Palate

A crisp freshness is the main component we look for, but we enjoy the bright minerality as well, and the naturally low alcohol level makes the wine even more enjoyable. There is no contact with oak barrels during the production, so the charming fruit component is allowed to take center stage.

Winemaking

The grapes are given a light, whole-cluster pressing in our 10-ton Bucher tank press, then the juice is racked to a stainless-steel tank for fermentation, using only the native,
wild yeast trapped on the grape skins during the final stage of fruit maturation. No laboratory-designed yeast is used in our winemaking. The native-yeast fermentation began after three or four days, at which time we begin to gently circulate the fermenting must within the tank for additional yeast-lees contact. The fermentation lasts about thirty days in the stainless-steel tank, when we turn on the cooling jacket, and allow the new wine to clarify through natural settling. Malo-lactic fermentation is allowed to proceed, but typically only 50% or so of the Malic acid is converted to Lactic acid by
the time we ready the wine for its first and only racking, just before bottling.