So my fascinating multiminivolume set of Volume 18 of View from the Cellar arrived today. In the very nice article about Eric Texier, John says, "The Brzme bottling in (sic) pumped over during the fermentation, whereas the Pergault is left with the cap, with no punch downs or pump overs during its two weeks of fermentation." I have never made so much as a glass of wine, but isn't an untouched cap of grape skins floating on fermenting wine for two weeks more or less an invitation to bacterial cofermentation and va?
But I have had the '06 Pergault, and it, in addition to its many virtues, is a wine that I find to be unmarred by va. Not that I'm as sensitive as certain of my friends, you know who you are. Am I missing va in this wine? Do I misunderstand the winemaking issue? Is there enough of a CO2 blanket from the fermentation to prevent oxidative bacterial metabolism even in an open fermenter?
Anyhow, I love the wine, it's beautiful, and whatever Eric is doing is just fine with me, but I was surprised to read this.
Thanks.
But I have had the '06 Pergault, and it, in addition to its many virtues, is a wine that I find to be unmarred by va. Not that I'm as sensitive as certain of my friends, you know who you are. Am I missing va in this wine? Do I misunderstand the winemaking issue? Is there enough of a CO2 blanket from the fermentation to prevent oxidative bacterial metabolism even in an open fermenter?
Anyhow, I love the wine, it's beautiful, and whatever Eric is doing is just fine with me, but I was surprised to read this.
Thanks.