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09/16/08 - Fine Wines

Another Great Fine Wines Article

Making White Wine: A Labor Of Love


Wine is made in winery and wineries exist all over the world and come in a variety of sizes. The grapes are grown at the wineries and then turned into wine and there are many varieties of grapes; each one either used either alone or combined to make different wines. But how exactly is white wine made?

To make a white wine, once grapes are brought to the winery they are de-stemmed and crushed before anything else is done. A machine is used to split the grapes to remove stems and stalks from each bunch because they contain astringent tannins, which might be acceptable for red wines, but are rare in whites. To stop the fermentation process from starting and turning the grapes brown and oxidizing (causing a vinegar type taste) a chemical called Sulphur Dioxide is added to the grapes. For those with allergies to Sulphur Dioxide, ?sulphur-free? wine is produced as well, however the lifespan on this wine is much shorter and needs to be consumed quickly.

After the grapes are split and the stems have been removed, they are sent to be pressed. Pressing the grapes releases their juices. The press is a large machine that has a canvas like material that separates the juice from the skins and seeds by allowing the juice to escape. The separated juice is then pumped gently to another steel tank where the sediment is allowed to settle to the bottom before being transferred again. The now sediment free juice is either pumped into another steel tank (unwooded wines) or to wooden barrels (wooded wines) where the preferred yeast type is added and fermentation can begin. Fermentation of white wine can take 3 days or 30 days depending on the type of wine being produced.

For unwooded whites, once the fermentation process is over, the wine is removed from the steel tanks and separated from the dead yeast cells. Whites such as Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc and Chardonnay are typically unwooded wines, however there are small exceptions. Rieslings in Europe can be made in wooden barrels, though the barrels usually have a crust of tartaric crystals (found in grapes and solidifies in their juices), which acts as a barrier preventing the oak flavor from being infused in the wine. Examples of oaked Sauvignon Blanc can be found in France, however the aging of unwooded Sauvignon Blanc in bottles produces a nutty toasted flavour as if it was stored in wood therefore it really is not necessary.

Why would someone want to produce an unwooded wine? The answer is simple, money. It is much cheaper to produce wine in large steel tanks, and the work required after fermentation is minimal allowing bottling and release to be quicker. This does not, however, mean unwooded wine is in any way inferior to wooded wine. It is simply a different process.

Wooded wines can often begin their fermentation in steel tanks before being transferred to oak barrels to finish fermenting, or they can have a second fermentation known as malolactic fermentation. A third option, barrel fermentation, is to simply ferment the wine once from start to finish in an oak barrel. Malolactic fermentation is the process in wine where malic acid begins to turn into lactic acid. This happens with the addition of bacteria, which in turn gives the wine buttery creamy characteristics. Wooded white wines are in barrels from six to twelve months before being filtered.

The next step in making white wine is filtration. The most common way commercial wineries filter their wine is with a membrane filter, which catches all the particles floating in the liquid. Some winemakers prefer not to filter at all thinking it will remove characters from the wine that were created in the winemaking process. After the wine has been filtered it is bottled and sealed and ready for marketing.

It all seems too easy, but it takes great skill. Climates need to be controlled, ingredients need to be accurately measured and timing needs to be perfect. Sometimes it is easy to forget that a bottle of wine can take so long to make and that patience is key. However, it is this patience and attention to detail that brings out the best in a bottle of wine.


About the Author:

Ken Finnigan is the CEO of Finest Wine Racks a website specializing in quality decorative wine racks and durable wine storage systems.





Another short Fine Wines review

Making White Wine: A Labor Of Love


Wine is made in winery and wineries exist all over the world and come in a variety of sizes. The grapes are grown at the wineries and then turned into...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Featured Fine Wines Items

The FTD Classic Beauty Bouquet - Premium


A classic presentation of some favorite flowers - purple iris, pink roses, purple asters, white stock, pink carnations and more in a glass vase. C19-3071P


Price: 79.99 USD



Fine Wines in the news

New electronic tongue tastes wines

Wed, 06 Aug 2008 08:33:00 PDT
Sommeliers could be out of a job and wine fraud a thing of the past, thanks to a group of Spanish scientists who have developed an ‘electronic tongue’ that can tell the difference between different types of wine.

