Sparkling wine

Despite being a traditional Champagne grape, Chardonnay was not used in the production of Cava until the 1980s. Espumante, pronounced esh-pu-man-te, is the Portuguese version of a sparkling wine. In California, cuvees are typically derived from around 20 wines taken from 1 to 2 years worth of vintages.

In Champagne, the cuvée blend will rarely have less than 30 wines and sometimes as many as 60 that are taken from grapes spanning 4–6 years of different vintages. The limestone-chalk soil produces grapes that have a certain balance of acidity, extract and richness that is difficult to replicate in other parts of the world.

This designation continues to be used for sparkling wine produced in several countries formerly part of the Soviet Union, including Belarus, Russia and Ukraine. Large Champagne producers like Moet & Chandon will use wines from several hundred base wines to create a blend that reflect the house style of their non-vintage wine.

The fresh yeast and sugar mixture is added to the wine which rapidly stimulates fermentation in the pressurized environment. Trento DOC wines are distinguished by their straw-yellow color. Prosecco is made in both fully sparkling (spumante) and lightly sparkling (frizzante) styles.

Since 1985, use of the term methode champenoise has been banned in all wines produced or sold in the European Union. Blending is the hallmark of Champagne wine, with most Champagnes being the assembled product of several vineyards and vintages. Some of these are exclusively sparkling wine appellations, and some are appellations allowing both still and sparkling wine to be made.

The Champenois vigorously defend use of the term Champagne to relate the specific wine produced in the Champagne wine region. The rest sell their grapes to the various Champagne houses, negociants and co-operatives.

Sauvignon blanc and Chenin blanc have been the traditional Cap Classique grapes but the use of Chardonnay and Pinot noir have been on the increase. Fully sparkling wines, such as Champagne, are generally sold with 5 to 6 atmospheres of pressure in the bottle. Sparkling rosé are made from the Blaufränkisch grape. The first Austrian producer of sparkling wine was Robert Alwin Schlumberger, who presented his first sparkling wine in 1846 under the name Vöslauer weißer Schaumwein (White sparkling wine of Vöslau).

Sparkling wine is a wine with significant levels of carbon dioxide in it making it fizzy. The tendency of still wine from the Champagne region to lightly sparkle was noted in the Middle Ages but this was considered a wine fault and was disdained in early Champagne winemaking. The English were one of the first who saw the tendency of Champagne to sparkle as a desirable trait and tried to understand why it did bubble.

The French terms Mousseux or Crémant are used to refer to sparkling wine not made in the Champagne region. In 1975, Crémant de Loire was given formal recognition as an AOC, and was followed by Crémant de Bourgogne (1975) and Crémant d Alsace (1976).

C. In some parts of the world, the words champagne or spumante are used as a synonym for sparkling wine, although laws in Europe and other countries reserve the word Champagne for a specific type from the Champagne region of France.

When the wine is open and poured into a glass, the gas is released and the wine becomes sparkling. There are several methods used to carry out this secondary fermentation. 1825 (first in Central-Europe) and Esch és Társa in 1835.

In France, there are seven appellations for sparkling wine which includes the designation Crémant in their name: There is also a Crémant designation outside of France: French appellation laws dictate that a Crémant must be harvested by hand with yields not exceeding a set amount for their AOC. While this gas is able to be released during the first fermentation, efforts are taken during the second fermentation to retain the gas and have it dissolve into the wine.

In 1662, the English scientist Christopher Merret presented a paper detailing how the presence of sugar in a wine lead to it eventually sparkling and that by adding sugar to a wine before bottling it, nearly any wine could be made to sparkle. The majority of these Crémant du Loire are produced around the city of Saumur and are a blend of the Chardonnay, Chenin blanc and Cabernet franc.

Minimum alcohol content must be of 11.5%, or 12% for riserva. The press house is often close by the vineyard to where the grapes can be quickly pressed and separated from their skins.

Wines produced within the European Union must include the sweetness level on the wine label. Most sparkling wine is produced from Chardonnay and Pinot noir, but an Australian speciality is Sparkling Shiraz, a red sparkling wine produced from Shiraz grapes.

