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Home Story Index Wine Wizard I have added some complexity by blending different kits and using French wood barrels, but I haven’t resolved the tannin issue...
| I have added some complexity by blending different kits and using French wood barrels, but I haven’t resolved the tannin issue... |
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Issue:
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Jun/Jul 2007
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Bringing up tannins
I have been making wine kits for three years and want to boost
complexity and tannin levels. I have added some complexity by blending
different kits and using French wood barrels, but I haven’t resolved
the tannin issue. How can I add more tannin?
N. Miyares
Lansdale, Pennsylvania
The best source of tannin for quality wine is always the original
grapes, and to a lesser extent, the oak barrels in which you store your
wine. If you cannot either grow or obtain grapes that give you enough
tannin for the style or wine type you’re trying to achieve, you
certainly may experiment with some of the tannin preparations available
through winery supply companies. Derived either from grape or oak
tannin, they are marketed to and sometimes used by commercial
winemakers with challenges like yours.
Though I’m not a
tannin user in my own wines (being blessed with great California
vineyards helps), from what I have been able to glean from the industry
“grapevine,” it does seem like the current tannin products on the
market are constantly changing and are increasingly being made with
fine winemaking in mind. Much like non-coopered oak products, tannin
preparations seem like they have increased in quality over the years
and though never a complete replica of or substitute for the real
thing, can deliver some benefits to a winemaker. I would strongly
caution you to be conservative in your approach, however. A little
added tannin can go a very long way; even though quality and solubility
of these products have increased, they still are powerful molecules
that can have a big sensory impact, perhaps a negative one, on a wine.
I suggest you start by doing a little research yourself, beginning with
your local winemaking supply source and then branching onto the
Internet. Suppliers like Laffort and Ferco and their U.S.-based
distributors like Scott Labs (www.scottlab.com) and Gusmer
(www.gusmerenterprises.com) carry product information about their
offerings.
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