Florida Jim
Florida Jim
Grenache usually isn't my thing but this was 100% whole cluster and was perfect with cured tuna on toast with cheese and green olives.
"Bottle of red, bottle of white . . ."
Best, Jim
originally posted by Saul Mutchnick:
That looks like a delicious combo--you've been on quite the Leo Steen kick recently.
Also questions about the Fiano--did it develop much visible flor and how long did it take for it to form? Also how did you settle on Fiano as a the grape to make a sous-voile wine from?
Did you consider leaving it sous voile for 6 years and 3 months, like vin jaune?originally posted by Florida Jim:
It developed very clearly at week four and held as the head space in the barrel increased and the volume of the wine decreased. I assume that this created concentration in the wine - it certainly tastes like it.
Not a vin jaune guy so, no.originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Did you consider leaving it sous voile for 6 years and 3 months, like vin jaune?originally posted by Florida Jim:
It developed very clearly at week four and held as the head space in the barrel increased and the volume of the wine decreased. I assume that this created concentration in the wine - it certainly tastes like it.
originally posted by Florida Jim:
originally posted by Saul Mutchnick:
That looks like a delicious combo--you've been on quite the Leo Steen kick recently.
Also questions about the Fiano--did it develop much visible flor and how long did it take for it to form? Also how did you settle on Fiano as a the grape to make a sous-voile wine from?
It settled on me . . . or it . . . or, well you know.
The flor was visible at about week four as we were trying to get the wine to go thru ML. It wouldn't, no matter what I did, and then developed the flor (unexpectedly). So we went with it. Sometimes the wine leads you where it wants to go and trying to force it is futile.
It developed very clearly at week four and held as the head space in the barrel increased and the volume of the wine decreased. I assume that this created concentration in the wine - it certainly tastes like it.
When we bottled it, the wine tasted premoxed; I thought I had lost the lot. But in bottle, it achieved equilibrium (or something akin) and became interesting. Oddly, each bottle requires different treatment prior to service. Some are best on day two or three; some come out of the refrigerator ready to go.
No explanation. Just something cool and a wine that we gave its head and it went wherever it wanted to go.
I'm not sure I would do that again but I'm not sorry I tried it.
Best, Jim
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Sometimes the wine leads you where it wants to go and trying to force it is futile.
While I take your point, I would guess that most people that make sous-voile make a decision early on to do so.originally posted by Brézème:
originally posted by Florida Jim:
Sometimes the wine leads you where it wants to go and trying to force it is futile.
Sometimes only?