But simplicity is never easy. First of all, we seek purity in our wines. Our obsession is that of the Japanese painter who spends his life to succeed in drawing a line. This work begins in the vineyards and is partly a reflection of our terroir, but it is necessary to finalise it in the cellar.
Having chosen purity for all our wines, we then choose two types of vinification for our reds.
Our white is made without any oenological embellishments.
The harvest is manual and the pressing is done with our small vertical press. This is a long and crucial step. Contrary to what we learn at school, we do a pressing without protection against oxidation. Moreover, this pressing is very long. This allows us to make a slight extraction of tannins which will bring a little more density to the palate.
We let the malolactic fermentation take place naturally. This allows the wine to be more stable and to develop a different aromatic palette.
Our orange wine has been Gérald’s speciality since 2009.
This wine is made from white grapes vinified like a red, with maceration.
At Terrasson, maceration is whole bunch for 10 to 20 days.
The resulting wine is darker in colour than a white and structured in the same way as a red. Therefore it needed an adjective to differentiate it from a white.
David Harvey, a wine merchant in the UK, and Isabelle Legeron, a wine journalist friend in the UK, coined the term “orange wine” in the 2010s. Gérald has since made a major contribution to getting the term “vin orange” into the French mind.
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