Chancellor Final Came Around

Anyone have much experience with Chancellor? I made one back in '98 that is finally drinkable. It was black with tannins because I left it on the skins until they sank. That, along with too much acid made it virtually undrinkable until now.

Not that I mind waiting 8 years but this year I will make it again and was wondering what acid levels other shoot for with this hybrid. I bottled this at 7.5 g/l which just seems too high. I may shoot for

6.5/g/l this time; that's higher than I normally go but this grape makes good wine and I would expect those bottles to last 10-15 years that I made back in 98. I may actually pull of some for earlier drinking and leave some on the skins longer for laying down.

It was literally undrinkable to a novice until now, only someone who likes big, dry reds would appreciate this. As much as people say they like big dry reds in the US I don't buy that. It's usually an acquired taste and most people I know never get that far with wines.

I liked the heavy tannins. I make a lot of light reds from Regina juice and they are fine for everyday table wines but a big red is never a bad thing when the meal calls for it.

The only fault if you wanted to call it that was the acid level, it dropped a little in the sediment but it still had a lot in there. Next bottle I will test. I think the reason I left it that high was mostly inexperience along with the pH being at 3.5. I traded off and bottled it too tart for my tastes in the interest of the numbers. That is not something I would do now, the taste is my tie breaker.

I was thinking of following Tom S's regime of lowering pH to 3.3 no matter what it does to the TA pre-ferment but this wine is good without ML; I'm not sure I want to go that route. I may split the difference, crops in PA are never predictable anyway. You get what the weather provides and go from there. Northwestern PA almost always requires some intervention.

Joe

Reply to
Joe Sallustio
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Joe- I don't grow Chancellor and I don't know anyone here in the KC area that does. But we do grow a lot of Chambourcin. My Chambourcin has trouble getting down to 0.9%TA before I panic and pick. A friend lets his hang two weeks longer than I do and his acid is the the 0.7% area. He makes excellent wine. If you can get your grower to let your grapes hand longer perhaps Chancellor will behave like Chambourcin. This year I'm tying by hands behind my back and will let the grapes hang until they start to pucker up. I'd like to take a crack at Chancellor...I hear it makes an excellent red wine.

Bill Frazier Olathe, Kansas USA

Reply to
William Frazier

Bill, I'll try that, I usually go get the grapes on the weekend so they are not necessarily picked based at the optimal time. This year I will plan to go up on the last days of the season. I usually go up as soon as they start picking, that can't help.

Joe

Reply to
Joe Sallustio

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