It is not uncommon for a premium Champagne to age for 7 years or more prior to release. After fermentation the base wines are then blended to form a cuvee.

Aligoté is often used to fill out the remaining parts of the blend. The designation Crémant was previously used for sparkling wines from the Champagne region which were produced with slightly less carbon dioxide and somewhat lower bottle pressure (typically 2-3 atmospheres instead of 5-6). When the wine was shipped to and bottled in England, the fermentation process would restart when the weather warmed and the cork-stoppered wine would begin to build pressure from carbon dioxide gas.

The beginning of significant sparkling wine production in Hungary is dated back to the first half of the 19th century. The wine is noted for its low alcohol levels around 8% and fresh, grapey flavors.

Over time it has been attributed to phases of the moon as well as both good and evil spirits. The majority of Champagne produced is non-vintage (or rather, multi-vintage) blends.

In the methode ancestrale the disgorgement step is skipped and the wine is sold with the lees still present as sediment in the wine. The amount of pressure in the wine is determined by the amount of sugar added during the tirage stage at the beginning of the secondary fermentation with more sugar producing increased amount of carbon dioxide gas and thus pressure in the wine. While the majority of sparkling wines are white or rosé, Australia, Italy and Moldova all have a sizable production of red sparkling wines.

This creates a massive amount of pressure within the wine bottle (on average around 5 atmospheres) and wine producers take care to package the wine in strong glass bottles. The English also rediscovered the use of cork stoppers, once used by the Romans but forgotten for centuries after the fall of the Roman empire.

When in the late 1980s lobbying by Champagne producers led to méthode champenoise being forbidden within the European Union as a designation for the traditional method, the term Crémant was given its present definition. Another distinct difference, particularly in Californian sparkling wines, is the favorable Californian climate which allows a vintage wine to be produced nearly every year. Current US regulations require that what is defined as a semi-generic name (such as champagne ) shall be used on a wine label only if there appears next to that name the appellation of the actual place of origin in order to prevent any possible consumer confusion. Australian sparkling wine can be produced using the Charmat method or the traditional method, and can be vintage dated or a multivintage blend.

Under Spanish Denominación de Origen laws, Cava can be produced in six wine regions and must be made according to the Traditional Method with second fermentation in the bottle and uses a selection of the grapes Macabeo, Parellada, Xarel·lo, Chardonnay, Pinot noir, and Subirat. A dosage mixture of fresh wine and some sugar syrup is used to adjust the sweetness level of the wine after it has been disgorged.

Though Franciacorta wines are made according to the traditional method, most Italian sparkling wines, in particular Asti and Prosecco, are made with the Charmat method. Asti is a slightly sweet sparkler made from the Moscato grape in the province of Asti. The Loire Valley is France s largest producer of sparkling wines outside of the Champagne region.

Both vintage and non-vintage Franciacorta sparklers are made which require 30 and 18 months, respectively, of aging on the lees. Trento DOC is an appellation for white and rosé sparkling wines maded according to the méthode traditionnelle. Caves were used in the early days of Cava production for the preservation or aging of wine. Cava is produced in varying levels of dryness of the wine which are: brut nature, brut (extra dry), seco (dry), semiseco (medium) and dulce (sweet).

As the sparkling wine industry in California grew, foreign investments from some of the Champagne region s most noted Champagne houses came to set up wineries in the area. AOC laws do allow cuvées with Sauvignon blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot noir, Gamay, Côt, Pineau d aunis and Grolleau but those grapes are rarely used in a significant amount.

Sekt was initially an informal German name for sparkling wine, coined in Berlin 1825, but was in common use by the 1890s. One of the by products of fermentation is the creation of carbon dioxide gas.

This tax was famously introduced by Emperor Wilhelm II in 1902 to fund the expansion of the Imperial Navy. Germans also call some similar foreign wines Sekt, like Krimsekt (often red) from Crimea. In Austria, Sekt is often made in the méthode champenoise with the Welschriesling and Grüner Veltliner grapes giving the wine a golden hue color. During the cold winters of the Champagne region, temperatures would drop so low that the fermentation process was prematurely halted—leaving some residual sugar and dormant yeast.

