Choosing the end of the fermentation cycle is very important to taste and structure of your final wine. It is true that you can just let a fermentation end naturally and fully on its own (this is the point where “all” (really “most” but we don’t want to get too detailed) of the fermentable sugars have been consumed by the yeast and converted into alcohol). When a fermentation ends on its own as described above, the wine is very dry to the palate as the natural sugars are gone and have been converted to alcohol. If on the other hand you choose to intercede and stop the fermentation early before all of the fermentable sugars are used up (you stop fermentation with extreme cold or the addition of sulphur dioxide (sulphur dioxide is natural in all wines but more on that later)), you will be left with a wine that has some level of sweetness on the palate. So the basic choice is a bone dry wine or a wine with some level of sweetness (from “rounded” to actually sweet to the taste).
Please notice the word “rounded”. Often people think that bone dry wine is the only way to go and that somehow any level of residual sugar (sweetness) is bad. Please let us state that this is categorically untrue. Some of the best wines made in the world have some level of sweetness. Now whether or not you taste the “sweetness” is another matter all together.
How can you specify the level of sweetness that you would like? It is a simple equation. The natural sugar in the grapes at harvest determines the overall “energy” within the juice. All or some of that energy can be converted into alcohol. It’s a basic balancing act between sugar and alcohol. The more alcohol that is produced the less residual sugar will be left in the wine. Now back to your decision and how to express when to stop the fermentation.
Do you want your wine to have a 10 to 11% alcohol and no sweetness or “roundness” at all? Are you looking for a bone dry Riesling? It will be a very dry, crisp wine and have weight due to the higher alcohol but with less “extract” due to the low or nonexistent residual sugar. You may choose on the other end to have a wine that is low in alcohol (8 to 9% – like our St. Urban Riesling) and a fuller rounder extracted character with a noticeable balanced sweetness. You may also choose something in between with an alcohol of 9 to 10%. What shall it be? How do you want the final structure and sweetness of your Riesling to be?


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