Photo: Karl Kaiser (courtesy Brock University)
Karl Kaiser, the man who made the Icewine that put Canada on
the world wine map, passed away on November 22 at the age of 76.
Karl was a co-founder in 1974 of Inniskillin Winery with
partner Donald Ziraldo. He was one of a handful of Ontario winemakers to begin
making Icewine in 1983. Inniskillin stunned the wine world with a 1989 Icewine
that won the top award at VinExpo in 1991. Within a few years, Canadian
Icewines were famous around the world, giving a credibility to Canadian wines
that was previously lacking.
“Karl was a true pioneer for the Canadian industry,” said
Donald Triggs, the former chief executive of Vincor International (now Arterra
Wines Canada), which subsequently acquired Inniskillin. “He gave the industry so many firsts and
always in such a generous, kind and gracious way.”
I recounted Karl’s history in my 2001 book, Icewine: The Complete Story. The book is
out of print but Karl’s story deserves to be repeated.
Born in Austria in
1941, Kaiser intended to be a teacher. He experienced vineyard work while in
the novitiate of a Cistercian monastery there and later, while helping in a
vineyard owned by the grandfather of his future wife.
He emigrated to Canada
in 1969, planning to teach science after earning a chemistry degree and doing
post-graduate work in microbiology. It was a choice of studies that equipped
him well when his career switched to winemaking.
Kaiser arrived in
Canada with a European wine palate and, dismayed at the sweet, foxy Canadian
table wines, he planted a small home vineyard.
While buying vines in 1971 at a nursery run by the Ziraldo family,
Kaiser loudly disparaged Ontario wine as unpalatable.
The combative Donald
Ziraldo, a University of Guelph agriculture graduate seven years younger than
Kaiser, loyally defended domestic wines. Kaiser made his point by returning
with a well-made bottle of his home-vintaged Chelois rosé. Ziraldo conceded that better wines could be
made in Ontario and proposed that he and Kaiser should make them. The cottage
winery they opened in 1975 was the first winery licensed in Ontario in nearly
fifty years. Its success inspired a wave of estate producers in all Canadian wine
regions and the quality of Canadian wine began improving.
In the 1970s, the
avuncular Kaiser was one of the best-trained professionals among the
German-speaking winemakers in Ontario. The other transplanted winegrowers from
Austria and Germany gathered often at his well-equipped Inniskillin laboratory
to share ideas and ambitions.
In the summer of 1983, over several bottles of
wine uncorked by the ever-hospitable Kaiser, the conversation turned to
icewine. Kaiser and Ewald Reif, a German-born grower who owned a vineyard
adjacent to Inniskillin, agreed to set aside vines for icewine. So did the
Austrian winemakers then working at the nearby Hillebrand Estate winery and at
the Pelee Island winery in southwestern Ontario. Only Pelee Island and
Hillebrand were able to save some grapes from the birds to make small icewine
vintages in 1983. All deployed nets the following year.
Kaiser, who made about
900 bottles (375 ml. half bottles) in 1984, ultimately outdistanced his
friends. By the vintage of 1998, he made or supervised the production of about
360,000 half bottles of icewine, undoubtedly a global record for any single
winemaker.
Kaiser’s seminal
contribution has not been the volume he has made but the quality. His 1984
icewine -- the label reads “EISWEIN Vidal (ICE WINE)” and it retailed for $18.50 when released on
December 1, 1985 -- was the only Canadian wine to win a gold medal at the 1986
InterVin International competition in Toronto.
The Grand Prix in Bordeaux five
years later, the first truly significant international medal won by any
Canadian winery, firmly established Inniskillin’s reputation.
Kaiser used the French
hybrid, Vidal, for icewine largely because it was grown in Inniskillin’s Brae
Burn vineyard adjacent to the winery. “It wasn’t totally a coincidence,” he
adds, “because I considered the Vidal would have the right properties. It is
fruity. It has a tough skins and hangs on well to the vines. It has relatively
decent acidity.”
He considered several other varieties,
including Seyval Blanc, which also were grown nearby, but none offered Vidal’s
perfect package. Over time, Kaiser has
refined his view of what the ideal icewine grape must possess. “It has to be
aromatic because a sweet wine with no aromatic overtones is plain sugar water,”
he says. “It has to be late ripening. It has to have relatively high acidity
and it has to have physiological properties to be durable against disease.”
Besides Riesling and Vidal among the white varieties, Kaiser also has embraced
Chenin Blanc, a fruity, aromatic variety “with the skin and stem of a tank.”
When Inniskillin
established a second Canadian winery in the Okanagan Valley in 1994, Kaiser
obtained Chenin Blanc for the 1994 and 1995 vintages for icewine. The variety
was planted in Niagara and in 1998 Kaiser made a Chenin Blanc icewine there as
well.
At first, Kaiser took
advantage of the frigid Canadian winters to make spectacularly big wines. His
1986 Vidal icewine was made from grapes that were deeply frozen to -17ºC when
pressed and the juice was 55º Brix, a honey-like sweetness. Kaiser concluded
that the practical limit is -14ºC; below that, the berries are so solidly
frozen that the juice yield is minimal and the excessively sweet must is almost
impossible to ferment.
In the bitterly cold
vintage of December, 1996 the grapes again were picked at -17ºC and Kaiser
broke two presses at Inniskillin in a near-futile effort to extract juice. “We
had to wait until it was minus fourteen before we saw juice coming from the
press,” he says. He now prefers a picking temperature of about -11ºC because it
yields juice with 42º to 45º Brix.
The longevity of his
Vidal icewines has delighted him. The 1986 “is one of the ones that is holding
up amazingly,” Kaiser said in 1999. “There is almost no sign of oxidation. I
don’t know how long Vidal lives. Our 1984 is still clean as a whistle.”