The sweetness of sparkling wine can range from very dry brut styles to sweeter doux varieties. Effervescence has been observed in wine throughout history and has been noted by Ancient Greek and Roman writers but the causes of this mysterious appearance of bubbles was not understood. The first wines produced were made from Riesling, Muscatel, Traminer and Chasselas grapes.

Care is taken to avoid tannins and other phenolic compounds with many premium producers still choosing to harvest by hand rather than risk mechanical harvesting which may split the berries and encourage maceration between the skins and juice. It is through the initiation of a secondary fermentation that distinguishes sparkling wine production and gives the wine its characteristic bubbles .

Partly aided by the foreign influence, the overall quality of Californian sparklers increased with the introduction of the more traditional Champagne grapes of Chardonnay, Pinot noir, Pinot Meunier and Pinot blanc into the production. While there are examples of varietal sparklers, such as blanc de blancs (white of whites) made from 100% Chardonnay, most sparkling wines are blends of several grape varieties, vineyards and vintages.

The names used by the German producers for their sparkling wines in the 19th century were Mousseux , Sect or Champagne (or Champagner), but the 1919 Treaty of Versailles forbade Germany the use of this name, long before European Union regulations prohibited its use outside the Champagne region. Cool climate weather limits the types of wine and grape varieties that can be made but it is in this region that sparkling wine has found its standard bearer.

In order for a wine to be certified as a quality Espumante from DOC Bairrada, it must be made in the traditional Champagne (indicating the year of harvest) and stamped with the VEQPRD (Vinho Espumante de Qualidade Produzido em Região Determinada) certification. VFQPRD: is a regional sparkling wine made in the traditional champagne, charmat or transfer method in one of the following determined regions: Douro, Ribatejo, Minho, Alentejo or Estremadura. VQPRD: is a sparkling wine that can made by injecting the wine with gas in the traditional champagne, charmat, transfer method anywhere in Portugal. Espumosos: the cheapest and lowest level of sparkling wine, made by injecting the wine with CO2. Top quality Espumantes can be found in Bairrada region and in Távora-Varosa sub region - Murganheira is a great example of high quality Espumante from this region. According to etymological sources, the term spumante was not used in a wine context until 1908, more than 40 years following the first Italian sparkling wine using the méthode champenoise produced by Carlo Gancia which was then sold as Moscato Champagne . Sparkling wines are made throughout Italy but the Italian sparklers most widely seen on the world market are the Franciacorta from Lombardy, Asti from Piedmont and Prosecco from Veneto. And unlike Cava, produced solely in northern climates, Espumante is not only produced in the northern wet region of Vinho Verde, but also throughout Portugal all the way to the southern region of the Alentejo, known for its extreme temperatures and arid climate. While Spain has one regulating body, DOC Cava, spread across several different political regions, quality Espumante is produced solely in DOC Bairrada, located just south of Vinho Verde.

Through the process of riddling and eventually disgorgement, the dead yeast cells (lees) are removed from the wine while still maintaining the dissolved carbon dioxide gas. It was produced from Blauer Portugieser grapes growing in vineyards in Bad Vöslau which Schlumberger bought in 1843, and the sparkling wine was an immediate success.

The term Mousseux is French for sparkling and can refer to a sparkling wine made using methods other than the méthode champenoise such as charmat method. Sparkling-only are: Either still or sparkling are: Cava is the name of a type of Catalan white or pink sparkling wine, produced in different areas of Catalonia, Andalucia, Valencia and Extremadura but mainly in the Penedès region in Catalonia, 40 km to the south west of Barcelona. Stuttgart-born Schlumberger had worked in the Champagne house Ruinart before he moved to Vienna in 1842. The Hungarian equivalent for sparkling wine is ’pezsgő’.

Most likely, the name has stuck since Sovetskoye Shampanskoye was one of the few products or brands of the Soviet era which were seen as luxurious. A couple of decades later the main producers moved to the Budai mountains and Budafok nearby the capital creating a new center of production, the so-called ’Hungarian Champagne’ existing till nowadays.

