Dictionary Definition
vintage
Noun
1 a season's yield of wine from a vineyard
2 the oldness of wines [syn: time of
origin]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Anglo-Norman vintage, from vendage, (cognate with French vendange), from Latin vindemia.Pronunciation
- , /ˈvɪn.tɪʤ/, /"vIn.tIdZ/
- Wine, especially high-quality, identified as to year and vineyard or district of origin
- The harvesting of a grape crop and the initial pressing of juice for winemaking
- The year or place in which something is produced
- italbrac attributively of or relating to a vintage, or to wine identified by a specific vintage
- italbrac attributively having an enduring appeal; high-quality, classic (such as video or computer games from the 1980s and early 1990s, or old magazines, etc.)
- italbrac attributively of a motor car built between the years 1919 and 1930
- italbrac attributively of a watch produced between the years 1870 and 1980
Derived terms
- make vintage
- non-vintage, nonvintage
- post-vintage thoroughbred
- rack vintage
- unvintaged
- vintage audio
- vintage base ball
- vintage car
- vintage clothing
- vintage dance
- vintage guitar
- vintage jewellery, vintage jewelry
- vintage model
- vintager
- vintage snowmobiling
- vintage spring
- vintage time
- vintage wine
- vintage year
Translations
wine identified by year and vineyard
harvesting of a grape and initial pressing for
winemaking
- German: Lese
- Polish: winobranie
- Swedish: tappning
year or place something is produced
relating to a vintage
having an enduring appeal; classic
- Polish: klasyczny
of a car built between 1919 and 1930
- Polish: zabytkowy
of a watch produced between the years 1870 and
1980
- Polish: zabytkowy
Verb
- To harvest (grapes).
- To make (wine) from grapes.
Translations
to harvest grapes
- Polish: zbierać
to make wine from grapes
- Polish: tłoczyć
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
- For other uses, see vintage (disambiguation).
Vintage, in wine-making, is the process of
picking grapes and
creating the finished product. A vintage wine is one made from
grapes that were all, or primarily, grown and harvested in a single
specified year. In certain wines it can denote quality, as in
Port
wine, where Port houses make and declare "vintage" Port in
their best years. From this tradition, a common, though incorrect,
usage applies the term to any wine that is perceived to be
particularly old or of a particularly high quality.
Most countries allow a vintage wine to include a
portion of wine that is not from the year denoted on the label. In
Chile and South Africa, the requirement is 75 percent same-year
content for vintage-dated wine. In Australia, New Zealand, and the
member states of the European Union the requirement is 85 percent.
In the United States the requirement is 85%, unless the wine is
designated with an AVA,
(e.g., Russian River Valley), in which case it is 95%. Technically,
the 85% rule in the United States applies equally to foreign
imports, but there are obvious challenges in enforcing the
regulation.
The opposite of a vintage wine is a nonvintage
wine, which is usually a blend from the produce of two or more
years. This is a common practice for winemakers seeking a
consistent style of wine, year on year.
The effect of vintage disputed
The importance of vintage, however, is both varied and disputed.In wine produced on the colder limits of wine
production, vintage is often very important because some seasons
will be much warmer and produce riper grapes and better wine for
people to drink. On the other hand, a poor growing season can lead
to grapes low in sugar, which lowers the quality of the resulting
wine.
In many wine regions, especially in the New World,
growing seasons are much more uniform. In dry regions, the
systematic and controlled use of irrigation also contributes
to uniform vintages. However, such wines are regularly labeled by
vintage because of consumer demand.
Wines of superior vintages from prestigious
producers and regions will often command much higher prices than
those from average vintages. This is especially the case if wines
are likely to improve further with some age in the bottle. Some
wines are only labeled with a vintage in better-than-average years,
to maintain their quality and reputation, while the vast majority
of wines are produced to be drunk young and fresh. In such cases, a
vintage is usually considered less important. However, it can serve
to protect consumers against buying a wine that wouldn't be
expected to improve with age and could be past its best, such as
with Beaujolais
nouveau, a wine style made to be consumed within months of its
bottling.
