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Oxidative


The term oxidative, describes winemaking techniques/handling that exposes the wine to oxygen to help develop it and build complexity.

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The term oxidative, describes winemaking techniques/handling that exposes the wine to oxygen to help develop it and build complexity.

This is the opposite of reductive, describes winemaking techniques that protect juice and maturing wine from exposure to oxygen, typically in order to maintain freshness and fruit characters.

At different stages in the winemaking process, the maker can choose to handle the wine either reductively or oxidatively to guide the wine towards the desired style. For example, the maker may handle the unfermented juice oxidatively and the maturing wine reductively pre-bottling.

Oxidative and reductive handling can dramatically impact the aromas, flavours, and, texture of the wine.

Like pretty much all winemaking there is a broad spectrum of approaches from super reductive to highly oxidative.

Head to the Wine Bites Mag Article “Wine Decoded Tasting Revolution: Bite 3 – Freshness & Development” for a deep dive into stages of the winemaking process and how oxygen may be used.

Wines of the world that are exposed to the greatest amount of oxygen include sherries (both under a flor and direct exposure), fortifieds like Madeira.

The risks of handling wine oxidatively include the development of volatile acidity, and, the oxidation of the wine destroying the fruit characters, oxidizing the alcohol (ethanol), converting it to aldehyde which can dominate the wine and give it a hard finish.

Just remember, a wine that looks like it has been oxidatively made should still have a good core of fruit and a balanced level of freshness. Exposure to oxygen will have been deliberate and done with care.

An oxidized wine pushes exposure past the limit that the wine can handle. Oxidized wine will be flat, tired, lack freshness and a core of fruit, and may, be volatile, browner in colour and have a hard finish due to the presence of aldehyde.

 

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Bodegas Luis Pérez Fino Caberrubia NV Saca III

Palomino | Jerez de la Frontera, Spain

Caberrubia is Bodegas Luis Pérez's answer to NV Grand Cru Champagne! 'Caberrubia' is the name of a local bird which has returned to these vineyards since they were converted to organics. All natural alcohol. It's saline, iodine, balsamic, deeply chalky, deeply savoury, rich with balancing bitterness. Drinking it is like skiing down an intermediate slope, deep and winding but not too rushed, there's heaps of time to explore the chalk and every delicate switch and fold of texture and flavour.
$91
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Les Preuses is probably taken from the word “Perreuse” (stone), the name given to the ancient Roman road which ran below the current vineyard. Made for ageing thanks to a dense, compact, clay-rich soil resting on a limestone bed. The 2020 Chablis Grand Cru Les Preuses is, if anything, even more electric than the formidable Valmur, wafting from the glass with notions of citrus oil, freshly baked bread, oyster jus and wet stones. Full-bodied, satiny and chiseled, it’s racy and intense
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Combining richness with precision, an incredible texture & complexity make it almost impossible to describe this wine! The hallmarks of greatness. This wine truly takes me to a happy place. Tasted next to Krug NV, a very good bottle at that, the Egly was inspirational. The élévage of this wine is simply perfect. Taking the time to mature base wines before blending and bottling makes an incredible difference to fruit of this quality, adding 70 months on lees has brought this wine together b
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This has long been one of Olivier Lamy’s finest reds, year in, year out. It comes from just under a hectare of vines on the lower slope of Derrière chez Edouard where the soils have more clay. The vines here are more than 50 years old and gift very small, ripe and intensely flavoured bunches that produce a deep and layered wine with pure, dark cherry fruit and plenty of spice. Again, Lamy worked with roughly 50% whole bunches and did not sulphur the wines at all until bottling. Another barg
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