tanks

October 7 – “Crush”

by Grape Stomper Todd on October 7, 2010

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This is a depressing day for grapes and Cumberland College.

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On this day in 1916, the Georgia Tech college football team smashes Cumberland College 222-0. That score still stands as the most lopsided game in college football history…and for Cumberland Collage, the most depressing.

That brings us to our Wine Word of the Day: Crush

Yes, it is a wonderful time of year. It’s football season AND the wine harvest is on! That means we hope our favorite teams crush their opponents, and that our favorite wineries crush our favorite grapes.

Although we’ve all heard the wine term “crush” before, it seems some folks are still a little unclear as to exactly what that means.

Generally, wine makers will refer to late Summer and most of Fall as “Crush Season”. But if you are a grape grower, to you, this is “Harvest Season.” The act of crushing is mainly done with red grapes these days. What happens is the grapes clusters are harvested, then taken to the winery. There they are put into a machine that does two things at once: destemming and crushing. The wine industry, in an attempt to confuse people, though, calls this machine the destemer/crusher.

This efficient, technological wonder quickly removes the grapes from the stems. The grapes then pass through soft rubber rollers that gently break their skins to release the juice into a fermenter. The stems are typically discarded. Yeast is then added to the fermenter where it eats the sugar in the juice and converts it into alcohol. Keep in mind the skins of the grapes are still in the fermenter to give red wine its color because almost all grape juice is clear.

After the yeast converts all the sugar to alcohol, the juice is put into barrels. However, about 20% of the juice is still attached to the skins. Winemakers, being a greedy bunch, will press this juice out of the skins using another machine. That device is known by industry insiders as the “press”. White grapes usually go straight to the press after harvest. Their skins aren’t needed, so the juice is pressed directly into barrels or tanks for fermentation.

In the old days, grapes were crushed by foot. The foot is an excellent crusher because it is heavy enough to break the skins, but soft enough not to break the grape seeds. If you break too many seeds, the wine will be very bitter. Kinda like the rivalry between Georgia Tech and Cumberland College, or Lucy and the Italian woman in the grape vat.

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September 6 – “Tanks”

by Grape Stomper Todd on September 6, 2010

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Another shiny new wine word to learn!

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On this day in 1915, the first tank rolled off the assembly line in England.  Nicknamed Little Willie, it was not an overnight success.  It weighed 14 tons, got stuck in trenches and crawled at a measly 2 miles an hour.   By 1916, improvements were made and “Big Willie” was introduced.
Which leads us to our wine word of the day:

No, it has nothing to do with “willies”

Our wine word of the day is: Tanks

Although you see lots of barrels in wineries, if you look closely, you’ll usually see some stainless steel tanks.  In fact, some wineries today only use stainless steel tanks to store and age their wine.

Barrels have traditionally been used as storage containers in wineries for centuries. They were a convenient way to store and transport many goods.  Barrels are still great for aging wine, but modern technology has allowed vintners more wine-making flexibility with stainless steel tanks.

Tanks are great for blending wines from different barrels, or for keeping wine temperature controlled with cooling and heating jackets built into the tank’s sides.  Tanks can also be dangerous.  A worker can become asphyxiated from CO2 gas while cleaning a tank.  Or just imagine falling into a 20,000 gallon tank full of wine?  What a way to go, huh?  Fatally tanked on wine in a wine tank!

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September 5 – “Industry”

September 5, 2010

Labor Day labor is a labor of love. Right click to download MP3 file On this day in 1882, some 10,000 workers assembled in New York to participate in America’s first Labor Day parade.  This celebration was organized and executed by New York’s Central Labor Union.  There is still a debate on who originated the [...]

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