue?