Piemonte 2018: The Red (and a White update)

September continued to be glorious in stark contrast to the wretched conditions of late July and early August. Not quite as great as the contrast with leaving Stansted airport at 8 in the morning with rain and 8 degrees C for company and landing in MilanĀ  it it apparently still being Summer: 33 degrees and a pure azure sky!

The fruit for The Red was selected from the vineyard plot that provides the fruit for “La Quercia”, this is a high South facing slope on Limestone. I took the decision to harvest slightly earlier due to the rapidly rising sugar levels and not wanting an overly alcoholic wine. A first pass through the vineyard selected the fruit perfect for using as whole bunch with the second pass for the de-stemmed portion.

The whole bunch fruit was then hand sorted and divided equally between 5 year old barrels (previously used for aging Barbera). The barrels were topped up with de-stemmed fruit. It’s worked out to be the same ratio whole bunch as the Moscato.

The Moscato has been ticking away quite perfectly. The mass of the skins has helped maintain a more even temperature and only need a gentle hand plunge to keep the cap wet and active. By late September the juice had fermented out to dry and was sealed up, still on its skins, to get to know itself for a few weeks. We naturally had to have a final taste before it was locked away and it is looking amazing: obviously full of solids still but the bright golden yellow colour is extraordinary, on the nose there was tangerine pith and acacia honey, the palate had not only that essence of grape but a touch of clove and all zinging off a nervy vein of salinity. Very exciting to taste.

Dry Moscato

The morning after processing the Barbera fermentation had already started spontaneously (just like the Moscato) which is a great sign!

Piemonte, The White!

It was a bit of a funny old growing season, started off wet then got rather warm. Vigour was our biggest problem so mowing and haircutting the vines were the major jobs. Then it rained and we all got rather worried, then it all dried out and it was all okay again.

The original forecast was to start picking the Moscato on the 20th of August, we actually picked in early September: beautiful fruit it was too. Perfect ripeness, no rot, no wasp, no dilution, just a little bit of sunburn here and there. Lovely stuff.

Moscato in Piemonte is a bit of a religion and the rules are super strict about what you can do with it and still call it Moscato. Essentially it has to be sweet, fizzy and low alcohol. Mine is going to none of those things!

All the wines this year are going to be in very small quantities of around about 600 bottles. The Moscato is a good proportion whole bunch and fermenting on it’s skins. How long it spends on the skins post fermentation is yet to be decided but we are looking at at least 28 days.