stickman
Veteran Winemaker
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2014
- Messages
- 1,930
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I agree, this is another one of those questions that has many different angles. It seems like the bulk aging concept has been around for many years, and the duration needed before bottling was probably determined by experience. All of the yeast and bacterial activity should be allowed to complete and consume all available nutrients before bottling, but without modern conveniences, special equipment, cultures, nutrients, so2, and other additives etc., this could easily take two years. For example, imagine waiting for a red wine at a pH of 3.5 to complete malolactic fermentation during the winter without temperature control and the latest cultures and nutrients. Then you have all of the other usual physical and chemical transformations that take place as others have commented above. These days I think wines can be made more quickly, but it is a question of the wine style desired and the techniques being used, the end result is what counts.