Saturday, December 01, 2012

Paul Draper - Making great wine "naturally"

Paul Draper, the genius behind Ridge
Photo by Lily-Elaine Hawk Wakawaka

Over the last few weeks I seem to have spent a lot more time than I should - or would have liked - thinking, writing and talking about "natural" wines.

I really have very little more to say about it, but I'd like to use this post to allow Paul Draper of Ridge Vineyards, one of my winemaking heroes, to make a number of my points for me. Draper, apart from being one of the greatest and most experienced winemakers in the world, really ought to be a hero for the 
naturalistas. In November 2012 in the Hawk Wakawaka Wine Reviews,  July 2010 in The Feiring Line,  and May 2011 in the (z)infandel, he has given his views about about "natural wines". In the (z)infandel piece he quotes Jancis Robinson's assertion that 90% of modern wines are "industrial" and proudly setting Ridge's efforts in the 10% he would class as "pre-industrial."

He goes on to say that "At Ridge, we felt from the beginning that these modern, increasingly industrial, wines lacked the complexity, the sense of place, and the ability to age and develop that the pre-industrial wines demonstrated. So we looked back to the 19th Century—to techniques used in the finest California wineries such as La Cuesta, and in the Bordeaux châteaux of that era. In a synthesis of past and present, we have taken the pre-industrial techniques and applied them in conjunction with the best, least intrusive modern equipment. "

He goes on to say that "we use cover crops, integrated pest management techniques, mechanical weed removal, and composted grape pomace in place of pesticides, herbicides and synthetic fertilizers... We pick when the grapes are ripe, but not overripe. All our grapes (estate or purchased) are hand-picked, which allows for sorting in the vineyard.
"Our winemaking philosophy includes fermenting entirely with native yeasts from the vineyard, rather than cultured yeast strains; extracting color, flavor, and tannins from the grapes without use of commercial enzymes; determining—by tasting for tannin extraction during fermentation—how long to continue pump-overs; allowing malolactic fermentation to occur naturally, without inoculation; achieving wine clarity through settling and racking; making major winemaking decisions, including blending, based on tasting rather than a pre-determined recipe". Stated simply, he avoids mechanical or chemical intervention, and believes that wines made with them don’t age as well.
What could be more natural than that? Unfortunately, however, Draper might seem to fail a number of "natural" tests. Wines are "occasionally" gently fined with egg whites "if we have a wine lot (or an entire, assembled wine) with excessive tannin". He avoids membrane sterile filtration, "a process which—to a minor but noticeable degree—affects flavor and complexity" but uses pad filtration to remove "any trace of egg white" from wines that have been fined.
 Sometimes Draper adds a little water - 1.4% in the case of the 2011 Paso Robles, as the label (wholly unnecessarily) reveals. In an interview with INSIDESCOOP, Draper explains that a small amount of H2O was added to three of eight fermentors to adjust slightly overripe grapes, in the hope of keeping the alcohol closer to 14%. 
Water addition probably gets the thumbs down from the naturalistas, as quite certainly does the tartaric acid that Draper's label acknowledges as having been added to the 2011 Three Valleys which needed some "fine tuning".
Finally of course, there's the always vexed issue of SO2. And here, Draper and I seem to be singing precisely the same song. When we don’t use the minimum effective level of SO2, the wine goes off differently every year. It can be fine. Or, it can be off. But we’ve found, what you get is simply not a consistent sense of character from the place it came.” That is, the overall quality and presentation the wine gives you might be pleasurable, but what it isn’t offering is that reliable experience of terroir coming from the vineyard site itself.
I really neither know nor care where Ridge and Draper fit within the "natural" canon. What I do know is that they're my kinds of wines and Draper is my kind of winemaker. On the one hand, he really does want to produce wines as naturally as reasonably possible, with a sense of the place where they were made; on the other, he cares about the consistency and quality of my experience as the person who's shelling out real money for his bottles. 





6 comments:

  1. Hi Robert,

    Draper adds interesting fodder for the question of 'natural' wine. I am glad to see too that you appreciate my photo of Draper, and my writing about him. Could you please put the named reference to my write-up within your post to show appropriate reference, as you do with Feiring's and INSIDESCOOP and the (z)infindel. Thank you! Much appreciated.

    Thanks again for your contributions to this interesting subject. Draper is a fascinating resource for thinking through these issues.

    Elaine

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    1. Lily-Elaine, please accept my sincerest apologies. I really did not mean to omit credits to you for the interview and (excellent) pic. Omission corrected). Thanks for your understanding - and kind words.

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  2. Hi Robert,
    Thank you! Much appreciated. Believe me, I understand how these things happen. I appreciate your blog, and am grateful to be included here, even if briefly.

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  3. Robert,
    At last we agree on something :)

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  4. I recently hosted a CA tasting and one of our wines was from Ridge and it was undrinkable. Terrible actually. The next day all four tasters had raging migraines. This is the 5th time I have had Ridge wines and had a raging headache. I am trying to figure out the headaches and wine. Some say it is from sulfites, but these were lower sulfite wines. Others say Ph level. I don't know. Do you know anything about this? I find that wines that are deeply oaky and smokey give me a headache and this last wine was an oak bomb.

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  5. Thanks to share the process of making great wine naturally using grapes.

    Best Wine in UK

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