The Future of Coopering
Transcription
The Future of Coopering
WINEMAKING The Future of Coopering Scientific stave selection could change how barrels are made By Stephen Yafa W ine barrel staves and beautiful women share at least one thing in common: They’re not always what they appear to be. Anyone familiar with American film noir can summon a long list of duplicitous femme fatales from Barbara Stanwyck in “Double Jeopardy” to Gene Tierney in “Laura.” It’s a little trickier for winemakers to name the oak staves that seduced their eyes only to betray their promise of stellar performance—but the pain still can be severe and persistent. The single-vineyard Rutherford Cabernet Sauvignon mysteriously develops a bitter finish after a year in barrel, or the Russian River premium Chardonnay in expensive new French oak begins to resemble a vanilla frappé with butterscotch topping. By then it’s too late to do much but repair the damage by masking and blending. These are not skills that most winemakers feel they should be required to use when purchasing wood that costs upwards of $1,000 per barrel. For at least 700 years, the winemaker’s relationship to oak has been plagued by pretty much the same demon: guesswork. Master coopers in Burgundy, Bordeaux Highlights •T he key criterion for choosing wood for barrels has shifted in recent years from the forest of origin to wood grain. •T onnellerie Radoux has developed a new technology to scan individual staves for polyphenol content, rather than relying on visual inspection of grain. •W ith barrel sales down dramatically, other coopers are likely to adapt their own tannin-measuring techniques to stay competitive. 38 W in es & V i ne s OC TOB E R 20 10 Each barrel stave examined with OakScan’s near infrared spectrometry by Tonnellerie Radoux is imprinted to encode its tannin content and to help match it with similarly tannic staves to assemble in a barrel with specific tannin characteristics. and elsewhere apply their visual expertise to the task of selecting grains, loose to fine, and to making relevant decisions about the quality of the oak they steam and bend into barrel staves—usually after air-drying the wood for three or more years. Most often they make reasonably accurate judgments, but looks can be deceptive. When you consider the extent to which technology has progressed in transforming a vast array of industries, simply eyeballing the expensive wood that will improve or possibly damage your wine seems quaintly primitive at one end of the spectrum, and positively archaic at the other. Genetic scientists at the University of California, Davis, for one example, have applied their advanced technical discoveries in the past two decades to developing clones of Pinot Noir specifically suited to California and Oregon’s AVA profiles, and in the process they have helped to elevate this grape variety from poor cousin to regal empress. Yet the barrels that age these new clones contain tannic components that can be only broadly surmised by staring at the grain. That’s a little like sticking a turbo-thrust Porsche engine into the carcass of an old Studebaker. Well, maybe not quite. Barrel toasting methods have in fact taken a technological leap during the past 10 or so years. Precision wood tannin measurements, however, have lagged behind, and that imprecision is essentially the root cause—excluding contaminants—of dysfunctional barrels that fail to deliver as promised. Tonnellerie Radoux, a cooperage under the umbrella of Seguin-Moreau, has set out in recent months to rectify this imbalance—and not incidentally, also to attract new business. Radoux’s new measurement process, OakScan, allows the cooperage to precisely assess initial oak tannin levels in each stave that will comprise a barrel. Among others, the judges at this year’s Vinitech trade show in Bordeaux were impressed. They awarded OakScan a gold trophy for its major innovation in wine. Based on near-infrared technology, this tool—realized in partnership with INRA, the French National Institute for Agricultural Research—can take 5,000 to 10,000 measurements per day. Once the measurements are completed, staves are marked, traced and sorted according to their grain and their chemical composition. As with most involved technologies, the details of its operation are both mind-numbing and thought-stimulating: That is to say, they can give you