Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
I produce a total of 7000 cases. 4500 cases are Cotes du Rhone and Vaison la Romaine.
That leaves 2500 cases for 17 cuvées : a mean of a little less than 6 barrels of each wine.
We harvested Macon Bussières on Friday 21st. We (12 of us) harvested the 2.5 tons of grapes within 3 hours between 7 and 10 am. We brought the grapes back to Charnay (southern beaujolais) which took us 50 mn. The old Coquard vertical press was filled up at 11:45. We began the pressing and at 12:00 all the fruit cases were clean and we went for an appéritif waiting for the first "rebêche".
At 4:00 pm the pressing was over and the press was unloaded and clean.
I took the rest of the afternoon off, and went back to Brezeme on the next morning to take care of my vats. I filled up the barrels with the juice on the following sunday morning, and now wait for the fermentation to end.
We went to Chateauneuf (300 km more south, probably less than Napa-Foothills) to harvest Clairettes and Bourboulencs on the next wednesday and it tooks us about the same time to harvest and press these (head-pruned vines are more tricky to harvest...)
I produce 9 barrels of Bussières. 6 barrels of Chateauneufs blanc, 10 of red. 2-3 barrels of Cote Rotie (harvesting and filling the demi muids took us 1:45 hour this year), 4 of St Joseph and Condrieu. 12 of Brezeme Pergaud and 20 of St Julien St alban Pergaud (we harvested them in 1.5 days and sorted them and filled the tanks the following afternoon).
This is a total of something like 10 days of harvest, pressing, sorting and filling tanks.
I usually spend 8 weeks harvesting and working at the cellar during harvest time.
As you can see, winemaking is peanuts, when you don't use RO, cultured yeasts, enzymes, powdered tannins and al. 95% of a wine is already in the grapes. Coming for the care the grower gave them during the growing season, the terroir, the climate of the vintage.
This report is salvaged from a train wreck in that other place; I hated to see good writing go to waste.
That leaves 2500 cases for 17 cuvées : a mean of a little less than 6 barrels of each wine.
We harvested Macon Bussières on Friday 21st. We (12 of us) harvested the 2.5 tons of grapes within 3 hours between 7 and 10 am. We brought the grapes back to Charnay (southern beaujolais) which took us 50 mn. The old Coquard vertical press was filled up at 11:45. We began the pressing and at 12:00 all the fruit cases were clean and we went for an appéritif waiting for the first "rebêche".
At 4:00 pm the pressing was over and the press was unloaded and clean.
I took the rest of the afternoon off, and went back to Brezeme on the next morning to take care of my vats. I filled up the barrels with the juice on the following sunday morning, and now wait for the fermentation to end.
We went to Chateauneuf (300 km more south, probably less than Napa-Foothills) to harvest Clairettes and Bourboulencs on the next wednesday and it tooks us about the same time to harvest and press these (head-pruned vines are more tricky to harvest...)
I produce 9 barrels of Bussières. 6 barrels of Chateauneufs blanc, 10 of red. 2-3 barrels of Cote Rotie (harvesting and filling the demi muids took us 1:45 hour this year), 4 of St Joseph and Condrieu. 12 of Brezeme Pergaud and 20 of St Julien St alban Pergaud (we harvested them in 1.5 days and sorted them and filled the tanks the following afternoon).
This is a total of something like 10 days of harvest, pressing, sorting and filling tanks.
I usually spend 8 weeks harvesting and working at the cellar during harvest time.
As you can see, winemaking is peanuts, when you don't use RO, cultured yeasts, enzymes, powdered tannins and al. 95% of a wine is already in the grapes. Coming for the care the grower gave them during the growing season, the terroir, the climate of the vintage.
This report is salvaged from a train wreck in that other place; I hated to see good writing go to waste.