Photo: Grant Stanley
You can add Quails’ Gate Estate Winery to
the list of producers that have switched entirely from cork closures to screw
cap.
The winery’s latest releases, which include
two of its premium reserve wines and two dessert wines in 375 ml bottles, all
arrived with screw cap. Winemaker Grant Stanley suggests that the dessert wines
would have been under screw cap even sooner but for the winery’s inability,
until now, to get the required bottles from their supplier in Italy .
I am guessing that Grant had a lot to do
with selling the switch to his boss, winery president Tony Stewart. Grant, who
was born in Vancouver and joined Quails’ Gate in
2003, began his winemaking career in New Zealand .
The New Zealand wine industry began
switching to screw cap more than a decade ago when it seemed like a daring move
to go against the cork tradition. The transition turned out to be easier than
expected. I once asked a New
Zealand winemaker if he was getting any resistance
to screw cap closures. “Only from white males over 50,” he replied.
The initial motive for the switch was to
reduce or eliminate the number of “corked wines” – wines that had taken on
musty aromas and dull flavours from tainted cork. The incidence of corked wines
had become unacceptably high by the early 1990s.
For a time, some wineries switched to
synthetic stoppers. They are still being used even though they are not entirely
satisfactory and even though consumers don’t liked them.
Screw cap closures have been used in the
beverage alcohol industry for a long time for spirits and for cheap wine. That
image was the reason for industry reluctance: would sophisticated consumers buy
bottles with a closure similar to the wines consumed by doorway drinkers?
The answer is yes. Of course, today’s screw
caps for fine wine are a better design that those that sealed bottles in the
1970s.
The new motive behind screw cap closures is
that wines age more slowly and retain their fresh aromas and flavours better.
That is not to suggest screw cap is a
perfect closure – you can get a flawed wine from one of these bottlings if the
winemaking is not quite up to standard. I would not worry about that with wine
from Quails’ Gate.
Not that cork is bad. The cork producers have
improved quality control vastly and the incidence of cork taint is way down.
And red wines that age under cork develop complexities that many find
appealing.
If the wines are good, they will show well
under either closure.
Here are my notes on the new Quails’ Gate
releases.
Quails’
Gate Chardonnay 2010 ($19.99 for 4,387 cases).
Grant Stanley occasionally takes some heat for making the winery’s “regular”
Chardonnay so good that some wonder why they need pay $10 more for the reserve.
The point is there is more of this wine and the style is different: only half
of this Chardonnay is barrel-fermented. The result is a fresh-tasting wine with
a core of sweet citrus-flavoured fruit and very subtle toasty notes of oak in
the background. The balance is elegant and the finish lingers. 90.
Quails’
Gate Merlot 2009 ($24.99 for 2,842 cases).
According to the winemaker, the accumulated heat units in the Okanagan in 2009 were
the highest on record. The result is this super-ripe wine (15.4% alcohol) from
grapes grown on the winery’s West Kelowna
vineyard. This is a powerhouse, beginning aromas of berries, spice and vanilla
and with flavours of blueberry, black currant and blackberry. As the wine
breathes, its fleshy texture emerges and that texture seems to be why Zinfandel-like
alcohol is not apparent. 90-92.
Quails’
Gate Stewart Family Reserve Chardonnay 2010 ($29.99
for 1,142 six-pack cases). The winemaker makes this wine primarily from mature
Clone 95 Chardonnay vines and ferments it in his best barrels. The wine begins
with a touch of bacon fat and tangerine on the nose, leading to rich, buttery
flavours of tangerine and grapefruit. Even though many of the barrels went
through malolactic fermentation, the great acidity of the 2010 vintage has
given this wine a fresh, tangy finish. This is a very complex wine and it
certainly is worth the extra $10. 92.
Quails’
Gate Stewart Family Reserve Pinot Noir 2009 ($45
for 9,618 six packs). The heat of the 2009 vintage produced a wine with more
power and less of the elegance of earlier cooler vintages. Dark in colour and
sensuous in texture, the wine begins with intense fruit aromas (cherries,
strawberries) and a hint of oak toast. On the palate, there are flavours of
black cherry and mocha. 91.
Quails’
Gate Optima Late Harvest Botrytis Affected 2010 ($29.99
for 375 ml; 715 cases). The kind of
botrytis that is called noble rot is rare in the Okanagan because the climate
usually is too dry. Quails’ Gate, however, has been making this wine almost
every year for two decades. The nearby lake provides the early morning moisture
that nourishes the botrytis spores and the Optima grape has thick skins, ideal
for gradual dehydration on the vines. The grapes, in fact, are crushed by foot
because it is not efficient to crush them mechanically. This is an attractive
wine, with aromas and flavours of marmalade, honey and tobacco. 91.
No comments:
Post a Comment