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Under the Flor: The Science and Soul of Sherry01 Dec 202500:11:52

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In this episode of The Wine Lab, host Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores the scientific brilliance and cultural heritage of Sherry. From Andalucía’s luminous albariza soils to the flor yeasts that sculpt its aromatic identity, Sherry emerges as a wine shaped by geology, microbiology, and centuries of human expertise. We examine how fortification, performed after fermentation, determines whether a wine will age biologically as a Fino or oxidatively as an Oloroso, and how the solera system maintains continuity across generations. The episode also discusses sweetness levels, explaining how sun-dried PX and Moscatel wines are blended to create styles from Medium to Cream. With detours into Shakespeare, Poe, and Magellan’s voyages, this is a deep, compelling look at a wine that deserves fresh appreciation. 


Glossary


Albariza
A white, chalk-rich soil formed from ancient marine sediments. Highly porous and capable of storing winter rainfall, sustaining vines through Andalucía’s dry summers.

Asoleo
A traditional sun-drying process used for Pedro Ximénez (PX) and Moscatel grapes. Grapes are laid on straw mats to concentrate sugars before fermentation.

Biological Aging
Aging that occurs under a living layer of flor at ~15% alcohol. This process protects wine from oxidation and imparts acetaldehyde-driven aromas typical of Fino and Manzanilla.

Criaderas
The upper tiers in the solera system, each holding wine of progressively younger average age. Wines from these tiers refresh the older levels below.

Dulce
A very sweet Sherry produced by blending dry Sherry with PX or Moscatel wine or concentrated must. Contains >140 g/L residual sugar.

Flor
A naturally forming film of specialized Saccharomyces yeasts that floats on the wine’s surface in partially filled barrels. It metabolizes ethanol and oxygen, generating acetaldehyde and protecting the wine from oxidation.

Fortification
The addition of neutral grape spirit after fermentation to raise alcohol. Determines whether a Sherry will age biologically (~15–15.5%) or oxidatively (~17–18%).

Grape Spirit (Destilado de vino)
A neutral distillate made from wine, used to fortify Sherry without altering aroma or flavor.

Manzanilla
A biologically aged Sherry produced exclusively in Sanlúcar de Barrameda. Noted for its delicacy and slight maritime influence.

Medium Sherry
A sweetened style created by blending dry Sherry with PX or Moscatel wine or must. Contains 5–115 g/L residual sugar.

Oloroso
An oxidatively aged Sherry fortified to ~17–18% alcohol to prevent flor formation. Rich, deep, and aromatic.

Oxidative Aging
Aging without flor, allowing controlled oxygen exposure. Produces darker color and flavors of walnut, spice, and dried fruit.

Pedro Ximénez (PX)
An intensely sweet Sherry made from sun-dried PX grapes. Known for flavors of raisin, molasses, coffee, and fig.

Solera
The lowest and oldest tier in the solera system, from sol (“ground”). Wine drawn for bottling comes from this level and is replenished from the criadera above.

Solera System
A dynamic, fractional aging and blending method using stacked tiers of barrels. Ensures stylistic consistency and continuity across decades.

Sweet Sherries (Cream, Medium, Dulce)
Styles created by blending dry Sherrie

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Winter in a Glass: The Story and Science of Icewine24 Nov 202500:13:49

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Icewine is one of the most challenging and extraordinary wines ever produced,a liquid born from winter itself. In this episode of The Wine Lab, Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores how a frozen accident in 1794 became one of the modern wine world’s most coveted styles. We travel from Germany to Canada’s Niagara Peninsula, through vineyards picked at –10°C, and into fermenters battling extreme osmotic stress, soaring Brix, and yeast pushed to its limits.

From the brutal harvest nights to the chemistry of freezing, from osmotolerant yeast to glycerol production, this episode unpacks the science behind icewine’s intensity and the economics, authenticity concerns, sensory profile, and even the best glass to pour it in.

A story of persistence, purpose, and prowess, this is icewine as you’ve never heard it: equal parts science, craft, and the beautiful madness of making sweetness in the dead of winter. 

GLOSSARY 

Icewine / Eiswein
Wine made from grapes naturally frozen on the vine and pressed while still frozen.

Brix (°Bx)
A measure of sugar concentration in grape must; icewine typically begins above 35°Bx.

Osmotic Stress
The pressure yeast face in high-sugar environments, slowing fermentation and challenging metabolism.

YAN (Yeast Assimilable Nitrogen)
The portion of nitrogen available to yeast; critical in supporting fermentation, especially in high-sugar musts.

Osmotolerant Yeast
Yeast strains selected or bred to survive fermentations with high sugar, low water activity, and strong osmotic pressure.

Glycerol
A fermentation byproduct that increases mouthfeel and viscosity, often elevated in icewine.

Norisoprenoids
Aroma compounds (e.g., β-damascenone) contributing notes of honey, dried fruit, and baked apple.

Monoterpenes
Aromatic compounds responsible for floral and citrus notes, especially in Riesling-based icewines.

Cryoextraction
Artificial freezing of grapes; not permitted in true icewine production.

Residual Sugar (RS)
Sugar remaining after fermentation; icewine typically ranges between 150–220 g/L.

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From Bark to Bottle: The Cork Chronicles15 Sep 202500:10:41

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Cork is everywhere in the world of wine, from the quiet of a cellar to the noise of a celebration. But how did this small stopper come to influence the way wines age, the rituals of opening a bottle, and even the way we think about quality? In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore the science, the history, and the culture wrapped up in every cork, and ponder why it remains central to wine today. 

