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Coates Wines
Why we do what
we do. The winemaking philosophy of Coates Wines is not predicated on fashion
or blind adherence to dogma, the processes used (and avoided) have grown from
experience and understanding. My training is as a winemaker (with a Masters
Degree from the University
of Adelaide), backed by
Australian and International experience. Making wines from the large scale
commercial end down to small batch boutique provides a pragmatic perspective
on the wine world. Coates wines are made in a way that is hoped will provide
sensory delights truest to region and variety. Those who make their wines
with a different philosophy to my own make different wines to my own.
Experimentation and diversity is welcomed in the vinous landscape.

Natural Yeast Fermentation.
Natural
yeast/wild yeast/indigenous yeast. The process of using the natural yeast
present in the vineyard and winery is fashionable and makes for great
marketing. But why?
Current
winemaking 101 mandates using freeze dried yeast of particular selected strains
(hundreds are commercially available) to maximised fermentation efficiency
and provide maximum flavour impact. The reasoning is strong for the
production of large scale commercial wines, but for artisanal batches of
wines I feel that wild yeast provides benefits.
- The fermentation kinetics are
altered to provide a slower start to fermentation. Often natural yeast
fermentation will be slower to start and finish, allowing for a longer
time on skins under the protection of small amounts of yeast produced carbon
dioxide.
- A flavour profile develops that
is less fruit intensive. Fruit intensity is something that winemakers
strive for and many journalists spruik constantly. The Coates range is
made with complexity and balance in mind; I prefer the flavour profile
of natural yeast for the savoury accents that are provided. This can be
seen to be mindful of a terroir
driven approach to winemaking.
- One potential risk of natural
yeast fermentation is the production of volatile acidity. Personal
observation using natural yeast is that volatile acidity (acetic acid or
vinegar –like aromas, and ethyl acetate or nail polish remover aromas)
is greater that using cultured commercial yeast. The volatile acidity
components are present in all wines; too much and the wine is compromised,
whilst too little can remove yet another component that adds to the
complexity and dynamics of the wine. In rare cases the level of volatile
acidity, after increasing with ageing in barrel (a natural occurrence),
can become borderline; those barrels are declassified out of the Coates
range.
Avoiding Fining Agents and Enzymes
The list of
winemaking fining agents and enzymes become longer every year. Those wineries
that use these agents do so for sound commercial reasons. The science and
application of fining agents and enzymes is complex, but a simple explanation
of their use is -
- Hasten the winemaking process.
Time is money, and enzymes can aid in clarification of juice post
pressing or obtaining better red wine colour in a shorter time. Using egg
whites, milk powder and gelatine on red or white wines can soften the
tannins out and make for an earlier bottling date. Our wines just take
more time to get to where we want them to be.
- Obtain better yield. Extraction rates
(amount of wine made per tonne of fruit) can be increased with enzymes
and fining agents, a better yield means a lower cost base. An increase
in yield comes at the expense of another manipulation process performed
that can detract from the inherent flavour and aroma of that wine.
- Correct mistakes. Too much
tannin, not enough colour, too much colour, over extracted and too
bitter? These issues can be fixed, and the resultant wine made to a
higher quality. Again, this is another manipulation of the wine that can
detract from the natural flavour and aroma profile. We try to avoid
making mistakes and declassify our slip ups; no one is perfect and
things to sometime go astray in wineries.
Unfiltered
Filtering red
wine acts primarily to achieve an aesthetic goal. As wine drinkers, we like
our wine to appear bright and haze free. That clarity does come at a cost; it
is another process that removes aroma and flavour from the wine.
Our red wines
are no longer filtered; even those exceptions in the past underwent only a
light filtration. The filtration process takes place firstly at the winery,
and usually during the bottling process as well. To my way of thinking, that
is two more steps that can potentially upset the wine and detract from
quality. Time spent during maturation in barrel aids the settling of
suspended materials (mostly yeast cells), during racking prior to bottling
every care is made to maintain the best clarity in our wines. You will see a
very fine deposit in Coates red wines, perhaps a very small price to pay for
ensuring the best result makes its way into your glass.
To obtain the
level of clarity expected in white wines we have been reluctantly lightly
filtering. Mention was made earlier that I am pragmatic in my approach. The
Barrel Fermented Chardonnay 2009 is a good example of a great unfiltered
white wine. Unfortunately, there is limited acceptability among the wine
buying public for unfiltered white wine styles.
Tannin Additions
Correct
balance of a red wines hinges on the interaction of fruit, oak, acidity,
tannin and a small amount of residual sugar (less that 3 grams per litre
remaining after fermentation). Getting the tannin contribution correct is not
easy, and varies for variety, region and vintage. Tannins may be added for a
few reasons –
- Hasten the production process.
Tannin extraction comes with time during fermentation, large scale red
wine production may allow as little as five days on skins prior to
pressing. Our wines are left to ferment long enough to build an
appropriate structure that suits the variety, region and vintage of the
wines we produce.
- Provide structure to ordinary
quality fruit. High yielding and/or poor quality fruit can be improved
by tannin additions. Coates Wines is not making wines from those poor
quality grapes.
- Bigger is better. Adding tannin
can make a wine appear ‘bigger’ and with greater structure. A mouthful
of aggressive tannin is seen as a plus by some wine drinkers. Machismo?
Often the addition of tannins needs to be ameliorated by fining prior to
bottling to make the wine palatable. In my winemaking view, that is two
processes (adding tannin, and then fining some out again) that detract
from the natural structure of the wine. The Coates range has natural
tannins that contribute to structure through careful fermentation
management. The tannins achieve balance and finesse through maturation
time in barrel.
Duane Coates
Winemaker,
Coates Wines
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