The importance of vintage may sometimes be
exaggerated. For example, New York Times wine columnist Frank J.
Prial declared the vintage chart to be dead, writing that
“winemakers of the world have rendered the vintage chart obsolete”
(Prial) and Bill Marsano wrote that “winemakers now have the
technology and skills to make good and even very good wines in
undistinguished years” (Marsano). The Wine
Spectator's James Laube has asserted that "even an average
vintage can yield some grand wines" (Laube).
Roman Weil, co-chairman of the Oenonomy Society
of the US and Professor at the University of Chicago, where you can
read his bio, tested the controversial hypotheses that experienced
wine drinkers "cannot distinguish in blind
tastings the wine of years rated high from those of years rated
low, or, if they can, they do not agree with the vintage chart’s
preferences” (Weil).
Dr. Weil used wines ranging from four to 17 years
beyond their vintage with 240 wine drinkers and found that the
tasters couldn’t distinguish between wines of good and bad
vintages, except for Bordeaux
wines. And even when they could make a distinction, the match
between the tasters' individual assessments and the charts'
rankings were little better than tossing a
coin. When the tests were replicated with wine experts
including French wine
academics, the results were again the same as chance.
Many critics believe that Bordeaux has the
world’s largest variance in vintages. Indeed, Weil found that
"tasters can distinguish the Excellent from the Appalling one, even
if they didn’t agree with which is the Appalling one."
Weil doesn’t consider a vintage chart to be
useless. He suggests using one to help "find good buys in wine. Buy
wine from the Appalling years," which may be priced far below
actual quality.
The subject of the importance of vintage is one
about which disagreement can be expected to continue.
Miscellaneous
- In Spain, wine regulators publish official classifications of each vintage.
- A common Bordelais saying is "The best vintage is the vintage we have to sell" (Greene).
- Vintage can also mean of or pertaining to the vine.
- Vintage has also become a word used to describe an action typical of a particular person, for example "thats vintage toothill"
- Vintage, is also an American Alternative Rock band from Grand Rapids, MI.
References
- Greene, Joshua. Bordeaux 2005. Wine & Spirits, June 2006, 25(3), 24-26.
- Laube, James. A caveat for Cabernet. Wine Spectator, June 15, 2006, 31(4), 37.
- Prial, Frank J. Wine talk: So who needs vintage charts. New York Times, February 9, 2000, B1 & B14.
- Marsano, Bill. Vintage nonsense. Hemisphere (United Airline's magazine), May, 2001.
- Weil, Roman L. Parker v. Prial: The death of the vintage chart. Oenometrie VIII. Eighth annual meeting of the Vineyard Data Quantification Society (VDQS) in Saint Helena, California; published in VDSQ, May, also in Chance Magazine'', vol 14, no. 4, Fall 2001. 2001.[http://64.233.161.104/search?q=cache:PinM43tiLk4J:www.liquidasset.com/WEILVDQS.PDF+%22Roman+L.+Weil%22+%22Parker+v.+Prial%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1]
External links and other references
vintage in Catalan: Verema
vintage in German: Traubenlese
vintage in Spanish: Vendimia
vintage in Esperanto: Vinberrikolto
vintage in French: Vendange
vintage in Italian: Vendemmia
vintage in Japanese: ヴィンテージ
vintage in Hebrew: בציר
vintage in Portuguese: Vintage
vintage in Swedish: Vintage
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aftermath, aged, antiquated, antique, archaic, bearing, best, better, bumper crop, bygone, choice, classic, classical, collector, crop, dated, demode, fruit, generation, good, harvest, make, matured, mellowed, old, old-fashioned, old-fogyish,
old-time, origin,
outdated, outmoded, output, over the hill, passe, proceeds, produce, product, production, quality, seasoned, second crop, select, superior, year, yield