Red Wine
Red
wine is a type of wine made from dark-coloured (black) grape varieties.
The actual colour of the wine can range from intense violet, typical of
young wines, through to brick red for mature wines and brown for older
red wines.
The
juice from most black grapes is greenish-white; the red colour comes
from anthocyan pigments (also called anthocyanins) present in the skin
of the grape; exceptions are the relatively
uncommon teinturier varieties, which produce a red colored juice. Much
of the red-wine production process therefore involves extraction of
colour and flavour components from the grape skin.
Production
Grape processing
The
first step in red wine production, after picking, involves physical
processing of the grapes. Hand-picked or machine-harvested grapes are
usually tipped into a receival bin when they arrive at the winery and
conveyed by a screw mechanism to the grape-processing equipment.
Destemming and crushing
On
arrival at the winery there is usually a mixture of individual berries,
whole bunches (particularly with hand-picked grapes), stems, and
leaves. The presence of stems during fermentation can lead to a bitter
taste in the wine, and the purpose of destemming is to separate grapes
from the stems and leaves. Mechanical de-stemmers usually consist of a
rotating cage perforated with grape-sized holes. Within this cage is a
concentric axle with arms radiating towards the inner surface of the
cage. Grapes pass through the holes in the cage, while stems and leaves
are expelled through the open end of the cage.
After
destemming, the grapes are commonly lightly crushed. Crushers usually
consist of a pair of rollers, and the gap between them can usually be
regulated to allow for light, hard or no crushing, according to the
winemaker's preference.
The
mixture of grapes, skins, juice and seeds is now referred to as must.
The must is then pumped to a vessel, often a tank made of stainless
steel or concrete, or an oak vat, for fermentation.
In
common with most modern winemaking equipment, destemmers and crushers
are normally made of stainless steel (food-grade stainless steel for
those parts which come into physical contact with the grapes)
Additions at reception
The preservative sulphur dioxide is
commonly added when grapes arrive at the winery. The addition rate
varies from zero, for perfectly healthy grapes, to up to 70 mg/litre,
for grapes with a high percentage of rot. The purpose is to prevent oxidation and sometimes to delay the onset of fermentation.
Macerating enzymes (for
instance glucanases) may also be added at this stage, to aid extraction
of cor and fruit flavours from the skins and to facilitate pressing.
Tannin may
be added now, later in the winemaking process, or not at all. Tannin
can be added to help stabilize colour, to prevent oxidation, and to help
combat the effects of rot.
Cooling of the must
Some
winemakers prefer to chill the must to around 10°C (50°F), to allow a
period of pre-fermentation maceration ("cold soaking"), of between one
and four days. The idea is that colour and fruit flavours are extracted
into the aqueous solution, without extraction of tannins which takes
place in post-fermentation maceration when alcohol is present. This practice is by no means universal and is perhaps more common in New World winemaking countries.
Inoculation and fermentation
Once the must is in a fermentation vessel, yeast naturally
present on the skins of the grapes, or in the environment, will sooner
or later start the alcoholic fermentation, in which sugars present in
the must are converted into alcohol with carbon dioxide and heat as
by-products. Many winemakers, however, prefer to control the
fermentation process more closely by adding specially selected yeasts
usually of the species Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
Several hundred different strains of wine yeast are available
commercially, and many winemakers believe that particular strains are
more or less suitable for the vinification of different grape varieties
and different styles of wine. It is also common to add yeast nutrient at
this stage, often in the form of diammonium phosphate.
Pumping over
Soon
after the must is placed in the fermentation vessel, a separation of
solid and liquid phases occurs. Skins float to the surface, forming a
cap. In order to encourage efficient extraction of colour and flavour
components it is important to maximize contact between the cap of skins
and the liquid phase. This can be achieved by:
- pumping over (pumping liquid from the bottom of the tank and spraying it over the floating cap; normally this would be done several times per day during fermentation)
- punching down the cap (either manually or using an automated mechanical system)
- submerging the cap (the cap is kept beneath the surface of the liquid phase by a physical restraint)
- drain and return (the above techniques can all be supplemented by a drain and return operation, in which the liquid phase is drained off the skins into another vessel and then pumped back over the skins)
Temperature control
Fermentation
produces heat and if left uncontrolled the temperature of the
fermenting must exceed 40°C (104°F), which can impare flavour and even
kill the yeast. The temperature is therefore often controlled using
different refrigeration systems. Winemakers have different opinions
about the ideal temperature for fermentation, but in general cooler
temperatures (25-28°C; 77-82.4°F) produce fruitier red wines for early
drinking while higher temperatures (28-35°C; 82.4-95°F) produce more
tannic wines designed for long ageing.
