Evening Edge
What’s For Dinner?
Dosage trial staged by Wolf Mountain Vineyards near Dahlonega
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 06/19/08
Mary Poppins let it be known what wonders a spoonful of sugar could do with medicine. She should have tried some in her wine.
The question of just how much sugar was needed to help a sparkling wine go down was the subject of a "dosage" (pronounced doe-SAHZJ) trial staged recently by Wolf Mountain Vineyards on the outskirts of Dahlonega.
Wolf Mountain Vineyards | |||
| Wolf Mountain Vineyards near Dahlonega, Ga. has produced three types of sparkling wines. | |||
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I was there, accompanied by a group of strangers with whom I'd been loaded into a black stretch limo (decked out inside with tinsel for a rad prom) and driven from a Buckhead office tower to Wolf Mountain's lovely Lumpkin County estate. There, we met the winery's owner and winemaker Karl Boegner, along with his son Brannon, who manages the vineyards.
We settled around tables in the winery's great room, which looked like a Tuscan villa by way of an Appalachian mountain lodge. Through every window I could see soft green hills, some striped with terraced vineyards. I made a mental note to drive up for the Sunday brunch, stretch limo or not.
Then the bottle caps popped. More permanent closures would come once the dosage was determined.
The Boegners had just bottled their pioneering vintage of Georgia sparkling wines. In the past, other local wineries have injected still wines with carbon dioxide gas to render them effervescent. But here they produced their bubbles using the méthode champenoise.
This multistep process, developed in France's Champagne region, puts the still wine through a second fermentation in the bottle. The Boegners claim they are the first Georgia winemakers to do so.
By the time we sat down to the wines, many of the steps had already been completed. The chardonnay grapes had been grown and crushed, the juice aged on its lees and bottled. Then, it got its first dosage of sugar syrup and yeast, which resulted in plenty of bubbles as well as some sediment.
The bottles were then placed with their spouts leaning down in a riddling rack so the sediment (essentially, a fresh batch of lees) could collect in the neck. A daily twist of the bottle over a period of time also helped sediment migrate from the sloped shoulders of the bottles to the neck. Then the bottlenecks were frozen so that an icy plug containing the lees could be disgorged.
Which brought us to the dosage trial.
The twice-fermented sparkling wine comes out not only bone dry but acidic enough to wrinkle your tongue. So, typically, when winemakers add base wine to cap off the disgorged bottles, they also throw in a little sugar. For the Boegners, that means topping off their wines with a simple syrup of water and Dixie Crystals.
They started us with side-by-side tastings of their blanc de blancs brut. Neither tasted sweet, but the one with more sugar seemed to have length of flavor, while the one with less sugar had a stronger flavor of yeast. Both were very appealing sparkling wines that I wouldn't hesitate to buy.
Next were two bottles of brut rosé, the same chardonnay finished with a dosage of Wolf Mountain's red blended wine called "claret." Again, the difference wasn't so much a perception of levels of sweetness but of flavors.
We finished with side-by-side tastings of demi-sec, the sweetest of the three. Karl Boegner said the sweeter demi-sec contained 35 milliliters of syrup, nearly 5 percent of the bottle's content. Not to my taste, but still a lot more interesting to drink than some sparkling wines I've been served at weddings.
The Boegners plan to take our comments and use them to determine just the right dosage for each of the three styles of sparkling wine, which will go on sale this month. (For a list of shops selling the wines, visit www.wolfmountainvineyards.com.)
If you are interested in a tasting, the vineyard will also prepare a tray of appetizers to match the various wines you try. And if there are a bunch of you going up, I've got just the stretch limo. ...
A note to readers: Thanks very much for the notes and calls from those of you who've wondered if I was sick, fired or pancaked by a bus. This column has been on hiatus while I was working on a project. In the meantime, has anyone else noticed how fantastic the Georgia peaches have been this season?
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Comments
By jim
Jun 20, 2008 8:04 PM | Link to this
Welcome back John, we missed you! I also had a chance to taste Karl's sparkling creations and found them wonderful! I liked the yeast note and found them dancing on my palete. For summer, try his rose, Sunset, or his white blend, Plenitude. Going to the winery is always a treat...
By jim
Jun 20, 2008 8:04 PM | Link to this
Welcome back John, we missed you! I also had a chance to taste Karl's sparkling creations and found them wonderful! I liked the yeast note and found them dancing on my palete. For summer, try his rose, Sunset, or his white blend, Plenitude. Going to the winery is always a treat...
By jim
Jun 20, 2008 8:04 PM | Link to this
Welcome back John, we missed you! I also had a chance to taste Karl's sparkling creations and found them wonderful! I liked the yeast note and found them dancing on my palete. For summer, try his rose, Sunset, or his white blend, Plenitude. Going to the winery is always a treat...
By jim
Jun 20, 2008 7:56 PM | Link to this
Welcome back John, we missed you! I also had a chance to taste Karl's sparkling creations and found them wonderful! I liked the yeast note and found them dancing on my palete. For summer, try his rose, Sunset, or his white blend, Plenitude. Going to the winery is always a treat...
By JohnKessler
Jun 20, 2008 4:36 PM | Link to this
Hey, guys -
Thanks! Nice to be writing again. As for the peaches, the last time we went picking was at Chapman Family Orchards in Zebulon, Ga. I ended up making lots of jam (which we ate in, like, three weeks) and some pickled peaches, which are still sitting on a shelf in the pantry giving off a scary whiff of botulism. By the way...lots of email from readers who think this is the best peach season in memory.
By EveningEdge guy
Jun 19, 2008 6:04 PM | Link to this
To Mathias:
There are some peach places listed on PickYourOwn.org, and if you look on the home page of EveningEdge.com, we have a good guide to area Farmers Markets.
By Well, thank goodness
Jun 19, 2008 4:40 PM | Link to this
I love to read ol' Kessler's stuff. Welcome back. And yeah, John, I'd like to have me a couple of big ol' peaches with a couple of glasses of that wine right now.
By George
Jun 18, 2008 5:33 PM | Link to this
I got to try the Blanc de Blanc this past Sunday. It is excellent. You guys must have given some great advice on the dosage.
By Phil
Jun 18, 2008 5:11 PM | Link to this
John,
Head up for lunch on a Saturday. Be sure to get the potato wedges with bleu cheese dip.
By Chris
Jun 18, 2008 3:51 PM | Link to this
I love Wolf Mountain and have been visiting there for several years now. The Boegner's are a great family and wonderful hosts. It's nice to see a small family business do so well. I was up there only a few weeks - a few weeks too early for I was unable to dry their new sparkling wines.
For those in the area - it's definately worth the drive. Not only to see the gorgeous views at Wolf Mountain, but also simply the town of Dahlonega is a reminder of the slower-paced life.
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