Crimson Clover Harvest Pictures

By now this is a really familiar picture. Start of the morning in the FJ Cruiser.  I was up at 5:45.  Crimson is not far from our home compared to some other sites so leaving at 6:37 we were actually the first ones on site at just after 7AM.  Millie had come the day before and removed all the chopsticks from the netting so the first task would be to remove the nets.  Normally we’d have Jerry and Gil remove the nets and everyone else would start picking.  The weather was drippy and wet though with mist coming down and clouds all around the vineyard.  I kept checking the hourly weather update (which showed clear from 8 Am until Noon) and watching the clouds.  Everyone pitched in to take the nets off.

fjcrimson

There was a little moister on the leafs but the clusters where staying dry.  They really looked fantastic.  We don’t generally leaf pull.  I prefer to get dappled sunlight on to the grapes rather than direct sun.

crimsongrapes

 

 

About 8:45 we got the clearing that we needed in the clouds and I sent the crew out to start picking as fast as they could.  Clouds hung around the vineyard all morning but as volunteers arrived on site they all said it was clear to the north of us, the direction any rain would come in from.

 

cloudystart

 

The first bin of grapes.  I picked about six bins total.  Once the bins started to fill up though my job changes to picking up the bins and carrying them to the macro bins for sorting.  Stefania calculated that I walked 12 miles in the vineyard, half of that carrying 30 pounds on my shoulder.  In all I carried out over 100 bins on Saturday and over 60 on Sunday.

 

firstbin

 

This is Stef’s usual job on picking days.  She’s keeping a tally of the bins as they come in and sorting through the grapes removing any bees, spiders, lady bugs, earwigs, leafs, shoots, grass, water bottles or finger tips that come in.  We had a good pick this time with no injuries or bee stings.

 

stefsorting

 

I thought we might pick heavy this year.  Last year we brought in just under three full bins or about 2700 pounds.  That’s 1 1/2 tons per acre and pretty normal for this site.  I thought we would get 4 bins this year.  That’s a little bit of a logistical challenge because the biggest trailer I can rent only hold three bins, and I wouldn’t want to tow much more than the 4000 pounds a fully loaded rig weighs up and down the mountain roads we have to travel.  I figured we’d just come back Sunday though and finish up.  The third bin though filled up on row 12 of 23.  Rows 18-23 are shorter than the rest so we actually came back for 2+ bins on Sunday or just over 5000 pounds.

 

lastbinfilling

 

 

There was some drama driving back to the winery.  The forecast held and at Noon it started raining again.  We had covered the bins though and were already on the road when the rain started.  When we arrived at the winery we had to weight about 30 minutes for the misting to stop.  We then got everything processed and inside in just about 25 minutes, which was perfect because 5 minutes after we finished processing it rained as hard as I’ve ever seen at the winery.

 

atthewinery

 

We ended up with three full fermentation bins of must.  That’s a thermometer sticking in the must getting a temperature.  Brix was 14 and pH 3.80.  Reallly perfect for this vineyard.

 

must

 

We were out of the winery in time to get home and take a shower and visit our friend Ingrid’s house for authentic Chinese food.  The ‘pearl’ sausage balls were fantastic and there was a pot of ‘blood and guts’ that I really enjoy.  We probably drank too much and ate too much and stayed to late given we had to get up Sunday at 5:45 again but it was fun.

 

harvestdinner

 

Sunday we returned and picked the rest of the vineyard as well as the Cabernet from the Roxy vineyard a block down the road from Crimson Clover.  For the first time there looks like enough grapes from Roxy (about 800 pounds so far) to do a barrel on its own.  Usually it goes into the Haut Tubee blend.  Sunday was one of those really tough days.  At 1 PM I had to stop picking and hauling grapes and just sit in the car for about 30 minutes to recover.  When we made it to the winery at 4PM with the grapes Millie was not there yet.  We’d sent her to pick up some sandwiches so knew we had about 30 minutes before we had to process the grapes.  I took my boots off and put them under my head on the cellar floor and fell asleep.