While the homespun
Kaiser honed the technique of making icewine, it was his partner, Donald
Ziraldo, who sold them. Ziraldo, who has received the Order of Canada, one of
his nation’s highest awards for achievement, made his first trip to Vinexpo in
1989. This Bordeaux exposition properly known as Le Salon Mondial du Vin et Des
Spiriteux, has become the most important of the international wine fairs. In
Ziraldo’s luggage were samples of Inniskillin’s 1987 Vidal icewine, another
powerhouse almost as concentrated as the previous vintage.
“We didn’t have our
own booth and there was no other Canadian winery there,” Kaiser recalls. But
Ziraldo, with his easy talent for mixing with the rich and famous, found
influential people to taste the icewine, including an individual who identified
himself as a personal friend of Jean Vidal, the breeder of the grape. “He said,
when he sat down and tasted the icewine, that he would rate the wine among the
five best sweet wines in the world,” Kaiser recounts. This extravagant
compliment spurred Ziraldo to enter an
icewine at the 1991 Vinexpo.
At Kaiser’s
suggestion, Ziraldo took the 1989 Vidal. It was not nearly as voluptuously
sweet as the previous vintages, with only about 160 grams of unfermented sugar,
but with a hint of botrytis, it possessed more finesse and complexity. “It is
very unusual for Vidal to get botrytis because it has a tough skin,” Kaiser
says. “But we had this warm Indian summer, with fog in the morning.” This was
ideal for the development of noble rot and the Vidal grapes had a ten to
fifteen per cent infection.
Kaiser had been
pleased with that wine from the beginning and believed it was Inniskillin’s
best shot at winning a medal. As it happened, Kaiser, ever the scientist, went
instead to a technical conference in Seattle rather than Vinexpo, sending his
daughter Andrea to Bordeaux with the Inniskillin delegation. She called from
France with the stunning news that Inniskillin had won not only one of just
seventeen gold medals but what she termed “the big medal.” Her mother, Silvia,
thought it was more like “the Academy award.” The publicity sent Inniskillin’s
icewine sales rocketing.
“We were incrementally
increasing our production of icewine every year,” Kaiser says. He continued to
be conservative in quantity, however, until the 1995 vintage after Inniskillin
had been acquired by Vincor International Ltd.,
Canada’s largest wine group. “It became a corporate objective to make a
lot of icewine,” he says.
That year, Kaiser made
about five thousand cases or 60,000 half bottles of icewine. Production rose to
sixteen thousand cases in 1996, then declined to four thousand in 1997 when the
harvest was delayed by warm weather until January 1998 and most of the grapes
were lost. But 1998, with favorable harvest conditions in both Ontario and
British Columbia, he was responsible for
making an astounding thirty thousand cases for Inniskillin or for Vincor under
the Jackson-Triggs label.
“We have more icewine
under this roof than all of Germany makes together,” Kaiser asserted after that
vintage. [When Kaiser retired] Vincor delegated its huge icewine production to
the team of winemakers employed at half dozen Canadian wineries the company
owns, each with its own icewine program.
Karl’s achievements extended far beyond Icewine, as was
recounted this week by Brock University, Canada’s leading winemaking school. He
was a 1974 graduate of that university.
Here are excerpts from Brock’s tribute:
Kaiser’s impact on the Niagara and Canadian
wine industry is unmatched, and it was through his guidance and drive that
Brock created the Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute (CCOVI) and
the Oenology and Viticulture (OEVI) undergraduate program in the 1990s, said
CCOVI Director Debbie Inglis.
“Karl truly believed that a successful wine
region needed a research institute to support it,” said Inglis. “And he was
passionate about passing his knowledge on to the next generation.”
Kaiser’s love of wine research and his
connection to Brock, where he graduated from in 1974, was something he took
pride in.
“I always felt very honoured by being a part
of Brock’s CCOVI as an affiliate,” Kaiser wrote in his final email to CCOVI
Communications Specialist Sarah Moore recently. “It always has been great
enjoyment being part of CCOVI in this way.”
Born in Austria in 1941, Kaiser immigrated
to Canada in 1969 with his wife Silvia. After graduating from Brock’s chemistry
program in 1974, Kaiser was experimenting with winemaking, which led to a
connection with Donald Ziraldo, a greenhouse owner who was providing Kaiser
with grapes for his hobby.
“Receiving the first Ontario winery licence
since 1920, Kaiser and Ziraldo launched Inniskillin Winery in 1975, and began
making wines that would ultimately put Canada on the world map for the
industry. The difference between what Inniskillin was making and what was being
produced in Ontario was the use of Vitis vinifera wine grapes rather than lower
quality juice grapes.
“It was a huge change for what was known in
the industry at the time. But it was through their initiatives that the
industry started to transform and we gained notoriety and respect,” Inglis
said.
The winemaker was given the Order of Ontario
in 1993, was awarded an honorary doctorate from Brock in 1994, and was the
recipient of Brock’s Distinguished Alumni Award in 2005 and the Faculty of Math
and Science Distinguished Alumni Award in 2009. Kaiser was also honoured with
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s 50th Anniversary Golden Jubilee Award and the
Ontario Wine Society Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005.
“He was never comfortable being in the
limelight and taking acknowledgement for all that he achieved and what he put
forward,” said Inglis. “He was a very understated individual.”
It was Kaiser’s desire for wine research and
knowledge that, together with other industry pioneers, led to the development
of CCOVI in 1996. He was part of the industry group that developed the concept for
the institute that year, as well as the OEVI undergrad program that followed in
1997.
Kaiser developed the OEVI wine chemistry
course and was its first instructor in 1998. He became a CCOVI Professional
Affiliate and returned on a regular basis to give lectures and seminars, the
videos of which are still among the program’s most downloaded.
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