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Metodo Italiano, aka. Charmat Process, and Three Prosecco Reviews, for Denise

Thank you to Denise for requesting a focus on Prosecco.To respond to her interest in the Italian sparkling wine we’ve got a comic that explains how this particular bubbly is made, and also three prosecco reviews.

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Prosecco is a regulated sparkling wine from Italy made with the Glera grape. While sparkling wines made in the methode traditionelle tend to have a focus on blending, prosecco instead expresses the qualities of a single grape. Originally, the grape used in prosecco hosted the same name as the drink itself, but in 2009 the makers of the Italian beverage lobbied their wine governing board to become a regulated DOC (a quality designation), and to have the grape name changed from Prosecco to Glera in order to avoid marketing confusion. That is, other areas of the world grow glera as well, and even make sparkling wine with it. Through the name change only glera-based sparkling wine made in the Prosecco DOC can be labelled with the name prosecco. It’s a move along the lines of the reservation of the term champagne only for wines made in the Champagne region of France.

Glera is a white grape with lower acidity levels, and generally grown in warmer climates than those varieties used for methode traditionelle. Acid is considered to be one of the structural elements of wine that the other flavors shape themselves around. It’s as if acid is one of the characteristics offering backbone to a wine, while the fruit give a wine its flesh. As such, grapes with these lower acid levels are sometimes said to be “softer” as a result of the lighter bodily feel that is sensed from the reduced grape skeleton. Since prosecco is made with only use of this one grape, the drink doesn’t gain any of the structural elements that can be brought in from blending. As a result, the final sparkling wine is also thought of as softer than those sparkling wines that depend upon the presence of higher acid levels. For many, this softer structure is precisely what is appreciated about prosecco. While it may taste softer, it also carries less acidic mouth tang, and less of a mouth watering quality to it too.

In fact, as a result of the softer structure, glera is a grape that does not do well with the treatment of the methode traditionelle. Instead, it needs a less demanding process to infuse it with those precious bubbles. When treated with a secondary fermentation in bottle, a grape with these softer structural elements ends up “smudgy” both in color and in flavor.

It turns out that metodo Italiano, also known as the charmat process, is also cheaper to produce with as a result of lower handling hours. There is no need to riddle individual bottles if the secondary fermentation is happening instead in a vat. So, prosecco is not only softer than sparkling wines made with twice fermentation, it’s also generally a lot cheaper.

Here’s how it’s done.

Metodo Italiano, aka., the Charmat Process

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And now on to the Prosecco wine reviews. I’ve been lucky enough to taste, and review several other proseccos as well, but for today we’ll focus on three affordable versions of the drink. The three appear here in order of preference.

Mionetto Gold Label NV Brut Prosecco

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The Mionetto Brut Gold Label was my favorite of the three. It offers well-balanced, and clean flavors that remain defined. The structure is good in this prosecco, allowing rich distinctive flavor with light mouth feel.

Thank you to Jennifer at Cuvee 928 in Flagstaff, Arizona for sharing this prosecco with me.

Tiamo Prosecco

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The tiamo is the softest of the three proseccos featured. But its flavors are also impressively clean. The fruits here are rich in the mouth, with only very light citrus, and a subtle, pleasant bite of ginger that livens up the softer texture.

Bisol Jeio Desiderio Brut Prosecco

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The Bisol Jeio Prosecco has woody elements mixed in with fruit, white flowers, and hints of grass. I appreciated the dry precision of this wine at first, but it gains a strong white grapefruit bite as it warms. If you like the warming intensity and bite of white citrus, then you’ll appreciate this prosecco. It was the most wood and grass driven of the three, unlike the tiamo which carried almost no such notes.

