Back sweetening
Oaking
Blending
Filtering!
I don't do any of those.
They all change the wine. I want my wine to "be what it is".
But that is just me of course. Each to their own.
Kind of surprised to hear you say that. Back Sweetening and filtering I can understand but I'm surprised you don't blend or oak
, do you not use barrels?
I grow and try to make mostly fruit forward varietal vintage white wines. So no, no blending. Not even for the same wine between years. And I think oaking many such white wines is a bad idea, as one then looses the wine's unique varietal aromatics to the wood. And I am very much after the very specific aroma from the varietal, as it is grown here under local conditions at a vintage year to year (its Terroir). So I don't want to mask those very important aspects with external influences like wood or blending. Some wines, like Chardonnay, are exceptions (they benefit from oak). But I don't make oak beneficial wines like Chardonnay.
In short.... my personal wine making style.
When I bought my winery, it came with many oak barrels from sizes from 12 L to 800 L (yes, very large). But they were all beyond their useful life span (and not ideally cared for). And ended up as firewood mostly
Today, I mostly use HDPE barrels from 30 L to 200 L in size, and am considering getting some PP variable capacity tanks.
Balaton Why is it that some of the European countries can't produce reds? Is the season not long enough to ripen?
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