Following the fermentation
Winemakers will usually check the density and
temperature of the fermenting must once or twice per day. The density
is proportional to the sugar content and will be expected to fall each
day as the sugar is converted into alcohol by fermentation.
Pressing
Main article: Pressing (wine)
Pressing
in winemaking is the process where juice is extracted from grapes. This
can be done with the aid of a wine press, by hand, or even by the
weight of the own grape berries and clusters.Historically, intact grape
clusters were treaded by feet but in most wineries today the grapes are
sent through a crusher/destemmer which removes the individual grape
berries from the stems and breaks the skins, releasing some juice, prior
to being pressed. There are exceptions, such as the case of sparkling
wine production in regions such as Champagne where grapes are
traditionallywhole-cluster pressed with stems included to produce a lighter must that is low in phenolics.
In
white wine production, pressing usually takes immediately after
crushing and before primary fermentation. In red wine production, the
grapes are also crushed but pressing usually doesn't take place till
after or near the end of fermentation with the
time of skin contact between the juice and grapes
leaching color, tannins and other phenolics from the skin. Approximately
60-70% of the available juice within the grape berry, the free-run juice,
can be released by the crushing process and doesn't require the use of
the press. The remaining 30-40% that comes from pressing can have
higher pH levels, lower titratable acidity, potentially higher volatile
acidity and higher phenolics than the free-run juice depending on the
amount of pressure and tearing of the skins and will produce more
astringent, bitter wine.
Winemakers
often keep their free-run juice and pressed wine separate (and perhaps
even further isolate the wine produced by different pressure
levels/stages of pressing) during much of the winemaking process to
either bottle separately or later blend portions of each to make a more
complete, balanced wine. In practice the volume of many wines are made
from 85-90% of free-run juice and 10-15% pressed juice.
Types of press
There
are many different types of wine press, but they can be broadly divided
into continuous presses and tank presses. Modern winemaking tends to
favour tank presses with pneumatic membranes, which squeeze the grapes
more gently than continuous presses. The press wine is often kept
separate from the free-run, and kept for later blending or disposal.
Malolactic fermentation
A
second microbiological transformation commonly takes place after the
alcoholic fermentation of red wines. This is usually referred to as the
malolactic fermentation (MLF), in which malic acid,
naturally present in grape juice, is converted into lactic acid under
the influence of bacteria (it is not strictly a fermentation). MLF is
almost universally practised for red wines. It often occurs naturally,
owing to the presence of lactic acid bacteria in wineries, but there are
also commercially available preparations of bacteria to inoculate for
MLF if necessary.
Racking
Once the MLF is complete, the red wine is usually racked (decanted) off its lees (dead yeast cells and other solids), and has sulphur dioxide preservative added to avoid oxidation and bacterial spoilage.
Aging
Most red wine is aged for some period before bottling, though this can vary from a few days, in the case of Beaujolais Nouveau to 18 months or more in the case of top Bordeaux reds.
Ageing can take place in stainless-steel or concrete tanks, or in small
or large oak barrels. The latter impart some flavour to the wine as a
function of their age and size (small, new barrels give more flavour
than large, older barrels).
Fining and stabilization
Red
wines sometimes undergo fining, which is designed to clarify the wine
and sometimes to correct faults such as excess tannin. Fining agents
include egg white and gelatin. Some red wines, particularly those
designed for early drinking, are cold stabilized so as to prevent the
precipitation of unsightly tartrate crystals in the bottle.
Filtration and bottling
Most
wines are filtered at some stage before bottling, although some
winemakers use the absence of filtration as a marketing tool. Filtration
serves to make wine completely clear and to eliminate any remaining yeast cells and bacteria,
which could render the bottled wine microbiologically unstable. Wine is
normally filled to glass bottles with cork stoppers, though aluminium
screwcap closures and plastic stoppers are also common. Alternative
containers such as Bag-in-Box, TetraPak and plastic bottles are also used.
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