The Hub August 2015 | Page 11

Just this year, area wineries brought home a slew of medals - 21 in all - from the All Canadian Wine Championships, Canada’s oldest wine competition. The final medal tally was seven gold, eight silver, and six bronze from 10 different wineries. (Be sure to check out the sidebar for a list of the winning wineries) The wine business in our region has a storied past, with Canadian South Wine Tours detailing the history of three Kentucky farmers who came to the region in the 1860s. The farmers found an opportunity to make wine on Pelee Island and opened Vin Villa Estates. This was followed by two brothers, England Edward and John Wardoper, who opened Pelee Island Wine and Vineyard Company. In the 30 years that followed, Windsor-Essex went from two wineries to 23, making up more than half of the 41 in Canada by 1890. But for a winery to be successful, one also needs to have a great product and that means growing a grape. “The quality of the wine starts in the vineyard,” says Michael O’Brien, president of Cooper’s Hawk Vineyards in Harrow. “You can’t make good wine out of crappy grapes.” Grapes have been used as the basis for winemaking since the beginning and the process of how they’ve been turned into wine has developed over thousands of years. Wine was an important part of the Roman diet, and winemaking became an important part of that culture. It continued through to Egyptian culture, as shown in hieroglyphics and carvings, before trickling down to the Jews, Arabs and Greeks. The vine was found in the Mediterranean as well, before travelling to the rest of Europe. When people think about making wine, often the image of feet stomping on grapes comes to mind, but while some winemakers say the method was commonly used, historians think otherwise. What can be said for sure is that wine comes from fermenting the grapes. Fermentation turns the sugar in the grapes into alcohol and carbon dioxide. During the process, the juice can become very hot - but too hot and the yeast won’t work. To combat this, some wineries pour the wine into large stainless steel containers so they can regulate the heat, while others, like Cooper’s Hawk, also store their product in oak barrels. O’Brian says they use a variety of methods in order to provide visitors with a choice of wines. In Windsor and Essex County, as well as across the world, the process differs between what is called the old or new world methods. The former focuses around allowing grapes to ferment on their own for months or years before bottling, while also foregoing preservatives or extra additives.. Nancy Paglione, owner of Paglione Estate Winery, says that using this method can sometimes create a smoother wine, but at the same time means the wine must be drunk in a quicker period of time due to the lack of preservatives. Although this is the method she prefers to use, it’s not necessarily the better way to make wine. “That’s the way we do ours,” says Paglione. “Everybody’s different, a lot of people have good wines, we’re just staying old world.” New world on the other hand does tend to use modern methods such as cold soaking, while also using different enzymes and stabilizers to make the wine ferment at a faster pace. O’Brien says his vineyard tries to use a combination of both, using stainless steel containers while also not adding sugars and sometimes storing wine in oak barrels. With the multitude of wineries and vineyards in Essex County - nearly 20 as of 2015 - the region has become a hub Wine lovers from China, Taiwan, England, Australia and the U.S.come to our region for the wine Opposite page: Cooper's Hawk Vineyards grows their own grapes using different soils on site Bottom left: Master wine taster Laura Moore speaks with visitors at Cooper's Hawk Vineyards Bottom right: Several wines on display at Cooper's Hawk Vineyards