a headache on the way to a revelation. The breakthrough here, simply stated, is that scientific measurement of wood tannins has arrived. For years, spectrometric analysis has been applied to everything from winegrapes to milk, and some might justly argue that for coopering it’s long overdue. OakScan’s infrared readings measure interior stave tannins from surface to surface, somewhat like night goggles illuminate darkness. (Continued on page 41) Trifles make perfection, and perfection is no trifle * TONNELLERIE RADOUX USA, INC. PHONE: 707-284-2888 FAX: 707-284-2894 WWW.RADOUXCOOPERAGE.COM * LEONARDO DA VINCI WINEMAKING Barrel Suppliers COMPANY PHONE Alain Fouquet French (707) 265-0996 Cooperage Inc. Artisan Barrels (510) 339-0170 Barrel Builders Inc. (707) 942-4291 Barrel Depot (612) 290-7427 The Barrel Mill/ (800) 201-7125 Oak Infusion Spiral Barrel’s Best - Vadai World (626) 289-8250 Trade Enterprise Barrels Unlimited Inc. (562) 438-9901 T.W. Boswell (707) 255-5900 The Boswell Co. (415) 457-3955 Bouchard Cooperages (707) 257-3582 Brick Packaging LLC (231) 947-4950 Canton Cooperage Co. (707) 836-9742 Carolina Wine Supply (336) 677-6831 Demptos Napa Cooperage (707) 257-2628 Gino Pinto Inc. (609) 561-8199 H & A Financing and Services (707) 812-0195 Heinrich Cooperage (707) 738-8670 Heritage Barrels LLC (775) 473-9970 I D L Process Solutions Inc. (604) 538-2713 J & J Wholesale (707) 935-9834 WEBSITE COMPANY PHONE WEBSITE Kelvin Cooperage G.W. Kent Inc. artisanbarrels.com Keystone Cooperage barrelbuilders.com Mel Knox Barrel Broker barreldepot.com Mistral Barrels Inc. Nadalie USA infusionspiral.com Oak Tradition Oceans of Wine Supply Inc. vadaiwinebarrels.com Pickering Winery Supply barrelsunlimited.com Premier Wine Cask twboswell.com Quality Wine Barrels Co. boswellcompany.com Rich Xiberta USA Inc. bouchardcooperages.com Seguin Moreau Napa brickpackaging.com Cooperage Inc. cantoncooperage.com StaVin Inc. carolinawinesupply.com Tonelería Magreñán demptosusa.com Tonelería Quercus ginopinto.com Tonnellerie Bel Air (502) 366-5757 kelvincooperage.com heinrich.com.au (335) 564-19690tonnellerie-berger.com alainfouquet.com halocation.com heritagebarrels.com idlconsulting.com barrelbuyers.com (734) 572-1300 gwkent.com (724) 883-4952 keystonecooperage.com (415) 751-6306 knoxbarrels.com (707) 996-5600 mistralbarrels.com (707) 942-9301 nadalie.com (707) 318-0002 oaktradition.com (732) 240-4993 oceansofwine.com (415) 474-1588 winerystuff.com (800) 227-5625 premierwinecask.com (805) 925-9903 qualitywinebarrels.com (707) 795-1800 xiberta.com (707) 252-3408 seguinmoreaunapa.com (415) 331-7849 stavin.com (707) 535-9931 www magrenan.es (707) 746-5704 vinoak.com (707) 987-8905 tonnellerie-bel-air.fr/ index.php/en_us/accueil Tonnellerie Berger & Sons Tonnellerie Berthomieu (Groupe Charlois) Tonnellerie Boutes (707) 968-0664 tonnellerie-berthomieu.com (510) 799-1518 boutes.com For more on barrel suppliers, see Wines & Vines’ 2010 Buyer’s Guide in print or online at winesandvinesbuyersguide.com. 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[email protected] • Phone: 1-888-422-8683 • Fax: 402-465-1220 www.snydernet.com 40 W in e s & V i ne s O C TOB E R 20 10 WINEMAKING Barrel Suppliers (continued) COMPANY PHONE WEBSITE Tonnellerie de Jarnac USA (707) 332-4524 tonnellerie-de jarnac-16.com Tonnellerie Ermitage (Groupe Charlois) Tonnellerie Garonnaise Tonnellerie Leroi Tonnellerie Mercier Tonnellerie Ô Tonnellerie Quintessence (707) 968-0664 tonnellerie-ermitage.com (510) 799-1518 garonnaise.com (707) 508-5006 leroibarrels.com (707) 967-9645 tonnellerie-mercier.com (707) 752-6350 tonnellerieo.com (707) 935-3452 tonnelleriequintes sence.com Tonnellerie Radoux USA Tonnellerie Remond Tonnellerie Saury Tonnellerie Sirugue Tonnellerie Sylvain Trust International Corp. VinOak USA World Cooperage (707) 284-2888 radouxcooperage.com (707) 935-2176 (707) 944-1330 sauryusa.com sirugue.com (707) 259-5344 (561) 540-4043 barrelmakers.com (707) 746-5704 vinoak.com (707) 255-5900 worldcooperage.com For more on barrel suppliers, see Wines & Vines’ 2010 Buyer’s Guide in print or online at winesandvinesbuyersguide.com. (Continued from page 38) They produce graphic simulations that look to an untrained eye like ink beads splattered across a blank page. With a little training, you quickly see the patterns of tannins that emerge, allowing you to gauge the differences