Quote post

[trx_quote author=”Matt Kramer” style=”1″ link=”#”]

Great wines taste like they come from somewhere. Lesser wines taste interchangeable; they could come from anywhere. You can’t fake somewhereness. You can’t manufacture it … but when you taste a wine that has it, you know.

[/trx_quote]

Status format

Wine is regulated by regional, state, and local laws. The laws and their relative rigidity differ for New World and Old World wines. Old World wines tend to have more stringent regulations than New World wines. Various wine laws, however, may include appellation-based regulations that cover boundaries as well as permitted grape varieties and winemaking practice-such as the French Appellation d’origine contrôlée (AOC), Italian Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC), Spanish Denominación de Origen (DO) and Portuguese Denominação de Origem Controlada (DOC). In some New World wine regions, such as the United States and Australia, the wine laws of the appellation systems (American Viticultural Area (AVA) and Australian Geographical Indication (GIs)) only pertain to boundary specifics and guaranteeing that a certain percentage of grapes come from the area listed on the wine label.
Read more

Chat post

[trx_chat title=”Mike” link=”#”]Other techniques associated with Old World winemakers include higher fermentation temperatures and a period of extended maceration following fermentation where the wine can leech more phenolic compounds from the grape skins. [/trx_chat]

[trx_chat title=”Lisa” link=”#”]This can create more tannic and austere wines with more layers of complexity that require longer periods of bottle aging in order to mature. In contrast, the technique of transferring the must into oak barrels during fermentation and inducing malolactic fermentation early is more commonly associated with New World wine regions and wines that are softer and mature earlier. [/trx_chat]
Read more

Gallery

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Temporibus a voluptate aspernatur impedit commodi vitae, vel ab dolor! Doloribus tenetur, dignissimos adipisci quisquam autem quasi, rerum rem aperiam possimus in sequi nesciunt consectetur amet, laboriosam? Quae aperiam porro quas distinctio, vitae obcaecati praesentium aspernatur consequuntur placeat non nisi nesciunt dolorem quasi, vero amet et unde fugit molestiae voluptas totam alias quo laboriosam. Quos explicabo cum ipsam sequi! Vero facilis necessitatibus magnam! Culpa libero suscipit, quibusdam odit, aliquam sit in, neque dolore sapiente et temporibus pariatur!

Repellat eveniet laudantium rem ipsa error architecto a earum quae. Esse nisi molestias, nulla laudantium rerum eligendi laborum, quibusdam doloremque unde sequi hic ea minus harum voluptas commodi consectetur quia alias repellendus, in architecto? Ipsum nesciunt soluta similique ab aspernatur fuga eaque minus qui consectetur sapiente, dolores optio unde suscipit, reprehenderit distinctio repellendus cum. Quam repellendus accusamus corporis provident ipsam eum voluptatem aperiam reiciendis, ipsum fugiat. Repellendus earum libero iure rerum error nemo repudiandae eligendi, sapiente, quasi debitis. Iusto mollitia sapiente quasi totam laboriosam, magnam consectetur odit quidem alias consequatur quam accusamus! Sapiente praesentium, suscipit tempore maxime impedit eius quaerat asperiores reprehenderit ad fugit! Neque nobis ipsam animi accusantium voluptates earum minus ut totam quia.


Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit. Quod dicta at possimus quaerat cupiditate vitae quam quasi aliquid, tenetur facere odit. Tenetur veritatis blanditiis autem commodi quasi ut. Ducimus dolor corporis quam voluptatibus, aperiam eius! Consectetur eos, voluptatum dicta odio cupiditate fugit ut odit autem molestiae temporibus consequatur! Mollitia laudantium dolore debitis fugit vero dolorem ducimus dolor harum quae rem quod voluptatum saepe ratione consectetur blanditiis quis placeat itaque quos natus, asperiores magnam explicabo cumque aut voluptates repellat? Excepturi velit, ducimus maxime tempora minima neque ratione adipisci nemo quis error fugiat amet totam, quas molestias. Animi error pariatur natus. Delectus!

Aside format

bigstock-Trendy-young-man-at-home-smil-523626612Mat Jefferson

Old World winemaking is often terroir driven with emphasis being placed on how well the wine communicates the sense of place where it originated. For example, a winemaker making a Riesling from the Mosel will often try to highlight the unique traits of the Mosel wine region (such as its slate soils) with the wine expressing those traits in the form of minerality.
Read more

New World Wines in Industrial Age

Vine cuttings from the Cape of Good Hope were brought to the penal colony of New South Wales by Governor Phillip on the First Fleet (1788). An attempt at wine making from these first vines failed, but with perseverance, other settlers managed to successfully cultivate vines for winemaking, and Australian made wine was available for sale domestically by the 1820s. In 1822 Gregory Blaxland became the first person to export Australian wine, and was the first winemaker to win an overseas award. In 1830 vineyards were established in the Hunter Valley. In 1833 James Busby returned from France and Spain with a serious selection of grape varieties including most classic French grapes and a good selection of grapes for fortified wine production. Early Australian winemakers faced many difficulties, particularly due to the unfamiliar Australian climate. However they eventually achieved considerable success. “At the 1873 Vienna Exhibition the French judges, tasting blind, praised some wines from Victoria, but withdrew in protest when the provenance of the wine was revealed, on the grounds that wines of that quality must clearly be French.” Australian wines continued to win high honours in French competitions.

A Victorian Syrah (also called Shiraz) competing in the 1878 Paris Exhibition was likened to Château Margaux and “its taste completed its trinity of perfection.” One Australian wine won a gold medal “first class” at the 1882 Bordeaux International Exhibition and another won a gold medal “against the world” at the 1889 Paris International Exhibition.

Chilean wine begun to modernize in 1851 when Sylvestre Ochagavia imported cuttings of French varieties. Sylvestre Ochagavia is credited with introducing the varieaties Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot noir, Cot, Merlot, Semillon and Riesling into Chile. Other wealthy wine growers followed suite. By the 1870s the wine industry was the most developed area of Chilean agriculture.

The region of Mendoza, or historically Cuyo, experienced an unprecedented wine-boom in the 19th century and early 20th century which turned it into the fifth wine growing area of the world and the first in Latin America. The establishment of the Buenos Aires-Mendoza railroad in 1885 ended the lengthy and costly trade with carts that connected these two regions of Argentina and sparked development of vineyards in Mendoza. Furthermore massive immigration to Río de La Plata mainly from Southern Europe increased demand and bought know-how to the old-fashioned Argentine wine industry. The vineyards of Mendoza totalled 1.000 ha in 1830 but grew to 45.000 in 1910, surpassing Chile which had during the 19th century had a larger areas planted with vines and a more modern industry. By 1910 around 80% of the area of Argentine vineyards were planted with French stock, mainly Malbec.