Thursday, August 28, 2014

Harvest is Here

It is that busy time of year here at the winery....Harvest Time. Long days and little sleep all in the name of producing some award winning wines. Our first grapes are in the tank (Brianna and Edelweiss). The yeast and nutrients were prepared and added last night to the Brianna so soon it will be fermenting away. Fermentation always fills the winery with some great aromas!  The Edelweiss will be ready to start fermentation in the coming days. Fermentation is the process that turns the sugar built up in the grapes during the summer in the vineyard into alcohol, wine in this case. It takes a week or so to turn all the sugars into alcohol. Each day we are monitoring the progress of the wine. We'll run tests to determine how much of the sugar is still remaining (thus telling us how far along we are in fermentation), the pH of the wine to keep an eye on acidity, and several other tests.

In the coming weeks the rest of our grapes will come rolling in. When the white grapes arrive they go thru the crusher/destemmer which takes off any stems and leaves us with whole berries. The grapes are then sent to the press to squeeze the beautiful juice out of them and put into a tank. The red grapes go through the crusher/destemmer, but they get fermented on the skins so they aren't pressed until after fermentation. This give them the great color and tannins we enjoy in our dry red wines. Harvest days start at 6 am and if we are in from the press by midnight, it was a short day!

Grapes just in from Harvest (circa 2013)

Erich runs the grapes thru the crusher destemmer to remove stems, leaves, etc. (circa 2013)


The yeast and nutrients being prepared to add to the juice

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Pruning...Fun with Vines!

We are well into pruning mode at Cellar 426. Pruning is typically done in the late winter months to get the vines ready to go for spring bud break, which usually occurs in mid April. Of course this is all dependent on everybody's good friend mother nature.

During pruning we will take off any dead cane, any branches that are touching or crossing each other, and any suckers growing off the main trunk. Depending on the grape varietal and the trellis system it is on you will look to keep the canes that are growing in proper direction. It is then important to tidy up the vine so when it grows and leafs out the sun will best catch the growing grapes. Finally we will reduce the canes length to a certain number of buds per cane, depending on the grape varietal. While natural tendency would be to leave all buds and get the most grapes possible, there is a delicate balance on a grape vine between leaving too many buds and over cropping the vine and cutting too many buds away and not having enough grapes. Over cropping leads to lower quality grapes as the energy and nutrients from the vine are disbursed to more grapes which reduces the good wine characteristics of each cluster. Obviously cutting too many buds away will yield great quality grapes, but less wine - a major problem!

Enjoy our photos as we get ready for Spring!



Grape Vine Before Pruning
Grape Vine After Pruning

Close Up Of Grape Vine

Cut Canes From Several Grape Vines

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Bottling

Our 2013 wines are heading near completion. In fact we have already bottled two our customers favorites: Treno and Linoma Lighthouse. Right now bottling is a labor intensive task as the following video illustrates. Enjoy!




Friday, December 13, 2013

Filtering

With several wines selling out in the tasting room we are working hard to get the 2013 vintage to bottle! If you have ever wondered how wines get so crystal clear here is part of the answer. In one of the last steps before bottling we have been filtering our 2013 Linoma Lighthouse and a new wine - Midnight Gold. In the pictures below you will see our plate filter and  some before and after shots. Along with making the wine more clear and radiant, filtering takes out any potential remaining yeast to help avoid re-fermenting of the wine in  the bottle, plus it takes out any fruit debris still in the wine.

If all goes well the, much anticipated, Linoma Lighthouse should be out in January along with 2013 Treno.  Midnight Gold a dessert wine should be ready in early 2014 as well.

Happy Holidays!

The Wine Awaiting Inital Filtering
The Filter


Midnight Gold BEFORE 1st Filtering

Midnight Gold AFTER 1st Filtering - Note the "fog" is from dry ice

Midnight Gold AFTER FINAL Filtering - You can see how its name was derived!



Friday, November 1, 2013

Barrel Work!

We are excited at Cellar 426 to introduce barrel aging to our winemaking regiment. In past years we have used oak cubes to oak our wines. The cubes have done a great job in our Soliel and Big Bold Red and are a fraction of the cost. For a young start up winery that is huge.  But for this year we wanted to make the jump and do some wine with barrels.

This week we barreled our Big Bold Red which is an estate blend of Frontenac and Marquette.  The two barrels we are using for this wine each has a different makeup to it. This will allow us to see which one we feel turned out the best wine and which way we want to go in future years. We will be aging the wine in the barrels until mid to late summer 2014.






Friday, September 20, 2013

Harvest Update

We've been working feverishly the last 5 weeks as the grapes have been coming in each weekend. As of today we have everything  in from our vineyard at the winery and are just awaiting the final grapes of the season, Chambourcin,  from our growers, the Bergmeier's at Cambrian Ridge Vineyards near Auburn, NE. Chambourcin is always a late season harvest and it looks like they may come in either this weekend or next depending on the latest numbers from the vineyard.  Chambourcin is what makes our popular Rocky's Red wine as well as our Soliel.

Here are some photos of what has been happening in the cellar since my last post:


We've been working on a beautiful dessert wine and it looks,smells and tastes wonderful. Hopefully we can get that out for the holidays!







Brianna is done fermenting.








Our Marquette is harvested, fermented, and has been pressed off.

Marquette grapes awaiting harvest

Here is what is left after the Marquette has been pressed.




Here Richard is punching down the cap on the Frontenac during fermentation.  This gets done 3 to 4 times a day as a thick cap of skins forms and you want to push them back down into the juice so the flavors and tannins from the skins can work their way into the wine. By the way he generally tries to color coordinate his shirts to the wine he is making!











During harvest there are many late nights. After a late night press Richard is cleaning the press with hopes of eventually catching some sleep. All in the name of good wine!
 Finally here is a glimpse of our new barrels that just came in. These will be for our 2013 Big Bold Red.

Friday, August 30, 2013

Brianna Begins Fermentation

Continuing from where I left off on our last posting....The Brianna finished up the cold soak and was readied  fermentation. We racked the juice off all the "sludge" that settled off the grapes while they were enjoying their cold bath. We then prepared the yeast and some nutrients and added those on Wednesday evening.  With our return to the cellar 24 hours later  we noted that fermentation had already commenced. We will keep an eye on the fermentation, adding some more nutrients and other goodies along the way as the sugar is turned into alcohol and the wine is born!
 Preparing the yeast in water. Temp is important thus the temp probe.
Wine is slooooowly added to the yeast so the yeast can acclimate to the substantially lower temperature. You don't want to shock the yeast.

By Thursday evening fermentation had begun. I know it doesn't look pretty, but everyone seems to love the wine that will come from this! The brianna will go into our Treno.