Making ice wine is not for the faint of heart, points out Steve DiFrancesco, winemaker at Glenora Wine Cellars and Knapp Winery and Vineyards in New York's Finger Lakes wine-growing region.
First, the grapes are left on the vine for months after regular harvest is over. The leaves are gone and vines are dormant, providing little protection, and though the grapes are bundled in netting to ward off the advances of nature winged and clawed, they are still vulnerable. The benefit to all this grape hardship is that the sugars and other dissolved solids don't freeze, but the water in the grape does, which means when the frozen grapes are pressed they produce a more concentrated, sweeter juice.
DiFrancesco likes to pick at around a chilly 13 degrees Fahrenheit. He's also made wines with grapes frozen post-harvest. Wines made that way can't be labeled as "ice wine" in the U.S. or Canada; though they may have the word "iced" on the label. DiFrancesco labels his as frozen post-harvest to make things clear. Wines from artificially frozen grapes are a technically sound product, while naturally frozen wines have more richness and depth, but possibly more funkiness, too, he says, which he doesn't see as a bad thing. "It's like people, if they're too perfect, they're not interesting."
In terms of holiday dessert pairings, texture's important, says Patrick Cappiello, partner and beverage director of Pearl & Ash, a Bowery hotspot in New York. Something firm is required to balance the syrupy nature of the wines. Gingerbread is "kind of a no-brainer," and another choice might be crisp oatmeal raisin cookies.
"The thing that's cool about ice wine is there's a textural difference that you don't see with other wines, and you see the care the fact that there's so many steps, there's so much effort that goes into making it," says Cappiello.
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Online:
Inniskillin: http://www.iniskillin.com
Knapp: http://www.knappwine.com
Cappiello: http://www.pearlandash.com/
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Michelle Locke tweets as @Vinecdote