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Resources & Links Sign up for the newsletter to get the full tasting exercise sheet and weekly updates: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup
How to Contact Us Email Joanne at: [email protected]
Episode Summary In this episode, Joanne dives into the concept of lees aging—a winemaking technique that can add texture, flavor, and complexity to a wine. You’ll learn what lees are, what autolysis means, and how lees contact shows up in both still and sparkling wines.
Joanne also covers why some winemakers use lees aging and why others avoid it, depending on the wine’s intended style. You’ll walk away with a clear understanding of what to look for in the glass and how to taste the difference for yourself.
In This Episode:
What lees are and how they form during fermentation
The process of yeast autolysis and what it does to wine
Three key impacts lees aging has: added body, flavor, and stability
Why winemakers choose to age wines on the lees
Examples of wine styles that do and do not use lees aging
A side-by-side tasting recommendation:
Without lees contact: Sauvignon Blanc from Marlborough or Pinot Grigio
With lees contact: Muscadet Sèvre et Maine “Sur Lie” from the Loire Valley
Tasting Series Reminder This is tasting exercise number nine in the summer mini-series. You can download the full tasting sheet with prompts and guided questions from the newsletter at: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup
Next week’s episode will be the final tasting in this 10-part series, and then we’ll shift gears to cover more WSET Level 3 material.
Thank you for listening to the Wine Educate Podcast. Until next time!
4.9
1212 ratings
Resources & Links Sign up for the newsletter to get the full tasting exercise sheet and weekly updates: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup
How to Contact Us Email Joanne at: [email protected]
Episode Summary In this episode, Joanne dives into the concept of lees aging—a winemaking technique that can add texture, flavor, and complexity to a wine. You’ll learn what lees are, what autolysis means, and how lees contact shows up in both still and sparkling wines.
Joanne also covers why some winemakers use lees aging and why others avoid it, depending on the wine’s intended style. You’ll walk away with a clear understanding of what to look for in the glass and how to taste the difference for yourself.
In This Episode:
What lees are and how they form during fermentation
The process of yeast autolysis and what it does to wine
Three key impacts lees aging has: added body, flavor, and stability
Why winemakers choose to age wines on the lees
Examples of wine styles that do and do not use lees aging
A side-by-side tasting recommendation:
Without lees contact: Sauvignon Blanc from Marlborough or Pinot Grigio
With lees contact: Muscadet Sèvre et Maine “Sur Lie” from the Loire Valley
Tasting Series Reminder This is tasting exercise number nine in the summer mini-series. You can download the full tasting sheet with prompts and guided questions from the newsletter at: www.wineeducate.com/newsletter-signup
Next week’s episode will be the final tasting in this 10-part series, and then we’ll shift gears to cover more WSET Level 3 material.
Thank you for listening to the Wine Educate Podcast. Until next time!
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