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Monday will consider an incredibly rare grape known as Charbono in the Northern Hemisphere, and Bonarda in the Southern. It’s a grape that is almost non-existant in the world, with very little growing acreage. Additionally, the flavor elements of charbono-bonarda are wonderfully unusual, and refreshing. So, for both reasons, it’s particularly exciting to have the opportunity to taste it.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Me’thode Traditionelle, and Two Cava Brut Rose’ Reviews

Many of us are getting ready for even more sparkling wine celebration with the New Year. I’ve focused on plenty of various sparkling wines here but thought this week I’d present illustration of how it is made as well.

Champagne is often considered the pinnacle of sparkling wines. It’s production method allows wonderful complexity of flavors, and the highest quality as well. There are actually three regulated sparkling wines made with this same method, known as the methode traditionelle–champagne, franciacorta, and cava. In each case, the production method includes the same double fermentation process with the second fermentation occurring in the same bottle in which the wine will then be sold. The quality of the final sparkling wine importantly begins with the quality of the original cuve’e–the still wine produced from the first fermentation.

Following, is a comic on the primary steps of me’thode traditionelle, and a couple of cava reviews.

Friday we’ll take a look at how another sparkling wine–prosecco–is made, and do a review of four affordable examples of the style.

Here’s how it works…

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Getting ready for celebration? Here are two cava brut rose’s perfect for the occasion. Both rely heavily on pinot noir, a newer happy focus for cavas.

The Marques de Gelida Brut Reserva Rose’ is 100% Pinot Noir.

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The second cava is known as the favorite of Salvador Dali. As the story goes, he served it to his dearest friends. The Galatea Torre Perelada Brut Rosado is a blend of 50% Pinot Noir, 25% Garnacha (aka. Grenache), and 25% Monastrell (aka. Mourv’edre, or, Matar’o).

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To consider other sparkling wines click on the “Sparkling Wines” link on the right under “Regions, and Wine Types.”

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Pierre Gimonnet 2005 Gastronome Brut

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To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

Wine Review: Diego Murillo 2010 Torrontes, Patagonia, Argentina

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To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

Wine Review: Campos Reales 2010 Tempranillo

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To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

Wine Review: La Vieille Ferme 2009 Rhone Red

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To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

Wine Review: Volunteer 2008 Napa Cabernet Sauvignon

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Love this wine.

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To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

December Holiday Break

Hello all!

To prepare for the holiday, and get a rest after the close of a busy Fall-Winter semester, Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will be taking it easy this coming week.

A wine review comic will be posted Monday through Friday, but without the written follow-up. Also, the wine review comics for this week will be reviews previously done for The Wine Loft, Flagstaff, AZ without having appeared here.

More new reviews will start December 26.

Beginning December 26 the format of Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews will change a little bit. At that time posts will appear here Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with a shift to more of a feature focus. The new format will allow me to take a more in-depth approach with, for example, a look at particular wineries, or side-by-side tastings of similar wines from different regions.

Have a wonderful holiday!

Wine Review: Metternich Cuvee Riesling Sekt Trocken

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As the story goes, Riesling originated in Germany, and now serves as the country’s most produced, and well-known variety. As also discussed in regards to Chardonnay, Riesling is a grape considered to reflect the flavors of its terroir and climate growing conditions, and to adapt to various production styles as well. In Germany the grape is generally treated as a straight varietal, without blending alongside other grapes, and is produced without oak influence. German tradition also has it that Riesling is the preferred grape for the best quality German Sparkling wine, known as Sekt.

Furst von Metternich produces Riesling Sekt in three cuvees–trocken, or dry; extra trocken; and the brut vintage, which is bottle fermented in the methode traditionelle. The trocken, and extra trocken are made instead in methode charmat. As previously discussed, methode traditionelle includes a secondary fermentation in bottle. Methode charmat, on the other hand, places the secondary fermentation in large stainless steel vats with bottling occurring under high pressure after the bubble-making process is complete.

