Thursday, November 6, 2008

End of Harvest

Well everything great has to end. All the wine is pressed off and in barrel. The next step is making sure all the equipment is clean and ready for storage, hopefully it is dreaming of next season.
I feel blessed to have been apart of this cycle of life even for such a brief period. I had a feeling of kinship with grapegrowers and winemakers around the northern hemisphere, working in harmony with the weather and hoping and waiting for the grapes to grow and ripen. The flow of the harvest made each day stand out, the list for the day was made and accomplished, the next day would arrive. It was what I hoped it would be but also very different. What did I learn,

1. Liquid is heavy.
2. Eastern WA is beautiful at 4am
3. my wife is amazing for supporting me
3. I love my life.

I will post more pics and stories from harvest soon, thanks for sharing this adventure with me.

Monday, October 27, 2008

trip to the Gorge

Ross and I traveled to the Columbia Gorge to visit the Celilo vineyard. Celilo sits above the Columbia river and is dry farmed. We are picking Pinot Gris and Gewurtraminer for our white wines from this beautiful spot. We had an amazing view of Mt Hood when we arrived
The Pinot Gris and Gewurt were tasting really nice. very fresh flavors with an great acid spine that will provide lift and certainly make the wines refreshing.
Here is some Pinot Gris, I was amazed that the skins take on such a reddish hue, since the wines that it produces is so light and clear.We stopped and chatted with our friends James and Poppie Mantone at their beautiful winery near Bingen WA. The wines that they are producing under the Syncline label are some of my favorite in the state. We chatted with Poppie as she harvested the last of their Mouvedre and Viognier off of the little 1 acre vineyard that sits near right next to the winery. It was a great day and I can't wait to taste what our Pinot Gris tastes like out of the fermenter.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

What a week! Last Tuesday started with a little 2:45 wake up, Ross and I drove out to the winery and did a quick punch down, grabbed the truck known now as "beastly" and headed south down Interstate 5 to Oregon. We were going to pick up some Pinot Noir for our good friend Mark. Mark sources fruit from the Lachini vineyard and what a pretty vineyard it is.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Crush on Friday

Big day yesterday. We crushed fruit from Cabernet Sauvignon from Klipsun. Grenache, Mouvedere and Syrah, Viognier from Ciel. We are going to co-ferment the Syrah with some Viognier and it just looks so pretty
it's only the top layer that is Viognier, oh yea there is a bit of Roussane in their too. It had such a nice mineral character that we had to try a bit of it. You can see the difference in the grapes easily. The Viognier has that deeper roasted marshmallow color where the Roussane is more green.Here are the grapes after they have been run through the Crusher/Destemmer, That is just cool.






Everything was put into fermentation bins, The graped came in very cold so we will need to wait a bit before we add the yeast. The yeast has a hard time starting fermentation if the must is cold.
Here the grapes are in the fermenter waiting to go into the winery.





This is the week of being busy. The vineyards have all been getting down to the mid 30's at night so we are pretty sure we will have almost everything picked this week. Should be a wild ride. We are making another run out to Ciel tomorrow to taste the fruit and check to see if the foliage has stopped photosynthesis if that is the case then we will certainly pick soon.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Crushing

So it has been a quiet week, Ciel Merlot finished fermentation and now it's happily sitting in barrel,
We took a quick trip out to Yakima Valley and hit all the vineyards we are getting grapes from. Tasted everything and it is tasting really good. It looks like we are going to get hit big time this week coming up.

We did some crushing and de-stemming last Sunday, this is Merlot from Alder Ridge, it came in really clean and delicious. Here is a little video of Mark driving the forklift, and the crusher destemmer at work.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

punching down Ciel

This past Saturday we were coming to the end of fermentation for our Ciel du Cheval Merlot. The sugar that was left in the juice was being converted to alcohol and our twice a day "punch downs" had done a great job of mixing the cap and juice with a bit of oxygen. The "cap" is a mixture of grape solids, the skin, pulp and seeds that is pushed up to the top of the fermenter by the action of fermentation. When fermentation is going strong the cap can become so firm that you can almost stand on it. Punching down the cap helps to break up the solid mass of the cap, it makes sure that all of the grapes are being introduced to the fermenting juice and it also may free up any seeds so they can float to the bottom of the fermenter. Seeds can contribute hard green tannins to the wine so we are very careful not to crush them while we are punching down, or pressing.

Here is a little clip that Ross took of me punching down one of the fermenters. 
this is late in the fermentation so the cap has become much less firm and it is easier to punch down. 


Wednesday, September 24, 2008

first day out

So I am going to go back to the beginning of this wine adventure. My first day began at 4:30AM
when we drove our bins over to Red Mountain in anticipation of our first grapes being picked.
Going over Snoqualmie Pass took a bit of time hauling 5000 extra pounds. After we stopped for coffee in Cle Elum the day started looking up. We had a great sunrise greet us as we descended into the the Columbia River Gorge.



We arrived at Ciel du Cheval Vineyard at 9 and proceeded to unload out bins.
bins are what grapes are transported over the mountains in. Plastic bins that will hold around 800 pounds of fruit or so. Here are some of our bins in front of the Crusher/Destemmer

The date was September 2nd and the red grapes were just going through verasion, which is when
the grapes turn colors from green to red. We tasted through our Merlot acreage and some Syrah
and Cabernet Sauvignon. It all needed a bit of time, the acid made our mouths pucker and the flavors were not there. I did get some great shots of some ripening Merlot.Red Mountain looks like this with the sun just over the ridge.
We made a stop at Olsen vineyard and Boushey just to chat and see how things looked. With the cool weather and how pretty August had been, it sure seems like we are going into a really nice harvest.