Thursday, November 4, 2010

It's That Time Again


Time to visit another Hawke's Bay stalwart, Esk Valley Winery


First stop, after a welcome at the door by Gordon Russell and Sue Cranswick, it's off to where all good winery tours begin, the vineyard. In particular, the newly enlarged Terraces on the Southern side of the valley, overlooking the winery.


On the way to The Terraces
 It is a grey wet day, but calm. perfect for golf, and Gordon is off to a tournament later in the day. We climb the path to half way up the vineyard and look over the little valley (not Esk Valley) in which the winery sits. Once Glenvale Winery, established in 1933, the site was bought in the mid 1980s by Villa Maria, renamed, and revamped. The winery buildings had evolved over 75 years and are still a random and sometimes ramshackle collection of add-ons and home made lean-tos. There are several houses on the site, although a notable omission is the old family home on the roadfront, demolished some years ago and now the ground has been replanted in chardonnay

Looking North, over SH 2, towards Mahia. The old farmhouse site is to the left
In the 1980s both sides of the valley were planted in mature pines, shadowing the winery and lending a gloomy air. The first task of the winery manager was to clear the pines, revealing the original 1940s terraces which had been abandoned when their low yield made them uneconomic in the times of volume over quality. Recently the slopes on the North side have been cleared, and a new venture has begun, raising moufflon (New Zealand mountain sheep) specially bred to cope with the steep slope, and fed on grape lees and pomace. It is thought that they will partner the syrah particularly well in warm years, while in cooler years the leaner but woollier animals will be best served with Pinot Noir.

The winery, and the new plantings
The ancient sheds are destined for removal and the vineyard will be extended up the valley, following the curve of the stream. Cooler flat sites are planted in chardonnay, while the terraced slopes are mainly red grapes, but include some undisclosed varieties which are being trialed for suitability for inclusion in the Esk Valley portfolio either blended or separately.
View over the Pacific Ocean


Barrel labels have been pixelated to obscure commercially sensitive details 
The old concrete cellars nestled into the hillside provide naturally even and cool temperatures without the need for refrigeration, reducing the carbon footprint of the wine and keeping costs down. Winemaking at Esk Valley is essentially minimalist and hands off, with a natural, non-interventionist approach being preferred unless fruit condition requires it. Gordon describes how as his confidence in the grapes has grown, his job has become easier and easier, with whole bunch pressing, running juice direct to barrel, and indigenous yeast fermentation and spontaneous malolactic being the norm.

100% French oak barriques for Esk Valley fruit
Gordon uses exclusively French oak for Esk Valley wines, and believes in leaving white wines on gross lees with regular stirring to build texture into the wine. He also follows this regime with Syrah, believing that this 'Burgundian' approach may sacrifice aroma but build texture. I was unable to confirm that he believes that 'Syrah is the Pinot of Hawke's Bay' but I'm sure he does :)

Esk Valley winery suffers from and revels in its 75 year legacy of somewhat unplanned expansion. The buildings are difficult to work in and lack the convenience of a modern purpose built cellar, but positives can be found - the cellar dug into the hillside, the massive concrete tanks now used for red fermentation, and the foundation of the main building which was once a tank used for storing fortified wine but has now been opened up for a new lease of life as a premium red barrel cellar.
Where good wine (and bad cellarhands) are kept
The things you find in old underground concrete sherry tanks
One of the most important legacies is the 20-odd red wine fermenters - open concrete vats lined with epoxy paint and lacking any of the niceties of a modern stainless steel fermenter - no temperature control, no easy way in or out, no way to seal it off for post ferment maceration other than plastic film and tape - and yet Gordon attributes much of the texture and tannin of the Esk Valley style to the thermal soak capacity of these tanks, their ability to even out fluctuations in temperature and share it between adjacent tanks, and the need for gentle hand plunging rather than pumpover or remontage.
The famous concrete fermenters



Hellloooo!
The winery itself is, to be a bit picky, somewhat shabby, with at best the fading charm of a once much larger establishment retiring gracefully, but the grounds are lovely, and the grey day brought out the gardens beautifully, so I indulged myself with a few gratuitously arty plant shots











Some of the collection of historic photos of the winery in Glenvale days can be seen in the winery tasting room
The range today
This seemed to say it all really
Happy students, learning, today Sue to the right, putting up with us.