We ended up staying until just about 8PM.  The Chardonnay was ready to go into barrel so while Millie and crew cleaned up outside, Stef and I got the barrels ready and all the wine transferred inside.  Sunday’s dinner was traditional harvest food – beer and pizza.

Field Testing

Right now we’re doing a lot of testing and sampling.  Sometimes we have Millie go out and bring samples back to us at home.  When we’re at the winery we gather samples from that vineyard and test there.  Most of the time though we go out and get samples and test them right in the field.  The back of the FJ Cruiser is a completely odd assortment of gear right now.  Both Stef and I have a change of shoes and socks in the car, there’s some dirty shirts, some mostly clean sweatshirts, tie downs, peanuts, apples, bottled water, a trailer hitch, plastic bags (for samples), clippers, and an assortment of test equipment and gear.

When we arrive on site we take out the plastic bags and start walking rows.  Usually we walk every row picking berries from both sides.  We then meet back up and combine the grapes.  Stef smashes them and strains the juice.  The first test actually happens as we pick.  We’re tasting as we go.  We’re also checking for the toughness of the skins.  If they are tough, the tannins in the wine will be tough.  Once strained we want to see most of the seeds brown and the juice should be reddish.  Really unripe grapes will have brown juice.  The picture below I would call brick red.

pink juice

Next we have this handy field temperature and pH meter.  The temperature is important because it will effect the other readings.  The pH meter is usually + or – .10 degrees from our experience.  If in doubt we’ll run a full test in the lab, but usually it gives us a good feel for the acidity.

 

phmeter

We like to run a hydrometer and refractometer test.  They hydrometer tends to be more accurate.  The picture below is actually from the day after we were in the field.  We always bring the samples home and let them soak overnight then retest.  With not ripe grapes there’s not much of a difference, but grapes over 24 Brix can soak up 2-3 degrees pretty easy.  THis reading is right at 20.
hydrometer

Somehow Stef got a picture of the inside of a refractometer.  This is from the same sample and shows a slightly lower Brix of 19.1  That’s why we like to do both tests.
refractometer

And this is what you do after you’ve driven 112 miles round trip in stop and go traffic to get samples you knew probably were not close to ready but had to anyway because the vineyard owner was ready to pick in two days of you didn’t test.

 

cocktailrelief

Pictures from the Chardonnay Harvest

Last Saturday we picked Chardonnay at Chaine d’Or.  I posted most of these pictures real time on Facebook on Saturday in real time.  I’ll try to do the same again this Saturday as we pick at Crimson Clover but I know getting a signal there is even harder than Chaine d’Or.  The day started at a decent hour for picking.  I was up at 5:45 and we were in the car at 6:33 and 60 degrees.  We did make a stop for coffee and arrived at the winery at 7:15.

Jerry and the crew had arrived at 7 and were already at work getting the nets off.  Stef and I had prepped and cleaned the winery and equipment the day before so there was no additional work that morning other than getting started picking.

 
morning fj

The fog hung low around the vineyard well into the early afternoon.  I was able to help with a little of the picking before switching to my regular job of driving the tractor and picking up the full bins for processing.

 

crew in fog

 

The grapes looked really nice coming in.  Some were very golden.  The upper section of the vineyard gets more sun and those grapes usually are riper than the grapes from the lower section.

grapes ready

 

After driving the bins up in the tractor I dump them into the press.  I started doing whole cluster pressing last year.

