With stars
shining overhead and ice crystals glittering in the air, the temperature had
dropped to minus 10 Celsius, or 14 Fahrenheit. Conditions were nearly perfect to
harvest fruit for this year's icewine, a Canadian specialty.
Malivoire,
one of the Niagara region's boutique wineries, picks its icewine grapes by hand.
For this annual rite of winter it relies on a corps of more than a dozen
volunteers, selected by a lottery, to get the grapes off the vine and crushed at
just the right moment.
One of those chosen for this year's harvest was
Susan Smith, 64, a first-time picker who said she was attracted to the mystique
of icewine.
"This experience is something I've wanted to have for a long
time," she said. "Having those juicy, fragrant little bunches in your hands and
being out under the stars."
COMPLEX, FRUITYIcewine is almost a
nectar that is rich with the flavors of apple, peach and apricot. Its hints of
honey, nuts and, maybe, a dash of caramel provide a refreshing counterpoint to a
blue cheese or fruit-based dessert.
"There is nothing else quite like
icewine ... It's a guilty pleasure," said Eric Nixon, who works at Malivoire,
adding that the wines - which sell for about double the price of most
non-vintage Champagnes - are often associated with special
occasions.
Ontario is Canada's icewine capital, accounting for up to 95
percent of the country's production, according to Wine Country Ontario, which
represents the province's winemakers.
By provincial law winemakers cannot
put the "icewine" label on their product unless the grapes have been picked in
temperatures no warmer than minus 8 degrees C (18 degrees Fahrenheit). And the
grapes must have sugar level of at least 35 Brix, which is a way of measuring
the amount of sugar in a solution. That's close to the sweetness of maple or
corn syrup.
Most years harvesting must take place in the dead of night in
order to achieve those conditions and the winemaker can usually only give the
volunteers a few hours notice at most.
"We have to take the first
opportunity," said Molivier's winemaker Shiraz Mottiar. "You can't be casual
about it."
In the past, he has called off the harvest even as the
volunteers gathered along the vineyard's edge because the temperature had inched
above the minimum.
This year, with the pickers working at about minus 10
degrees C, sugar levels came in at 37.8 Brix. "Perfect," Mottiar said. "Right
where I'm always aiming,"
Shortly after Malivoire opened, it began to
recruit volunteers to help with the 1997 harvest and to its surprise, there was
no shortage of candidates. Most years the winery selects just enough people to
do the job, leaving others to remain warm and asleep in their beds - and on a
waiting list.
In return for their hard work, volunteers will see their
name on the back label of Malivoire 2012 Gewurztraminer Icewine, expected to be
released in mid-2014.
RISKY BUSINESSIt is a risky business to
make icewine. Leaving the selected vines unharvested for so long means that they
could be ravaged by wildlife or mold or rot.
Even in the best years,
yields are relatively small, making the juice at least four to five times more
expensive than that used for table wines.
The price also adds another
layer of risk for the winery, especially in a tough economy.
"Icewine is
an expensive luxury item. When the economy goes south, those sorts of items
aren't a priority for people to buy," Mottiar said.
Icewine is big
business for Ontario representing 4 percent of the province's total wine output,
according to VQA Ontario, the province's wine authority.
Canada has
become one of the world's major icewine producers competing with Germany and
Austria, where it is called Eiswein. New York State's Finger Lakes region and
Switzerland are also among the colder climes that make icewine.
"Icewine
is a significant attraction," especially in January when the Niagara-on-the-Lake
Icewine Festival takes place, said Magdalena Kaiser-Smit, public relations
director for Wine Country Ontario.
OBVIOUS CONCERNClimate change
is an obvious concern, and some worry that the Niagara region may grow too warm
to guarantee a reliable icewine harvest every year.
Barry Cooke, 59, a
veteran picker since 2004, recalls that Malivoire's 2008 harvest took place over
two days, with a large haul of three different varieties of grapes -
Gewurztraminer, Riesling and Cabernet Franc.
By contrast, this year's
icewine harvest produced a relatively small yield from a single variety. The two
hours of picking on that January night produced enough grapes to make about
1,000 bottles.
"We got half of what we wanted," Mottiar said.
Even
so, the winemaker said the experience is like nothing else.
"It comes
full circle," he said. "People come together for a one-time harvest and have a
celebration afterwards. It's all about the process of making it...The flavor
that has developed through the process can't be simulated."
($1 = 0.9837
Canadian dollars)
0 comments
Write Down Your Responses