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Sweet Lies and Dry Truths: Sugar in Wine08 Sep 202500:08:25

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 Is wine really “full of sugar”? What about those “zero sugar” labels, or the idea that wine is keto-friendly? In this episode of The Wine Lab, Andreea breaks down what you need to know about sugar in wine — from grapes on the vine to yeast in the tank, from chaptalization in Burgundy to back-sweetening in Riesling, and from Champagne dosage to carbs and calories. Along the way, we’ll uncover what’s legal, what’s marketing, and what really ends up in your glass. 

Glossary

  • Glucose & Fructose – The natural grape sugars fermented by yeast into alcohol and carbon dioxide.
  • Residual Sugar (RS) – Natural grape sugar left in wine after fermentation is stopped or incomplete. The main source of carbohydrates in wine.
  • Chaptalization – Adding sugar before fermentation to increase alcohol, not sweetness. Legal in many cooler regions (e.g., Burgundy, Germany), illegal in warmer regions (e.g., California, Italy, Spain).
  • Back-sweetening – Adding grape juice, concentrate, or in some U.S. states, sugar after fermentation to increase sweetness. EU law restricts this to grape-derived products only.
  • Süssreserve – A German method of back-sweetening where unfermented grape juice is reserved and blended into the wine after fermentation.
  • Dosage – In sparkling wines, a small addition of sugar solution before corking that sets the final sweetness level (e.g., Brut Nature, Brut, Demi-Sec).
  • Fortification – Adding a spirit such as brandy to stop fermentation, leaving natural grape sugar in the wine (e.g., Port, Madeira).
  • Dry Wine – A wine where nearly all sugars have been fermented away, leaving little or no residual sugar.
  • Sweet Wine – A wine with sugar remaining in the finished product, either naturally or through winemaking choices.
  • Keto-friendly Wines – Typically dry wines with 1–3 g of carbs per 5 oz glass, low enough to fit into a ketogenic diet.

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Wine in Art – From Ancient Gods to Pop Culture01 Sep 202500:15:45

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 Wine shimmers across the history of art: painted on Egyptian tomb walls, poured into Greek amphorae, celebrated in Roman mosaics, lifted in Renaissance chalices, and glowing in Impressionist picnics. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we follow its journey through image, poetry, and song, tracing how wine has carried sacred meanings, earthly joys, and artistic inspiration across millennia—ending with Pablo Neruda’s luminous Ode to Wine.


🍷 Glossary of Lesser-Known Terms

Amphora
A tall, two-handled clay vessel used in ancient Greece and Rome to store and transport wine. Often decorated with painted scenes.

Dionysus / Bacchus
The Greek (Dionysus) and Roman (Bacchus) gods of wine, fertility, and festivity. Frequently depicted with vines, ivy crowns, satyrs, and panthers.

Symposium
A Greek banquet or drinking party where men gathered to drink wine, discuss philosophy, and enjoy poetry, music, and games.

Kottabos
A popular drinking game played at Greek symposia, where participants flung the dregs of their wine at a target, often while reclining.

Maenads
Female followers of Dionysus in Greek mythology, often shown in ecstatic dances, symbolizing the wild, frenzied side of wine and ritual.

Carmina Burana
A medieval collection of Latin songs and poems (12th–13th century) written by wandering students and clergy. Includes both religious hymns and bawdy drinking songs. Later set to music by composer Carl Orff.

In Taberna Quando Sumus
One of the most famous drinking songs from Carmina Burana, describing the chaos and revelry inside a tavern.

Cistercians and Benedictines
Catholic monastic orders in medieval Europe. They preserved viticulture knowledge and carefully cultivated vineyards, especially in Burgundy, often recording early observations of terroir.

Terroir
A French term describing the unique combination of soil, climate, and geography that shapes the character of a wine. First systematically studied by monastic orders in the Middle Ages.

Mission Grape
The first European grape variety planted in the Americas by Spanish missionaries, used for sacramental wine in Mexico, Chile, and later California.

Counter-Reformation
A movement within the Catholic Church (16th–17th centuries) responding to Protestant Reformation. In art, it emphasized realism and emotional intensity—Caravaggio’s gritty, dramatic paintings reflect this style.

Jan Steen
A Dutch Golden Age painter known for lively, chaotic tavern and household scenes, often using spilled wine and misbehavior as moral lessons.

Ode to Wine
A lyrical poem by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, celebrating wine as both an earthly pleasure and a cosmic force.

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Headaches, Hipsters, and the Myth of Sulfite-Free Natural Wine25 Aug 202500:07:54

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 In this episode of The Wine Lab, host Andreea Botezatu unpacks the misunderstood world of sulfites in wine — what they are, what they do, and why that warning label exists. From antioxidant chemistry to ancient winemaking tricks, we look at how sulfur dioxide protects wine, explore common myths - like the one about sulfites and headaches - and even dive into the science of those rare sulfite sensitivities. Expect a splash of history, a little rock ‘n’ roll, and a few nerdy detours into redox chemistry. 

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

The Oldest Wines Ever Discovered – Stories from the Ancient World18 Aug 202500:09:43

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From Neolithic pottery shards to golden amphorae sealed for millennia, the world’s oldest wines tell us more than just what ancient people drank — they reveal how wine shaped trade, ritual, and daily life across civilizations. In this episode, we journey through some of the most remarkable archaeological wine finds, explore the science used to identify them, and imagine what these ancient vintages might have tasted like.


Glossary

Qvevri (also spelled Kvevri)

Large, egg-shaped clay vessels used in Georgia for fermenting, aging, and storing traditional wine—usually buried underground or set into the floor. They’ve been integral to Georgian winemaking for millennia.
 

