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Residual Sugar [RS]


Residual Sugar refers to the amount of sugar left in a wine when the alcoholic fermentation has been completed and any additions made prior to bottling the wine.

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Residual Sugar refers to the amount of sugar left in a wine when the alcoholic fermentation has been completed and any additions made prior to bottling the wine.  The amount of residual sugar in a wine will depend on the style being produced. A Dry wine has only non-fermentable sugar left. Typically 2g/L or less. A sparkling wine or off-dry wine might have just a few g/L of sugar left. Then we move all the way up to dessert wines and fortified wines that may contain several hundred grams of sugar per litre.

In the end, it’s all about ensuring the wine is balanced and has a clean finish no matter what amount of sugar it contains. For a high acid low pH Riesling, a few extra grams of Residual Sugar will help to balance potentially searing acidity without giving any apparent sugar sweetness.

Bear in mind fruit flavours and alcohol can also have apparent sweetness.

There are two methods for managing Residual Sugar in a wine:

  1. Sugar can be added back to achieve the desired balance, for example, Champagne. Sometimes sugar is added to make up for a lack of fruit flavour, giving perceived sweetness. Think low-quality fizz, mega high volume commercial white and even red wines.
  2. Fermentation can be stopped through the addition of sulphur, refrigeration, and, fortification. For example German and Alsatian whites, Sauternes and many of the fortified wines from around the world.

Different regions around the world have different scales / naming systems to help you understand the possible amount of residual sugar in a wine.

In Champagne Brut refers to dry, but may have up to 12g/L residual sugar, with the residual sugar being added at disgorgement in the liqueur expedition. Brut Nature, Brut Sauvage, and, Brut Zero, are used interchangeably for wines with no added sugar or Zero Dosage and we expected to have less than 2g/L RS.

The same principals apply for German Riesling named Trocken (Dry), Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese and Trockenbeerenauslese where the residual sugar levels increase as we go along the scale.

One trick to working out how sweet a German Riesling could be is to look at the Alcohol. If it is high 10% and above the wine will be less sweet. If it is low 6.5-8% the wine will be sweeter.

Fruit for sparkling wine is often picked at between 180g/L and 200g/L sugar. Fruit for a table wine between 200-250g/L. When it comes to sweet wines like Sauternes, Muscats, Topaques, and, German Rieslings like Trockenbeeranauslese we see fruit picked with sugar levels well over 300g/L.

A mini Wine Bite to test your tastebuds

  1. Grab 3 glasses.
  2. A bottlle of Dry wine with no Residual sugar in it.
  3. Pour around 50mls of wine into each glass.
  4. Do nothing to the first glass.
  5. Add 1/4 of a teaspoon of white sugar to the second glass. Equivalent to 15-20g/L Residual Sugar.
  6. Add 1 teaspoon of white sugar to the 3rd glass. Equivalent to 60-80g/L Residual Sugar.
  7. Stir until the sugar is dissolved.
  8. Then taste and look for the differences.

The first, unadjusted wine should finish clean and refreshing, the second will appear a little clumsy possibly a little oily, the last will seem way over the top, and, you may feel like you’re trying to swallow a teaspoon of honey.

Let us know how you go. Leave a comment below.

 

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Feeling Thirsty?

Gunderloch Jean Baptiste Riesling Kabinett 2019

Riesling | Rheinhessen, Germany

I love seeing Kabinett styles from the different regions of Germany. Gunderloch's from the Rheinhessen is an absolute cracker! So playful. This is an excellent wine. Complex with beautiful acid, a divine texture. Delicious. A beautiful expression. Compared to the Kabinett of Loosen in the Mosel you see and extra 2.5% alcohol, half the residual sugar and 1.5g/L less acid yet both are balanced. The extra fermentation raising the alcohol adds vinosity and more immediate approachability to the wine.
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Alphonse Mellot Sancerre Satellite 2020

Sauvignon Blanc | Sancerre, Centre Loire

The Satellite comes from vines in Chavignol that are spread of five separate parcels, including the reverred terroirs Le Cul de Beaujeu and Les Monts-Damnés. The low cropping Sauvignon Blanc vines here are between 40 and 80 years old. The juice was naturally fermented and raised in large, mature oak barrels and bottled without filtration. The resulting wine harnesses both the famed texture and natural chalky electricity of the slopes of Chavignol, offering intensity, precision, elegance and
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In my mind, this is the wine that best represents the Casanova di Neri house style. With 30 months of aging in tonneaux, it shows enormous richness and texture, and the stellar fruit quality appears with more primary elegance compared to the more expensive Cerretalto that is released with an extra year of aging. That dynamic is especially pronounced in a comparison of the 2019 and 2018 vintages. The 2019 Brunello di Montalcino Tenuta Nuova has a dark vein of toasted spice, black fruit, ink, blac
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