Thread: Pinot Noir
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Old 10-04-2004, 02:46 AM
Darwin Vander Stelt
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Default Pinot Noir

In my short and not very broad experience, the quality challenge is in
growing the grapes. As Tom says, topping up and adequate sulfite seems to
make the wine behave once its made, but the plant really wants to make a
variety of lite cool aid. Maybe the problem is it wants to grow 8 tons of
grapes to the acre and it needs a real meany to drop all that fruit on the
ground, or maybe it needs it to be cool all summer, maybe both. I have
considered daily verbal abuse ("make em suffer"), and deprivation (make em
suffer more). If you can get great grapes, at least pretty good wine
should follow. I think Pinot is made in the vineyard.

"Tom S" wrote in message
om...

"ernie" wrote in message
...
I've recently become a fan of commercial pinot noir, and I'm thinking
of picking up some grapes this fall, since I'm not far from several
prime pinot regions in northern California. But pinot noir has a

reputation
for being cranky, difficult to work with, challenging even for

experienced
professionals.

Is this true? Has anyone here had good results or particular

difficulties
making pinot noir wines (from grapes)?


Pinot Noir has a tendency to spoil if it is not tended properly - perhaps

a
little moreso than other varietals. Apparently it contains _all_ the
nutrients spoilage organisms need to thrive. Keeping barrels/containers
topped up and sulfited adequately takes care of this problem quite
effectively.

I've noticed that Pinot Noir tends to go through phases in its

development -
mood swings, as it were. One day it'll taste simply wonderful; the
following week you'll wonder "what the hell happened to my wine?". It can
jump around like a Chihuahua on caffeine when it's young, but eventually
settles down. Reminds me of some women I've known. ;^D ducking and
covering

I'd say that if you have access to good fruit (and it sounds like you do)
it's well worth the trouble to make.

"Bordeaux is the wine of gentlemen, but Burgundy is the wine of kings."

Tom S




 

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