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- May 22, 2009
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Utah wine!!
This year the Malbec's got picked at an average of 23 brix. Highest picking ever was 25 brix. I harvest based on available time and to avoid picking everything at once. I suspect I could get 25 or higher every year on the wall Malbecs but then I'd being picking 400 lbs in a weekend which would be too much for me to handle. 60 lbs a day to pick and destem is a nice day. I did one 150 lb day and will never do that again.rip out the dogs and replant with more Malbec
Truly ripe Malbec can be sensational.
IMHO If I could grow Malbec which I absolutely adore I would be all over it. I'd even consider ripping out Baco Noir and replacing with Malbec. I really like ripe Baco Noir and if you do keep it but if you can grow healthy dead ripe Malbec then do that. One of my friends had a sensational 100% Washington Malbec from Meek Vineyard that was to die for. What is the brix on your Malbec right now or when you picked it?
We are about 5900 ft. A couple miles past Ruth's Diner then up into Emigration Oaks. Maybe I'll buy a couple of vines and test. Deer would decimate garden if it didn't have some fencing.We don't get deer in the summer here. The racoons just walk by the grapes.
I have had deer in the winter kill a small peach tree but haven't seen winter deer damage on the vines.
I wonder how high up the canyon you could go and still get a viable harvest. Did your yard freeze last night?
If you are on the south facing side of the canyon vinefera might be viable if you aren't too high.
The growing season just varies so dramatically with elevation.
Our low was 50 2 days ago and 42 last night. I bet your growing season is 30 days less than mine. Which would be a problem for my vinefera vines.We are about 5900 ft. A couple miles past Ruth's Diner then up into Emigration Oaks. Maybe I'll buy a couple of vines and test. Deer would decimate garden if it didn't have some fencing.
Past couple of nights 33 degrees for low. We have a south south-east facing slope.
23+ brix on any red wine grape is perfect. If your Malbec isn't damaged and you are careful with it, destemming it the way you do with RC212 yeast with nutrient could give you a sensational red wine. I wouldn't sulphite until after malolactic fermentation. That is why pressing it around SG 1.000 matters i.e. carbon dioxide from slight ferment off of a press and off of sludge (e.g. SG 0.996 approximate) with or without oak should give you something really good. I'd sulphite to 50 ppm total sulphite as potassium metabisulphite after racking post malolactic. I envy your ability to grow it.This year the Malbec's got picked at an average of 23 brix. Highest picking ever was 25 brix. I harvest based on available time and to avoid picking everything at once. I suspect I could get 25 or higher every year on the wall Malbecs but then I'd being picking 400 lbs in a weekend which would be too much for me to handle. 60 lbs a day to pick and destem is a nice day. I did one 150 lb day and will never do that again.
If my wife didn't prefer the Tempranillo I'd think about removing them. The Bacos were planted in areas of limited sun, where I think the Malbecs might struggle. That changed though, I was able to buy the house next door to the south, which had a ton of siberian elms, trash trees in this area, that shaded some of my yard. I'll probably move the Bacos on the south side of my house and replace with Malbecs and maybe more Tannats. With the additional space I've got more options than I used to have. The siberian elms were really driving all my gardening decisions. I'm planning on renovating the house I bought and the yard (along with south part of my yard) in 2025.
I haven't tried malolactic yet. I did buy some this year and will try it on the last Malbec picking and probably the tannat too.23+ brix on any red wine grape is perfect. If your Malbec isn't damaged and you are careful with it, destemming it the way you do with RC212 yeast with nutrient could give you a sensational red wine. I wouldn't sulphite until after malolactic fermentation. That is why pressing it around SG 1.000 matters i.e. carbon dioxide from slight ferment off of a press and off of sludge (e.g. SG 0.996 approximate) with or without oak should give you something really good. I'd sulphite to 50 ppm total sulphite as potassium metabisulphite after racking post malolactic. I envy your ability to grow it.
Unfortunately, I'm not a supertaster, and decided to grow grapes because I like how they look. The wine is just a bonus.I'm definitely interested in how your Malbec and Tempranillo turn out. I'm a big Tempranillo fan and I'd love to grow it if it will ripen. I'll be waiting eagerly for tasting notes in..oh a year
I’ve been wanting a “bad wine” tasting too! I mean, over the years I’ve been able to pick out different flavors and accidentally oxidize unfinished bottles but I can’t put a name to it all.Unfortunately, I'm not a supertaster, and decided to grow grapes because I like how they look. The wine is just a bonus.
My tasting notes from last year's tempranillos is
color - good
Smell - good
Taste - good.
Once a year or so I search for a wine tasting class to educate myself.
What I really want is a class that tastes bad wines.
Ie this is what a corked wine tastes like, this is oxidized, this is too much oak, this is too much tannin...
I think if I could isolate the taste once, I'd be able to pick the specific element taste up in a good wine.
Mostly I think mine is as good as the $15 or less Spanish and Argentinian wine I would buy.
I do think the Malbec and tempranillos are more cold hardy than you do. Wsu has a lot of good info on cold hardiness. Last winter it got down to about 2 at my house. I've got a pomegranate between the Tempranillo and Malbec, the cold killed all the pomegranate branches above the ground. I didn't notice any real damage to the grapes. That said, I do worry about a real cold snap killing the grapes to the ground.
The wsu site actually tests the cold hardiness of vines at different times during the year. The cold hardiness varies pretty significantly from fall to winter to spring.I’ve been wanting a “bad wine” tasting too! I mean, over the years I’ve been able to pick out different flavors and accidentally oxidize unfinished bottles but I can’t put a name to it all.
I’ll have to look at WSU. I have always just defaulted to USU and maybe I haven’t searched broadly enough.
Also, those tasting notes are basically what I think everyone should do. Is the wine sound? Does it taste and smell good to you? Hooray! You found a wine you like. Enjoy!
The wsu site actually tests the cold hardiness of vines at different times during the year. The cold hardiness varies pretty significantly from fall to winter to spring.
I think that in general our climate is similar to the western Washington wine regions. The main difference is our potential for significant cold is higher.
I just looked at a plot of walla walla versus slc temps. April through October is pretty similar. In winter we average about 7 degrees lower
I'm realizing that WSU is probably Washington state university. For those interested: Grapevine Cold Hardiness | WSU Viticulture and Enology | Washington State UniversitySuper cool! I’ll look into that. That’s very cool to know that there’s another local resource.
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