Pithoi

Very large earthenware storage jars used throughout the ancient Greek world—sometimes as tall as a human—used for storing bulk foods or liquids like grain and wine, sometimes even used for burial.
 

Krater

A large, two-handled Greek vessel used for mixing wine with water. In ancient symposia, it stood centrally, and wine would be served from it using other vessels.

Amphora(e)

Two-handled, narrow-necked jars used across the ancient Mediterranean—as storage and transport containers for wine and olive oil. Common in maritime trade and often inscribed with workshop or content details.
 

Symposium (Symposion)

An elite Greek social gathering held after dinner—men reclining, drinking, and engaging in music, poetry, or philosophical discussion. The setting often included kraters and specialized drinking cups.

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Under Pressure: The Craft and Chemistry of Sparkling Wine. How do the world’s finest bubbles get into your glass? We explore the science, regions, and traditions of sparkling wine.11 Aug 202500:10:02

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 From royal courts in 17th-century France to today’s celebrations around the world, sparkling wine has captured attention for centuries. In this episode of The Wine Lab, host Andreea Botezatu explains how sparkling wines are made, from traditional Champagne techniques to Prosecco’s Charmat method and beyond. We’ll look at the role of secondary fermentation, explore different sweetness levels, highlight the major regions producing sparkling wine, and share the story of La Veuve Clicquot, the woman who changed sparkling wine production forever. 

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Native Rebels and Cultured Icons: Yeast in the Cellar - How yeast drives complexity, unpredictability, and style in winemaking.04 Aug 202500:08:28

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In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore the unseen world of yeast—the microscopic winemakers transforming grape juice into wine. 

From lab-selected commercial strains to wild, spontaneous fermentations and even wineries culturing their own native yeasts, we uncover how these tiny organisms shape wine’s flavor, texture, and identity. 

Along the way, we touch on yeast’s long history in human culture—from bread to beer to Bordeaux. 

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Smells Like Wine Spirit: The Science of Aroma28 Jul 202500:10:17

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Why does a glass of wine smell like blackberries, jasmine, or freshly cut herbs—when it’s made entirely from grapes? 

In this episode, we explore the complex and fascinating science of wine aroma.

 From compounds naturally found in grapes and flowers to the transformative role of fermentation and microbes, we trace how scent molecules form, evolve, and interact with our senses. 

We’ll also examine how genetics, memory, and culture shape the way we experience wine, and why no two noses interpret it quite the same way. 

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Malolactic: Magic or Mayhem?21 Jul 202500:11:01

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In this episode of The Wine Lab, we swirl through the science of malolactic fermentation (MLF), the process that can soften wine and elevate complexity, but also invite spoilage and instability, especially in high pH wines. We break down what MLF actually is, why winemakers use it, when they avoid it, and how to manage its benefits and risks with precision.

Perfect for winemakers, wine students, and curious wine lovers.

For more in-depth information on this topic you can watch this webinar, which is part of my Enology Webinars Series.: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0tf6XRqRlg&list=PL3ahyvW-3wQrSRJO1BEvEpJS8ISBZH_D0&index=37

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Sour Grapes, Sweet Solutions: How Verjus Could Help Winemakers Beat the Heat14 Jul 202500:05:19

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Can a splash of sour grape juice make wines better in a warming world? 

In this episode, we explore how verjus—juice from unripe grapes—can improve wine chemistry, reduce alcohol, and enhance sustainability in hot-climate winemaking. Based on research from Texas A&M University.


 👉 Read the full paper

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Pét-Nat: Ancient Method, Modern Mood17 Nov 202500:11:51

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Before Champagne perfected the art of bubbles, there was pétillant naturel or pét-nat -  the ancestral, gracefully imperfect  way to make sparkling wine. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore the chemistry, the history, and the somewhat controlled chaos that defines this naturally effervescent style.

Why does pét-nat fizz differently? What actually happens when fermentation finishes inside a sealed bottle? And why are winemakers, from the Loire to California, falling back in love with this centuries-old technique?

From carbonic acid to crown caps, this episode reveals the science and spirit of a wine that refuses to be tamed.

Glossary

TermDefinitionPétillant Naturel (Pét-Nat) | A naturally sparkling wine made by bottling before primary fermentation is complete, so it finishes fermenting in the bottle (méthode ancestrale).
Méthode Ancestrale | The oldest method of sparkling wine production; fermentation finishes in bottle without added sugar or secondary yeast inoculation.
Méthode Traditionnelle | The traditional Champagne method involving a second fermentation in bottle, extended lees aging, and disgorgement.
Dosage | A mixture of sugar and wine added after disgorgement in traditional sparkling wines to balance acidity and adjust sweetness. Not used in pét-nat.
Lees | Dead yeast cells and other solids that settle after fermentation; can add texture and flavor when aged intentionally.
Autolysis | Breakdown of yeast cells over time, releasing compounds that add “brioche” or “toasty” notes to traditional sparkling wines.
Crown Cap | A metal cap similar to a beer cap, often used for pét-nat bottles due to lower pressure and rustic style.
Residual Sugar (RS) | Unfermented sugar remaining in the wine; in pét-nat, small amounts may remain depending on fermentation completion.
Carbonic Acid (H₂CO₃) | A weak acid formed when CO₂ dissolves in wine; contributes a slight tang and enhances perceived freshness.
Haze / Sediment | Cloudiness caused by yeast or solids remaining in unfiltered wines; common and expected in pét-nat.