Different Types Of Wine

Wed, 30 Jul 2008 05:15:23 PDT
Wines come in two major categories Red and White, but each category will have many sub categories. Many gourmands will argue that red wines can only be served with red meats and exotics such as ostrich and emus and white wines should only be paired with fish, poultry, roast pork, and deserts.

Giving A Food Wine Gift Basket

Sun, 27 Jul 2008 20:57:21 PDT
There are many ways to show someone that you care about them. Giving a food wine gift basket can be exactly what you need. There are many ways that you can give a basket, and you will also find that there are several types and prices of baskets that you can give.

Wine Basics - Beginner's Guide to Choose & Buy Wine

Fri, 25 Jul 2008 07:54:31 PDT
Are you confused about what wine to choose to serve with food or to take at a party? Do you love to entertain but lack in the basic knowledge of wine? Here's a wonderful article that explains the types of wine, their properties, and how you can understnad these and choose the wine best for your taste & budget!

LG XD1 Stylish Portable Hard Drives

Mon, 21 Jul 2008 09:29:11 PDT
LG Electronics launches its 2.5-inch portable hard disk drive called XD1 in Korea market. Coming in Red Wine and Black Pearl colors, the XD1 features a stylish design with sunrise gradation. Equipped with a SATA II interface, it is available either USB 2.0 type or USB + e-SATA combo type.


Wine Definitions
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12:35 AM

April 2008 - Drinking Wine

A Featured Drinking Wine Article

Why Australia for Fine Wines?


Australia, the land DownUnder, has become a major and exciting force in international wines. Australian wine is taking the world by storm, due to the quality of the grape stock combined with the skill and experience of its winemakers. This enables it to produce a superb and wide range of Australian wine styles.

This island continent features wines as varied as its terrain. Most people know of Australian Shiraz ? that fruit-forward wine now known and enjoyed around the world. These fabulous ?fruit bombs? represent but a small part of the overall Australian winemaking scene.

Australia is sometimes described as the perfect wine producing country. It has a land mass as great as the United States or Western Europe, with a diverse climate from cold to cool to warm, and a wide variety of soil types, including the famous Coonawarra terra rossa. These natural advantages coupled with the irrepressible free-spirited character of the Australian people, has encouraged Australian winemakers to build on the great traditions of winemaking, to create delicious wines of stunning quality, diversity and uniqueness.

Wines from Australia are usually denoted by their grape variety. Aside from Shiraz, Australia also produces fine Chardonnay, Semillon, Riesling, Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon and plenty of Cab-Shiraz blends plus some distinct Aussie wines. And don?t forget the Australian sparking whites and reds ? just the wines to keep your taste buds tingling.

Delicious concentrated ripe fruit, harvested at the peak of perfection is easier to obtain in Australia than almost anywhere else in the world. Australian wines are a delight on your palette with their different aromas, flavours and taste sensations crafted from each of the different grapes, blends and regions.

Go and visit DownUnder, you won?t be disappointed. If you don't have the time just now, you can take a Wine Tour around this amazing country through the AussieWinesOnline website and experience the people, places and those incomparable Aussie wines.





About The Author


Lindsay Lewis is the Marketing Director of AussieWinesOnline.com, an Australian company providing Worldwide home delivery of fine, estate-grown Aussie wines from independent Australian Wineries. Visit their website http://aussiewinesonline.com and take a Wine Tour around the Wineries and see the unique Australian countryside.



Short Review on Drinking Wine

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Drinking Wine Products we recommend

Wine Enthusiast Vintage Chart Wine Bottle Cooler


The Wine Enthusiast Magazine Vintage Chart decorates the outside. Take Chillz-It from your freezer and wrap it around your bottle. Chillz-It chills your wine in minutes and keeps it chilled. The fastener adjusts to any size bottle and you'll reuse it over and over again. 7 1/4' H x 15 1/2' W (open).


Price: 9.95 USD



Drinking Wine in the news

Pregnant women not always truthful about alcohol (Reuters via Yahoo! News)

Thu, 24 Apr 2008 11:31:36 PDT
Women may not always tell the truth about their drinking habits during pregnancy, the findings of a new study hint.

"ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?"

