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  • Wine: Roll out the barrel

    The New Zealand Herald
    September 16, 2011 Friday

    Wine: Roll out the barrel

    Wood's influence on wine can be diverse.


    Since the days when ancient Armenian merchants shipped their wares
    down the Tigris in palm-wood casks, wood has played an important role
    in wine - both as a storage container and as an influence on the taste
    and texture of the final product. But just as species of trees differ,
    what exactly wood brings to a wine can be equally diverse.

    I'm not sure what flavours the palm-wood imparted to the contents of
    those early casks, but in those days winemakers used wood
    predominantly as a handy material with which to make vessels for their
    wine's transportation and storage, giving little thought to its effect
    on the wine character.

    By the mid 20th century, wood's role here was usurped when glass
    bottles became wine's main storage receptacle and steel tankers moved
    larger quantities around. However, far from being the last time when
    grape got together with tree, this issued in an era when wood became
    part of a winemaker's art.

    Even after stainless steel vats were introduced from the 1950s, the
    appreciation that barrels could add character to a wine means they've
    remained a key part of winemaking kit for the maturation of fine wines
    in particular.

    Part of this comes from the fact that unlike impermeable materials
    like steel or glass, the small pores in wood allow minute quantities
    of oxygen to enter a wine, which changes a wine's texture, softening
    tannins in red wines.

    Wood can also leave its mark on a wine's flavours, with the nuances of
    oak making it the most popular material for barrels. As well as being
    hard, supple and watertight, oak has a natural affinity with wine's
    flavours, arguably more so than other woods also used for barrels,
    such as chestnut, acacia, pine, redwood and Chile's rough rauli.

    Where the oak comes from plays a further part in its taste profile.
    American oak is the most overt, often adding sweet, coconutty and
    vanilla notes, while French is more restrained, characterised by more
    gentle notes of cedar and spice.

    In France, individual forests are selected for their woods' different
    grains and characters, and then there are the individual coopers,
    whose barrel-making styles are favoured by different winemakers.

    Barrel-making involves the toasting of staves that allow these to be
    bent into shape, a practical technique that is now manipulated to
    provide winemakers with different levels of "toast" and resulting
    toasty characters that can infuse into their wines.

    Wood influence can also be regulated by the size of the barrel, with
    the small and most popular 225-litre barriques showing the strongest,
    while the larger surface area of big barrels and vats imparting less.
    As the strength of oak's flavours decline with usage and time, the age
    of the barrel also impacts on its intensity.

    But not all wood you taste in a wine is from a barrel: given these can
    cost big bucks, winemakers have developed cheaper ways to harness its
    flavours. One popular method is the use of wooden staves, which are
    basically planks that sit in a vat of wine.

    Even cheaper cheats for less expensive wines are the wood chips
    winemakers use to leach toasty notes into their wines, or even cruder,
    a splash of oak essence. These are far less refined in terms of taste
    and do nothing for texture.

    Can't see the wood for the trees? Well, after some years of excess,
    our winemakers have become wiser to wood and are now increasingly
    choosing wood that will enhance their wines rather than overwhelm.

    WOOD WORK

    Some grapes unfurl in oak, while others work better in the inert
    temperature-controlled containers that preserve fruit and aromatics.
    Here are a few from across the spectrum.

    OAKY CHARDONNAY
    Julicher Martinborough Chardonnay 2009 $19-$22
    Without oak, chardonnay can be a trifle dull. But this
    barrel-fermented example certainly isn't, with its ripe stonefruit and
    citrus, enhanced by nutty toasty flavours and a creamy texture from
    French oak. (From Caro's, Scenic Cellars, www.julicher.co.nz)

    SPICY WOODED SHIRAZ
    Mojo Barossa Valley Shiraz 2010 $18.99
    Wood pairs well with the spicy flavours of a grape like syrah. While
    Australian winemakers traditionally opted for in-yer-face American
    oak, French is now finding favour, with both used in this ripe and
    rich brightly boysenberry packed example with its sweet cinnamon spice
    and a hint of pepper. (From Caro's, Fine Wine Delivery Company, First
    Glass, New World Victoria Park, Waiheke Wine Centre, Hamilton Wine
    Company, Hillsdene Wine Cellars, Arawa Wines, Scenic Cellars,
    Liquorland.)

    TREE FREE
    Auburn Aura Central Otago Riesling 2010 $30
    Riesling tends to taste better without oak, which would overwhelm the
    purity of a fine example like this with its sweet honeyed palate of
    apricot, spice and lemon blossom counterpoised by fresh notes of
    citrus and mineral. (Scenic Cellars, Hillsdene Wines, First Glass.)

    By Jo Burzynska

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/lifestyle/news/article.cfm?c_id=6&objectid=10751651

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