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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Cluster Thinning and Wine Quality: Myth, Method, or Must?14 Jul 202500:06:35

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Can fewer grapes mean better wine? In this episode of The Wine Lab, Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores the science behind cluster thinning, a time-honored but hotly debated vineyard practice. Drawing from a recent narrative systematic review, we break down what the research really says about its impact on wine aroma, phenolics, sensory quality, and economic viability. Whether you’re managing a vineyard or just love wine science, this episode offers practical insights to help you make informed decisions.

📄 Read the full paper here:
https://oeno-one.eu/article/view/8238

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Uncorking Haloanisoles in Wine14 Jul 202500:06:01

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We’ve all heard of “corked” wine — but what if that wet dog smell isn’t the cork’s fault at all? In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore the fascinating and frustrating world of haloanisoles: TCA, TBA, TeCA, PCA, and their highly aromatic footprint in wine.

These powerful compounds can travel through the air, cling to barrels and insulation, and even sabotage stainless steel tanks. Learn about their origins, their impact on sensory perception, the limits of closures like screwcaps and synthetic corks, and the cutting-edge methods being developed to detect and remove them.

Whether you’re a winemaker, sommelier, or just a curious wine geek, this episode uncorks the real story behind “cork taint” — and why it’s time to call it haloanisole taint.

To read the full paper that the episode is based on, visit: https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/28/6/2532

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For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Steel, Bubbles, and Fruit: Inside the Making of Prosecco03 Nov 202500:10:14

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What makes Prosecco so different from Champagne or Cava?


 In this episode, Andreea takes you inside the tanks (almost literally) to explore the Charmat method, the clever bit of winemaking engineering that gives Prosecco its bright, floral personality.

We’ll look at how Glera grapes, stainless-steel pressure tanks, and precise temperature control create a wine built on freshness rather than aging. You’ll learn what “tirage” and “dosage” mean in Prosecco, why it skips lees aging, and how its chemistry translates into texture, aroma, and food pairing magic.

By the end, you’ll know exactly why those bubbles feel lighter, taste fruitier, and disappear a little faster — and why that’s the whole point.


Glossary

  • Charmat (Martinotti) Method:
    The tank-fermentation process used for most Prosecco, where the second fermentation happens in a sealed stainless-steel tank rather than in the bottle.
  • Tirage:
    A mixture of sugar and yeast added to the base wine to start the secondary fermentation.
  • Dosage:
    A small addition of sugar or sweetened wine used to adjust the final sweetness level of sparkling wine (Brut, Extra Dry, Dry).
  • Lees:
    The spent yeast cells left after fermentation. Prosecco is typically filtered off the lees quickly, preserving freshness.
  • Glera:
    The main grape variety used for Prosecco — formerly called “Prosecco” until the DOCG rules renamed it.
  • Autolysis:
    The breakdown of yeast cells during extended lees aging, responsible for the toasty and bready notes in Champagne — largely absent in Prosecco.
  • Isobaric Bottling:
    Bottling under equal pressure to retain dissolved CO₂ and prevent the wine from losing its sparkle.

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Champagne & Cava: Two Ways to Catch a Bubble (or proof that joy can be engineered - one tiny bubble at a time)27 Oct 202500:09:29

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Across Europe, bubbles tell stories. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore two sparkling legends - Champagne and Cava -  both born from the same meticulous process yet shaped by different lands, grapes, and histories.

We’ll uncover how the traditional method transforms still wine into a storm of fine bubbles, why the same Brut label can taste drier in Champagne than in Cava, and how yeast, sugar, and time create that signature creamy texture and brioche aroma.

From royal coronations in Reims to sunny Catalan cellars, discover the shared science and unique soul of the world’s most beloved sparkling wines - proof that joy, sometimes, can be engineered.

Glossary

Méthode Traditionnelle (Traditional Method):
The classic process of making sparkling wine, involving a second fermentation inside the bottle that traps carbon dioxide and creates natural bubbles.

Tirage:
A mixture of sugar and yeast added to the base wine to start secondary fermentation.

Lees / Autolysis:
Dead yeast cells that settle after fermentation. Over time, they break down, releasing flavor compounds that add creaminess and notes of bread, nuts, and brioche.

Riddling (Remuage):
Gradual turning of bottles to collect sediment in the neck before removal.

Disgorgement (Dégorgement):
Freezing and ejecting the sediment plug from the bottle after aging.

Dosage:
The final addition of wine and sugar after disgorgement to balance acidity and determine sweetness level.

Residual Sugar (RS):
The amount of natural grape sugar remaining in wine after fermentation, measured in grams per liter (g/L).

Brut / Extra Brut / Brut Nature:
Dryness levels in sparkling wine. Brut Nature is bone dry (0–3 g/L sugar), Extra Brut slightly less dry (up to 6 g/L), and Brut the most common (up to 12 g/L).

Gyropalette:
A mechanized riddling machine invented in Spain, now used worldwide to automate the process.

Champagne Grapes:
Primarily Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier.

  • Chardonnay brings elegance, freshness, and citrus-mineral notes.
  • Pinot Noir adds body, structure, and red-fruit depth.
  • Pinot Meunier contributes softness, fruitiness, and approachability.

Cava Grapes:
Traditionally Macabeu (Viura), Xarel·lo, and Parellada, sometimes joined by Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, or Trepat for rosé styles.

  • Macabeu offers floral and apple notes with a gentle profile.
  • Xarel·lo provides structure, acidity, and subtle spice.
  • Parellada adds lift, freshness, and delicate citrus.
    Together, they express the Mediterranean warmth and brightness that define Cava.

