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Blending Tradition and Innovation: CHANDON's Shift to a Fully Digital Winemaking System
You have to be quick on your feet to make sparkling wine. Harvest starts earlier than for still wines and the time frame is considerably more condensed because there just isn’t as much time to pick the grapes. Harvesting is done during the cool nights to eliminate the need to chill the juices and reduce energy consumption. Pauline Lhote, the Director of Winemaking at Domaine Chandon in Napa, describes the pace. “We process fruit every single day. When a block is ready, we have only a couple of days to pick it. If today were a harvest day, we would be pressing, and tonight, we would start doing flotation to clarify the juices. By later tonight or tomorrow morning, the wine would already be inoculated.” Chandon is, of course, all about sparkling — 98% of its wines have bubbles. Its winemaking and production team of nearly 45 employees turns around 30 sparkling wines in this fast-paced environment, from the large case production for its brut and rosé blends
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Chandon California officially announced the start of its 50th sparkling wine harvest today, with Head Winemaker Pauline Lhote calling the first pick of Napa’s 2023 season...

Napa Sparkling Wine Harvest Begins Three Weeks Late, Having Successfully Weathered A Wet Winter and Cool Summer Winemaker Pauline Lhote Says 2023 Harvest

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Sparkling wine maker Chandon California officially and ceremoniously announced the start of its sparkling wine harvest today, with Head Winemaker Pauline Lhote calling one of the first picks of Napa’s 2022 season...

Napa Sparkling Wine Harvest Begins, Having Successfully Weathered Frost, Hail and Drought Winemaker Pauline Lhote Says Water Conservation and Fire Safety Were ‘Top of Mind All Season’ and Praises 2022 […]

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