These Sekts are usual vintage dated with the village and vineyards that the grapes are from. Most of the Hungarian sparkling wines are made by the charmat and transvasée methods and a small but steadily growing amount by the traditional, champagneois method.

Sparkling wine is usually white or rosé but there are many examples of red sparkling wines such as Italian Brachetto and Australian sparkling Shiraz. While some skin exposure maybe desirable in the production of rosé sparklers and some blanc de noirs (white of blacks), most sparkling wine producers take extended precautions to limit the amount of skin contact. The primary fermentation of sparkling wine begins like most other wines, though winemakers may choose to use specially cultivated sparkling wine yeasts.

The United States is a significant producer of sparkling wine: California in particular has seen French Champagne houses open wineries in the state to make American sparkling wine according to the Champagne method. The regions of Gaillac, Limoux and Clairette de Die are the most well known producers of methode ancestrale wines. Champagne is produced at the far extreme of viticultural circumstances, where the grape struggles to ripe in a long drawn out growing season.

Each grapes add their own unique imprint on the wine. Semi-sparkling wines are defined as those with between 1 and 2.5 atmospheres of pressures and include German spritzig, Italian frizzante and French petillant wines.

This method produces large bubbles that quickly dissipates and is generally only used in the cheapest sparkling wines. An initial burst of effervescence occurs when the Champagne contacts the dry glass on pouring. In Champagne there are over 19,000 vineyard owners, only 5,000 of which are owned by Champagne producers.

In areas like Australia, winemakers aim to harvest the grapes at 17 to 20° brix. Wine was often transported to England in wooden wine barrels where merchant houses would then bottle the wine for sale.

per hectare for all varietals, and a maximum grape yield of 70%. (bestimmter Anbaugebiete, in parallel to Qualitätswein b.A.) only from grapes from one of the 13 quality wine regions in Germany. Some of the premium wines are often made using the Riesling, Pinot blanc, Pinot gris and Pinot noir grapes, with much of it drunk locally rather than exported.

French sparklers made according to the Champagne method of fermentation in the bottle, but sometimes use different grape varieties, are known as Cremants and are governed under their own Appellation d origine contrôlée (AOC) regulations. Unlike still wine production, high sugar levels are not ideal and grapes destined for sparkling wine production may be harvested at higher yields.

The wine is produced in the cool hills around the town of Valdobbiadene and are generally dry but sweeter examples are produced. Sekt is the German term for sparkling wine. Most sparkling Shiraz is traditionally somewhat sweet, but some producers make it dry, full-bodied and tannic. Cap Classique denotes a South African sparkling wine made by the traditional Champagne method.

Red wine grapes like Pinot noir can be used in the production of white sparkling wines because their juice is initially clear and is only later tinted red through exposure to the color pigments in grape skins. For wines produced outside the EU, the sweetness level is not required but if it is included on the label the terms used must conform to EU guidelines. The most well known example of sparkling wine is that of Champagne from the Champagne wine region of France.

Moscato d Asti is a frizzante style slightly sparkling version of Asti. The Franciacorta region, located northwest of Brescia, is home to the largest segment of Italian sparkling wine production. The process of carbon injection (or carbonation), the method used to make soda pop fizzy, doesn t involve initiating a secondary but rather injecting carbon dioxide gas directly into the wine.

The most well known is the Traditional or Champagne method where the base cuvee is bottled with a mixture of sugar and yeast. It also comes with a Schaumwein tax, which since 2005 has been 136 euro per hectoliter, corresponding to 1.02 euro per 0.75 liter bottle.

Vintage Champagne is also produced, and this is often a house s most prestigious and expensive wine, but only in years when the producers feel that the grapes have the complexity and richness to warrant it. Sparkling wines designated Crémant are produced using the traditional method, and have to fulfill strict production criteria. was founded in Esslingen am Neckar by Georg Christian Kessler (1787-1842), who had previously worked at the Champagne house Veuve Clicquot from 1807 to 1826.