This particular Metternich cuvee offers a subtle nose of white flowers, and fruit, with scents of spiced apple compote, and hints of golden grass and wood. The flavors in the mouth are fuller with the fruit and floral bouquet continuing with layers of white grapefruit, and peach blended through. The acidity on this sparkling wine is low, leaving a soft fruit body, and only light yeast elements. This wine is certainly trocken (dry) but the reduced acids gives the sense of more fruit elements than in a wine with higher acidity, which in turn offer a sense of sweet flavors. In other words, I do agree with the dry rating, and acknowledge too that there are a number of elements here that give a sense of a sweeter flavor, without actually carrying more residual sugars.

This Metternich is an affordable alternative to more expensive sparkling wines. It’s softer body reflects a difference sometimes found in the charmat process–it demands less acidity in the original juice than fermentation in the bottle, allowing for a stronger sense of fruit to the glass. As mentioned in relation to the cava reviewed earlier this week, if you’re determined to drink bubbles regularly and want a slightly less expensive option, you can find one here.

I will enjoy this particular sparkling wine on occasion for just such reasons. I’ll admit the sense of wood (not oak, just wood) mixed in with the fruit, and it showing lighter structure (less acid) means I am not always in the mood for these particular bubbles. Still, this wine offers an interesting insight into the possibilities of German riesling.

Wines of the Rheingau are generally considered to have excellent structure, and power. This particular rendition shows less acidity than is typical for still wine examples of the region, and a softer body than might otherwise be expected.

Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com

Wine Review: Shingleback Black Bubbles Sparkling Shiraz

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I’m going to be honest here. This wine is strange.

I imagine sitting on a porch in late afternoon as the sun is reaching out far towards the horizon but still a couple hours from setting. It’s late in the warm months, so it’s comfortable enough to be outside like that, but still we want to sit in shade. There are some bugs in the air, but they bite only rarely, and most are just floating languidly about the grass-golden light of late day. The air smells a bit of earth, and herbs, and a lot of grass, which the property we are visiting is surrounded by–long, golden, late-season grass. There are at least three of us sitting together, and another is arriving shortly with grass-fed ground meat for us to grill into burgers.

That kind of moment–that is when you might want this wine–a spritz of bubbles to lighten things up a bit in the warm air; but the richness of red wine to match the lateness of the day and the grasses surrounding us; a slightly rustic but fruit driven body of flavors to suit the meat we’re anticipating.

The wine demands meat. A host of grilled burgers would well suit, or a plate of charcuterie. The label on the back suggests this sparkling shiraz would offer a nice apertif. I have to disagree. To be clear, I specifically list four friends in the grassland-and-rolling hills, late afternoon, pre-meat fantasy because while I was interested enough here to have a flute of the black bubbles, and maybe even two, I simply didn’t want more than that.

Shingleback’s Black Bubbles Sparkling Shiraz has a full body that the bubbles struggle through. The fruit flavors are concentrated dried versions of dark fruits–raisin, dark plum, blackberry, and hints of blueberry. There is a lot of yeast on the nose, and in the mouth giving a sense of real raisin bread. I imagine an apertif as a wine you want to relax with, and that pleases you, getting you ready to enjoy your food. This wine has a little too much density to just drink with ease.

Sparking shiraz is apparently readily available in Australia. Various materials I read suggest that people there like to drink it with bbq. If you’re not already used to this sort of thing, then I can only suggest that you try this if you’re looking for something a-typical, and slightly strange, or, if you like fruit-forward shiraz, and appreciate bubbles. It has a lot of the flavor of a still dark-fruited shiraz, but with a bit of fizz to it.

This wine is not my thing. It was a fun try for me, and I enjoyed it for a flute, as I said. I’d be happy to taste it on occasion as a kind of light-hearted snacking wine with friends that are eager to drink it. It’s not something I’m likely to buy again on my own.

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Post Edit:

To clarify: there is some very good sparkling shiraz out there. Sparkling shiraz in general is harder to find outside of Australia though, and only a few make it specifically to the United States.

There are also other sparkling reds that can be quite yummy, a dry Italian Lambrusco being a favorite.

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Copyright 2011 all rights reserved. When sharing or forwarding, please attribute to WakawakaWineReviews.com