 

pump and fog

 

I did take a short break from the bin dumping to run down into the lower section of the vineyard and pick the ‘rouge’ Pinot Noir I wrote about last week.

rouge pinot

 

After pressing the wine is pumped into this large chilled tank to settle for 24 hours.  That helps the juice separate from any solids.

tank

 

The dogs watch the entire process.  Sofie on the right was a puppy in 2005 when I first worked at Chaine d’Or so this is her 8th Chardonnay harvest.

pups

 

On Sunday we went back up to the winery and transferred the settled wine into an inside tank to start fermentation.  We’ll let it burble in here until it reaches about 12 Brix.  The tank is chilled to keep fermentation between 60 and 70 degrees.  Once we reach the 1/2 way point on fermentation and the temperature is not likely to spike up we’ll transfer the wine to barrel to finish fermentation.

inside tank

 

Final numbers on the wine looked great.  Brix was 23 exactly and pH was 3.36.  We expect a smooth fermentation and the wine should turn out like the 2008 version based on the numbers and handling so far.

New Wines Released

I’ve just put up the details on our Fall Release:

http://localhost/wordpress/?page_id=10

We have 4 wines we’re releasing, two of them brand new.  Offer letter will go out to Mailing List Members this week.  Anything left will be available for web orders on October 31st.  I’m particularly excited about the Mourvedre.  It got great reviews in Chicago where we opened two bottles in August.  We do have a Chardonnay from 2012 but will be releasing that as well as our 2012 Pinot Noir in the Spring.

More Vineyard Visits

I wrote about the visit and testing at Chaine d’Or we did on Saturday.  We also visited a small Syrah vineyard in Los Altos Hills that the owners now maintain all on their own and visited a potential new site in the Gilroy-Watsonville Road area.  For those out side of the South Bay, Gilroy and Watsonville are two small towns south of San Jose.  The irony of the Gilroy-Watsonville Road is it goes to neither Gilroy or Watsonville.  We finished up the day at the Crimson Clover vineyard which is in the town of Morgan Hill behind the big hill everyone things is named Morgan Hill but is really named El Toro.  Whoever named things in that part of the valley was definitely trying to confuse people.

Sunday we watched the Saints game in the morning.  They seem to have their defense figured out this year which was encouraging.  Then we headed to the Mineral Hill vineyard to watch the 49er game with the vineyard owners there and check on the grapes.  This will be a hard one to figure out when to pick because the vines are just three years old and a vineyard that young tends to have a great deal of variation from plant to plant.  Stefania says it’s really year 7 when the vineyard starts acting like a vineyard, and stops acting like a collection of individual plants.

 
mineral hill 2013

The grapes planted here are Mourvedre and the yield looks to be pretty high.  I’m sure some of the clusters won’t make it and will dry up and some will not be ripe and have to get cut off so probably 75% of what is on the vine now will make it into a fermentation bin.  The vineyard is over an ancient creek bed and water still flow under ground so the plants are particularly strong for being three years old.  I’m thinking we will pick here right around the 1st of October.

 
mineral hill close

One last picture from Crimson Clover on Saturday.  The vineyard tested at 22.25 Brix.  Flavors are well past the green state and in between red and black fruit.  We set the pick date as September 21st, which is in the normal to early range for the site.  With the weather pattern we expect to pick right around 24 Brix.  Yield here looks average for the site and I think we’ll get just under two tons.  We will also pick the ‘Roxy’ Vineyard at the same time.  Roxy is a mix of Syrah, Zinfandel and Cabernet Sauvignon that we put in the Haut Tubee Blend.  Yield there looks high this year, close to a 1000 pounds.  That would be cool actually if we got that much as we could keep the vineyard on it’s own through fermentation and into barrel.

 
crimson grapes

Samples and Rouge Pinot Noir

Saturday Stefania and I logged 112 miles on the FJ Cruiser checking on vineyards and getting samples to do lab testing on.  We started at Chaine d Or testing Chardonnay.  We tasted the Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot in the vineyard as we went but it’s really too early to do lab tests on those grapes yet.