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

Inside the Barrel: Where Wine Meets Oak, Fire, and Time20 Oct 202500:13:38

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In this episode of The Wine Lab, Andreea takes you inside one of winemaking’s most iconic tools — the oak barrel. From Celtic craftsmanship to modern coopering, we’ll explore how fire, oxygen, and time turn simple wood into a vessel of transformation.

Discover why oak became the gold standard, what happens during toasting, and how micro-oxygenation softens tannins and stabilizes color. Learn about the differences between French, American, and Hungarian oak, the chemistry behind aging, and even the future of sustainable cooperage — including experimental ideas like biochar barrels and hybrid woods.

It’s the story of the barrel as both instrument and ingredient — a breathing partner that connects forest, fire, and fermentation in one seamless conversation.

Glossary of Key Terms 

Barrique – The standard Bordeaux-style oak barrel, holding about 225 liters of wine. Its small size increases oak influence and oxygen exposure.

Toasting – The process of heating the inside of a barrel with fire to bend the staves and develop flavor compounds like vanillin, furfural, and spice phenols.

Ellagitannins – Polyphenolic compounds in oak wood that stabilize color and influence mouthfeel during aging; they also act as antioxidants.

Micro-oxygenation – The slow diffusion of oxygen through the wood, which polymerizes tannins, softens structure, and develops complexity in wine.

Foudres – Very large wooden vats (1,000–20,000 L) used for aging; they allow oxidative benefits of wood with minimal oak flavor influence.

Hemicellulose and Lignin – Structural components of wood that decompose under heat to form aromatic compounds like vanilla, caramel, and smoke notes.

Angel’s Share – The portion of wine (water and alcohol) that evaporates through the barrel over time, concentrating flavor and altering balance.

Acetaldehyde – A compound formed by mild oxidation of ethanol; in small amounts, it adds brightness and nuttiness, but in excess it can smell bruised or sherried.

Biochar – A carbon-rich material produced by pyrolysis of biomass in low oxygen; being explored in cooperage as a sustainable, oxygen-modulating material.

Hybrid Barrel – A barrel made from different woods (e.g., oak staves with acacia or cherry heads) to achieve specific flavor or structural goals.

Support the show

For more detailed wine science checkout my YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@Enology_channel

From Leather to Cabernet: The Story of Tannins13 Oct 202500:11:44

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In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore the science and story of tannins: what they are, where they come from, and why some wines feel silky while others grip your gums.

From the ancient craft of leather tanning to modern barrel aging, we trace how these polyphenolic compounds shape wine’s structure, color, and longevity. We’ll look at how fermentation temperature, pH, and rising alcohol shift what gets extracted from skins and seeds — and how acidity changes the way tannins feel on your palate.

You’ll also learn why black tea gives you the same dry feeling as a young Cabernet, that tannins aren’t probably the cause of wine headaches, and why  some white wines  have more tannin character than you might think.

So pour a glass, and let’s explore the chemistry of feeling wine.


Astringency – The tactile, drying sensation in the mouth caused by tannins binding to salivary proteins, reducing lubrication. It’s a feeling, not a flavor.

Tannins – Polyphenolic compounds found in grape skins, seeds, stems, and oak. They contribute structure, color stability, and aging potential to wine.

Condensed tannins (Proanthocyanidins) – Tannins naturally present in grapes; built from flavan-3-ols. They shape a wine’s body and mouthfeel.

Hydrolyzable tannins – Tannins derived from oak barrels, composed of gallic or ellagic acid units. They provide antioxidant capacity and subtle structure during aging.

Anthocyanins – Water-soluble pigments in grape skins that give red and purple wines their color. They stabilize when bonded to tannins.

Maceration – The period during fermentation when grape skins and seeds are in contact with the juice, allowing extraction of color, flavor, and tannins.

pH / Acidity – A measure of wine’s acid level. Lower pH (higher acidity) makes tannins feel firmer; higher pH makes them feel softer.

Polymerization – The process where small tannin molecules link into longer chains over time, softening texture and reducing astringency.

Ethanol – The alcohol formed during fermentation. It changes the solubility of phenolics, enhancing seed-tannin extraction but slowing pigment release.

Tribology – The study of friction and lubrication. Used in wine sensory research to explain how tannins affect mouthfeel.

Ellagitannins – Oak-derived tannins that help stabilize color and protect wine from oxidation during barrel aging.

Extended maceration – A winemaking technique where wine remains on skins after fermentation to extract additional tannins and complexity.

Aging – The slow chemical evolution of wine after fermentation. Tannins polymerize and precipitate, softening texture over time.

Bitterness – A taste detected by receptors on the tongue, distinct from astringency (a physical sensation).

Color stability – The persistence of wine color over time, maintained by reactions between tannins and anthocyanins that form more stable pigments.

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Wine with Spirit: The World of Fortified Wines06 Oct 202500:08:59

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What do Port, Sherry, Madeira, Marsala, and Vermouth all have in common? They’re wines with an extra ingredient — spirit. In this episode of The Wine Lab, Dr. Andreea Botezatu explores how fortification began as a practical solution for preserving wine on long sea voyages and evolved into a craft that shaped trade, taste, and culture.

From Shakespeare’s Falstaff praising “sack” to George Washington’s love for Madeira, we’ll travel through history and a little chemistry to understand what makes fortified wines so enduring. You’ll learn about their different origins, what spirits are used (always grape-derived!), how to serve them, and the best ways to enjoy them — from chilled Fino with tapas to Vintage Port and Stilton by the fire.

A story of science, adaptation, and taste — all in one small pour.