In the transversage method, after the wines have gone through the traditional method including riddling and disgorgement, the bottles are emptied into a large tank where they are then transferred to small and large format wine bottles such as 3 liter jeroboam and small split sizes used on airlines. The Charmat method take places in stainless steel fermentation tanks that are pressurized. The Crémant designation was also used for sparkling wines from the Loire valley, in the form of Crémant de Saumur and Crémant de Vouvray, without being defined as separate appellations.

Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc and Pinot Meunier grapes are used. US AVA requirements and wine laws do not regulate the sugar levels and sweetness of wine though most producers tend to follow European standards with Brut wine having less than 1.5% sugar up to Doux having more than 5%.

One of the famous brands are Iskra (Искра, meaning spark ) and Magareshko mlyako (Магарешко мляко - Donkey milk ). Sparkling wines produced in the United States can be made in both the méthode champenoise and the charmat method. Another style of sparkling wine found in France are those made according to the methode ancestrale which skips the process of disgorgement and produces wines with slight sweetness and still containing the particles of dead yeast matter in the form of lees in the bottle.

In the US, there are no minimum requirements, and aging length can vary from 8 months to 6 years. Germany long attempted to have the name Sekt reserved for sparkling wine from countries with German as an official language, but these regulations were annulled by the European Court of Justice in 1975.

The majority of Sekt produced (around 95%) is made by the Charmat method with the remaining premium Sekt being made according to the méthode traditionnelle. This is nearly three times the amount of pressure found in an automobile tire.

The grapes, most commonly Chardonnay, Pinot noir and Pinot meunier, are used to make several base wines that are assembled together to Champagne. The wines must rest for a minimum of 15 months on their lees for non-vintage, 24 months for vintage, and 36 for riserva.

New and old wineries are seeking for the forgotten roots. These include Moët et Chandon s Domaine Chandon, Louis Roederer s Roederer Estate, and Taittinger s Domaine Carneros. While many top American sparkling wine producers utilize the French Champagne methods of production, there are distinct differences in their wine making techniques that have a considerable effect on the taste of the wines.

Lower cost sparklers, such as André, Cook s, and Tott s, often employ the latter method while more premium sparkling wines utilizing the former. The introduction of a fresh yeast and food source (the sugar) triggers the fermentation process in the bottle that the wine will eventually be sold in.

The first wineries of sparkling wine were founded near Pozsony (today Bratislava) by Hubert I.E. Cava is a Greek term that was used to refer to a high end table wine or wine cellar, and comes from the Latin word cava which means cave in English.

During the 17th century, English glass production used coal-fueled ovens and produced stronger, more durable glass bottles than the wood-fired French glass. There is a maximum vien yield of 150 q.l.

The wines may go through malolactic fermentation, though producers wishing to make fruitier, simpler wines will usually forgo this step. French Champagne laws require that the wine spend a minimum of 15 months on the lees for non-vintage and minimum 3 years for vintage Champagne.

This meant that the use of Crémant in the Champagne region was discontinued and additional French Crémant AOCs were created from 1990, starting with Bordeaux and Limoux. In Luxembourg, Crémant de Luxembourg is a designation within the Moselle Luxembourgeoise appellation, rather than a separate appellation, but otherwise follow the same rules as French Crémant. Since the designation Crémant is not reserved exclusively for French use (as a result of it replacing méthode champenoise), it may also be used by producers in other EU countries which fulfill the production criteria, although such usage is rare. There are also some other French appellations for sparkling wines, which do not carry the name Crémant. At the vineyard, grapes are harvested early when there is still high acid levels.

Nowadays, it is more common to encounter Sovetskoye Shampanskoye produced in a dry style. In Bulgaria, sparkling wine, mostly dry, is widely sold and consumed at the domestic level. Another legal decision in the 1970s abolished the large producers monopoly on Sekt production, allowing winemaking cooperatives and individual winegrowers to produce and sell their own sparkling wines.

At the end of the 19th century the two most important wineries were József Törley és Társa moving from Reims, France to Budafok in 1882 and Louis és César-François founded in 1886. Kessler & Co.

