Photo: Summerhill's Eric von Krosigk (l) and Ezra Cipes
Summerhill Pyramid Winery will be releasing an organic
sparkling wine after winemaker Eric von Krosigk figured out how to get organic liqueur d’expĂ©dition and liqueur tirage.
Most of Summerhill’s wines are
organic. It was a matter of considerable frustration that its sparkling wines –
the major portion of the winery’s production – could not also be labelled
organic due to a technicality.
In sparkling wine production, the
liqueur tirage is the sugar solution added to each bottle to trigger secondary
fermentation. The liqueur d’expĂ©dition is the sugar solution used to balance
and top up the wines when they are disgorged.
Eric found that organic cane sugar
is readily available but not acceptable. “Organic cane sugars are all
brown and they all have molasses,” he says. “The wine tastes like it was stored
in a garden hose for the summer.”
“We finally found an organic sugar from France that is grape
sugar,” says Summerhill president Ezra Cipes. As we stand in the winery’s
massive new cellar, he gestures: “This is the first batch of sparkling wine
made with organic sugar. We will finally be able to have the organic logo on
the wine.”
The 20,000 square-foot cellar and warehouse was built last
year, part of a major expansion to accommodate the many visitors the winery welcomes.
“We certainly are the most visited winery in BC,” Ezra
believes. He estimates that Summerhill
averages between 1,000 and 3,000 visit0rs daily throughout the year.
“We have long since outgrown our quite large wine shop,” he
says. A gazebo tasting room was added last year. Two other tasting rooms are
being added this season, along with tastings for those who tour the winery’s
pyramid. As well, the winery has an expanded picnic area where visitors can buy
deli lunches and wine by the glass. That supplements the winery restaurant for
visitors who do not have time for elaborate dinners and lunches.
“One of the big opportunities is the lunch,” Ezra says. “Some
people want to sit down and have a wine-paired multi-course meal; and some just
want a sandwich before they get on to the next winery. So our picnic menu will
be a nice option.”
And there is more. “We are also introducing a number of
remote tasting locations in the garden and by the heritage house for pre-booked
groups and tours,” Ezra says. “I think that will make a huge difference in the
experience of coming here.”
The winery is also planning a demonstration area in the
cellar where the sparkling wine process can be explained, no doubt with a glass
of bubble in hand.
“We want to set up a little interpretive display around the
disgorgement of wines, so that people can understand it,” Ezra says. “I think
it will impress upon them how much investment is made in sparkling wine when
they see how much has to be cellared; and how it sits so long. We have 6,000
square feet, absolutely packed with bottles.”
That is one-third of the new cellar. The other two-thirds
accommodates up to 900 barrels and a number of oak fermenters, including nine
oak fermenters, each with a capacity of 10,000 litres. These were shipped from
Italy, disassembled in the fall of 2014 and were put together by a team of
coopers from the supplier.
These are likely to change the style of some of Summerhill’s
red wines. “We have just started
releasing wines from the 10,000 litre casks and they are exciting,” Ezra says. “The
idea is to bottle them younger. We fermented our 2015 Foch in the large tanks.
Instead of transferring it to barrels and letting it sit, we bottled it young
and let it bottle age. Those tanks impart a nice quality of vibrancy and
youthful style.”
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