California 2015 wine harvest shrinks but ¡®quality high¡¯
Date£º
2015-10-16 16:00 Source£º
decanter Author:
Chris Mercer Translator:
There is a smaller crop in the California 2015 wine harvest, but producers in several regions are upbeat about quality and particulary for Cabernet Sauvignon, says the region's Wine Institute.
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California 2015 wine harvest
Producers are still upbeat about California's 2015 wine harvest Credit: K Erdman / Wine Institute
The California 2015 wine harvest is only the third since 1982 that has finished in September, said the US state¡¯s Wine Institute today (15 October).
Yields are reported down by between 20% and 50% in some parts of California as a historically early harvest failed to match the bumper crops of the past three years.
¡®This year was the earliest harvest in my 46 years as a winegrower,¡¯ said Richard Sanford, owner of Alma Rosa Winery & Vineyards in Santa Barbara County, primarily producers of Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.
¡®The California drought clearly had an effect in this 2015 vintage,¡¯ Montse Reece, winemaker for Pedroncelli Winery in Sonoma County, told the Wine Institute.
¡®This has been an early and light harvest, with smaller berries and concentrated fruit flavors. The high temperatures in August and early September accelerated maturity and picking times.¡¯
But, Reece and other producers said healthy grapes meant the California 2015 vintage was likely to be of very high quality.
¡®Though there isn¡¯t a lot of it, the quality of the crop this year is exceptional,¡¯ said Cameron Perry, winemaker for Groth Vineyards & Winery in Napa Valley.
¡®All the Cabernet ferments are showing big, rich, ripe fruit in great balance with the tannins, and the colour metrics are off the chart this season.¡¯
Some wineries were forced to harvest as some of the largest wildfires on record raged only a few miles away. In Lake County, where on winery was destroyed, Tracey Hawkins, co-founder of Hawk and Horse Vineyards, said fruit quality was still looking good.
¡®Harvest was delayed for some when the Valley Fire struck, but harvest resumed in most areas within four days,¡¯ she said.
Wine Institute president and CEO Robert Koch appeared unconcerned by lower yields in 2015. ¡®After three record harvests, a lighter vintage will not impact our supply of California wines.¡¯