A New Way to Elevate Texas Wine Production and Quality: The Champagne Connection

A New Way to Elevate Texas Wine Production and Quality: The Champagne Connection

This week, in my Texas wine column in the Lubbock Avalanche Journal (click here), I talked with Austin’s  wines.com and Red Room Lounge sommelier Bill Elsey about interesting and somewhat surprising connections between grape growing and winemaking in Texas and in the northern French wine region of Champagne. I think that I may have caught some people off guard to the point of thinking that we both went over the cliff on this one.

However, I believe that we came up with a way around one of the major stumbling blocks of Texas wine production: vintage-to-vintage variability. The work around is really nothing new. It’s more like borrowing a page from the play book of Champagne, another region that is challenged with a highly variable, continental climate.

As acknowledged by Oz Clark in his book, Grapes and Wines: The Definitive Guide to the World’s Greatest Grapes and the Wines They Make (click here), wine regions in continental climates typically have greater variability year-to-year in the weather leading to colder winters, late spring freezes and shorter summers. This is the result of not having close access to a large body of cold water near by like they do in most coastal regions of France, California and other places in the modern wine world. This sure describes what we have in Texas. However, we are at the opposite end of the climatic extreme to Champagne. Champagne fights of the effects of cool, damp summers, while Texas fights heat, drought and the occasional late spring freeze.

Check out my Texas Wineslinger column to see how multi-varietal and multi-vintage blended wines (common in Champagne)  can help Texas wine growers and wineries build a buffer between them and weather to  maintain more consistent production and wine quality at the same time. It just means that Texas wine consumers will have to learn a new lexicon: proprietary wine names versus what California taught them about single varietal wines.

I will rest my case after you taste a wine from Red Caboose Winery: their Range Rider multi-varietal, multi-vintage blend of Tempranillo, Syrah and Cabernet Sauvignon (click here).

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About admin 795 Articles
Love to taste, talk and tweet about Texas wines and where they are in the global scheme for wines. After all that's the only way they will reach the full potential.

4 Comments

  1. The problem with vintage variability in Texas, Russ, is not as much quality as it is quantity. If you advocate NV, which is the common practice in Champagne, then you open yourself to all sorts of abuses with out of state fruit.

  2. Russ,

    You nailed it. The commercial structure of Champagne would suit us well. Our growing environment is much better so prices would not need to be so high but the mechanisms to deal with extreme variability work very well.

  3. Bobby how can we protect against what Jeff fears will happen, a flood of none Texas wine thru another loophole in The Feds labeling laws.

  4. I would agree that quantity is an issue as well. It’s seems to me that a reasonable approach to take would be to hold back a percentage of wine per harvest such as is practiced in Champagne. That said, it’s not as though the industry doesn’t suffer significant abuse from out of state of fruit currently.

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