We walk each row of the vineyard and pull berries from each plant, going back and forth to get each side of the row and each exposure.  We also try and mix up the berries from the middle, bottom, and top of the cluster as well as pull from clusters in full sun and those on the interior of the plant.  The idea is to get a sample that shows the entire vineyard not just those berries that are in sight.  Stef is holding a white bucket that we use to gather the berries as we go.

row to

At Chaine d Or it takes one person about an hour to get samples.  Two people takes 30 minutes so we split up.  It’s also important to taste as you go.  That’s a good way to train your taste to recognize what the grapes are at in terms of lab readings.  You sample 20-30 grapes in the vineyard, then go back and test and it’s instant feedback and learning.  In this case the Brix was under 21 and the pH was 3.25 so now we both have an excellent idea of what the maturity level tastes like.

We’re also checking on secondary indicators of ripeness like brown seeds and brown stems on the clusters.  Since each plant is getting a quick look we can also check for any issues.  On Labor day weekend when I went out I noticed small amounts of Botrytis or Grey Mold in the vineyard.  Under the wrong conditions this can be a disaster unless you spray right away.  With the weather we’ve had though I though we would be ok.  It’s been very hot and I know temperatures over 90 degrees will keep the mold from spreading and just shrivel the berries that have been effected making them very sweet and introducing the unique Botrytis flavor profile.

The walk through the vineyard confirmed that the mold was all dead and we’ll have about 60 clusters of Botrytis Chardonnay grapes in the wine, which is normal for the vineyard.

One final oddity that Stefania wanted me to take a picture of is a rouge Pinot Noir plant we have in the Chardonnay.  It was probably a mix up at the nursery when then vineyard was originally planted.  It was actually 4 years before we noticed the plant.  The leafs are very similar between Chardonnay and Pinot Noir and the cluster shapes and sizes are also very close.
pinot chard

We kept missing this plant because the Pinot turns red earlier than the Cabernet Sauvignon.  We usually don’t net the vineyard until the Cabernet turns color, so the birds were cleaning out this plant every year before we netted and could see the grapes were red and not white.  I remember seeing the plant and thinking it odd that the birds would completely clean out one plant and not touch the others around it.  That’s not super unusual, it’s how birds attack a plant.  They eat one cluster completely before moving to the next and tend to clean out the plants one at a time.  Stills it would be odd that they had not eaten any clusters off the neighboring plants.

When we discovered this plant last year it was mostly eaten but there were a few clusters left that helped us identify it.  We made an effort this year to get it netted early and will use the grapes in our Santa Cruz Mountains Pinot.  Chaine d’Or also has a rouge Zinfandel plant in the Chardonnay and a group of plants we are pretty sure are Pinot Gris in the Merlot section.  The birds love Pinot Gris and most of those get eaten early every year.

stef pinot

Dinner at Our Place

Every year we make a donation to the Washington Open School in Santa Clara. Usually we do a case of wine or a couple of magnums. Last year they asked if we could do something bigger so we offered a wine dinner at our home. The package was a four course dinner paired with our wines and we were told it brought in a huge bid. We had the winners over on Friday night and Stefania prepped the house and dinning room.  We’re still trying to figure out what art to put in the living room so for right now the chalk boards to track football scores are in the space along with the banner for the Roller Girls.

 

dinning room

We started in the living room and bar with some fresh fruit and a selection of cheese.  I opened our unreleased 2010 Chardonnay and the just bottled 2012 Chardonnay.  We wound through the what would be five courses and a dessert on the patio about 11PM.  I started with a Caesar salad with grilled shrimp.  Then Stefania had a soup and I followed that with lamb chops over cabbage and mushrooms in red wine.  I added a few slices of home made sausage to the plate.  We finished with Filet Mignon and summer squash.
the bar

We put a dent in the wines working through some unreleased wines and some from our library.  I though the 2011 Nueva Casa de los Padres was the highlight.  The 2006 Uvas Creek Cabernet Sauvignon was also really good and I was surprised that the 2012 Chardonnay wasn’t showing any bottle shock.

