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Cellar Wisdom
....Why, When,
Where, What, How and Hints on Wine Cellaring.
Of all the ways we
can make good wine taste great, the simplest is to open the most
suitable wine at every occasion. We should endeavour to open
each wine at its “optimum” – an intangible point in time
governed by taste but guided by winemakers and tradition. This
requires selecting from a store of wine, otherwise known as a
wine cellar.
Characteristics
and prices of wine change over time. Consequently wine has
always been cellared. Over the millennia cellaring techniques
have improved but the reasons to cellar wine remain constant.
Cellaring rules
are fully flexible and vary according to your tastes and
interests.
This article will
describe many aspects of cellaring, but the subject is bigger
than one small article. Throughout the text are paths to other
sources of information, which you are invited to take as you
explore this satisfying hobby.
Contents
-
Why should you Cellar Wine..
-
When should you Cellar Wine..
-
Where should you Cellar Wine.
-
What Wine should you Cellar.
-
How should you Cellar Wine.
-
Insulation
-
Temperature.
-
Racking.
-
Inventory control
-
Hints
-
Controlling your Cellar.
-
Aging your Wines.
-
Pleasures of Cellaring Wine.
-
The Seven Sins of Cellaring.
-
Wine Aging Chart.
-
Temperature Chart.
-
The cost of storing 800 bottles
-
Acknowledgements.
Why Should You
Cellar Wine.
·
All
wine is stored between bottling and drinking – It is stimulating
to take part in this storage procedure.
·
Wine
changes its characteristics as it ages. While modern wines are
often produced to give satisfaction soon after bottling, the
effects of aging can produce fascinating and pleasing changes.
In many cases this improves the quality and enjoyment of the
wine.
·
A
winemaker’s recommendation for the aging of a wine is only
dependable if that wine is stored under the correct conditions.
·
An
abundance of wine types and varieties is available. You have the
opportunity to enjoy the most suitable wine for every occasion
by storing a broad range of these wines.
·
Prices for wine can vary distinctly through seasons and years.
With your own storage, you can take advantage of these price
fluctuations.
·
When
unexpected friends turn up you can enjoy selecting an
appropriate wine without leaving home.
·
There is a pleasure in cellaring which adds to the total
enjoyment of wine. For further comment
click here
·
Wine
cellarers grow immeasurably in wine knowledge and confidence.
·
As a
wine enthusiast, the best investment you can make is a wine
cellar, capable of storing your wine in ideal conditions.
When Should You
Cellar Wine.
·
Every wine you buy will suffer from a degree of travel shock.
Ideally all bottles should be cellared for as long as it takes
to alleviate this. Winemakers find that wines also
suffer "bottle shock" for about six months after bottling.
Wineries such as Killerby hold their wines for this six month
period. The vast majority do not. So hold new
releases for six months in your cellar just in case.
·
Wines with a predilection to improve as they age must be
cellared to make the most of their aging characteristics.
·
Wines that are ready for drinking should be held to await an
appropriate occasion for opening.
·
When
a favourite wine is selling for less than normal - buy a case or
two, put it in your cellar and gloat!
Where Should You
Cellar Wine.
·
Wine
should be stored in a dark place.
·
Wine
should not be subjected to vibration.
·
Wine
will only keep and age gracefully where the temperature is
constant.
·
Your
cellar can be a space within your house or adjacent building. It
can be anything from a small cupboard to a well designed
underground cavern or it can be a free standing wine storage
cabinet.
·
At
least some of your wine should be stored close to where you are
going to drink it. A cellar too far from where you are enjoying
your wine fails to provide all the pleasures it should.
·
A
professional wine storage service can be used, providing you
have a wine cellar into which those wines brought home can be
stored.
What Wine
Should You Cellar.
·
All
wine coming into your home should be placed in your cellar.
·
Some
wine will be opened soon after recovery from travel or within a
few months. However some will be stored for many years.
·
Much
is made of the question of which grape varieties should be
cellared for longer periods. In the end it comes down to your
taste. To start with follow general recommendations on the back
of the bottle, but work on
developing your own tastes and rules.
·
Wines which may show the greatest benefit from longer storage
include – Cabernet Sauvignon, Shiraz, Pinot Noir, Zinfandel,
Riesling, Semillon and fortified wines.
·
Wines which are traditionally opened before extended aging
include - Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Gris, Gewurztraminer, Merlot,
Chianti, Malbec, Beaujolais.
·
If
you are unsure of how long a wine should be held, refer to the
winemaker through the notes on the bottle or by contacting the
winery.
·
For
further information on grape varieties and cellaring click here.
·
For
a comprehensive review on how long to keep any wine
click
here.
How Should You
Cellar Wine.
Insulation.
