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Tirage


Tirage is the step in making a bottle-fermented sparkling wine when sugar and yeast are added to the blended still wine.
The wine is bottled immediately, most commonly under crown seal.
The yeast then ferment the sugars yielding around 1.5% alcohol and carbon dioxided, creating … the fizz!

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After the grapes are picked, pressed, fermented and matured to make a still white wine known as “Vin Clair” (French) or base wine (English), the wines are blended if desired, and, the final blend is now ready for Tirage.

Tirage is the step in making a bottle-fermented sparkling wine when sugar and strong yeast culture yeast are added to the blended still wine. The wine is bottled immediately, most commonly under crown seal.

The bottles are stacked on their sides.

The yeast then ferment the sugars, 22-24g/L for a Champagne style, yielding carbon dioxided which is trapped in the sealed bottles and generates 6-6.5 bar of pressure. This creates … the fizz!

Around 1.5% alcohol is produced during the second fermentation in bottle.

The second fermentation takes anywhere from a couple of weeks to a few months. You can read a little more about this in the Wine Bites Mag Article “Myth Proven: Why do Magnums of Champagne Taste Better?”.

In the video below you’ll see wine being matured in barrel, blended, and then tiraged. The cover photo of the video shows cloudy bottles with the sugar and yeast adedto them. Pouillon has sealed their bottles with cork and the traditional metal agrave. Many moons ago, before the agrave, they used twine to hold the cork on.

 

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Feeling Thirsty?

Auguste Clape Cornas ‘Renaissance’ 2016

Shiraz/Syrah | Rhône Valley, Cornas

Since 1998, a second Cornas has also been bottled: Renaissance. It’s made from 20 to 25-year-old vines on the Domaine’s best slopes as well as older vines from the lower slopes. An earlier maturing wine than the classique, it should develop for two decades.

Sabon Châteauneuf-du-Pape ‘Cuvée Prestige’ 2017

Rhône Blend | Châteauneuf du Pape, France

“Including more Syrah, the 2017 Châteauneuf Du Pape Prestige is 70% Grenache 20% Mourvèdre, and the rest Mourvèdre and other permitted varieties. While it’s brought up mostly in foudre, it has 10% in demi-muids and 30% in cuve tronconique. With thrilling purity of fruit, notes of black raspberries, blackberries, ground pepper, garrigue, and a distinct sense of minerality, it hits the palate with full-bodied richness, ripe, sweet tannins, a beautifully opulent texture, and a great fini
$150
$143ea in any 3+
$136ea in any 6+
Medium Sweet - 80-100g/l

Pereira D’Oliveiras Boal Colheita 2001

Boal | Portugal, Madeira

A delightful nose combines dark honey with herbal/vegetal, red date, hazelnut, smoke and wood-aged aromas. There’s a range of forest smells (wood, damp foliage, sweet, fresh clean air…), faded plum and a maritime pungency (very much a Boal character) of iodine engendering an umami rich-savouriness. The palate is incredibly subtle and unforced, a wine of natural delicacy where great aged character gives a medium-sweet mid-palate with considerable power. Deliciously sweet jar fruits with lovel
$288
$278ea in any 3+
$268ea in any 6+
Here the expressive nose is spicier and a bit more floral as well with its baked plum, black cherry and soft earth scents. I very much like the texture of the medium-bodied flavors that are more precise if not quite as rich or powerful, all wrapped in a mildly sweet finish where a touch of warmth slowly emerges. While qualitatively similar, the texture of this and the Les Duresses are like night and day. Allen Meadows, Burghound 89-92 Points
$115
$110ea in any 3+
$105ea in any 6+