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This is the sort of thing that would never occur to any orthodox winemaker, and
is why this group of people-who-will-try-anything is so great.
O course, you will blow away any SO2, H2S and dissolved CO2 with this sort of
abuse, as well as aerate the wine heavily, liberating all the aromatics all at
once.
The dissolved air will give the wine a creamy texture, increasing mouthfeel.
I used to make frozen orange juice this way, and it was great, creamy, smooth,
stuff, but then I discovered that it would not keep overnight. Don't keep this
wine overnight !
Jay Conner
Greatferm
Paul
cardano wrote in message
<34eb857e....@discovery.intergate.bc.ca>...
A couple of years ago on a tour through Fetzer Winery in California I
video taped the winemaker explaining the system they use to speed the
aging of red wine. This is what he had to say:
The reason new red wine (Cabernet in this case) is harsh on the tongue
is that the tannin is in small single cells that get caught in the
ridges of the tongue making the wine taste harsh and high in tannin. As
the wine ages the tannin cells join together and become larger. The
larger tannin particles then slide over the tongue making the wine taste
softer or less harsh. This joining together of the tannin cells also
occurs when wine oxidizes. So they will pump over some tanks of red wine
and splash it on the side of the tank to slightly oxidize it thereby
making the wine ready to drink sooner.
However one must also consider that there are many things other than
softening of tannins that happen in properly aged wines. Another
consideration is that Fetzer has a well-equipped laboratory where they
can do tests that are beyond what is available to the average home
winemaker.
Aerating wine in a blender seems somewhat aggressive. However it may be
worth a try with a bottle or two.
Then again, there is also the pyramid method...
Jack
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
British Columbia Amateur Winemakers Association
British Columbia Guild of Wine Judges
http://nanaimo.ark.com/~jziebart/
>O course, you will blow away any SO2, H2S and dissolved CO2 with this sort of
>abuse, as well as aerate the wine heavily, liberating all the aromatics all at
>once.
>The dissolved air will give the wine a creamy texture, increasing mouthfeel.
>
>I used to make frozen orange juice this way, and it was great, creamy, smooth,
>stuff, but then I discovered that it would not keep overnight. Don't keep this
>wine overnight !
I never keep opened wine overnight :-)
Running out of wine you say? Make more next year and put some of it
away.
Paul
>
>
> However one must also consider that there are many things other than
> softening of tannins that happen in properly aged wines. Another
Can anyone describe what some of these things are?