·
The
first essential is to create a storage environment which
provides the basics of stable temperature, no light and no
vibration.
·
In
general terms 100mm (4”) of Polystyrene is the equivalent to a
meter (3ft) of ground. So if you are trying to decide between an
above ground construction and an underground cavern, you must be
prepared to dig deep for the latter.
·
Your
cupboard, indoor space or your outdoor construction, must be
well shaded well insulated and with the minimum of air movement
in and out of your cellar.
Temperature.
·
The
objective is to provide stored wines with a constant temperature
of between 10° and 15° degrees Celsius and a humidity of between
60% and 70%. A settled temperature preserves the wine and high
humidity maintains the sealing integrity of the cork.
Storing wine in the kitchen or a cupboard in Australia, for
example, will result in temperature range of up to 27 degrees C
- not ideal. Even if your house is air-conditioned, there
are lots of times you are out of the house and the
air-conditioner is off.
·
Seasonal changes in temperature (ie: 10 degrees in winter, 15
degrees in summer) will not harm your wine,
although fluctuations greater than 1 degree a week should be
avoided.
·
Wines subjected to temperatures over 25°C (77°F) are in grave
danger of rapid deterioration.
·
Wines stored at less than ideal conditions will age at speeds
quite different to those envisaged by wine makers when they
offer suggested storage times.
·
A
Hygro-thermometer will provide you with accurate information as
to both the temperature and humidity ranges within your cellar. To buy one online, go to
www.vinote.com/cellaringwww_therm.php
·
A
well constructed above-ground cellar or a well dug underground
cellar will require the minimum of additional temperature
control.
·
The
position of your cellar or your climate may oblige you to
introduce a cooling device.
·
For
an online display of different types of cellar cooling
equipment, click on
www.rosehillwinecellars.com/3rsV2/manufacturer.php?category=wine_cooling
·
The
introduction of a cooling unit into a constructed cellar will
provide complete temperature stability. However care must be
taken with the placement of the unit to avoid uneven
distribution of the cooling air.
·
Regard assembled wine as your best cooling block. A high density
of wine bottles will reduce wine temperature fluctuations.
·
Consider keeping your long term wines in a professional storage
facility if your cellar cannot conform to the optimum
temperature ranges. Try Kennards at
www.kennards.com/new/
Racking.
·
The
objective of racking is to carry bottles securely in a
horizontal position, in as dense an arrangement as possible.
·
It
is important for bottles sealed with corks to be laid down to
keep the cork moist.
·
Bottles with screw caps can be stored standing upright but
generally this is less space-efficient.
·
Racking can be individual cells of timber, steel or plastic,
simple shelving or bins.
·
Individual racking is the most convenient for selecting bottles.
Some racks can cause damage to bottle labels; designs vary in
bottle density; price variations are more to do with aesthetics
than efficiency.
·
Simple shelving can be built. Spacers of 100mm carrying 20mm x
200mm planks provide dense and low cost storage.
·
Bins
carrying 12 or 24 bottles are ideal when large numbers of the
same wine are being stored but the resident bottles can be
susceptible to destruction if subjected to earthquake movement
(editor's note - this is, perhaps, too obvious a point!)
·
Wherever possible use single depth racking. Racking which
carries bottles two deep can lead to difficulty in finding some
wines and unnecessary disturbance of wines moved to reach the
wines behind.
·
As a
rough guide each square meter of racking will carry 100 bottles.
·
Avoid using bulky racking systems, such as stacked field tiles;
it is wine you are trying to store.
Inventory
Control.
·
If
you are one of the many who have:
·
a
desire to grow your cellar,
·
the
best in temperature control and racking,
·
a
collection of wonderful wines, and
·
a
personal way of picking a wine which ranges from the lucky dip
system to something more sophisticated,
but do not have
inventory control, then you have not addressed the core of good
cellaring.
·
A
good inventory system is the most important but the least
considered element in maintaining a wine investment. A poor
inventory leads to wasted wines.
·
Selecting appropriate wine from a cellar list and then easily
finding it adds to the overall pleasure of wine and cellaring.
·
Constant pulling out of bottles, studying the label and
declaring “I know it is here somewhere” is not a precursor to
happy or effective cellaring.
·
Lost
and over-aged wines place a cost burden against every good wine
you enjoy. Eliminating this cost can only be achieved through
accurate inventory and good bottle location
·
The
Vinoté Wine Cellar System is one system that overcomes the dichotomy between
accuracy and alcohol.
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·
The
Vinoté method uses uniquely numbered (and barcoded) tags
attached to every bottle. The wine and associated tag
number are recorded in the wine cellar database. This allows
wine to be selected and found with ease and most importantly,
allows the recording of the wine’s consumption at any sober time
after the event, through the retention of the tag even if the
bottle has been discarded. This guarantees an ongoing accurate
inventory.
|
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·
A
barcode scanner greatly improves the speed and accuracy of both
entering and removing wine from your inventory.
