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Élévage


The French use the term élévage with reference to both wine and children! It translates to “A good upbringing” or “Being well raised”.

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The French use the term élévage with reference to both wine and children! It translates to “A good upbringing” or bon élévage “Being well raised”.

For kids, this covers life before adulthood begins.

For wine, it’s the ageing or maturation period of time following the initial alcoholic fermentation right up until the point of bottling. A good maker will be constantly tasting their wine and deciding what they can do to develop the wine. It may be that the wine could do with a little air through a process like racking to help bring it on. The aim here might be to evolve the flavours and aromas from raw and primary to more sophisticated developed ones or to develop the tannins, refining them and improving the texture / mouthfeel.

The wine might be looking a little tired and need a hit of sulphur to freshen it up.

The wine may have enough oak influence from newer wood and need to be transferred to another vessel.

It may simply be a matter of the status quo, patience and waiting.

Wine is not always linear or predictable and often curve balls are thrown our way. It’s important to be agile in your approach to making a wine and work with the cards you’re dealt. This is when the knowledge, experience, wisdom is you will of the maker comes to the fore.

In the Wine Bites Mag article: “Bathtub Winemaking Day 449 – Élévage: Raising the Kids 2017 Wine Decoded Shiraz” I explore the approach to élévage we took making our very own wine.

Some wines are rushed through this process for commercial reasons and are bottled raw, with a bit of puppy fat. Come commercial wine can be released within 2-3 months of harvest.  Others are allowed have a more thorough élévage and are much more ready to drink at the end of this process.

Rioja is an extreme example of insane differences in élévage for a red wine. Some Rioja is bottled 12-18months after harvest. In contrast R. López de Heredia bottle their Viña Tondonia Reserva after around 6 years in barrel and then hold it in bottle for another 4-6 years before releasing it to the market. Both of these cases are not necessarily about one wine being better than the other, they are a stylistic interpretation of the fruit in the hands of the maker, one wine fresher the other fully developed.

Weingut Nikolaihof is an extreme example of the exceptionally long aging of a white wine, Riesling, in barrel, aged for as long as 25 years in large old casks before bottling.

The most extreme examples of the wine world being the fortified wines of Madeira, aged Sherries of Spain and the divine fortifieds of Rutherglen that may see decades even centuries in barrel before bottling.

Synonyms:
Ageing, Maturation
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Feeling Thirsty?

The 2016 Morey St Denis 1er Cru Vieilles Vignes, which comes from vines planted as far back as the 1930s, suffered a lot of millerandage so that the yields was 25 hectoliters per hectare. It is matured one-third new oak and one-third whole bunch fruit. It has an introspective bouquet at first and then gradually unfolds to reveal enticing blackberry, briary and cold stone scents—all very sophisticated and poised. The palate is medium-bodied with filigree tannin, a disarming sense of symmetry an
$409
$394ea in any 3+
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Massolino “Parafada” Barolo 2021

Nebbiolo | Serralunga d'Alba, Barolo

Planted in 1957, Parafada was the Massolino family’s first prime parcel in Serralunga. It is still home to their oldest vines. Legend has it that Giovanni Massolino planted these vines when he was just 17 years old! Today these 69-year-old vines produce smaller berries with more concentrated fruit as a result. Located between Gabutti and Lazzarito, Massolino’s 1.2-hectare parcel rises steeply from 300 to 340 metres above sea level and faces due south, catching the full face of the sun. The a
$276
$266ea in any 3+
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Pyramid Valley North Canterbury Pinot Noir 2020

Pinot Noir | South Island, New Zealand

Showing much more freshness & red fruit profile than the atypical 2021, sits fine and velvety on the tannin profile. Long and even. Plush and refreshing. Gently spiced. Elegant flavourful. Harmonious and integrated. Layered complexity with eathiness and a well balanced stalk use adding intrigue. A lovely perfume dancing over the top.
$68
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Barrel Selection "AP: 15 21. The 2020er Wehlener Sonnenuhr Riesling Auslese ** - 24 - was made from 40% botrytized fruit picked at 115° Oechsle and was fermented down to noble-sweet levels of residual sugar (120 g/l). It offers a still rather backward nose made of smoky elements and only faint scents of melon, pineapple, apricot, and herbs. The wine is hugely racy and beautifully focused on the palate and leaves a mouthwatering feel of herbs, faint flavors of subtly exotic fruits, and spices in
$95
$90ea in any 3+
$85ea in any 6+