Chandon strives to attract many of its wine drinkers by using various methods of preparation. It prepares its sparkling wines using a traditional method which allows pressing of grape juice, and undergoing of two fermentation methods, one outside the bottle, and the other inside. The company also used the cool climate of Victoria to make wines with a variety of flavor and texture that wine drinkers like. In this regard, Chandon works with various growers of grape to use the climatic condition to produce grapes from diverse fruit types for different flavors of wine.
It gets its wine from winemakers such as Dan Buckle, Glenn Thompson, Adam Keath, and Daniel Dujic. Yering Station Yering Station had the first vineyard in 1838. Today, Yering Station is a family business and produces high quality wines. It is committed to bring the old and new together, therefore mixed the traditional wine making techniques with modern styles to provide tourists and local wine drinkers with high quality wine. The company has a Wine Store with a lot of information about wines for wine drinkers to browse and make informed purchasing decisions.
Visitors can find a variety of wine such as Mr. Fog, Parker Coonawarra Estate, and Yarrabank. It gets its wines and related products from its chief winemaker, William Lunn. It has a variety of sparkling wine including Yarrabank Late, Yarrabank Cuvee, and Yarrabank Crème de Cuvee. Types of wine in Australia White Wine Though the white wine, Chardonnay, was likely to be overlooked in the 1990s, it formed the foundation of other wines such as the red wine (White Wine – The Taste of Australia n.d.).
Many consumers who take other wines started by taking the white wine, which was packaged into bottles marked Lindemans Bin 65 or Jacob’s Creek (Allen 2010). Lindemans Bin 65 and Jacob’s Creek, which came in variety of tastes and flavor, were very popular in the United States and United Kingdom in the 1980s. They were prepared with the Australia’s taste and culture in mind, and were loved by many consumers (Beeston 2001). Chandon uses different wine made by Glenn Thompson. The different wine categories it sells include pinot meunier, pinot Shiraz, and pinot noir.
The wines are left in their bottles to age for at least eighteen months for it to produce the required texture and complexity. On the ther hand, Yering Station has a variety of white wine with different tastes and texture including Little Yering Cahrdonnay, Yering Station Village Fume Blac, and Yering Station Village Cahrdonnay. Red Wine The history of red wine in Australia dates back 200 years ago when the production of wine began in Australia. At that time, Grenache and Shiraz were the red grapes presented in Australia.
Fortified wine was made majorly to be taken at home. Many wine making activities at the time were aimed at changing Shizar and Grenanche into wine by pressing and maturating the product (Red Wine – The Flavor of Australia n.d.). Cabernet and Shiraz were blended to form the most beloved red wine in Australia and around the world. The wine producers also came up with the idea of using a variety of wine descriptions to add flavor and taste to their wine (Garde-Cerdan et al. 2013). Yering sells a variety of red wine including The Little Yering Carbernet, Little Yering Pinot Noir, and Yering Station Village ED Rose among others.
Desert and Fortified Wine Fortified Wine Fortified wine has been produced since the history of wine in Australia. Fortified wine is usually prepared with grapes that have been left in the vine for quite some time (Fortified and Desert Wine n.d.). They are left to stay for long in the vine to let the berries to stock more sugar as they slowly dry (Winetitles 2000). Fortified wines are normally prepared by adding some spirit brandy to red wine during fermentation to retain flavors and colors, and left to mature for some time, which can take even years (Halliday 2006).
Desert Wine The preparation of desert wine normally relies on botrytis cinerea fungi which take up water from the grape, making the amount of sugar and acid to increase, and leading to a decent flavor (Fortified and Desert Wine n.d.).
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