Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tips. Show all posts
Monday, April 15, 2019
The Effects of Weather on Vintage Wine
Geoff Block is the founder and manager of the Lowcountry Strong Foundation, a non-profit organization that supports families in need in Beaufort and Jasper counties. A graduate of Tulane University, Geoff Block develops real estate and currently manages RLB Squared in South Carolina.
When he’s not busy with professional or philanthropic responsibilities, Mr. Block enjoys fine dining and vintage wines. Vintage refers to the year that grapes were picked for use in winemaking. In other words, vintage wines are produced from grapes that were selected in the same year, whereas non-vintage wines are made from blends of different vintages.
The weather has a significant impact on wine vintages since different grape varieties respond differently in taste and quality under different climates. Different grapes perform best under certain weather conditions, while other weather conditions can negatively affect a vintage. Spring frosts and hail can kill crops and reduce the size of grapes, while overly wet weather or drought conditions in the summer can reduce grape quality. In the fall, rainy conditions or cold weather too close to harvest time can also reduce the quality of a vintage.
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
Vintage Wines and Their Point of Comparison
A Tulane University business graduate, Geoff Block gained executive experience with Crown Growth Partners. He currently oversees the day-to-day operations of RLB Squared, LLC. Aside from managing this firm, Geoff Block enjoys fine dining and vintage wines.
When two wines of the same variety are displayed in a wine store and one is more expensive than the other, it may be because the more expensive bottle is a vintage wine. The age of a bottle of wine often affects its price, particularly when it comes to red wines. Taste is altered as red wine ages because time reduces the tannin and acidity levels in the wine.
Aside from processes and procedures that are controllable, the taste of vintage wine is greatly affected by an uncontrollable force — nature. The climate in a particular region where grapes grow has a huge impact on the outcome of the wine. During wet seasons, grapes don’t ripen at the time they were originally expected to ripen. That means the fruit harvested during a wet year might be mediocre when compared to fruit grown and harvested under normal climatic conditions. For this reason, even wines of the same label may taste differently from year to year.
Wine enthusiasts use the vintage chart as a general reference guide. The vintage chart contains information on the region where a wine was produced, the variety of grapes used in the wine, and the years of bottling. The chart also provides a rating. A certain wine may be rated as “superb” in one year and rated “very good” in another, thanks to those occasional uncontrollable forces.
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