This article was first published as a chapter in my ebook Emerging Varietal Wines of Australia, published in 20141 It was also published as a wine article on the Vinodiversity website. It has been slightly edited here.
What is a Wine Variety?
There are thousands of grape varieties used to make wine. Jancis Robinson's huge book Wine Grapes lists over 1368, and these are just the more commercially important ones.
We all have an instinctive idea of what a wine grape variety is but it is worth exploring the concept more fully. As you explore wine you will also come across discussion of clones. Just what are clones? And how are they related to varieties?
The basic definition of a variety is that all of the individual vines in that variety are derived directly or indirectly from a single seedling. The new plants are propagated from cuttings or grafts from that original mother plant, or from other vines which derive from it. Therefore individual vines of a particular variety are all genetically identical to each other for virtually all of their genes. In human terms they are like identical twins - very similar, but exactly identical.
Grape seeds, like the seeds of other plants, arise from sexual reproduction. Therefore, every variety has two parents, although some seeds arise from self-pollination. In the several millennia that grapes have been cultivated untold squillions of grape seeds have become seedlings. The vast majority are not cultivated. Seedlings are extremely variable in all sorts of characteristics. Only a tiny minority of seedlings survive to give rise to a variety.
The majority of varieties have arisen by natural crossings where pollen is spread from one plant to another by wind or insects. This cross-pollination was more common in the past when vineyards often consisted of several varieties interplanted, rather than the more orderly arrangement today, where vineyards consist of a single variety or several blocks each containing just one variety.
Over the past couple of centuries grape varieties have been deliberately bred. Often the breeding intention is to combine the good characteristics of two varieties into one new variety.
For example, the variety Pinotage2 was deliberately bred in South Africa by crossing Pinot Noir and Cinsaut. The first parent was chosen for its ability to produce fine wines, the second for its ability to thrive in a hot, harsh viticultural environment. In this case, the plan was successful, but may thousands of Pinot Noir x Cinsaut seedlings would have been tested and found wanting before the eventual mother Pinotage plant was identified. From this mother plant, all subsequent Pinotage vines around the world have been produced by asexual reproduction.
Varieties and Clones
All of the plants of a grape variety are derived directly or indirectly via asexual reproduction from a single vine. So their genomes or genetic makeups are very similar, nearly identical in fact, but there are very small differences. Sometimes these differences can become very important. To find out how these differences occur we need to look at how a grape vine (or any other plant) grows.
A plant grows by forming new cells by cell division. The genes in each new cell are copied from the mother cell, but the copying is not quite perfect. Tiny changes called mutations occur. So all of the cells of a plant don't have exactly the same genes. Most of the mutations are not noticed by the plant, let alone the viticulturist. But some mutations can have major effects.
For example, at some stage a mutation occurred on a Pinot Noir plant and on one cane of the plant all of the berries had pink or grey berries rather than black. If vines are propagated asexually from buds on this cane, all of their berries will be grey and hence a new distinct clone of Pinot Noir has arisen. It is sufficiently different for it to be treated as a new variety, Pinot Gris, but in fact it is a clone.
There are many clones which are treated as separate varieties. For example, all of the Pinots -Blanc, Gris, Meunier are all clones of Noir and Gewürztraminer is a clone of Savagnin.
More often, the mutations causing new clones to arise are more subtle than the change of berry colour. The new clone may be more vigorous in the vineyard, it may have disease resistance, or there may be slightly different compounds in the skin giving rise to better (or worse) aroma and flavours in the wine it produces.
Older varieties and those that have been grown in a wide variety of viticultural environments tend to have many more recognised clones, and the clones are more diverse in their characteristics.
In summary, varieties originate from sexual reproduction producing a seed. Clones arise from mutations in a growing vine and are spread by asexual reproduction methods such as cuttings and grafting.
Why do grape varieties matter?
Careful selection of the appropriate wine grape variety is critical for successful grape growing and wine making. Different can have vastly different characteristics in the vineyard and in the wine produced.
Consumers need to know at least something about varieties to chose wines they like. But there is much more to it than that. Watch out for a new article about why grape varieties matter coming soon for subscribers.
Open that bottle night preview
Our Taste and Talk session on Thursday 22nd will be a preview of Saturday’s Open That Bottle Night. We’d love to see some new faces there. Details in this post.
I will send you a reminder and a link to the Zoom meeting on Thursday.
Need to top up your cellar?
Wine selectors have a nice offer called Med Red Moments. - lighter styles, alternative varieties. Check them out 3
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