Quite frequently people ask if Michigan produces a wine similar to
one of their favorite California or European wine varieties. Quite frequently
the answer is yes.
Cayuga White or Geneva White # 5 is very popular for soft semi-dry
wines. These wines with their prominent fruit flavor and flower bouquet
are quite reminiscent of the German style of wine making. Because Germany
and Michigan have similar cool climate conditions, these grape varieties
have a tendency to evolve to the desired sugar and alcohol levels that
provide soft, fruity and extremely palatable wines for all wine consumers.
These same varieties are also fashioned into "Late Harvest" sweet
wines by Michigan vintners who have learned to utilize the Botrytis
mold, caused by the Lake Michigan micro-climates, to their advantage.
Michigan
wines will also please consumers who like French-style wines. Seyval,
Vignoles and Chardonnel are produced in both the oak version of burgundy
and the stainless steel finish of softer European wines.
The versatility of Michigan's grapes, particularly the hybrid versions
of Seyval and Vignoles, have allowed a wide assortment of wine styles
to develop from dry to sweet, other familiar "old world" tasting wines
also occur from one Michigan winery to another.
Currently, consumer appeal and production emphasize the highly successful
Michigan white wines. However, red wine is becoming a factor to reckon
with. Marechal Foch, Baco Noir, and DeChaunac has been the backbone
for most of the state's red table wine production. These wines bear
many of the same desirable complexities and rich color of the more well-known
Cabernet Sauvignons of California and Bordeaux. As more acreage is planted,
these wines will achieve more national recognition.
Many
beginning winemakers ask where they should go to purchase wine barrels.
I always tell them to avoid using them unless they are making large
lots of wine (50 gallons or more). A 50 gallon barrel has the proper
ratio of air exchange through the wood to the wine, anything smaller
may add too much oak flavor and cause rapid oxidation of the wine and
cause it to spoil. Remember, if nature has it's way, grape juice will
turn to wine and then to vinegar. 5 gallon glass carboys are the perfect
size containers. They are easier to use and unless you are an expert
in barrel use, they are much more reliable. Smaller carboys also allow
you to make many different batches of wine for consumer variety. We
grow over 20 varieties of grapes, and they are frequently blended into
many unique wines.
Another question frequently asked is about wine yeast, sulfur and sugar.
Many of our customers have a heritage of never adding anything to their
wines. What makes wine making interesting is the many different techniques
used, although I believe some methods should be left in the last century.
California grown grapes tend to be high in sugar, and low in acid sometimes
making a high alcohol and "flat" tasting wine. French hybrid grapes
grown in the east tend to be lower in sugar, but higher in acidity,
adding more fruit characteristics to the wine. Home winemakers can easily
correct lower sugar "musts" by slight additions of sugar or honey.
Fermenting grape juice using its natural wild yeast will usually work,
but you are always taking a chance. (Did you ever hear of a baker baking
bread with wild yeast's?) I always recommend adding sulfur (cambden
tablets) at crushing time and adding a cultured wine yeast the next
day. The sulfur will lower the level of wild yeast in the must, allowing
the cultured yeast to take over. We have wine yeast and cambden tablets
available at our fruit stand. Good luck with this years crush!
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