Sharon Bowman
Sharon Bowman
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Typical.
nows we's gettin recursive. "typical" is the bane of every grower denied teh legalistic hoop for trying.
This was my joke!
originally posted by fatboy:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Typical.
nows we's gettin recursive. "typical" is the bane of every grower denied teh legalistic hoop for trying.
originally posted by fatboy:
typical exposures?
originally posted by SFJoe:
Niagra, OTOH, is subtitled, "The foxiest American hybrid of them all."
Apparently a Concord X Cassady hybrid. Cassady, though, is labrusca.
Confusingly, and news to me, Concord appears to be a hybrid itself. It is named for the town of its discovery (the one in Massachusetts), and was not an intentional hybrid, but was wild labrusca that met some local vinifera on the sly.
Who knew?
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by SFJoe:
Niagra, OTOH, is subtitled, "The foxiest American hybrid of them all."
Apparently a Concord X Cassady hybrid. Cassady, though, is labrusca.
Confusingly, and news to me, Concord appears to be a hybrid itself. It is named for the town of its discovery (the one in Massachusetts), and was not an intentional hybrid, but was wild labrusca that met some local vinifera on the sly.
Who knew?
OK, Mr. Smarty-Picky pants. We are all hybrids in our way. I was using the ITB colloquial version of hybrid, a cross between vinifera and native labrusca or rotundifolia, as the case might be.
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Wish they would try indigenous yeasts.
...I think you need to look more into what that would require. Do they own the vines? Are those vines farmed without pesticides and herbicides? Most probably not, if they don't own them. You need to have a thriving yeast population from the vineyard and in the winery in order for ambient (not indigenous) yeast to result in something other than ruining fruit. Knowing Andrew and Jennifer a little bit, I suspect that they would try ambient fermentation if they felt that the situation allowed it.
That is a curious piece of news indeed. I'm falling back to we iz all hybridz.originally posted by SFJoe:
And thus being hybrids to my uninformed mind.
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Wish they would try indigenous yeasts.
...I think you need to look more into what that would require. Do they own the vines? Are those vines farmed without pesticides and herbicides? Most probably not, if they don't own them. You need to have a thriving yeast population from the vineyard and in the winery in order for ambient (not indigenous) yeast to result in something other than ruining fruit. Knowing Andrew and Jennifer a little bit, I suspect that they would try ambient fermentation if they felt that the situation allowed it.
My understanding is that most of the "wild yeasts" get crowded out in the winery proper, so wild yeast fermentations are very dependent on the wild yeast that come in on the grapes themselves. Not my field, but are wild yeast of the sort beneficial for wines bothered by pesticides or herbicides? I could see some fungicides being a problem.
Personally, I don't see why some people get so agitated by the wild/native vs. inoculated yeast issue, pro or con. I've had great wines made from inoculated musts, and there is nothing scary or Luddite about wild yeast fermentation if you know what you are doing. Plus the lines can get very hazy; what happens if you isolate some native yeasts from your vineyard and inoculate with them next year? How about if your neighbor in the adjacent appellation then uses them? Someone in the next state? What if you start with native yeasts, but by halfway through the fermentation they've all been squeezed out by the exact same type of S. Cerevisiae that you used last year, or your neighbors have?
originally posted by fatboy:
words is information. in the right crowd, "pizza wine" can be exactly teh right level of signal.
fb.
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Everyone referred to red blends with some hybrid in them as "pizza wine." At Red Newt, one tasting room associate said she "puts a bottle in the red sauce and serves a bottle with the food."
That kind of language really irks me. I dislike typecasting and it seems so narrow to think of wines in just one way. (But perhaps it helps to present a clear sales message, so what do I know)
I also really dislike these cutesy expressions like 'pizza wine'. Why not actually describe the wine!
Grump expressed.
You've never had certain wines with pizza before?
It's not academic.
originally posted by MLipton:
Not so very long ago, on this very site forum bored, someone reproduced a publication (from New Zealand mayhap?) that studied yeast populations in the ferment as a function of time and also classified by whether they were inoculated or not. IIRC, what they found was that several different yeast populations would rise to prominence at different stages of the fermentation and that the identity of those yeasts bore little resemblance to the strain(s) used to inoculate in those cases that involved inoculation. Someone more motivated than myself can torment the search engine to find said article.
Mark Lipton
Thanks to the kind lurker who sent this along.originally posted by SFJoe:
I wish I had access to this.
Here is a handy synopsis of some southern hemisphere researchers' conclusions on the subject.originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by MLipton:
Not so very long ago, on this very site forum bored, someone reproduced a publication (from New Zealand mayhap?) that studied yeast populations in the ferment as a function of time and also classified by whether they were inoculated or not. IIRC, what they found was that several different yeast populations would rise to prominence at different stages of the fermentation and that the identity of those yeasts bore little resemblance to the strain(s) used to inoculate in those cases that involved inoculation. Someone more motivated than myself can torment the search engine to find said article.
Mark Lipton
Torment reveals this thread, which is informative on this question for the first handful of posts and then jumps to a discussion of cuneiform. The citation is there, and I have the paper if anyone wants it. The simplified conclusion is that the yeast comes in with the grapes, and that sometimes you can have multiple cerevisiae strains acting at the same time in fermentations that are pretty far along.