We really enjoy putting together dinners.  Charity events are a rarity but for friends coming into town it’s something we try and pull together.  It might not always be as many courses but it will always be something good!
the line up

Crawdads

Nothing really wine related at all for this post other than I was on my way back from the winery doing punchdowns when I stopped at Ranch 99 Market. That’s a large Asian market in the Bay Area.  My objective for the trip was to pick up some ribs for dinner.  The pork there is always much fresher than what I can find anywhere else.  I also bought some pork belly to make bacon and browsed through the seafood section.

Ranch 99 can be a bit of a challenge for me.  Most of the guys there who are not Asian are ‘in the way’ while they shop with their Asian girlfriend or wife.  At the store on Wolfe Road and the one near my day job in Milpitas though they mostly recognize me and will help me at the counter.  The first few times though trying to buy a fish I actually had to hold the fish up to get my turn in line.

The Chinese granma’s though are another thing.  I get bumped, jostled, pushed and prodded to get out of the way.  It helps once I have a few things in my basket or if I hold up a fish!  One thing I’ll always look for is live crawdad’s.  They are not always in stock but when they are I’ll buy them.  The crawdad took a long route into the Asian Market.  It’s a New Orleans and Louisiana specialty that was picked up by Vietnamese fisherman who immigrated to Louisiana.  When I get crawdads I actually attract a small crowd seeing what I’m doing and how I’m picking them out (get the live active ones).  It’s all really fun though and the boil always makes me miss New Orleans.

cooked crawdads

Dim Sum Cellar

Bottling is a particularly busy time of the year.  There’s lots of work and it requires lots of hands.  We’re lucky to have friends who come out and help on the days we need them to.  The days are long and the work is terribly boring.  We usually keep everyone doing the same task so it can be 8-10 hours of just sparging bottles with nitrogen and lifting them on to the filler.

We don’t always stop for lunch too if we’re bottling and the line is rolling we’ll just go right through.  We might stop for a few minutes for water, and bathroom breaks but as soon as the forklift can move one lot out of the way we’ll usually start on the next lot.  If there is time though we will stop and have lunch in the cellar.  Usual winery food is to order in pizza, or run out for burritos our sandwiches.  The pizza and burritos are not really an option in our location and the sandwich thing gets boring pretty fast.  For our last bottling our friend Ingrid fixed that problem by picking up Dim Sum on her way to the winery.

dim sum 2

 

It can be a challenge though, as we don’t have tables and only two chairs so we improvise.  Stefania laid some towels over a completed pallet of wine.  A few buckets turned upside down worked for chairs.  This actually worked out as a great lunch idea.  It was filling but not heavy and easy to set up and clean up.  There were a few beers cracked, which you can probably see below.  Beer fuels winemaking in the Fall, that’s for sure.

 

dim sum

2013 Harvest Update

A quick update on where we are for 2013 harvest.  We brought in our first lot of Pinot Noir on 9/1 which was eight days earlier than 2012 and a month earlier than the very late 2011.  Weather has been good and the vineyards look excellent with a decent crop load.

One thing we’ve noticed this year is the grapes look to the eye more mature than the chemistry on them is showing once back in the lab with samples.  The Chardonnay at Chaine d’ Or was a good example.  It looked as I walked through the vineyard like harvest would be 9/8 or 9/9 but in the lab the Brix was 20.0 and pH 3.05.  We’re actually likely to pick on 9/14.  When we tested the Mourvedre at home it was the same story.  The grapes looked like they would be ready in 2-3 weeks, but Brix tested at 18.2.  It will be 4-5 weeks before the grapes are ready.

I’ve not really seen this before.  Usually I have a good handle on visual, with taste and chemistry but in 2013 the visual is ahead of the taste and chemistry.  That’s ok though just likely going to be different from most years where the chemistry is ok and then we wait a few weeks for flavor to be where we want it.  This year I think we’ll be getting flavor at the same time the chemistry is right.  Normally we just test until we reach 22 Brix and 3.3 pH then go totally off of taste.  This year we’ll have to watch that both are on mark at the same time.