Pinot noir adds body and fruit while Pinot meunier contributes substantially to the aroma adding fruit and floral notes. In Australia, these sparklers are often made from the Shiraz grape. .

These wines were rare in comparison to regular, full-pressure Champagne. Around 90 percent of Sekt is made at least partially from imported wines from Italy, Spain and France.

This is one of the first known accounts of understanding the process of sparkling wine and even suggest that British merchants were producing sparkling Champagne before the French Champenois were deliberately making it. The viticultural and winemaking practices of making sparkling wine have many similarities to the production of still wine with some noted divergence. The sorts of grape used during production can be international like Chardonnay, Pinot noir, Riesling, Muscat Ottonel, Muscat Lunel or natives like Olaszrizling, Kékfrankos, Furmint, Királyleányka, Hárslevelű, Kéknyelű and Juhfark. In the Soviet Union, sparkling wine was produced under the name Soviet Champagne, or Sovetskoye Shampanskoye, most of it sweet.

German and Austrian sparkling wines are called Sekt. The wine is then cooled, clarified and bottled using a counter pressure filler.

The carbon dioxide may result from natural fermentation, (either in a bottle, as with the méthode champenoise, or in a large tank designed to withstand the pressures involved (as in the Charmat process) or as a result of carbon dioxide injection. In Burgundy, AOC laws require that Crémant de Bourgogne be composed of at least thirty percent Pinot noir, Chardonnay, Pinot blanc or Pinot gris.

Recently the United Kingdom, which produced some of the earliest examples of sparkling wine, has started producing Champagne-style wines again. This includes objection to the term Champagne style to refer to sparkling wines produced outside the Champagne region.

The Trento DOC is also famous. When the wine was opened, it would be bubbly.

After the Soviet era the Hungarian wine sector was reborn. Chardonnay is prized for its finesse and aging ability.

The classic example of a sparkling wine is Champagne, but many other examples are produced in other countries and regions, such as Espumante in Portugal, Cava in Spain, Asti in Italy (the generic Italian term for sparkling wine being Spumante) and Cap Classique in South Africa. The history of producing quality sparkling wine in California can be traced to the Sonoma Valley where, in 1892, the Korbel brothers (immigrated from Bohemia in 1852) began producing sparkling wine according to the méthode champenoise.

On average, Champagne is responsible for about 8% of worldwide sparkling wine production with many other regions emulating the Champagne style in both grapes used (generally Chardonnay, Pinot noir and Pinot Meunier) and production methods—sometimes referred to as the Champagne method . European Union regulations define a sparkling wine as any wine with an excess of 3 atmospheres in pressure.

These include German Sekt, Spanish Espumoso, Italian Spumante and French Cremant or Mousseux wines. Made predominately from Chardonnay and Pinot bianco, sparklers labeled under the Franciacorta DOCG are permitted to include no more than 15% Pinot nero.

Sekt labeled as Deutscher Sekt is made exclusively from German grapes, and Sekt b.A. The wines must also be aged for a minimum of one year.

Together, these two decision produced the situation of the name Sekt being possible to apply to sparkling wines of varying quality level. Not all sparkling (bubbling) wines are called Sekt, some are simply Perlwein. These bubbles may form on imperfections in the glass that facilitate nucleation or on cellulose fibres left over from the wiping/drying process. The average bottle of Champagne contains enough carbon dioxide to potentially produce 49 million bubbles. The amount of sugar (dosage) added after the second fermentation and aging varies and will dictate the sweetness level of the sparkling wine.

produced in smaller lots is often referred to as Winzersekt (winegrower s Sekt), since it is typically produced by a producer which has vineyards of his own, rather than by the large Sekt-producing companies (Sektkellereien) which buy grapes or base wine on a large scale for their production. Sekt typically comes with elaborate enclosure (safety cage) to withstand its considerable CO2 pressure.

Premium Sekt b.A. In Austria, the corresponding term is Hauersekt. German production of sparkling wines dates back to 1826, when G.