Glossary

Aguardente vínica

A neutral grape brandy used to fortify Port and other Portuguese wines. It typically sits around 77% ABV and is added mid-fermentation to stop the process and preserve natural sweetness.
🔗 Instituto dos Vinhos do Douro e do Porto (IVDP)

Amontillado

A style of Sherry that starts aging biologically under flor (like a Fino), then continues oxidatively after the flor dies off, creating nutty, caramelized aromas.
🔗 Sherry Wines – Amontillado Overview (Consejo Regulador)

Copita

A small, tulip-shaped glass traditionally used for serving Sherry. Today, the Sherry Council recommends small white-wine glasses instead, to allow greater aromatic expression.
 🔗 Sherry Wines – How to Serve Sherry

Flor

A layer of yeast that forms naturally on the surface of Fino and Manzanilla Sherries, protecting the wine from oxidation and producing unique acetaldehyde-driven aromas (almond, green apple, saline).
🔗 Sherry Wines – The Role of Flor

Fino

The driest style of Sherry, aged entirely under flor. Fresh, crisp, and delicate, often served chilled with tapas or fried foods.
 🔗 Sherry Wines – Fino

Madeira

A fortified wine from the Portuguese island of Madeira, famous for its oxidative and heat-influenced production process (estufagem). Styles range from dry (Sercial) to rich (Malmsey).
🔗 Instituto do Vinho, do Bordado e do Artesanato da Madeira (IVBAM)

Marsala

A fortified wine produced around the city of Marsala in western Sicily, Italy. Often made with local varieties like Grillo and Catarratto, and sometimes enriched with cooked grape must (mosto cotto).
🔗 Consorzio di Tutela del Vino Marsala DOC

Oloroso

A Sherry style aged entirely by oxidation, resulting in a full-bodied, nutty, and often semi-sweet wine.
 🔗 Sherry Wines – Oloroso

Port

A fortified wine from Portugal’s Douro Valley, produced in various styles (Ruby, Tawny, Vintage). Fermentation is stopped early by adding grape spirit, retaining residual sugar.

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Dom Perignon - The Monk Who Didn’t Invent Champagne29 Sep 202500:07:52

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Everyone knows the story of Dom Pérignon — the monk who invented Champagne and declared he was “tasting the stars.” But history tells a very different tale. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we uncover the truth behind one of wine’s most enduring myths.

Dom Pérignon didn’t create sparkling wine at all! In fact, he spent much of his life trying to eliminate bubbles from the Abbey of Hautvillers’ wines. Yet his innovations in grape selection, blending, and cellar practices laid the foundation for the Champagne style we know today. Along the way, we’ll explore how monks in southern France were making Blanquette de Limoux as early as 1531, how English scientists and glassmakers contributed critical tools, and how Champagne finally transformed its “fault” into a feature during the 18th century.

It’s a story of climate, innovation, and collaboration across regions and centuries — and of how a myth, repeated often enough, can outshine the real history. The truth, though, is just as fascinating: a centuries-long journey that turned accidental fizz into the world’s most iconic wine of celebration.

Blanquette de Limoux
A sparkling wine from southern France, first recorded in 1531 at the Abbey of Saint-Hilaire; made by the méthode ancestrale and often cited as the oldest sparkling wine still in production.


Méthode ancestrale
An older sparkling method where fermentation finishes in the bottle, yielding natural sweetness and softer effervescence—explicitly recognized in the Limoux AOC specifications.

Secondary fermentation (Champagne method)
The in-bottle fermentation that creates pressure and dissolved CO₂.

Christopher Merret
In 1662, Merret presented Some Observations concerning the Ordering of Wines to the Royal Society, describing the deliberate addition of sugar to provoke a secondary fermentation—key historical evidence for controlled sparkling production.

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Roots of Disaster: The Phylloxera Story. A tiny insect nearly erased wine from history — discover how science, stubbornness, and a Texan saved it.22 Sep 202500:10:10

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In the late 1800s, an almost invisible insect began destroying Europe’s vineyards. This episode of The Wine Lab takes you inside the phylloxera crisis — from the first mysterious vine deaths in France to the desperate experiments, scientific breakthroughs, and global collaboration that saved wine from near extinction. Along the way, we meet the heroes of the story, including Texan horticulturist T.V. Munson, whose work with American rootstocks helped rescue French viticulture. Discover how this tiny pest reshaped winemaking traditions, why grafted vines are now the global standard, and why phylloxera is still with us today.

Glossary 

Phylloxera – The root-feeding insect that caused the 19th-century wine crisis.

  • Current scientific name: Daktulosphaira vitifoliae (Fitch, 1855)
  • Historical name: Phylloxera vastatrix (“devastating phylloxera”), the term used during the crisis and still found in many older accounts.

Vitis vinifera – The European grape species from which most classic wine varieties (Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Riesling, Chardonnay, etc.) are derived.

Rootstock – The lower portion of a grafted vine, made from a resistant American grape species or hybrid, providing roots and protection from phylloxera and soil stresses.

Scion – The upper portion of a grafted vine, which grows the shoots, leaves, and grape clusters. Determines the grape variety and wine style.

Cambium – The thin layer of actively dividing cells just under the bark of a plant. When the cambium layers of scion and rootstock align during grafting, they fuse and allow nutrient and water flow.

Grafting – The horticultural technique of joining a scion to a rootstock so they grow as one plant. Grafting European Vitis vinifera onto American rootstocks is the standard global solution to phylloxera.

Hybrid grape – A vine bred by crossing Vitis vinifera with American grape species to combine resistance and adaptability. Early hybrids were criticized for producing wines with unfamiliar “foxy” aromas but are experiencing renewed interest in modern viticulture.

