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"You guys have a great gig out here!" ~ Arthur, Santa Rosa |
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Making Wine ~ Step-By-Step |
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Growing Grapes |
Ripe
for the pickin'
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Our wines come from growers whose farming
families date back to the turn of the century here in
Mendocino County, where care and knowledge go into growing
grapes in the proper location. The right conditions in
the vineyard will bring out the most striking qualities in
the grapes. Harvest is done by hand at the optimum time, when the
natural acidity and rich fruit sugars are in balance and the
grapes are plump and full of juice. Subtle and complex, the
right amount of sun and rain at the right moments in the
right soil, can make
magic in the hands of an experienced and intuitive
winemaker.
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Jennifer Pronsolino's Zinfindel |
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Harvest |

Grape delivery |
Harvest begins at dawn - best done on cool, foggy mornings
to retain moisture for the slow trip over the notoriously
curvy Hwy 20. North at scenic Hwy 1 they
ultimately find the way to our coastal perch 12 miles north of
Fort
Bragg, where the crew anticipates the fun about to begin. |

Hauling grapes over the hill |
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The Crush

Sorting through the grapes |
Bins are tipped into a large hopper and moved
by conveyor belt toward the crusher-destemmer. Passing
by many busy hands, we toss out leaves, rocks, and any unripe or
mold-damaged clusters. The Concept: “If you
wouldn’t eat it we don’t make wine from it.” It takes just a
small percentage of sour tasting clusters to effect the ultimate
wine flavor, so we take this laborious step often bypassed by
large producers in the name of efficiency.
A giant stainless cylinder rotates inside the
destemmer where stems get separated from berries and
discarded. Individual berries get fully crushed to release the
delicious juice. Now
called “must”, this mixture of grape pulp, thick
gooey juice and skins gets pumped into open-topped stainless steel vats for
a 24-48 hour settling before fermentation is encouraged to
begin.
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Into the crusher |
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Fermentation
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Pressing
David presses the grapes |
The next step separates the solids from the skins.
Called “pressing”, we use several pieces
of equipment depending on the size of the lot.
Small amounts 5A
water bladder basket press with wooden slats leave enough room for the wine
to go through but not the skins. There is a bladder in the middle of the press that slowly
fills with water and will eventually press the skins into a hard
cake, which we remove when we have extracted all the wine from
the must. We then
pump the wine into our barrels for aging.
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More pressing |
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Aging

Barreling aging outside |
New wine is thin and tart and will get better
with aging. As the
wine sits in the barrels some of the water will slowly evaporate
through the pores in the wood barrels and needs to be replaced
with more wine. This
is how wine becomes concentrated, similar to simmering a sauce. Over time you have a concentrated liquid with flavors
that have developed in the aging process.
What else makes up wine besides alcohol? It’s
83-85% water, 12-15% ethyl alcohol, with small amounts of
Tartaric and Malic acids (keeps wine from spoiling), esters
(that’s what you are smelling), tannins (in red wines what most
people call the “dry” effect), and about 300 other minor
components.
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Waiting is the hardest part |
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Bottling

The bottling line boys |
When
the wine is ready for consumption it is time to bottle it. Bottling is done not just to transport and sell it, it is
done to keep the wine from spoiling. Before
bottling was invented wine would spoil very quickly in barrels
once air got to it and bacteria could turn the Tartaric acid
into vinegar (Acetic acid). Even the “air” space you see at the top of a bottle is
not air; it is pure Nitrogen gas.
We use
a mobile bottling service that is a self-contained bottling
plant in one large truck. The unit collects the bottles, fills the bottles (first
nitrogen and then wine), corks the bottle, attaches the front
and back labels, and adds the foil. Human labor then puts the bottles into the case boxes and
they are stacked on pallets.
We listen to a lot of loud music during the day and
consume beer at the end.
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Then the wine goes in the bottle... |
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Bottle Shock
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Imagine
yourself sleeping for many months and then be rudely awakened.
Would you be ready for anything? That is what happens to wine. It has been quiet and sleeping for 2 years, and then
suddenly pumped into holding tanks, through a hose and then
bottled. Wine will
eventually come around, some in a few days and others in a few
weeks (Pinot Noir).
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Enjoyment
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©2003-2009 Pacific Star Winery. All rights
reserved.
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