How Wine is Made

The first stage in the wine making process is tochippings may be added to the must.
crush the grapes. In days gone by the grapesRed and rosé wines are usually produced in
would be loaded into a large vat and the winestainless steel vats or, sometimes, in oak. When
maker(s) would gently tread on them to breakthe fermenting wine has reached the required
the grapes' skins to release the juice.color intensity, the liquid is drawn from the vessel,
Nowadays this procedure is almost invariablyleaving behind the crushed skins and stalks.
carried out using a machine called, unsurprisingly, aBefore bottling, wines from different batches may
crusher.be blended together and matured. Depending on
In the case of white wines, after crushing, thethe type of wine, the length of this maturation
juice is separated immediately from the pulp ofprocess can be measured in anything from days
skins and stalks and fermentation commences.to years.
When making red (and rosé) wines, the juice isIf an "oaky" flavor is desired then the wine can
allowed to remain in contact with the crushed pulpbe matured in oak barrels. New oak or old oak
for a while to add color, body and flavor to thebarrels can be used depending on the final flavor
'must' (the juice to be fermented).required.
Most modern wines are fermented at a relativelyEven after bottling, the flavor of some quality
low temperature (around 20° C), which results inwines will continue to evolve, albeit at a slower
wine with a fruity character. White wines arerate. However nowadays, most wines, even
commonly made in large, cooled, stainless steelexpensive wines, are ready for drinking soon
containers but some better quality wines areafter bottling.
fermented in oak casks or, alternatively, oak