·
Comprehensive Bottle Tag comparisons and Wine Cellar Software
comparisons will simplify your choice of inventory management.
·
For
a full summary of the world’s Wine Cellar Software click
http://www.vinote.com/soft_wineindex.php
·
Inventory processes such as linking a wine to its racking
location or simply believing that you know where your wine is
located, ultimately leads to the “Lucky Dip” method of wine
selection. The outcome is sure to be a breakdown in inventory
control and a sad wastage of wine.
Hints
Planning your Cellar
·
Cellaring of wine is often seen as the preserve of the rich or
the connoisseur. However people from all walks of life own good
cellars. The common feature is a love of wine and a nose for a
bargain.
·
If
you drink wine you can afford a cellar; if you have space for
living you have space to properly store a few wines.
·
To
determine how large a cellar you need, multiply the number of
wines you consume a week by 52 and multiply this by 2, 3, 4 or 5
(being the average aging of the wines you will be storing).
·
Your
cellar should be designed to hold sufficient wines to ensure
that you can produce a suitable wine for most occasions.
·
Most
cellars, purchased or created, become too small for the
cellarer’s needs. Always budget for a cellar larger than you
initially think you need.
·
A
temperature controlled wine cabinet will maintain your wine at
the ideal temperature but may lack the ambience and space of a
purpose built cellar.
·
To
view a list of suppliers of wine cabinets
http://www.kitchenerwinecabinets.com.au/
·
Make
sure your floor is strong enough and consider the cost and
capacity before buying a stand alone wine storage unit.
·
If
your house is large enough to house a cabinet, it probably has a
space large enough to convert into a cellar.
·
Before starting on your journey of building a cellar, you are
well advised to read the book “Cellaring Wine - Do-it-yourself
Solutions” by Tyson Stelzer - order online at
http://www.vinote.com/prodcellaringw.php or
www.amazon.com
·
Your
tastes will change over time so take care in selecting the wines
you plan to hold for a long period.
·
Maintain a reasonable balance between wines ready for drinking
and those that you plan to age.
·
Cellar as many different wines as possible and let your
knowledge and palate expand.
Controlling
your Cellar
·
Cellar all wines properly - irrespective of age.
·
Keep
your wine safe from your guests’ and your own impetuosity by
creating an orderly wine cellar and a controlled inventory.
·
Avoid the hedonistic approach of diving in to your cellar for a
lucky dip.
·
Avoid the hoarding instinct of leaving “precious” wines until
they become undrinkable.
·
Maintain a reasonable balance between wines ready for drinking
and those which you plan to age.
·
Apply a “drink by”, or “peak” year to every bottle in your
inventory, making adjustments as you taste one of a group. Then
try to live by this stricture.
·
Control your inventory. A lost or over-aged bottle is gone
forever.
·
Make
the most of barcodes on bottles and neck tags for fast and easy
inventory management.
Aging your
Wines.
·
Avoid opening your recently purchased wine when you get home.
Tag it, record it and cellar it. Let the wine get over its
travel shock and open it a week, a month or a year or two later.
·
There are low priced wines which held for a year or two may
improve but aging an inferior wine might simply turn it into an
old inferior wine.
·
Once
your wine is resting in your cellar, leave it alone until you
choose to drink it. Avoid moving or turning it.
·
Good
wine cellarers develop greater wine confidence. You will start
buying better wine and buying more wine with self-assurance.
·
Temperature fluctuations and warm storage will age or possibly
deteriorate wines faster than you might expect. If your wines
have been stored in less than perfect conditions, open them
early.
The Pleasures
of Cellaring Wine.
·
Seven excellent reasons for spending a few cents per bottle on
inventory control are:
-
Despite the dichotomy between accuracy and wine, a numbered tag
applied to each bottle means you can easily maintain an accurate
inventory
-
An
accurate inventory ensures a well-ordered cellar.
-
A
well ordered cellar enables you to open your easily found wines
at their best.
-
Opening wines at their best provides a better return on your
investment.
-
Getting more value from your wine creates greater vinous
pleasure.
-
Increased wine pleasures ensures that you will expand your wine
horizons with confidence.
-
Confidence will lead to you adding more wine to your well
ordered cellar, pleased that you spent a few cents per bottle on
a great inventory system. Treat your wine well and enjoy the
rewards.
·
Give
all wines the respect they are due; open them at the right time
for the right occasion.
·
Don’t store your wine in the kitchen or living room. These are
generally hot rooms with bright lighting.
·
Your
cellar should provide a choice of wines to suit any mood, meal
or occasion.