between heavy and light tannic satura- ÉLEVÉ EN FRANCE tion in each oak stave. As expected, tight-grain wood produces a signature pattern that contrasts with looser grain wood. But two tight-grain staves with precisely the same forest origin, aging regimen and so forth can display noticeably dissimilar tannic concentrations undetected by even the most experienced naked eye. “Forest sourcing and grain are no longer the sole quality criteria we use in order to select our oak wood,” says Nicolas Mähler-Besse, general manager of Tonnellerie Radoux USA in Santa Rosa, Calif. “Using OakScan, we are able to code each stave from A to F as to its level of tannins, and fine-tune the process of barrel making so that we can choose a combination of staves to meet the client’s specific needs. Do you want to add structure or soften the grape tannins? How old are your vines? How long do you plan to age? If eight to 10 months, we’d recommend medium grain for faster extraction. The longer the aging, the tighter we’d suggest. And we’d go over the toasting options to increase or decrease the level of tannins. That’s what any cooperage might take you through, of course. The difference at Radoux is that we eliminate the uncertainty factor.” By measuring the polyphenolic content in oak wood, he adds, Radoux can determine a stave’s exact tannic level and code it accordingly. “We avoid the variability you get with staves that look the same but are actually not. Once you know the initial concentration of tannins, you can toast with a more accurate understanding of the impact that every barrel will have on the wine it will age,” he says. Flavor and aromatic consistency from year to year—as fundamental to winemaking as fermentation— also benefit from barrel control. It can be argued that OakScan’s contribution to the artful science of winemaking has been long in coming and also has COOPERED IN C ALIFORNIA Visit www.tonnellerieo.com to learn about our French oak barrels and schedule a private tour of our new California cooperage. 531 Stone Road, Benicia, CA 94510 | 707.752.6350 office | 707.746.7471 fax | [email protected] Win es & Vin e s O C TO B E R 20 10 41 WINEMAKING Polyphenol index Stave Scans Organized by Pallet 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Code article: MG27105 Code article: MF27095 0 500 1,000 1,500 Code article: MF27095 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 Number of staves scanned, Aug. 9, 2009 0 The circles represent individual staves scanned by OakScan during a in five-hour period and reflect their polyphenol (tannin) content. Vertical lines separate pallet loads, and “code article” notations represent two different oak origins. been inevitable. It follows a progression that began at least 15 years ago in France, when cooperages first shifted their sourcing emphasis away from trees to grains. While most winemakers, myself included, still prefer to sit around and shoot the bull about the differences between Allier, Tronçais, Nevers and Vosges forest oak, 42 W in es & V i ne s O C TOB E R 20 10 the barrel industry, with noted exceptions like Ermitage, evolved to a granular method of wood selection. As Alan Goldfarb chronicled (“The Forest or the Trees,” December 2008) in these pages, forest designations have become somewhat elusive in any case. He quoted François Peltereau-Villeneuve, the president and CEO of Seguin Moreau Napa, about the hazards of designating oak by origin: “It’s not specific enough… because there’s no forest in Nevers.” A French governmental movement began in earnest to curtail the practice of labeling barrels by forest. And more to the point, uniformity and quality of grain trumped geographical source in purchasing wood. It still does, of course, and will perhaps become even more critical a determining factor as tools like OakScan take precedence over visual inspection. Other cooperages are likely to follow Radoux’s lead in the coming years. Barrel sales are way off—as much as 40% since 2006, according to Christy Thomas, senior sales manager of Tonnelierie Saury—and that, in turn, puts pressure on cooperages to deliver precisely as requested. Master coopers at Saury, at least for the moment, continue to gauge tannic content in stave oak by looking at grain; there are three classifications: medium fine, fine and ultra fine, from looser to tighter. Saury buys from five forests in central