Ungrafted vine – A vine growing on its own roots, without grafting. Rare today except in sandy soils or in phylloxera-free regions such as much of Chile and the Canary Islands.

Rioja Boom – The surge in Spanish wine production and modernization of Rioja in the late 19th century, driven by French wine merchants escaping phylloxera devastation in France.

Chevalier du Mérite Agricole – A French agricultural honor awarded to T.V. Munson in 1888 for his contributions in selecting American rootstocks that saved European vineyards.


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Vermouth and the Logic of Botanicals22 Dec 202500:09:29

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Vermouth is everywhere, yet rarely examined on its own.

Often encountered through classic cocktails rather than the glass itself, vermouth plays a defining role in balance, aroma, and structure while remaining largely unacknowledged. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we slow down and treat vermouth as what it truly is: wine, shaped by fortification, bitterness, and deliberate design.

We explore vermouth’s foundations in neutral grape varieties, the use of grape spirit for stability and extraction, and the careful construction of botanical profiles built around wormwood, roots, barks, citrus, and spice. Along the way, we trace its emergence from eighteenth-century Turin, its ties to apothecaries and café culture, and its evolution into a cornerstone of modern drinking culture.

This episode examines why bitterness matters, how extraction chemistry influences sensory balance, and why vermouth behaves like wine once the bottle is opened. More than a mixer, vermouth reveals how intention, chemistry, and restraint can reshape what wine can be.


Glossary

Vermouth
An aromatized, fortified wine flavored with botanicals, legally required to include wormwood.

Wermut
The German word for wormwood, from which the term vermouth is derived.

Wormwood (Artemisia spp.)
A bitter plant containing potent compounds that provide structural bitterness in vermouth.

Aromatized Wine
Wine that has been flavored with herbs, spices, fruits, or other botanicals after fermentation.

Fortification
The addition of distilled alcohol, typically neutral grape spirit, to raise alcohol content and improve stability.

Neutral Grape Variety
A grape selected for low aromatic intensity and high acidity, used as a base to showcase added flavors rather than varietal character.

Sesquiterpene Lactones
Bitter compounds found in plants like wormwood and gentian that contribute to vermouth’s structure and persistence.

Maceration
Extraction of compounds by soaking botanicals in wine or alcohol over time.

Infusion
Gentle extraction of aromatic compounds, often at lower temperatures.

Aperitif
A drink consumed before a meal, traditionally intended to stimulate appetite.

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Madeira - From Ocean Voyages to Attic Barrels 15 Dec 202500:11:17

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Madeira is one of the most resilient wines ever produced. Fortified during fermentation, intentionally heated, and slowly oxidized, it defies many of the rules that govern wine aging and thrives because of it.

In this episode of The Wine Lab, we explore how Madeira’s unique production methods developed through long ocean voyages, how fortification with highly rectified grape spirit shapes sweetness and stability, and why heating methods like estufagem and canteiro create such extraordinary longevity. Along the way, we trace Madeira’s chemical evolution, its role in history and literature, and the compounds that give it aromas of nuts, citrus peel, and caramel.

This is a story of wine shaped by travel, time, and deliberate stress, and a reminder that endurance can be its own form of elegance.

Before you go, pour a glass of Madeira, taste it slowly, and share it with someone curious. Some wines reward patience more than others.

Until next time, stay curious, cheers!


Glossary

Aguardente vínica
A highly rectified, neutral grape spirit used to fortify Madeira during fermentation, typically around 95 to 96 percent alcohol.

Boal (Bual)
A Madeira grape variety used to produce medium sweet wines with caramelized fruit and nutty aromas.

Canteiro
A traditional Madeira aging method where barrels mature slowly in warm lofts, heated only by ambient conditions, often for decades.

Estufagem
A controlled heating process for Madeira using tanks or heated rooms, typically applied to younger wines.

Fortification
The addition of grape spirit during fermentation to stop yeast activity, preserve sweetness, and increase alcohol.

Malvasia (Malmsey)
A grape variety used for the richest and sweetest style of Madeira.

Sercial
A high acid grape variety producing the driest style of Madeira.

Sotolon
An aroma active compound associated with walnut, curry leaf, maple syrup, and aged fortified wines.

Verdelho
A Madeira grape variety producing medium dry wines with smoky and saline notes.

Vinho da roda / Torna viagem
Historical Madeira wines intentionally sent on long sea voyages and returned to enhance flavor through heat and oxidation.

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Fortified by the Douro: The Story of Port Wine08 Dec 202500:11:26

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Step into the steep, sunlit terraces of Portugal’s Douro Valley and explore how landscape, law, chemistry, and culture shaped one of the world’s most distinctive wines. 

In this episode of The Wine Lab, host Dr. Andreea Botezatu traces the story of Port from the Douro’s historic demarcation in 1756 to the precise moment fermentation is stopped with grape spirit. 

Follow the evolution of styles, from ruby’s vibrant fruit to the layered depth of long-aged tawnies, and learn how traditional lagares, the Benefício vineyard-grading system, and regulated aging all influence flavor and structure. 

Along the way, Port’s presence in literature, art, and history comes into focus, along with thoughtful food pairings that highlight each style’s personality. A deep, engaging journey through a wine shaped by place, technique, and time. 

GLOSSARY


Aguardente
A grape-derived spirit at 77% alcohol used to halt fermentation and fortify Port wine.

Anthocyanins
Pigments in grape skins responsible for red color; highly soluble in the ethanol-rich environment of Port.

