2009 CrushCrush, the period during which grapes are harvested, sorted, destemmed, soaked, fermented, punched-down, pampered, racked, pressed, settled and barreled, is over for 2009. Crush is anticipated with excitement, initiated with glee, begun enthusiastically, and somewhere after 2-4 weeks of insufficient sleep, ended with great relief, exhaustion and some melancholy. In any given Crush, the first time I punch down a thick cap, the first time I see the roiling purple/red foam from the carbon dioxide released by the yeast, and the first time I smell a perfect ferment, these are still entralling to me. And it stays that way, nearly throughout Crush until the time I realize that if I fall asleep while punching down and fall into the fermenter, I'll probably ruin the wine and never wake up. Crush 2009: Hard work, lots of laughs, and great people helping |
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| The first fruit in was from Fairsing Vineyard, a new vineyard in Yamhill-Carlton. It is owned by Mary Ann and Mike McNally, pictured here. | The fruit arrives in totes such as this, and is then slowly loaded onto the sort table |
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Then the sorting begins. We remove all foreign material (leaves, stems, gravel, insects), unripe fruit, or any rot, Anything that is not perfect grape clusters is removed.
| Strongly believing in "garbage in, garbage out", we are fanatical about sorting. Crews of this size are unusual, but we think it makes a difference in the wine. | It all looks rather placid in these still images, but this shot gives you a better sense of what it is like on the sort line. |
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| Make sure the cluster is perfect. Repeat... | |
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Only the purist, cleanest grapes fall into the destemmer, where the berries are separated from the stems |
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Then the grapes fall into a fermenter where dry ice is sometimes added to cool the grapes down. The discarded stems go to the compost pile.
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Can't have crush without a shared meal. With wine, of course.
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