A Spanish university and a Ribera del Duero winery announced yesterday they had completed a project in which specific yeasts from the winery were selected and reproduced for use in on-lees aging of red wines without any of the undesired side effects (i.e., off odors) of this method. This of course meant that extensive b“tonnage is facilitated.
On our web site, elmundovino, we said that this was one more tool for spoofing wines, probably good for supermarket wines since it produces fatter, rounder, more immediately attractive wines. But, we added, it also homogenizes them, cancels terroir characteristics and is therefore not advised for wines from exceptional terroirs. We also pointed out that even in white wines, in which on-lees aging had been all the fashion, this method was being abandoned or restricted by a growing number of producers.
Of course we've been deluged by protests from what I call "the Lallemand crowd", the technological group which loves additives and in-cellar manipulation. They tell me that since these yeasts are of natural origin, there's no harm in using them.
Any comments here? Thanks!
On our web site, elmundovino, we said that this was one more tool for spoofing wines, probably good for supermarket wines since it produces fatter, rounder, more immediately attractive wines. But, we added, it also homogenizes them, cancels terroir characteristics and is therefore not advised for wines from exceptional terroirs. We also pointed out that even in white wines, in which on-lees aging had been all the fashion, this method was being abandoned or restricted by a growing number of producers.
Of course we've been deluged by protests from what I call "the Lallemand crowd", the technological group which loves additives and in-cellar manipulation. They tell me that since these yeasts are of natural origin, there's no harm in using them.
Any comments here? Thanks!