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Windmill Ridge
Rich is the word that best both describes Chardonnay and
explains its popularity. Its aroma is distinct, yet
delicate, difficult to characterize, easier to recognize. It
often smells like apples, lemons, peaches or tropical
fruits. Its delicacy is such that even a small percentage of
another varietal blended into a Chardonnay will often
completely dominate its aroma and flavor. Oak commonly takes
over Chardonnay if the wine is fermented or aged in new
barrels or for too long in seasoned ones.
This delicacy also allows Chardonnay to absorb the
influences of both vinification technique and appellation of
origin. In the Chablis region of France, it is the only
grape permitted and it renders a "crisp, flinty" wine. In
the Meursault appellation, chardonnay takes on a lush, ripe,
"fleshy", "buttery" quality. Even in quality sparkling wines
and French Champagne, it is the major varietal used.
California Chardonnay is every bit as variable and possibly
even more exciting because of the effusive varietal quality
it develops there. In spite of this variety in style,
Chardonnay is unmistakable in the mouth because of its
impeccable sugar/acid balance, its full body, and its easy
smoothness.
Researchers at the University of California at Davis used
DNA profiling in 1999 to prove that Chardonnay originated as
a cross of an obscure, ancient, and nearly extinct variety
called gouais blanc with a member of the "pinot" family,
quite likely pinot noir (although ampelographic research has
not yet been able to pinpoint this).
Vineyards in France are commonly planted with an
intermingling of chardonnay and pinot blanc vines, so that
"pinot" has often been attached to chardonnay, incorrectly.
In spite of its heritage, Chardonnay is not considered a
member of the "pinot" grape family (pinot noir, pinot blanc,
pinot gris, etc.). California has achieved real success
growing chardonnay and popularity of its wine. It has also
been a successful grape in Australia, where it also is
sometimes misnamed "pinot chardonnay".
Unfortunately, chardonnay vines are shy-bearing and
susceptible to a myriad of maladies. Chardonnay berries are
relatively small, thin-skinned, fragile, and oxidize easily.
This makes chardonnay somewhat more sensitive to winemaking
techniques and more difficult to handle from harvest to
bottling than most other grape types.
Different wine making techniques also produce wide variances
in the Chardonnay flavor profile. Such techniques as barrel
fermentation, proportion of new to old cooperage, lees
stirring, and partial, complete, or prevention of malolactic
fermentation generate controversy and lively discussion
among winemakers.
Chardonnay's intrinsic blank canvas quality also allows its
flavors to be dramatically affected by differences in soil,
climate, and vineyard practices. Not uncommon among wine
grapes, the chardonnay vine also has a tendency to mutate
and research has identified over 400 clonal variants. Each
clone has chardonnay family traits, but displays
individually specific tendencies in such characteristics as
length of ripening cycle, crop load, berry and cluster size,
acid retention, etc., therefore producing wines with various
flavor differences.
The widespread popularity of varietally-labeled Chardonnay
wines spurred many new California plantings in the early
1970s. The most commonly planted clone was the "Wente" clone
(UCD 2A) and, later, clone 108, isolated at UC Davis from
vines grown in Carneros. Due to this grape's blank canvas
nature and the proliferation of new vineyard sources using
essentially only two clones, regional variations in
Chardonnay wines became more apparent than perhaps in any
other varietal wine in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
In the 1990s, California vintners began paying much more
attention to matching, not only varieties but also clones,
to specific microclimates and vineyard sites. Many new
vineyards and re-plantings since then, especially in cooler
regions, have propogated the "Dijon" clones (particularly
75, 76, 78, 95 and 96), the "Espiguette" clone (352) or, in
fewer locations, "Champagne" clones.
The most common (but not exclusive) smell and/or flavor
elements found in chardonnay-based wines include:Stone
Fruits: apple, pear, peach, apricot; Citric Fruits: lemon,
lime, orange, tangerine; Tropical Fruits: pineapple, banana,
mango, guava, kiwi; Floral: acacia, hawthorn. |