France. Recently merged with Groupe Charlois, which owns Ermitage and three other cooperages, it prides itself on cutting and forming the wood into staves at its own facility, and in being focused obsessively on grain selection to produce barrels that build midpalate and extend the wine’s finish. In short, Saury represents traditional coopering augmented by impressive attention to detail. Ermitage is even more traditional. Sales director Vincent Garry explains that his cooperage continues to designate barrels by forest. Are these cooperages, and many others like them, still fighting with muskets in the age of automatic weapons? How long, and with what level of success, will they continue to make key barrel-assembly decisions based on the practiced gaze of veteran craftsmen? The genuine appeal of that old-fashioned approach probably shouldn’t be underestimated. We are talking, after all, about winemaking, not widget manufacture. Technology may be a beneficial asset to the process of stave selection, but it runs counter to the aura of romance and intuitive artistry that attaches itself to the transformation of fruit into fermented beverage. And one more thing: These cooperages produce some of the best barrels in the world, one eye-scan at a time. Nowhere, perhaps, is vino techno-speak as vividly exhibited as in Radoux’s PowerPoint presentation of its OakScan spectrometer. The first clue arrives on the first slide: “Numerous factors of ellagitannins WINEMAKING Index of Tannins by Barrel 70 Selection 1 Selection 2 Selection 3 60 Polyphenol index content variability.” From there we move to Graphic A: “Acid Hydrolysis of Castagin & Vescalagin,” with text supported by images of long molecular chains. Sixty-two slides later, we’ve romped through reactions with ethanol, leaped from vibrational spectroscopy to polychromatic radiation, and landed on SN1-type nucleophilic substitution, with a minor mention of epiacutissimins, ethylvescalagins, and malavidin via its carbon 8. It’s not exactly a sizzling elevator speech. If it were, it would rally winemakers to use OakScan to homogenize oak tannin content in barrels of the same type. In other words, to leave no tannic level to chance. Mähler-Besse says, “After seasoning— wind, rain, all that—we want to find out what has been the impact of the elements on the wood after three years. Once we know that, we go to the winemaker and fine-tune each barrel to what the winemaker wants—softer tannins, all that. The best cooper for you is a person with the right tools and the right wood to get you the barrel you need.” Selecting tight grain to achieve a low level of tannin makes sense to everyone, he adds. “But you may have an accident, because our research shows that 20% of 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 Number of Staves Radoux sorts staves into Selections 1, 2 and 3, for lowest to highest tannin levels. Each vertical bar represents a barrel and its tannin range. Two tight-grain staves from the same forest can display noticeably dissimilar tannic concentrations. tight-grain staves actually have a high level of tannins. With your normal toasting you may wind up with a high-impact barrel, not the one you expected or wanted.” If in fact it lives up to its billing, OakScan creates a direct link between winemaker and wood; it gets inside the head of one and the body of the other to create barrels that reduce the margin for error to a mere blip. As with any technology, early adopters who scout the frontier sometimes pay dearly for their eagerness to explore new terrain. Still, the rewards often justify the gamble, and OakScan will surely seem like a wise bet to many wineries trying to boost their odds for producing consistent vintages. Stephen Yafa produces limited release Pinot Noir in the Russian River Valley for his winery, Segue Cellars, seguecellars.com. To comment on this article, e-mail [email protected]. Patent # 7357069 Inspired Design Our spirals made from Premium, American or French Oak deliver 100% new barrel flavor (8 months) in as little as six weeks. Now you can boast authentic oak flavor using neutral barrels or tanks – with rapid, controllable and predictable results. www.InfusionSpiral.com (800) 201-7125 West Coast–New York–Texas Len Napolitano (805) 712-4471 [email protected] Four toast levels Economical Sustainable Time-saving Win es & Vin es O C TO B E R 20 10 43