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THE USE OF BARRELS IN WHITE WINE MAKING
Some of Château Carsin's white wines are aged for several months in
new or relatively new oak barrels. We believe that this gives the wine
more complexity and improves its ageing potential.
There are two reasons for ageing wine in oak. The first is to extract
flavours from the wood. Making barrels involves heating the staves
with a naked flame. The more the barrels are "toasted" and the newer
they are, the more vanilla and toffee type flavours they give to a
wine. Secondly the wine will oxidise in a controlled way. This
immediately implies a loss of fruit character, but this is compensated
by increased complexity. If the wines are kept in barrel with their
yeast lees then we gain even further depth of flavour. Only the best
quality white wines at Carsin undergo long-term barrel ageing. The
finished wines are rich in fruit, complex, and have good cellaring
potential. The high cost of small French oak barrels, about 600
euross, is somewhat prohibitive. Each barrel holds 300 bottles! We
currently purchase around 70 new barrels each vintage, but we also use
one and two year-old barrels.
Château Carsin has been experimenting with oak from various parts of
the world : North America, Costa Rica, Hungary and France (oak from
the Nevers, Allier, Tronçais and Vosges forests). Furthermore,
different species grow in North America and Europe. Trees in a
relatively warm region grow faster resulting in wood with softer fibre
and bigger pores. Accordingly, the oak flavours will be extracted
faster. The wine also "breathes" and evaporates more quickly, thus
speeding up the entire maturation process.
There are, however, ways of replicating some of the effects of ageing in
expensive barrels at only a fraction of the cost. In fact, oak chips are
frequently used to flavour wine. Only now the use of oak chips is becoming
allowed for our use but we still prefer to only use barrels to introduce the
oaky characters into our wines. The main argument in favour of using oak chips
is the lower cost and thus an increased commercial advantage. Not being
allowed to use chips hinders France's competition with other wine producing
countries.
The argument against oak chips is that they betray the wine's natural
character. So the question remains: where would such authorizations
end? Many Frenchmen believe that you should put wine into oak and not oak
into wine!
Even though oak chips enhance the flavour of wines, the absence of
slow oxidation provided by traditional barrel ageing, means that they
will never have the same complexity.
Oak Barrels For Red Wines
Some Château Carsin reds are a lighter, fruitier style of red
Bordeaux. Their structure does not usually warrant ageing in new oak
barrels, which would overpower the taste of the wine. For the other,
richer and more complex styles a greater amount of new oak barrels are
used.
The reasons and procedures for barrel-ageing has already been partly
dealt with elsewhere. Ageing in oak slowly oxidizes the wine under
controlled conditions giving it complex flavours as well as increasing
the amount of tannin in the wine.
In better years, at Château Carsin we use a greater number of new
barrels for our red wines. If the barrels are new then we prefer to
finish the alcoholic fermentation and/or carry out the malolactic
fermentation in them. By doing this we find that the oak flavours and
tannins become better integrated with the fruit flavour of the
wine. In other cases the barrels are first used for fermenting and/or
ageing white wine and are then used for ageing red wine.
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