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Lecture 3:. The Harvesting Decision: Viticulture from the Winemaker’s Perspective. Reading Assignment:. Text, Chapter 2, pages 52-64. The Winemaker’s Perspective. Grapes must be harvested at the ideal time for the style of wine desired to be made
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Lecture 3: The Harvesting Decision: Viticulture from the Winemaker’s Perspective
Reading Assignment: Text, Chapter 2, pages 52-64
The Winemaker’s Perspective • Grapes must be harvested at the ideal time for the style of wine desired to be made • Characters of the finished wine will be largely dictated by the composition of the fruit at harvest • Goal: to have the ideal composition at time of harvest
Berry Ripening: Acids Veraison Malate Tartrate Concentration Time
Berry Ripening: Sugars Dehydration Concentration Synthesis stops Net synthesis Time
Berry Ripening: Arginine Thought to signal deterioration of fruit Concentration Time
Berry Ripening: Evolution of berry flavors in red grapes Vegetation Herbaceous Unripe Fruit Red Fruit Black Fruit Jam
Vegetation: Plant matter Herbaceous: Straw, Vegetable Unripe Fruit: Green apple, Citrus rind Red Fruit: Cherry, Strawberry, Raspberry Black Fruit: Plum, Black Cherry, Blackberry Jam: Prune, Date, Raisin
Stems: Unripe: Green = vegetal, leafy Ripe: Brown = resinous wood, spices: clove, pepper, cinnamon Over-ripe: Brittle Brown: Dried leaf, tea, herbal
Decision to Harvest • Berry compositional factors • Berry physical traits • Non-berry factors
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar: ranges from 19-26 Brix • Depends upon style of wine • Maturity of flavors • 1.7% sugar 1% ethanol
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH: 3.0-3.8 • Affects solubility of tartrates and proteins • Affects microbial populations
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugars • pH • Acids: • Contribute Sourness and Tartness • Titratable Acidity: Whites (0.7-0.9 g/L) Reds (0.6-0.8 g/L)
Wine Acidity Total Acidity: Sum of anionic species Titratable Acidity: Amount of base needed to reach a specific end point Fixed Acidity: Not distillable Volatile Acidity: Distillable (acetic acid)
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Brix/TA = 30 or less, depending . . . • 22 Brix/ 0.8 TA= 27.5 • (Brix)(pH)2 = 220-260, depending . . . • (22 Brix)(3.2)2 = 225.3
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Ratio of malate to tartrate
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Ratio of malate to tartrate • Arginine levels
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Ratio of malate to tartrate • Arginine levels • Taste
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Arginine • Ratio of malate to tartrate • Taste • Phenolics/Anthocyanin levels
Berry Compositional Factors • Sugar • pH • Acids • Balance of sugar and acidity • Arginine levels • Ratio of malate to tartrate • Taste • Phenolics/Anthocyanin levels • Terpene content
Terpene content • Measure terpenes directly • Measure free/bound terpenes • Measure all bound aromatic precursors (GG) analysis
Berry/Cluster Physical Traits • Berry firmness and deformability • Seed characteristics • Color • Integrity • Stem characteristics • Color • Integrity
Non-Berry Factors • Environmental factors
Environmental Factors • Rain • Humidity • Temperature • Disease Pressure
Non-Berry Factors • Environmental Factors • Tank capacity/limitation
Non-Berry Factors • Environmental Factors • Tank capacity/limitation • Labor availability
Non-Berry Factors • Environmental Factors • Tank capacity/limitation • Labor availability • Fruit availability
Which factors are most important in the decision to harvest will vary with the wine style, the winemaker, and the vintage
Sampling the Vineyard • Need to obtain an unbiased representation of the entire crop • How uniform is the vineyard? • Soil • Climate • Elevation • How uniform are vineyard treatments? • Sampling protocol should lead to a statistically significant evaluation
Types of Sampling • Berry: 100-200 berries randomly picked • Cluster: 20-50 clusters also randomly chosen • Cluster/Berry: remove all berries from clusters; randomly select 200 berry lots • Vine: select typical vine and sample all clusters
Berry sampling is most robust statistically but more susceptible to harvester bias than cluster or vine sampling
Once the decision has been made that it is time to harvest, the winemaker/vineyard manager must then decide how the fruit is to be harvested
Harvesting Options • Temperature • Machine • Hand
Temperature of Harvest • Lower temperature: • Less flavor loss • Less extraction from skins • Less microbial activity • Elevated temperature: • More extraction • Initiate fermentation earlier
Machine Harvesting • Faster • Cheaper • Can be done day or night • Less gentle • Mixture of “good” and “bad” clusters • More “MOG” (material other than grapes) • Berries can be crushed • Juice loss • Oxidation • Microbial Growth
Hand Harvesting • Slower • More labor intensive • More expensive • More selective of clusters • Less MOG • Lower yield
This concludes the first section on viticulture for winemakers. The next section will cover juice and must treatments and processing decisions.