Benefício System
The Douro’s vineyard classification system (A–F) that determines how much Port each vineyard is permitted to produce, based on quality factors.

Demarcated Region (DOP Porto)
The legally defined area in northern Portugal where Port must be produced to bear the name.

Foot Treading (Lagares)
Traditional method of crushing grapes with human feet in shallow granite tanks, maximizing extraction while avoiding seed bitterness.

Fortification
The process of adding grape spirit during fermentation to stop yeast activity and preserve natural grape sugar.

IVDP (Instituto dos Vinhos do Douro e do Porto)
Regulatory body responsible for overseeing Port production, vineyard classification, and quality certification.

Oxidative Aging
Aging process, typical of Tawny Ports, where controlled oxygen exposure develops caramel, nut, and dried fruit notes.

Reductive Aging
Aging in environments with minimal oxygen exposure, typical of Ruby and Vintage Ports, preserving fresh fruit and color.

Sotolon
An aroma compound associated with oxidative aging; contributes nutty, maple-like, or warm spice notes in Tawny Port.

Vintage Declaration
Decision by Port houses to declare a year as suitable for Vintage Port, done only in exceptional harvests.

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Marsala And The Reputation It Did Not Choose29 Dec 202500:08:42

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Welcome back to The Wine Lab. In this episode, we take a closer look at Marsala, one of the most misunderstood fortified wines in the world.

Often dismissed as a cooking ingredient, Marsala has a long history as a serious wine shaped by fortification, oxidative aging, and deliberate patience. We explore how Marsala is made, the grape varieties that define it, and why oxygen plays such a central role in its aroma and structure. Along the way, we unpack the classification system, from Secco to Vergine, and explain how Marsala earned both its reputation and its recent revival.

This episode weaves together chemistry, history, and cultural context, from British naval trade routes to Sicilian tradition, and asks a simple question: what happens when a wine waits for you to slow down?

Buy it. Taste it. Share it. Appreciate the layers. And don't forget to stay curious!

Glossary

Marsala
A fortified wine with protected designation of origin status produced in western Sicily, known for oxidative aging and a wide range of sweetness and aging styles.

Grillo
A primary grape variety used in Marsala production, valued for its acidity, ripening potential, and tolerance to oxidation.

Fortification
The addition of grape spirit to wine to increase alcohol content and stability, typically bringing Marsala to 17 to 20 percent alcohol.

Oxidative Aging
A controlled aging process where wine is intentionally exposed to oxygen, contributing to aromas such as nuts, dried fruit, caramel, and spice.

Mosto Cotto
Cooked grape must used in Ambra-style Marsala to add color, sweetness, and flavor.

Vergine Marsala
A dry style of Marsala aged for a minimum of five years without sweetening or cooked must, emphasizing structure and oxidative complexity.

Acetaldehyde
An aroma-active compound formed during oxidative aging, contributing nutty and bruised apple notes when present in balance.

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Clay, Skins, and Time: Orange Wine in Georgia05 Jan 202600:10:20

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Orange wine often feels contemporary, even radical, yet its roots stretch back thousands of years. In this episode of The Wine Lab, we travel to Georgia, widely considered one of the birthplaces of wine, to explore qvevri winemaking, extended skin contact, and the historical foundations of what we now call orange wine. Along the way, we unpack how this style bridges white and red winemaking, why it pairs so naturally with food, and how ancient clay vessels continue to shape modern wine conversations. This is a story of time, texture, and continuity. 

Glossary

  • Orange wine: White wine produced with extended skin contact, resulting in amber color, tannic structure, and enhanced phenolic extraction.
  • Qvevri: Large egg shaped clay vessels traditionally buried in the ground in Georgia and used for fermentation and aging, providing thermal stability and gentle oxygen exchange.
  • Skin contact: The period during which grape juice remains in contact with skins, seeds, and sometimes stems, influencing color, tannin, texture, and aroma development.
  • Phenolic compounds: A group of compounds including tannins and flavonoids that contribute to bitterness, astringency, color, mouthfeel, and oxidative stability.
  • Supra: A traditional Georgian feast centered on food, wine, and guided toasts, emphasizing hospitality, memory, and community.
  • Tamada: The toastmaster at a Georgian supra, responsible for guiding the rhythm, order, and meaning of toasts.
  • Rkatsiteli: One of Georgia’s most widely planted white grape varieties, known for high acidity, thick skins, and suitability for extended skin contact.
  • Kisi: A Georgian white grape variety that produces aromatic, structured wines, often showing stone fruit, spice, and tea like notes when made with skin contact.
  • Mtsvane: A family of Georgian white grape varieties valued for freshness, herbal aromatics, and balance, frequently blended with Rkatsiteli in qvevri wines.
  • Khikhvi: A lesser known Georgian white grape variety that yields deeply colored, textured orange wines with pronounced phenolic structure and oxidative stability.
  • Khachapuri: Traditional Georgian cheese filled bread, baked in various regional styles, often rich and salty, making it well suited to phenolic, textured wines.
  • Khinkali: Large pleated Georgian dumplings filled with spiced meat and broth, typically eaten by hand and known for their savory intensity.
  • Mtsvadi: Georgian grilled meat, commonly pork or lamb, cooked over open flame and served simply with onions and herbs.
  • Pkhali: Cold vegetable dishes made from spinach, beets, or eggplant blended with walnuts, garlic, herbs, and spices, offering earthy and nut driven flavors.
  • Lobio: Slow cooked Georgian bean dishes seasoned with walnuts, coriander, garlic, and herbs, often served warm or at room temperature.

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