Thanks Gordon and Sue

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Charlie's Birthday

This post belongs in the 'things only my family are really interested in' so please, move along, nothing to see here...
This is Charlie. He is Seven now.


He's quite happy about it because when you are six, being seven is the best thing in the world. Do you remember when being a year older was a good thing?
Andrew was only a little bit jealous when Cha got presents
Like the Star Wars Lego Speeder ('These are not the Droids you're looking for')

The party was at Onekawa Pool

This is a good idea because 10 small boys can swim, go on waterslides, make noise and mess, and nobody cares.

Seriously, stop looking at me
That's Andrew trying to be in Charlie's picture. Can you see him there? Cha doesn't seem impressed, but he has a fruit kebab so it's all ok really.
Vulcan flavour fruit kebabs

Mmmm - chips, honey  rice bubble biscuits, fruit kebabs, fizzy drink. But nobody was actually sick with excitement. Amazing really...I remember my 8th birthday...it probably looked a bit like this come to think of it.


This is Bella. She is nearly three.
When we weren't eating cake and chippies we went on the waterslides. I don't have pictures of them because I was in them too and my phone isn't waterproof. Here's the outlet...by the time you have run up the stairs a few times you have burned off any amount of chippies and fizz...and if you are carrying a nearly three year old (more! again! faster! splash!) you soon run out of energy.



What did you get?
There were presents.
Lots of presents




Leslie made a soccer ball cake (I made the grass from coconut!)

Bella likes a party. This is her seal towel.

In the end we were all exhausted after our busy morning
Self portrait by Charlie, age 7

And then we had to go to the soccer farewell, where Charlie won 'Golden Boot' for the most goals scored in the season. What a day.








Monday, August 30, 2010

No 3 in the series Wineries of Hawke's Bay: Sacred Hill

They play it cool at Sacred Hill

Maybe they don't want people to visit? Well we were early, so the class tried to go to Roosters next door. 

Dejection - closed
But Heather came to the gate and let us in, and we were away on our magical tour...
The receival bin and must chiller
First, the obligatory Front End  - where every winery tour begins. Raining hard today as you can see.
Two presses, one tipper tank, efficient handling of grapes.
Sacred Hill process 1000-1500 tonnes of Hawke's Bay fruit through this site.
Red Cellar
Lots of smaller ferments which are subsequently assessed for blending.
Students ask 'which one's the Riflemans?'

Maybe it's over there?

Or in these arty looking tanks?

Two kinds of heater visible 
In the malo room - 18 degrees, to get the wines finished promptly

But who do they mean? Surely not The Silver Fox?

That would do your head in wouldn't it?

The inside spiral beater arm of a destemmer/crusher

And the perforated rotating drum it lives in. Nice pic, n'est-ce que pas?



Retirement time for old glycol pumps. Kick back guys, you've earned it...

And now - the tasting of Ti Point wines. Students liked Rose 2010, Unwooded chard '09, and merlot/cab franc '09.

Then over to Armourtech where we saw the STARS unit



STARS is the electrolytic removal of bitartrate ions to enable the cold stabilisation of wines without the protracted storage of wine at very low temperatures - cheaper ($0.08 per litre) than chilling, less capital intensive (if you hire Armourtech to do it rather than buying your own unit) and faster too. Hooray.
The day ended happily because Roosters was open so it was back there for a muffin and a debrief - and for some, a flagon of the new Weissbier (mmm, bananas and cloves).


All too familiar logo in these pages... 

Monday, August 23, 2010

Roosters HB Class Visit 2010 part 2







Most of the beer brewed at Roosters goes out to the trade in kegs






But a lot gets served at the brewery in a very pleasant atmosphere 

There is nobody here because it's Tuesday morning and nobody drinks at that time of day in Hastings (shhh!)


There is lovely food
Fancy a roll?


And a convivial bar




Chris tells the 'son of a hill country sheep farmer' story one more time. The ladies are hanging on his every word...

And most of the students filled a flagon to take away because...




Well, they are students...