Thu, 24 Apr 2008 12:02:18 PDT
About the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, "ELI, ELI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?" that is, "MY GOD, MY GOD, WHY HAVE YOU FORSAKEN ME?" I have always been puzzled by this too. I've used that phrase in like five things I've written. So Jesus went around telling everyone to believe in God. He was convinced he was The Son of God. (And King of Kings which were titles given to Caesarion the son of Julius Caesar and Cleopatra.) Christianity has this strange thing. A God a person can pr

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Thu, 24 Apr 2008 12:45:30 PDT
If It Isn’t One Thing, It’s Another. Like, Duh. Hugh’s grandmother passed away yesterday at the age of 94. She was a classy lady and I will miss her. In accordance with her wishes, there will be a small gravesite ceremony in Florida, where her husband of fifty-years, is buried. In accordance with some rule of her religion, she will be buried as quickly as possible (which, I have no idea, Catholic, remember? When one of our people dies we have wakes that go on for days, viewings, a reading of t

Beacon Hill Roll Call - April 14 to April 11, 2008

Thu, 24 Apr 2008 13:05:39 PDT
Beacon Hill Roll Call / Volume 35-Report No. 16 / April 14-18, 2008 Copyright © 2008 Beacon Hill Roll Call. All Rights Reserved. By Bob Katzen THE HOUSE AND SENATE. Beacon Hill Roll Call records local representatives and senators' votes on three roll calls from the week of April 14-18. RULES FOR HOUSE BUDGET DEBATE (H 4699) House 131-22, voted mostly along party lines and approved a set of Democratic leadership-sponsored rules to be followed when the House considers the $27.99 billio

De Loach 2006 Green Valley Pinot Noir

Thu, 24 Apr 2008 13:10:00 PDT
This is a bottle of wine to begin the evening, before you’re too tipsy to notice what you’re drinking. A fruity, slightly spicy pinot that reminds me of ripe, dark cherries and the smell of leather.


Wine Holder
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7:29 PM

We hope that through reading of this article on Wine Com , interest in Wine Com is once again activated.

Another Great Wine Com Article

Greek Island Wine - Taste the Place



Living on the island of Paros, I drink a lot of Greek island wine, yet I am not a connoisseur. I am an imbiber. I drink what is available at the time and place. Just as Greek light and air have influenced art since the dawn of civilization, so do the atmosphere and sun at our local taverna influence the taste of the wine before us.


All restaurants and tavernas on the islands serve an "open" or barrel wine at usually a very low price - sometimes the price is so low I double the tip out of guilt. I always try the local offering and am only rarely disappointed. When sitting on a shaded veranda with the sound of the sea lapping against the sand and either the villa-clad hills or open sea in the background it would have to be a very bad wine to take away from the sense of well being. Though, I have found that when the Greek male host is especially boastful of his own wine, it tends to not be to my liking, usually because it is too sweet.


While some of this open wine may come from the proprietors' home stock, most comes from a large plastic jug and is produced at a central island winery. Each island tends to specialize in a different variety. Santorini produces mostly white wine using the Assyrtiko grape that was originally cultivated there and now is grown all over Greece. Paros is famous for the quality of its Mandelaria red grape.


Perhaps when comparing the world market including France, California, & Australia then wines from Greece would not sell well on the High Street wine shop shelves. Yet when in Greece at one of the many "fine dining" restaurants, enjoying the well-cooked lamb or the octopus, would it not be a sacrilege to order a wine from Germany, for instance? There are many quality bottled Greek wines. Here on Paros we have the Moraitas family-run winery producing superb hand-crafted wines for that special occasion.


My recommendation, whether you are a wine connoisseur or just an imbiber like me, is to make your next winery tour on the Greek islands. Come to Paros and I will show you my favorite taverna at Palm Beach, where you forget life's problems regardless of what you are drinking.

About the Author


Michael Russell

Your Independent guide to Wine

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Chinon-Nouveau Siecle Millenium


Here in Chinon,the Cabernet franc makes wine with the raspberry fruitiness of a fine Beaujolais. It is considered the finest red of the Loire valley. Hugh Johnson states that "for its quality and complete individuality it is absurdly undervalued." Monsieur Kebreton has created a marvelous Chinon for the Millennium in its own exclusive embossed bottle. A stunning wine in one of the classiest packages we have ever seen. LNS97(1500 ml bottle) LNS97


Price: 63.99 USD




Muscat Wine
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Posted by Bill Jackson | 0 comments