Winemaker
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A winemaker is a person engaged in the occupation of making wine. They are generally employed by wineries or wine companies, where their work includes;
- Cooperating with viticulturists
- Monitoring the maturity of grapes to ensure their quality and to determine the correct time for harvest
- Crushing and pressing grapes
- Monitoring the settling of juice and the fermentation of grape material
- Filtering the wine to remove remaining solids
- Testing the quality of wine by tasting
- Placing filtered wine in casks or tanks for storage and maturation
- Preparing plans for bottling wine once it has matured
- Making sure that quality is maintained when the wine is bottled
Today, these duties require an increasing amount of scientific knowledge, since laboratory tests are gradually supplementing or replacing traditional methods. Hence the vast majority of winemakers have, or are studying for, a Bachelor of Science degree (or similar) majoring in oenology. Winemakers can also be referred to as oenologists as they study oenology - the science of wine.
Winemaking practices change over time, largely as a result of increasing scientific knowledge about the biochemical processes involved. They sometimes change in response to legislation.
Winemaking can also change as a result of evolving tastes and market demands. In recent decades wine critic Robert M. Parker, Jr.'s taste and judgments have greatly influenced wine markets. A high score from Parker can dramatically increase the price of a wine whereas a low score can make it difficult to sell the low-scoring wine.
Parker's tastes in wine have encouraged many winemakers to utilize such practices as cool fermentation, adding dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) during fermentation, injecting small amounts of oxygen during fermentation, using more new oak barrel ageing, and reducing the use of fining and filtering.
Although based on natural processes, winemaking evolves in response to law, new knowledge, and market demands.
[edit] See also
[edit] Source
- Echikson, Tom. Noble Rot. NY: Norton, 2004