Treinta y Dos Pinot noir 2013

BODEGA CHACRA

Treinta y Dos Pinot noir
2013

  • Biodynamic
Country
Argentina
Regulated designation
Geographical Indication (GI)
Region
Patagonia
Varietal(s)
Pinot Noir
Alcohol percentage
13%
Colour
Red
Sugar
Dry
Aging vessel type
Burgundian oak barrels
Length of aging
24 months
PH
3.6
Producer's website

About this winery

Located in the Rio Negro Valley in northern Patagonia, Bodega Chacra is nestled between the Andes Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 1000 kilometers south of Buenos Aires. Founded by Piero Incisa della Rocchetta, descendant of the renowned Italian family, Chacra arose from his passion for fine wines and exploration of promising terroirs in Argentina. Since the 2000s, Chacra has focused on crafting exceptional Pinot Noir, benefiting from the dry climate and limestone-rich soils that...

See the BODEGA CHACRA detail page for more information on this brand

Product notes

In 2004, Piero Incisa della Rocchetta purchased the first of Bodega Chacra's vineyards, a property with an existing, though abandoned, vineyard planted in 1932. This singular vineyard of gnarled Pinot Noir vines, planted on their own rootstocks, is head trained and produces tiny bunches of small, concentrated berries. The vineyard's pale, dry, porous soils are dominated by gravel and coarse alluvial pebbles with significant limestone content. Irrigation is carried out at most five times during the vine cycle, with a single copper sulfate treatment.

Production notes

The berries are placed whole, without crushing, in the fermentation vat, where the weight of the grapes near the top of the vat crushes some of those at the bottom of the vat. This method, which shares similarities with carbonic maceration, allows the wine to express the subtle, complex and finely textured tannins characteristic of very old vines. Fermentation is initiated spontaneously by indigenous yeasts, and lasts approximately three weeks at an average temperature of 78.8F (26C). During fermentation, a layer of carbon dioxide blankets the surface of the cap, which is neither pumped over nor punched down. Once the alcoholic fermentation is complete, the wine is transferred off the skins into small Burgundian oak barrels. Malolactic fermentation begins spontaneously once the wine is in barrel, and is completed in roughly six months. A small amount of free sulfur is then added to kill any stray yeasts or bacteria.