·
For
your enjoyment, embrace the technological advances that have
improved all aspects of wine. These include winemaking, bottle
seals, wine identification, wine cellaring and inventory
control.
·
Drink your cellared wine from appropriate glasses for greatest
enjoyment.
·
A
recent survey indicated a high level of marital bliss amongst
those who have good cellars. Perhaps the two go together!
The Seven Sins of
Cellaring
-
Not having a
cellar at all!
The worst of all sins!
-
Storing wine in
a warm or bright place.
Do you really want to ruin your wines?
-
Failing to
derive the maximum pleasure from cellared wine.
Open the optimum wine at its optimum time for each
occasion.
-
Failing to
maintain an accurate record of wine held.
Record every bottle coming in and record each wine opened.
-
Keeping a narrow
range of values, varieties and vintages.
There are hundreds of varieties and types – enjoy them all.
-
Owning an
over-aged wine or opening an under-aged one.
If you have done this, you have ignored sins #2, #3 and #4.
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Failing to share
your cellar treasures with others.
Wines are made for sharing and enjoying.
An 8th sin has
been added –
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Dying with wine
still in your cellar!
If you do this, you may have ignored sins #3 and #7.
Wine Aging
Chart.
·
All
wine changes with age. Whether it improves or not is a matter of
taste. As a guide to some of the changes that can occur in two
wines, here are some typical changes in an average New World
Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. Both wines are from
relatively cool climate wine producing regions, which will
increase their potential longevity. Both have been stored under
ideal conditions..
| |
Chardonnay
|
Cabernet
Sauvignon
|
|
Year One
|
Not bottled.
|
Not bottled |
|
Year Two
|
Fresh peach,
grapefruit, butter, obvious oak.
|
Not bottled |
|
Year
Three
|
Flavours
integrated slightly, small gain in colour.
|
Deep purple,
strong ripe berry-fruit, grippy tannins, stong oak. |
|
Year
Four
|
Enters a slightly
dull patch as fruit fades and bottle development begins to
appear.
|
Deep ruby with
hings of purple. Strong berry-fruit flavours now more
accessible. Firm tannins. |
|
Year
Five
|
Fruit less
obvious, more toasty flavours emerging.
|
Beginning of
toasty, forest floor bottle development. |
|
Year Six
|
Strong toasty,
nutty, mealy bottle development with background of peach and
grapefruit.
|
Strong development
starts to compete with ripe berry flavours. Colour ruby/red. |
|
Year
Seven
|
Acidity mellows
slightly, colour deepens.
|
Red colour with
savoury earth flavours and the beginning of a beef tea
complexity. |
|
Year
Eight
|
Still has a
vestige of fruit but strong toast, nuts etc.
|
A slight brick
edge to colour, more beef tea, mellow flavours. Sometimes
tannins can appear stronger at this stage.
|
|
Year
Nine
|
Fruit begins to
"dry up" and the texture starts to become coarse.
|
Fruit fading but
still evident. Stong bottle development. Tannins may begin
to mellow.
|
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Year Ten
|
Bitterness may
begin to emerge.
|
Strongly developed
composty flavours. Very integrated. Strong brick edge to red
colour. Still has a few years potential for further
development.
|
(With
acknowledgments and thanks to Bob Campbell M.W.)
Temperature
Chart.
·
The
following provides temperature guidelines for serving different
wine varieties. It is your taste however, which is the final
determinant as to what temperature wines are served at. The most
common fault is to over-chill a wine and so spoil or hide its
true character.
·
Importantly, the temperatures shown for cellaring should be more
strictly adhered to.
·
An
Infra Red Thermometer is the ideal tool for instantly measuring
your wine or cellar temperature.
|
Celsius |
Fahrenheit |
|
|
100 |
212 |
Boiling water |
|
39 |
100 |
Warm
bath |
|
25 |
77 |
Maximum temperature to subject wine to |
|
21 |
70 |
|
|
20 |
68 |
|
|
19 |
66 |
Serve
Vintage
Port |
|
18 |
64 |
Serve
Bordeaux,
Shiraz |
|
17 |
63 |
Serve Red Burgundy,
Cabernet |
|
16 |
61 |
Serve Pinot Noir |
|
15 |
59 |
Maximum cellar temperature. Serve Chianti, Zinfandel
|
|
14 |
57 |
Serve
Tawny
Port,
Madeira |
|
13 |
55 |
Ideal
wine storage temperature |
|
12 |
54 |
Serve
Beaujolais,
Rosé |
|
11 |
52 |
Serve Viognier,
Sauterne |
|
10 |
50 |
Minimum cellar temperature |
|
9 |
48 |
Serve Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc |
|
8 |
47 |
Serve Riesling |
|
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